
Olivia gained fame in the
last weeks of her 16-year-long life when a Katy Perry song she recorded
in a Toronto studio in September became a viral hit online.
"She died peacefully in her home surrounded by the extraordinary love of her family," a family statement sent to CNN said.
The teenager said that
she didn't want people crying at her funeral, but that they should
celebrate her life, her mother wrote in a letter to CNN.
Her version of Perry's hit "Roar," which she recorded in September
after learning there were no more treatments available, drew the
attention of Perry after it was published on YouTube in October.
"I was very moved and you sounded great," Perry told her in a video posted on YouTube. "I love you. A lot of people love you and that's why your video got to me. It moved everybody that saw it."
Perry concluded with: "Keep roaring!"
The international
attention drew more than a million viewers to Olivia's song and helped
raise $77,000 for the Liv Wise Fund that was started in her name in
support of brain tumor research.
The video shows OIivia
sitting in a wheelchair in the middle of the studio, singing softly at
first and struggling with her breaths.
"'Cause I am a champion, and you're gonna hear me roar."
Her energy grows and she smiles as she sings "I got the eye of a tiger, a fighter, dancing through the fire."
"Olivia is a fighter and
has gone through the fire," her cousin wrote in the post under the
video posting on YouTube. "In fact, she was going through the fire while
she recorded this song, but you wouldn't know it, because she was
dancing right through it."
Her family posted
another song video on YouTube just days before Olivia's death. She wrote
"Simple Girl" -- a song about how she wanted to live life -- when she
was 11. The only time she sang it was on September 6, during the same
session in which she recorded "Roar."
"In many ways, Olivia has lived a shortened, but full life," her mother wrote in the letter to CNN.
Wise was diagnosed with a very aggressive form of brain cancer in January 2012 after she suffered a seizure.
She rarely complained
about the grave prognosis, her mother said. "Every day, she wished for a
cure, and rarely succumbed to negative thoughts."
"To tell the truth, her
diagnosis didn't change her personality," her mom said. "It only
enhanced it. She took the news in a mature, reasonable, responsible way.
... Even in the most difficult moments, she managed to bring laughter
and friendship to all that were caring for her."
source:CNN
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