Billy Joel's wife speaks out on his brain disorder diagnosis: 'Hopeful for his recovery'New Foto - Billy Joel's wife speaks out on his brain disorder diagnosis: 'Hopeful for his recovery'

Billy Joel'swife is speaking out about the singer'sbrain disorder diagnosis. Alexis Roderick Joel, who has been married tothe "Piano Man" singersince 2015, thanked fans "for the outpouring of love and support"in a statement sharedMay 26 on Instagram. The message came after Joel announced that he has been diagnosed withnormal pressure hydrocephalus, a brain disorder that has led to problems with his hearing, vision and balance. "We are so grateful for the wonderful care and swift diagnosis we received," Alexis Roderick Joel said. "Bill is beloved by so many, and to us, he is a father and husband who is at the center of our world. We are hopeful for his recovery. We look forward to seeing you all in the future." Billy Joel and Alexis Roderick Joel share two children together: Della, 9, and Remy, 7. The singer also shares daughterAlexa Ray Joel, 39, with his ex-wifeChristie Brinkley. Billy Joelbreaks silence on normal pressure hydrocephalus diagnosis, canceling concerts Brinkleypaid tribute to her ex-husband in her ownInstagram post on May 24, writing that the "whole Brinkley gang is sending you lots of love and good wishes for a full and speedy recovery." She continued by urging Joel to "please take good care of yourself" because "we all want you back in that white hot spotlight," adding, "We're always in the mood for your melodies And we all hope you're feeling alright!" Billy Joelhas normal pressure hydrocephalus. What is that, and what are symptoms? Joel's daughter Alexa Ray Joel, meanwhile,said in an Instagram post on May 24that her father is the "strongest and most resilient man I've ever known," and he is "entirely committed to making a full recovery with ongoing physical-therapy treatments as he continues to regain his strength." "The genuine care, empathy, and concern from everyone means so much to him ... it means a lot to me, too," she said. Joel canceled all of his upcoming performances as he shared news of his diagnosis of normal pressure hydrocephalus. The singer is undergoing physical therapy and "has been advised to refrain from performing" during his recovery, a statement shared on his Instagram said. According to the Cleveland Clinic, normal pressure hydrocephalus occurs when fluid buildup inside or around the brain disrupts brain function. "That can affect several brain-related abilities, including thinking and concentrating, memory, movement and more," the clinic notes. "The symptoms of NPH look very much like those of dementia, but NPH is sometimes reversible." "I'm sincerely sorry to disappoint our audience," Joel said, "and thank you for understanding." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Billy Joel's wife Alexis Roderick on singer's brain disorder diagnosis

Billy Joel's wife speaks out on his brain disorder diagnosis: 'Hopeful for his recovery'

Billy Joel's wife speaks out on his brain disorder diagnosis: 'Hopeful for his recovery' Billy Joel'swife is speaking out ab...
"Days of Our Lives "Stars Recall the Exact Moment They Knew Fans Loved Bo and Hope Brady

Gary Null/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Kristian Alfonso and Peter Reckell opened up in a new interview about playing Hope and Bo onDays of Our Livesand the characters' 40th wedding anniversary Alfonso explained that the pair only realized their characters had become a true supercouple after they were mobbed by fans at the airport The pair is returning as their iconic characters in new episodes ofDays of Our Lives Kristian Alfonsowas one-half of a soap opera supercouple, but it took her some time to realize. Alfonso andPeter Reckell— better known as Hope and Bo onDays of Our Lives— spoke toSwooonin a video published May 23 about their on-screen alter egos' long relationship, including their characters' 40th wedding anniversary. Alfonso, 61, first joinedDays of Our Livesas Hope Williams in 1983, taking over the role and bringing the character into her adult era. Reckell, 70, joined the series as the new character Bo Brady at about the same time. Bo was a rebel on a motorcycle who soon fell for the rich and spirited Hope. The actress explained that she and Reckell first realized how strongly fans were reacting to them when they went to Louisiana to shoot on location in 1984.  "We were on the plane, we landed in New Orleans, and I heard music before deplaning, and I was like, 'Pete, they're playing our theme song… Can you believe it?' " Alfonso said.Days of Our Livesused "Tonight I Celebrate My Love," a duet byRoberta Flackand Peabo Bryson, as the couple's theme. NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty "When we got off the jetway, there were thousands, thousands of people…. There were more people than when The Beatles arrived [in New York City in 1964], if you can even believe that," she continued. As for the couple's connection and why viewers adored it so much, Reckell said, "The love in that relationship was always there. No matter what was happening underneath, when we looked at each other — and lots of audience members say that — when we looked into each other's eyes, you could see the love that was just ever-present." "Good producers and writers, they lean into whatever you're bringing," Reckell said of how their chemistry was translated into storylines. "You look back on that time, and what they gave us was just incredible. The support they gave us, the writing they gave us, we were just so extremely fortunate to have this wholeDays of Our Livesholding us up." Bo and Hope married for the first time in 1985 in a "royal wedding" given to them by a British royal named Lady Joanna in thanks for their help saving her life. The wedding's exteriors were filmed on location in England, and the moment is considered one of the most expensive soap opera weddings ever. Paul Drinkwater/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Reflecting on the 40 years since the wedding, Alfonso told Swooon, "It feels like we blinked, and here we are. I'm at a loss for words, shockingly. It's incredible, it's just incredible, that we are still involved withDays of Our Livesand still a part of it." The wedding itself was stressful for the pair, they explained. "For some reason, the two of us basically hung on each other because that was the only thing that was a safe place," Reckell said. "There was so much pressure on that one moment." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Both Bo and Hope left the show in 1987, but returned in the 1990s. In 2000, the characters had a second wedding, and in 2008, they renewed their vows. Bo died in a 2016 plot, but (in true soap opera fashion) was later resurrected. Alfonsoleft the show in 2020after 37 years, butreturned two years laterwith Reckell for the spinoffDays of Our Lives: Beyond Salem.The pair announced their full return toDays of Our Livesback in September. Whether another wedding is in the cards, fans will have to wait and see. Days of Our Livespremieres new episodes weekdays onPeacock. Read the original article onPeople

