Lucille Ball mini-bio: Remembered as a dizzy sitcom redhead with show business aspirations, Lucille Ball was, in fact, a show business powerhouse and television pioneer. Throughout her teen years, Ball tried unsuccessfully to launch her show business career, finally landing a spot as a "Ziegfeld Girl". She launched her Hollywood career as one of the "Goldwyn Girls", but she moved out from the crowd of starlets to starring roles. With "I Love Lucy" (1951), she and husband Desi Arnaz pioneered the 3-camera technique now the standard in filming TV sitcoms, and the concept of syndicating television programs. She was also the first woman to own her own film studio as the head of Desilu.
On April 18, 1989, Ball experienced chest pains, and was rushed to the Emergency Room of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center where she had bypass surgery and received an aorta from a donor to fix her damaged one. On April 26, 1989, Lucille Ball unexpectedly died after the aorta ruptured in a different area, far from where the replacement was attached. Her remains were initially interred in the Forest Lawn – Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles, but were later moved by her children to the Lake View Cemetery, in Jamestown, New York.