Image Credit: ABC
The news hit like a punch in the gut. Eric Dane died on February 19 after battling ALS, a disease he had made public in April 2025. Eleven months after that announcement, the world of Grey’s Anatomy (discover the episodes considered true masterpieces) finds itself dealing with a loss that weighs heavily. To the public, he was Dr. Mark Sloan. To colleagues and friends, he was much more. He was a shining presence on set. Arriving in the second season almost on tiptoe, Dane had transformed a cameo into a central role, winning over viewers episode after episode. In total, there were 145, enough to enter the hearts of fans and stay there.
The series creator, Shonda Rhimes, remembered him as an actor capable of leaving a deep mark on the show’s history. These words do not sound like mere platitudes. Rhimes never hid how much Mark Sloan was one of the characters she loved to write the most. Emotional messages flooded social media. Kim Raver spoke of his irony and that mischievous look that always preceded a perfect joke. Producer Krista Vernoff recalled the day he returned to the set in 2021, when he agreed without hesitation to reprise his role in a special scene. “His hugs were the best,” she confided.
In a statement, ABC and 20th Television expressed their sympathy to the family, emphasizing Dane’s courage in facing his illness. But beyond the press releases, a sense of disbelief remains. We have lost an actor who marked an era in television, but above all a man who, according to everyone, knew how to make himself loved. Grey’s Anatomy will continue. Reruns will be aired, and streaming platforms will keep his most iconic scenes alive. And every time Mark Sloan walks onto the set with that confident half-smile, it will be impossible not to think of Eric. Of what he gave to the series.
Source: Variety