Martin Frizell, the former This Morning editor and longtime partner of TV presenter Fiona Phillips, has given one of the most raw and heartbreaking interviews of his life, admitting he is quietly slipping into depression as he watches the woman he loves slowly disappear to Alzheimer’s disease.

In an exclusive conversation with The Mirror published on February 14, 2026 — just days after Fiona’s 64th birthday — Frizell fought back tears as he described the daily reality of caring for his wife, who was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s in 2022. “She’s still here,” he said, voice cracking. “But we’re losing her every day. Some mornings she knows me. Some mornings she looks at me like I’m a stranger. And every time that happens, a little piece of me breaks.”

Fiona Phillips, a beloved face on British television for decades as a GMTV and ITV Breakfast presenter, first shared her diagnosis publicly in 2023. At the time, she spoke with characteristic courage and candor, hoping to raise awareness and reduce stigma around early-onset Alzheimer’s, which affects people under 65. She described the confusion, memory loss, and frustration she experienced, and vowed to fight the disease with everything she had.

But in the two years since, the progression has been relentless. Frizell revealed that Fiona now struggles with basic tasks — dressing, cooking, even recognizing familiar faces. “The woman who used to command a live studio audience with such ease now can’t always remember how to make a cup of tea,” he said. “She’ll stand in the kitchen looking lost. I have to guide her gently. It kills me every time.”

The emotional toll on Frizell has been profound. He admitted to quietly battling depression, describing sleepless nights, loss of appetite, and a growing sense of helplessness. “I’m supposed to be the strong one,” he said. “But I’m grieving someone who’s still alive. That’s the hardest part. You lose them piece by piece, and you can’t stop it. You just have to watch.”

The couple, who married in 1998 and have two sons together, have tried to maintain as much normalcy as possible. Fiona still enjoys music, walks in the garden, and time with the family dog. Frizell has become her full-time carer, managing medications, daily routines, and the increasing safety concerns that come with advanced Alzheimer’s. “I promised her ‘in sickness and in health,’” he said. “I meant it. But no one prepares you for this.”

The interview has struck a deep chord with the public. Fiona’s openness about her diagnosis has already helped reduce stigma and encouraged thousands to seek early testing and support. Now, Martin’s raw honesty about the caregiver’s side of the disease has amplified that conversation. Social media has been flooded with messages of love and solidarity, with many sharing their own stories of caring for loved ones with dementia. “This is what real love looks like,” one viral comment read. “It’s not glamorous. It’s heartbreaking. But it’s real.”

Frizell ended the interview with a plea for greater awareness and support for carers: “There are so many of us out here doing this quietly. We need help — practical, emotional, financial. Alzheimer’s doesn’t just take the person who’s ill. It takes the whole family.”

For now, the couple continues to face each day together. Fiona still has moments of clarity and laughter, and Martin clings to those. “She’s still my Fiona,” he said. “Even on the hardest days, she’s still the woman I fell in love with. I’ll keep fighting for her — for us — until the very end.”

The image of Martin Frizell — once the confident, unflappable television executive — now quietly caring for his wife as she slips away, is a powerful reminder of the hidden human cost of dementia. It is not a dramatic collapse but a slow, relentless erosion — and it is happening in homes across the country every single day.

As Fiona and Martin continue their journey, they do so with the love and support of a nation that has watched Fiona bring warmth and joy into living rooms for decades. Now, they ask only for understanding, compassion, and the recognition that behind every diagnosis is a family fighting to hold on to what remains.