SALT LAKE CITY — The Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square paid tribute on Sunday morning to President Russell M. Nelson, who led The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in a live broadcast of Music and the Spoken Word.

Some of those attending the broadcast at the Tabernacle were actors and celebrities from the FanX comic convention in Salt Lake, which just wrapped up.

Dan Farr, who produces FanX, credits President Nelson – who died Saturday night at age 101 – with saving his life.

“I would not be here today if it wasn’t for him,” Farr told KSL-TV.

Farr said in 1973, when he was 5 years old, he had open-heart surgery. The surgeon was then-Dr. Russell Nelson, who would later become a Latter-day Saint apostle and, eventually, the worldwide faith’s president.

That surgery, Farr explained, allowed him to live beyond his childhood. As he got older, Farr interacted with the church leader multiple times.

“I reminded him who I was and who my parents were, and he said, ‘Didn’t I perform a coarctation of the aorta on you?'” Farr recalled. “How can he remember it after so many years? He just had an amazing mind.”

John Rhys-Davies, an actor famous for his roles in Lord of the Rings and Indiana Jones, was also at the Music and the Spoken Word broadcast Sunday. He met President Nelson several years ago.

“He was a most remarkable fellow,” Rhys-Davies said in an interview outside Temple Square.

The actor even attended the church leader’s 95th birthday celebration back in 2019.

“I bought him a little hat for his birthday,” Rhys-Davies said, smiling. He wondered what he should give the church president on his birthday. “So, I found him a little Irish hat to keep his head warm, and apparently, he wore it once or twice, too.”

Rhys-Davies, who was a guest performer during the Tabernacle Choir’s Christmas concert in 2013, said he admired President Nelson’s faith. The actor also enjoyed seeing the choir and orchestra pay tribute to the late church president at Sunday’s live broadcast.

“I think he was a giant. He must go down as one of your very, very great presidents or prophets,” Rhys-Davies said. “I loved the man … He was a very exemplary leader.”

Julie Keyes, who plays the harp in the Orchestra at Temple Square, said it was emotional performing at Sunday’s broadcast and processing the news of President Nelson’s death.

“The music that we gave today was of hope and of peace,” Keyes said. “Hopefully, we comforted some of the family and some of the saints, and that’s what our mission is, is to bring that hope and that peace to those throughout the world.”

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.