Thirty years after Elizabeth Montgomery’s death, her children reveal the hidden struggles, secret loves, and private pain she endured, finally confirming the long-rumored truths that redefine her legacy and leave fans both shocked and deeply moved.

30 Years After Her Death, Elizabeth Montgomery’s Widow FINALLY Breaks  Silence

Thirty years after the death of Bewitched icon Elizabeth Montgomery, the world is finally learning the truth about the woman behind the magic.

Her children — William, Robert, and Rebecca Asher — have come forward to reveal what really happened in their mother’s final years, confirming long-circulating rumors that Hollywood refused to talk about.

What they shared is emotional, heartbreaking, and, above all, deeply human.

Elizabeth Montgomery, who became a household name as the mischievous witch Samantha Stephens in the hit 1960s sitcom Bewitched, passed away on May 18, 1995, at her Beverly Hills home.

She was 62.

Her death shocked fans who had no idea that she had been battling colorectal cancer in secret — a battle she fought with quiet dignity and fierce independence.

For years, the details surrounding her illness, her final months, and her private relationships were kept under wraps by her family.

But now, three decades later, her children have decided to speak — not to exploit her story, but to honor her truth.

“Mom didn’t want anyone’s pity,” said Rebecca Asher, her youngest daughter, in a recent interview.

“She was strong, proud, and incredibly private.

Even when the pain got worse, she refused to let anyone see her as weak.

But she also carried emotional pain from years before — things people never knew about.”

 

Former 'Bewitched' child star Erin Murphy explains why the '60s sitcom  ended | Fox News

 

Those “things,” her children explained, included a lifetime of quiet rebellion against Hollywood’s rigid expectations.

Elizabeth was born into a show business dynasty — her father, actor Robert Montgomery, was a major Hollywood figure.

But behind the glamour, their relationship was complicated.

“He was a perfectionist, demanding, and hard to please,” recalled William.

“She spent her whole life trying to earn his approval — but she never really got it.”

This strained dynamic followed her throughout her career.

On Bewitched, she was not just the star; she was also a producer, a rare position for a woman in the 1960s.

But that power came at a cost.

She clashed repeatedly with studio executives, who dismissed her creative ideas and tried to box her into a “cute TV witch” stereotype.

Off-camera, her marriage to director William Asher — the man behind Bewitched — was equally complicated.

Together, they built an empire, but the pressures of fame, long work hours, and personal struggles led to their separation in 1973.

“She poured herself into her work,” said Robert Asher.

“But the more successful she became, the lonelier she felt.

Hollywood adored her — but it also isolated her.”

 

THE DEATH OF ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY - YouTube

 

In her later years, Montgomery found solace in quiet causes rather than spotlight appearances.

She became an outspoken advocate for AIDS awareness at a time when few in Hollywood dared to speak.

“That was Mom’s real courage,” Rebecca said.

“She saw people being shunned and chose to stand with them, even when it wasn’t popular.”

But the most shocking revelation her children confirmed was one that fans had long whispered about: Elizabeth had fallen in love again late in life — with actor Robert Foxworth, her co-star from Mrs.

Sundance.

The two lived together for nearly 20 years but never made their relationship the centerpiece of their public lives.

“They were soulmates,” William revealed softly.

“When she got sick, he was by her side every moment.

He never left her.

She wanted love without the performance — and she finally found it.”

 

Former 'Bewitched' child star Erin Murphy explains why the '60s sitcom  ended | Fox News

 

Foxworth was reportedly the last person she spoke to before she passed away peacefully in her sleep.

“She wasn’t afraid,” her daughter said.

“She told us she had done everything she wanted to do — she just wished people had known her for more than the twitch of her nose.”

Her children’s decision to speak out now, on the 30th anniversary of her death, isn’t just about setting the record straight.

It’s about reminding the world that Elizabeth Montgomery was more than a TV icon.

She was a complex, passionate, sometimes wounded woman who fought to live on her own terms.

“She didn’t want her legacy to be about secrets or scandals,” Rebecca concluded.

“She wanted it to be about love — for her kids, for her craft, and for the people she believed deserved to be seen.”

Thirty years later, that legacy feels stronger than ever.

The world may have fallen in love with Samantha Stephens’ magic, but the real magic — the kind that still inspires — was always Elizabeth Montgomery herself.