Eric Dane died on February 19, 2026 at just 53 years old, losing his battle with ALS after facing his diagnosis with a courage and a public openness that made the Grey’s Anatomy community love him even more deeply in his final months than they had across the nine seasons he spent making Dr. Mark Sloan one of the most beloved characters in the show’s history. When the 2026 Oscars arrived and the In Memoriam segment played without a single frame of McSteamy, the reaction from his fanbase was immediate and volcanic — the specific, personal fury of people who had watched a man they loved fight a terminal illness with dignity and grace and then watched the industry’s most prestigious night treat him as if he had never existed.
The defense they were waiting for from the woman who knew Eric Dane best and worked with him longest arrived at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party, and it did not land the way Shonda Rhimes perhaps intended. “Well, he’s not a movie star,” Rhimes told Entertainment Tonight. “I feel like when the Emmys come around, he will be immortalized the way he should be. We can’t fault the Oscars for the fact they’re looking at movies — Eric was unique to television.”The fans who had been waiting for someone in power to be angry on Eric’s behalf heard instead someone explaining why the slight was reasonable — and the response has been fierce, deeply felt, and entirely directed at the woman who created the show that made Eric Dane a household name and who, in the most painful moment for his community, chose defense over outrage. Eric’s family, meanwhile, was reported to be saddened by the exclusion, though understanding of the industry’s position given the scale of loss that year.