Wendy William's new documentary was supposed to document the next steps in the talk-show host's life and career, following the cancelling of The Wendy Williams Show in June 2022.
By the end of filming, it had become a tragic chronicle of her cognitive decline.
The four-part Lifetime series Where Is Wendy Williams? was shot between August 2022 and April 2023. Three days before the documentary was set to air this year, Williams' guardians announced she had since been diagnosed with primary progressive aphasia and frontotemporal dementia — the same condition affecting Bruce Willis.
This information makes watching the series especially uncomfortable and potentially unethical.
And to be brutally honest, it's one of the most disturbing things I've ever watched. And yes, I've seen all four episodes.
At first, Where Is Wendy Williams? sets out to document the controversial host's career comeback, as the former The Wendy Williams Show star sets out to start a podcast.
But very quickly, the plan is derailed by Wendy's dwindling mental state.
This is not the confident, witty, and effortlessly iconic Wendy Williams fans know and love. This documentary introduces a vastly different Williams.
The star is in the grips of legal and financial issues that have sprung from her being placed under legal guardianship in May 2022, after her then-financial advisers claimed that she was unfit to manage her own funds. In the years since, Williams has lived under the guardianship of lawyer Sabrina Morrissey, who declined to be interviewed in the docuseries.
Wendy's health is clearly in its most fragile state in the doco. The host is showing early signs of dementia and also struggling with alcoholism and addiction. Throughout the countless interviews filmed in her New York City penthouse, Williams cannot form coherent sentences. She's caught with half-drunken bottles of vodka, she's abrasive and volatile, and her appearance is noticeably dishevelled and frail.
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