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#vivianvance #williamfrawley #hollywood Why Vivian Vance Celebrated the Death of William Frawley March 3, 1966. William Frawley, the man America knew as the grumpy, tight-fisted Fred Mertz from I Love Lucy, collapses on a sidewalk along Hollywood Boulevard. Strangers rush to his side, but it’s too late. His heart gives out. Just days after his 79th birthday, William Frawley is gone. Across town, at a quiet dinner gathering, his former co-star, Vivian Vance, receives the news. She doesn’t gasp. She doesn’t shed a tear. Instead, she does something no one in the room expects. With a slow, deliberate smile, she raises her glass. “Champagne for everyone.” The room falls silent. Some guests exchange uneasy glances. Others laugh nervously, waiting for her to clarify that it’s a joke. But it isn’t. The woman who spent years beside Frawley on-screen, playing his loyal wife, is now toasting to his death. It’s a chilling reaction. But why? Had she despised him so much that his death brought her joy? Or was there something deeper behind that cold smile? For years, the world believed Fred and Ethel Mertz were one of TV’s most iconic couples. Their constant bickering, playful sarcasm, and undeniable chemistry helped define I Love Lucy. But behind the laughter was one of Hollywood’s most bitter rivalries, a feud so deep that even death couldn’t erase it.