From this explanation, I can see how he died on stage and the scene we saw was his final moments because everything he wanted to happen in real life, happened. 1. he got a great review from the NY Times 2. He got the front page review from the NY Times Art section vs. Michael/Edward Norton 3. People are lighting vigils all around the world, so he's popular/has attention 4. He attorney literately said, this play will run forever vs. that critic saying it will close 5. His daughter got him the lilacs he wanted vs. the beginning of the film getting him random flowers 6. His daughter showing love and affection towards him. 7. His daughter seeing him "fly" is apart of her thinking he's cool and relevant (plus the 80,000 followers in one day on Twitter is included in being relevant).
I do not agree that he died on stage and the hospital stuff is a dream. Yes, all the things he wanted came true, but why? What did he have to do to achieve his dream? Exactly... he literally had to shoot himself to get the attention that he desired. It's a social commentary on what it means to be famous these days. This is foreshadowed in the scene after he runs around the streets in his underwear and videos of him go viral and are all over the news. His daughter tells him: "Believe it or not, THIS is power." Again, it's a commentary on the ridiculousness of fame and popularity in today's society. IMO. Kim Kardashian will make the front page, while something actually important and substantial will be on page 20, for example.
Also, if "he's dead and dreaming" was how you explain him flying at the end, and his daughter seeing him fly, then how would you explain the other flying scene in the middle of the movie and all the other times he uses superpowers (levitation, telekinesis)? You'd have to change your interpretation to "he was dead the entire film." :P
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