Patti Newton reveals she has built a shrine to her late husband Bert

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Patti Newton Reveals She Built A Shrine For Her Late Husband Bert And Compares It To A ‘Museum’

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Patti Newton pays tribute to her late husband Bert in a very personal way.

The wife of the late entertainment legend, who died of various health complications in October 2021 at the age of 83, revealed on… The Kyle and Jackie O Show this week she had built a shrine to Bert at the family’s Melbourne home.

Considered a golden couple by Australian TV, Bert and Patti had been married for nearly half a century and were the parents of two children, Matthew, 45, and Lauren, 42, as well as six grandchildren.

Patti Newton pays tribute to her late husband Bert in a very personal way. The wife of the late entertainment legend, who died in October 2021 at the age of 83 from various health complications, revealed this week on The Kyle and Jackie O Show that she had built a shrine to Bert at the family’s Melbourne home. (The couple can be seen here on their wedding day)

Radio host Kyle Sandilands asked Patti, 77, if it was true that she had caused Bert to place his numerous awards – including four Gold Logies – and his TV memorabilia in his home office rather than displaying them all over the family home. .

Patti confirmed this to be true, and now his office is akin to a ‘Bert Newton museum’.

“You should see it now. It is certainly a sanctuary. You walk in there and there’s all his hats there,” she replied.

‘I built this new room for him, which he was never allowed to see, but there I hung his Logies – but instead of 36 there are only 17 in the room, because he handed them out.

“I don’t know who else has his Lodge, but he was a very generous man.”

Considered a golden couple by Australian TV, Bert and Patti had been married for nearly half a century and were the parents of two children, Matthew, 45, and Lauren, 42, as well as six grandchildren. (Bert can be seen here with his daughter Lauren)

Bert donated one of his golden lodgings to an AIDS patient three decades ago in a stunning act of generosity that was only revealed until his death last year.

At the time, there was a lot of stigma and misinformation surrounding HIV transmission, and many Australians didn’t want to be around people with AIDS.

But that didn’t bother Bert, who visited personally ill patients for two hours in the early 1990s.

Only the late Graham Kennedy, the winner of six Gold Logies, has surpassed Bert’s four.

Bert died on October 30, 2021, after a long battle for health that resulted in one of his legs being amputated.

At the time of his death, he was receiving palliative care at a Melbourne clinic.

The TV host was in hospital in March of that year and underwent surgery on his leg in May.

“I built this new room for him, which he was never allowed to see, but I put his Logies in it – but instead of 36 there are only 17 in the room because he handed them out,” Patti said.

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