MÖTÖRHEAD’s LEMMY Mural Appears On Spanish Street

Lemmy Mural

A small mural of iconic MÖTÖRHEAD frontman Ian Fraser “Lemmy” Kilmister recently appeared on a street in Bilbao, Basque Country, Spain.

According to Metal Journal, mural appeared on Lemmy‘s birthday, December 24.

Lemmy passed away on 28 December 2015, four days after his 70th birthday, from prostate cancer, cardiac arrhythmia and congestive heart failure. According to the band, his cancer had only been diagnosed two days prior to his death.

He had dealt with several health issues over the last few years of his life, including heart trouble, forcing him to cut back on his famous smoking habits.

As previously reported, Lemmy will get the biopic treatment.

The upcoming film, Lemmy, will be directed by Greg Olliver, who previously helmed the 2010 documentary of the same name, LemmyDeadline reported.

The film will follow Lemmy’s life growing up in Stoke on Trent, becoming a roadie for Jimi Hendrix and a member of HAWKWIND before establishing MOTÖRHEAD.

VMI Worldwide‘s Andre Relis will produce, alongside Damon Lane. The screenplay was written by Medeni Griffiths, with additional writing by Greg OlliverMOTÖRHEAD‘s manager Todd Singerman and Steffan Chirazi will serve as executive producers. Production will likely start in early 2021, depending on coronavirus restrictions.

“Everything you’ve heard about Lemmy is probably true… not because he was embracing rock ‘n’ roll clichés, but because he was creating them,” Olliver said. “Marlboro Reds and Jack Daniel’s for breakfast, speed for dinner — all true. But behind that steely-eyed façade of rock ‘n’ roll was also a compelling, complicated and lion-hearted man who stayed the course and never gave up playing the music that made him happy. We’ve been carefully developing this biopic since 2013, making sure to stay true to LemmyMOTÖRHEAD band members Phil Campbell and Mikkey Dee, and all the other folks that played important roles in Lemmy‘s life. This will be a film they’ll be proud of.”

“It is a story of immense cultural importance,” Chirazi and Singerman added, “If the last five years of his absence has taught us anything, it is that he was more unique than anyone could ever have known because no one touches the quality and sheer freedom of the man. Greg is a deeply trusted part of our circle, and we are delighted to see this film coming to fruition.”