HE LOST HIS WIFE IN MAY. HE DIED IN SEPTEMBER. AND THEN HE BECAME BIGGER THAN HE’D EVER BEEN Johnny Cash fought pills, prison, and the devil for 50 years. But losing June Carter Cash in May 2003 was the one fight he didn’t want to win. He visited her bedside in his wheelchair every 30 minutes, sang to her, read her Psalms. She never woke up. Four months later, on September 12, he followed her. He was 71. Over a thousand people filled the same church in Hendersonville where they’d buried June. Kris Kristofferson called him “Abraham Lincoln with a wild side.” Rosanne Cash eulogized her father. Al Gore spoke. A country singer named Larry Gatlin looked at his own son from the pulpit and said: “This man fed your mama and me when we couldn’t afford food.” Then the world did something Johnny Cash never cared about — it gave him fame he couldn’t have imagined. Justin Timberlake won an MTV award two weeks before Cash died and told the crowd: “My grandfather raised me on Johnny Cash. He deserves this more than any of us.” “Hurt” won a Grammy, a CMA, and an MTV award. Two years later, Walk the Line grossed $300 million and won Reese Witherspoon an Oscar. His posthumous albums debuted at number one on Billboard. Posthumous sales passed $130 million. The man who sang “I Walk the Line” for June spent his whole life keeping that promise. He just couldn’t keep it without her.

He Lost His Wife in May. He Died in September. And Then He Became Bigger Than He’d Ever Been Johnny…

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