Dwayne Johnson

Dwayne Johnson Supports Tyrese Gibson After Death of His Mom

Dwayne Johnson is making sure his "Fast & Furious" co-star Tyrese Gibson knows he is here for him after Gibson's mother passed away

Dwayne Johnson, Tyrese Gibson
John Shearer/Invision/AP)

The "Fast" family always rides together.

When Tyrese Gibson announced his mother Priscilla Murray had passed after battling pneumonia and COVID-19 on Feb. 14, his "Fast & Furious" co-star Dwayne Johnson offered his condolences.

Gibson, 43, posted an emotional video to Instagram of him holding his mother's hand in the hospital room as he cried.

In the caption, he said that he and his family are "broken and just can't believe this" and asked the Lord to embrace his mother into heaven.

Johnson was one of many celebrities who sent their sympathies to Gibson in the comments.

"So so sorry about this brother," he wrote. "She was so proud of all you are and have become. Deepest condolences & love sent your way to you and your family."

It's the latest sign the co-stars have moved past any public bickering. In 2017, the "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" actor threatened to quit the "Fast & Furious" franchise if Johnson made an appearance in the ninth film.

Tyrese Gibson and More 'Fast & Furious' Stars Honor Paul Walker on 5-Year Death Anniversary

He also blamed the "Red Notice" actor for delaying the movie's release after Johnson was offered his own spinoff, "Hobbs & Shaw." However, they sped past their feud, and in 2021, Gibson called up a sweet anecdote during an appearance on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show."

Revealing they were on the "phone every other day," he shared that they had a friendly competition about who could leave the longest voice note to each other.

After all, it doesn't matter how much you win by, winning is winning.

Dwayne "The Cop" Johnson aka Lt. Eric Fields of Morgan County, Alabama talks to NBCLX about what it's like to be mistaken for his incredibly famous doppelgänger Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson.
Copyright E! Online
Contact Us