Ozzy Osbourne had agreed to death ahead of his final farewell tour.
“If my life is nearing the end, I can’t really complain about it,” he said on Paramount+’s “Ozzy Osbourne: No escape from now.”
“I had a great life,” added Locker.
The upcoming documentary, released on October 7th, chronicles the final farewell gig in July 2025 at Villa Park in his hometown of Birmingham.
Page 6 exclusively reported that the concert supported his spirit.
“It energised him – it filled him with life,” the longtime peer said of the show.
Less than a month later, Osborne passed away at the age of 76.
“It is more sadness than mere words that we can tell you that our beloved Ozui Osborne must report that he has passed away this morning,” a statement from his family read after his death.
“He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect the privacy of our family at this point: Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Amy, Louis.”
A public funeral was held in Birmingham.
Former Black Sabbath frontman wife Sharon Osborne and his children, Amy, Kelly and Jack, are also included in upcoming documentaries.
They spoke openly about the injuries Ozzy suffered after collapsed in February 2019, and were forced to cancel their two and a half year farewell tour.
Sharon, 72, said in the trailer that Ozzy’s only regret was not saying goodbye to fans.
During his final years, the health of the “Crazy Train” belt deteriorated.
In January 2020, he revealed that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.
The rock metal legend suffered a neck injury in a 2003 quad bicycle accident.
The documentary reveals that Ozzy has undergone numerous correctional surgeries that caused chronic pain and seriously affected his mobility.