Wendy Williams, who is battling frontotemporal lobe dementia and aphasia, detailed her 'prison'-like conditions at the facility where she is living.
Wendy Williams spoke out against her court-ordered guardianship and denied reports that she'd become cognitively impaired on 'The Breakfast Club.'
Wendy Williams is fighting back against reports that she is impaired after having been diagnosed with progressive aphasia and frontotemporal dementia.
Wendy Williams was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia and aphasia last year and has remained out of the public eye
Wendy Williams is speaking out from a New York care facility where she is currently living, adamant that she is not "cognitively impaired" although under a guardianship.
Earlier this week, “Friends of the Williams Family” organized the “Support Wendy Williams’ Fight for Independence” fundraiser, aiming to speed up “her return” from her current New York wellness facility to Miami — what the organizers are considering to be her “rightful home” and where her elderly father lives.
Williams — who revealed she’s living in a New York City wellness facility — responded, “Hell f–king no” when Lemon, 58, asked if she was “incapacitated” as her guardian, Sabrina E. Morrissey, has claimed.
Wendy Williams is the latest celebrity placed under conservatorship, and friends and family are raising money to fight it.
Wendy Williams is under guardianship due to health issues, including aphasia and dementia, but is happy with family.
Wendy Williams was placed under a conservatorship with a court-appointed guardian in 2022 after being diagnosed with dementia.
The documentary "Susan" follows a woman living with frontotemporal dementia and her advocacy for others with the disease, highlighting the emotional impact on her family and their efforts to continue her legacy.
Wendy Williams' family wants to free the former talk show host from her guardianship following her interview on 'The Breakfast Club.'