Bruce Willis has been living with frontotemporal dementia since his diagnosis in 2023, a progressive and incurable condition that primarily affects communication and behavior — a reality his family has been navigating with a courage and an openness that the people who love him have found both heartbreaking and profoundly instructive. His wife Emma Heming Willis has become one of the most important and most honest voices in the conversation around FTD, sharing details of his decline with a specificity and a rawness that the medical community has praised and the public has received with the particular gratitude of people who needed someone to say the difficult things out loud.
In an August 2025 interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer, Emma said something about her husband’s condition that stopped everyone who heard it completely cold: “Bruce is still very mobile. Bruce is in really great health overall — it’s just his brain that is failing him.” Those words — the brutal, loving precision of them, the way they hold both the man who is still present and the disease that is taking him simultaneously without flinching from either — are the kind that land somewhere permanent and stay there. More recently Emma revealed that Bruce is unaware of his own diagnosis, explaining the neurological condition called anosognosia that prevents his brain from identifying what is happening to it — and that she considers this, in the most heartbreaking of ways, something of a blessing: “I’m really happy he doesn’t know about it,” she said. “He is still very much present in his body.” The family surrounding Bruce Willis — Emma, Demi Moore, and their daughters — has been a model of grace under an impossible weight, and what they continue to share about the man at the center of all of it is both a gift to the millions who love him and the most honest portrait of love under impossible circumstances that Hollywood has ever produced.