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Fiona Phillips' desperate plea to husband as Alzheimer's 'wipes her away'
Fiona Phillips' desperate plea to husband as Alzheimer's 'wipes her away'

Daily Mirror

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

Fiona Phillips' desperate plea to husband as Alzheimer's 'wipes her away'

Ahead of the publication of their new book, Fiona Phillips and her dedicated husband, Martin Frizell, have spoken candidly about the realities of life with Alzheimer's Disease, including the former presenter's heartbreaking plea In a candid admission, Fiona Phillips' devoted husband, Martin Frizell, has opened up about the desperate plea she's made as the couple deals with the everyday realities of living with Alzheimer's Disease. Fiona and Martin first locked eyes on the set of GMTV, back when he was chief correspondent. Although independent-minded Fiona had never intended to marry, they fell in love quickly and tied the knot in a 1997 Las Vegas wedding. ‌ In the years since, Fiona and Martin, who share sons Nathaniel and Mackenzie, have stuck by each other through thick and thin. When Fiona, 64, was given a shock Alzheimer's diagnosis in 2022, after months of suffering from brain fog and anxiety, Martin made sure to be there for her every step of the way. ‌ Now Martin has offered a devastating insight into how their lives have changed, with his "glamorous, glittering star" of a wife now vulnerable and in need of constant reassurance. In a joint piece penned for the Mail Online, producer and editor Martin shed light on the "isolating" nature of Fiona's illness, admitting, "the dinner-party invitations have dried up". ‌ Martin wrote: "It's not that Fiona would even want to go out for dinner, but sometimes it would be nice to be asked. I don't think people are deliberately trying to exclude us; they're just not sure what to say, and so they say nothing at all. "And it does feel lonely. It feels selfish to say that because this is not about me – it's about Fiona and she's the one who is really suffering in all this. She's the one who feels lonely and scared and is often in pain." ‌ Sadly, when Martin does try to head out alone, Fiona finds it difficult to be left, sometimes even begging him to stay. He continued: "Sometimes when I'm going out, she will say, 'Please don't leave me,' because she wants me to be close by. And it breaks my heart that my strong, independent wife has become so vulnerable." In the same piece, Canterbury-born Fiona spoke of the challenges she faces as her "memory skips away", with even her most precious memories now difficult to grasp - a feeling that she's likened to "trying to chase a £5 note that's fallen out of your purse on a gusty day". ‌ Paying tribute to her supportive husband, Martin, the mum of two shared: "I couldn't be writing this at all without my husband Martin, and my closest friends, who are helping me articulate more clearly the thoughts I once had that are now harder for me to reach. "I used to be able to talk to anyone about anything (a skill inherited from my mum), and then I made a career out of chatting to people on television. Nowadays, I can find talking about my life agonisingly difficult. Sometimes I get halfway through a sentence and I can't remember where I was heading with it or the word I was looking for. It feels awful." Fiona was only in her early 60s when she learned she had Alzheimer's - an illness she had assumed she wouldn't have to think about for another 20 years. She had initially attributed her symptoms to going through menopause, but further tests revealed the devastating diagnosis. ‌ Speaking previously with the Mirror, former breakfast TV host Fiona divulged: 'It's something I might have thought I'd get at 80. But I was still only 61 years old. 'I felt more angry than anything else because this disease has already impacted my life in so many ways; my poor mum was crippled with it, then my dad, my grandparents, my uncle. It just keeps coming back for us.' With Martin's assistance, Fiona has penned a book called Remember When: My Life With Alzheimer's, which is set to be published later this month. Remember When: My Life With Alzheimer's by Fiona Phillips (Macmillan, £22), is to be published July 17.

Cause of death revealed for veteran actor Tony Mathews
Cause of death revealed for veteran actor Tony Mathews

Yahoo

time05-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Cause of death revealed for veteran actor Tony Mathews

An inquest into the death of veteran actor Tony Mathews has concluded that the 81-year-old died because his heart could not pump enough blood around his body. Lawyers representing Mr Mathews' relatives had argued there had been a series of medical errors following an operation at Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital in Margate. The coroner for North East Kent found that there had sufficient monitoring of Mr Mathews whilst he was a patient but raised a concern about the hospital's record keeping. A spokesperson for East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust said it would "carefully review the coroner's findings to identify any further learning opportunities in addition to the changes we have already put in place". Mr Mathews appeared in numerous TV shows during his two-decade career including The Bill and Inspector Morse. The Canterbury-born actor was living in Ramsgate at the time of his death. He was a patient at the hospital's Spencer Wing for private patients who pay for medical procedures. He was admitted in December 2023 to reverse a stoma following "life-saving" surgery eight months earlier. In the days after the operation, Mr Mathews' condition deteriorated and he was resuscitated through blood transfusions. The coroner said a doctor's decision to resume Mr Mathew's blood thinning medication likely contributed to internal bleeding after the surgery. Coroner Sarah Clarke said: "Had Apixaban not been restarted we would have been having a very different conversation." "My concern is that there was no documentation of the rationale for this decision being made." Lawyers representing the Mathews family said they were still exploring a civil compensation claim against the hospital. Leigh Day solicitor Frankie Rhodes said: "It's ultimately about trying to find some accountability, to seek answers, to get justice not only for this family but actually for others and to try and prevent any mistakes happening again." Speaking after the inquest, Mr Mathew's son Kent paid tribute to his father. "My dad Tony Mathews was a loving father, a talented actor and painter." He added: "We now have some closure, which is what we hoped for. Rest in peace dad." Follow BBC Kent on Facebook, on X, and on Instagram. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@ or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250. East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust

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