
Fiona Phillipsâ heartbreaking journey with early-onset Alzheimerâs has taken a devastating turn, as her husband Martin Frizell reveals she no longer recognises their son and has become increasingly confused during simple moments.
The former This Morning editor opened up in a deeply emotional interview on Newsnight, sharing the daily reality of caring for his wife since her diagnosis in 2022. âI used to say there were good days and bad days,â he admitted. âNow, itâs just bad or wretched. Wretched is the word I use now.â

Martin described a distressing car ride where he was taking Fiona, now 63, to the hospital due to unexplained pain. During that short journey, she asked him, âWhere are we going?ââan astonishing 72 times. âShe didnât know where she was, and I had to keep reminding her we were going to the doctor,â he said.
Sadly, Fionaâs condition has declined to the point where she sometimes fails to recognise even close family members, including their children. Martin revealed, âShe still looks like herself, the way viewers remember her on TV. So people come up to her and say hello. But she doesnât understand whatâs happening. Itâs distressing.â

Making a devastating confession, Martin said he wished Fiona had been diagnosed with cancer instead of Alzheimerâs. âMy mum and dad both had cancerâI know what that journey looks like. With Alzheimerâs, thereâs no chance of remission. Thereâs no slowing it down. I donât think Fiona will ever sip a glass of wine again, or walk a beach, or go to the theatre.â
Fiona and Martin, who married in 1997 and have two sons, are now facing the brutal reality of her disease together. Martin fears that when the end comes, âshe might not even know who we are.â

This week, Fionaâs memoir Remember When: My Life with Alzheimerâs is released. Co-written with journalist Alison Phillips and husband Martin, the book details the slow and painful progress of the illness, the emotional toll on caregivers, and Fionaâs brave attempt to document her fading memories.