LOS ANGELES —
Annette Funicello, star of Disney's "Mickey Mouse Club'' television program in the 1950s, has died, Disney said on Monday.
"We're sorry to report beloved Disney Mouseketeer and iconic teen star Annette Funicello has passed away at age 70,'' the Walt Disney TV and movie studio said on its official fan club's Twitter account.
Her family told television program Extra that Funicello died in hospital in Bakersfield, California, while in a coma due to suffering from multiple sclerosis, which was diagnosed in 1987. It was not immediately clear when she died.
Funicello was America's peaches-and-cream girl, portraying the innocence of the 1950s and 1960s, first as a Disney Mouseketeer and then as the star of a series of beach movies.
But in later life, she was remembered for what many say was her greatest role: a valiant fight against multiple sclerosis, a crippling disease of the nervous system which reduced the once perky and vivacious singer and actress to depend progressively on a cane, a walker and finally a wheelchair.
"We're sorry to report beloved Disney Mouseketeer and iconic teen star Annette Funicello has passed away at age 70,'' the Walt Disney TV and movie studio said on its official fan club's Twitter account.
Her family told television program Extra that Funicello died in hospital in Bakersfield, California, while in a coma due to suffering from multiple sclerosis, which was diagnosed in 1987. It was not immediately clear when she died.
Funicello was America's peaches-and-cream girl, portraying the innocence of the 1950s and 1960s, first as a Disney Mouseketeer and then as the star of a series of beach movies.
But in later life, she was remembered for what many say was her greatest role: a valiant fight against multiple sclerosis, a crippling disease of the nervous system which reduced the once perky and vivacious singer and actress to depend progressively on a cane, a walker and finally a wheelchair.