A painful new chapter has emerged in Fiona Phillipsâ ongoing battle with Alzheimerâs â and this time, itâs the silence that hurts the most.
Speaking candidly on Good Morning Britain, Fionaâs husband Martin Frizell shared a heartbreaking update about the former presenterâs condition, revealing that she no longer wants to talk about the disease that has slowly reshaped their lives.
Fiona, now 65, was diagnosed with the progressive neurodegenerative condition in 2022. At first, she faced it with openness and courage â even writing a deeply personal book, Remember When: My Life with Alzheimerâs, to help others understand the reality of living with the illness.
But that chapter has now closed.
âThe book she wrote last year â she absolutely was talking about it,â Martin told viewers. âBut now, the way sheâs dealing with it â and everyone is different â is that she doesnât want to talk about the âA wordâ. And we donât.â
According to Martin, Fiona is now âfrightenedâ â a stark contrast to the fearless woman viewers knew from her 12 years on ITVâs GMTV sofa.
As the disease has progressed, Fiona has developed chronic depression, a recognised symptom of Alzheimerâs. Martin explained that this has marked a profound shift in her personality and how she copes day to day.
âShe used to be fearless,â he said quietly. âThatâs changed.â
Earlier this month, Martin also revealed another devastating milestone: Fiona no longer remembers last Christmas.
Despite the decline, he is careful to stress that she is still very much herself in many ways.
âI donât want people to think sheâs some sort of basket case,â he previously said on Lorraine. âSheâs very much with us. Sheâs still the worldâs most stubborn woman and still pottering around the house.â
But the reality of daily life has become increasingly difficult.
Martin admitted he can no longer drive Fiona or take her on public transport, as she often doesnât understand where she is going â or why. During journeys, she repeatedly asks what is happening, sometimes four or five times a minute, stuck in an exhausting loop of confusion.
As a result, Fionaâs home has become her only safe place â a restriction that has taken a heavy emotional toll not just on her, but on her entire family.
Martin has previously described the experience as âwretchedâ, explaining the particular cruelty of watching someone you love still be there â yet slowly slip away.
Itâs a quiet, devastating reality â one that no headline can soften.
And for Martin, perhaps the most painful sign of all isnât the fading memoriesâŠ
but the moment Fiona decided she could no longer speak about it.



