PreviousThey said the scene was “too personal,” but when early viewers whispered about Bruce Springsteen visiting Clarence Clemons’s grave at dawn — alone, shaking, carrying something wrapped in cloth — the story took on a life of its own. They described him walking through the mist like a man chasing a voice only he could hear, stopping at the headstone engraved with a golden saxophone before the camera caught his hands trembling. Those who saw it swear Bruce knelt, placed something on the stone, and whispered a line that made even the editor cry. Rumors spread that he played a melody beside the grave, one that sounded less like a song and more like a conversation between two brothers separated by time. The studio cut it, saying audiences “weren’t ready” for a moment that raw, that human. But insiders insist it was the closest Bruce has ever come to saying goodbye on camera…
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