It was a quiet Tuesday-level moment in a celebrity news cycle that rarely slows down — but the sight of Andy Dick signing autographs for fans stopped more than a few people cold. Five months ago, by his own account, the comedian was not expected to be signing anything at all.
Dick, 58, suffered a near-fatal overdose in December 2025. He later told Page Six in unambiguous terms that he “legit died” during the incident, the kind of quote that tends to land in a headline and stay there. This week he resurfaced in public, pen in hand, posing with fans in what Page Six described as a rare appearance — rare being the operative word for someone whose last major news cycle involved a hospital stay.
Dick built his name on NBC’s NewsRadio through the late 1990s and carried a volatile public profile well into the social-media era, cycling through tabloid front pages for reasons that ranged from professional to deeply personal. A December overdose serious enough to prompt his own “legit died” assessment would register as a reset moment for anyone.
No formal statement accompanied the sighting, and his representatives had not commented publicly at the time of filing. The autographs, at least, appear to be real. His next scheduled public appearance has not been confirmed.