Rebecca Gayheart Stands by Eric Dane as ALS Battle Reshapes Family Life

ijr.com

Long after their marriage ended, Rebecca Gayheart and Eric Dane have found themselves bound together again — not by romance, but by a shared fight against a devastating diagnosis.

According to Fox News, as Dane’s ALS has progressed, Gayheart has quietly stepped into a role few expect of an ex-spouse. 

What began as emotional support has grown into full-scale caregiving, with Gayheart helping manage medical decisions, coordinating daily care, and advocating fiercely within a complex health system — all while keeping her own household running and shielding their daughters from unnecessary disruption.

“Our love may not be romantic, but it’s a familial love,” Gayheart told The Cut. “Whatever I can do or however I can show up to make this journey better for him or easier for him, I want to do that.”

Dane now depends on around-the-clock nursing care, a necessity Gayheart said did not come easily. She described repeated clashes with insurance providers before the coverage was finally approved.

“Eric has 24/7 nurses now,” she said. “Just figuring out the healthcare system is its own thing — the health insurance company will deny you what you’re asking for … you have to appeal and then you have to apply again.”

One exchange, in particular, hardened her resolve.

“With the nurses, the woman from his insurance said to me, ‘You can keep applying, and I’ll keep denying,’” Gayheart recalled. “I was like, Oh? F that. I made it my mission. I was ‘locked in,’ as the kids would say. I crashed out, and then I locked it in.”

Two appeals later, the nursing support was approved. Even so, gaps in coverage remain, forcing Gayheart to personally fill in when care overlaps with parenting duties.

She said learning to ask for help has been one of the hardest lessons.

“There was a 12-hour shift recently that I could not cover. I could only do four hours because of all the stuff that the kids are doing,” she said, explaining that she reached out to two of Dane’s friends — one of whom had never helped care for him before.

Should Rebecca Gayheart continue caregiving for Eric Dane after their divorce?

Support: 0% (0 Votes)

Oppose: 0% (0 Votes)

Her anxiety was unfounded.

“I thought, I can’t believe I had to ask someone to do this,” she said. “And of course when I asked for help, they said, ‘Yeah, anything, what do you need? What’s going on?’ And they both showed up and did a wonderful job.”

Gayheart vividly remembers the moment Dane shared his diagnosis.

“I was in my closet the day I heard those three letters: ALS,” she said. Dane called from a neurologist’s office in San Francisco after months of unexplained symptoms.

“When we would have a meal with the kids, he’d say things like, ‘Something’s wrong with my hand,’” she said. “That was when he started seeing doctors.”

“When he told me that day, he just started weeping, as did I,” Gayheart added. “It didn’t feel real because he was still OK.”

At home with their youngest daughter, she tried to take the call privately, but her distress was immediately noticed.

“I tried telling her, ‘Honey, nothing. Everything’s fine,’ because I couldn’t process it,” Gayheart said.

The former couple later told their daughters, Billie, 15, and Georgia, 14, with the guidance of therapists.

“We wanted to have complete transparency and honesty with them,” Gayheart said. “I’m a horrible liar. You can see right through me.”

Gayheart and Dane married in 2004 and separated in 2017. Although their divorce filing was withdrawn in April, the shift in their relationship came just weeks before Dane publicly revealed his ALS diagnosis — a condition the Mayo Clinic describes as a progressive nervous-system disease affecting the brain and spinal cord.