“Days of Our Lives ”Stars Recall the Exact Moment They Knew Fans Loved Bo and Hope Brady

"Days of Our Lives "Stars Recall the Exact Moment They Knew Fans Loved Bo and Hope Brady Gary Null/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal vi...
Marcel Ophuls, the Oscar-winning filmmaker who forced France to face its WWII past, is dead at 97New Foto - Marcel Ophuls, the Oscar-winning filmmaker who forced France to face its WWII past, is dead at 97

PARIS (AP) — Marcel Ophuls, the Academy Award-winning filmmaker whose landmark 1969 documentary "The Sorrow and the Pity" shattered the comforting myth that most of France had resisted the Nazis during World War II — has died at 97. The German-born filmmaker, who was the son of legendary filmmaker Max Ophuls, died Saturday at his home in southwest France of natural causes, his grandson Andreas-Benjamin Seyfert told The Hollywood Reporter. Though Ophuls would later win anOscarfor "Hôtel Terminus" (1988), his searing portrait of Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, it was "The Sorrow and the Pity" that marked a turning point — not only in his career, but in how France confronted its past. Deemed too provocative, too divisive, it was banned from French television for over a decade. French broadcast executives said it "destroyed the myths the French still need." It would not air nationally until 1981. Simone Veil, Holocaust survivor and moral conscience of postwar France, refused to support it. But for a younger generation in a country still recovering physically and psychologically from the aftermath of the atrocities, the movie was a revelation — an unflinching historical reckoning that challenged both national memory and national identity. The myth it punctured had been carefully constructed by Charles de Gaulle, the wartime general who led Free French forces from exile and later became president. In the aftermath of France's liberation in 1944, de Gaulle promoted a version of events in which the French had resisted Nazi occupation as one people, united in dignity and defiance. Collaboration was portrayed as the work of a few traitors. The French Republic, he insisted, had never ceased to exist. "The Sorrow and the Pity," which was nominated for the 1972 Oscar for Best Documentary, told a different story: Filmed in stark black and white and stretching over four and a half hours, the documentary turned its lens on Clermont-Ferrand, a provincial town at the heart of France. Through long, unvarnished interviews with farmers, shopkeepers, teachers, collaborators, members of the French Resistance — even the town's former Nazi commander — Ophuls laid bare the moral ambiguities of life under occupation. There was no narrator, no music, no guiding hand to shape the audience's emotions. Just people — speaking plainly, awkwardly, sometimes defensively. They remembered, justified and hesitated. And in those silences and contradictions, the film delivered its most devastating message: that France's wartime story was not one of widespread resistance, but of ordinary compromise — driven by fear, self-preservation, opportunism, and, at times, quiet complicity. The film revealed how French police had aided in the deportation of Jews. How neighbors stayed silent. How teachers claimed not to recall missing colleagues. How many had simply gotten by. Resistance, "The Sorrow and the Pity" seemed to say, was the exception — not the rule. It was, in effect, the cinematic undoing of de Gaulle's patriotic myth — that France had resisted as one, and that collaboration was the betrayal of a few. Ophuls showed instead a nation morally divided and unready to confront its own reflection. Even beyond France, "The Sorrow and the Pity" became legendary. For cinephiles, its most famous cameo may be in Woody Allen's "Annie Hall": Alvy Singer (Allen) drags his reluctant girlfriend to a screening, and, in the film's bittersweet coda, she takes her new boyfriend to see it too — a nod to the documentary's singular place in film history. In a 2004 interview with The Guardian, Ophuls bristled at the charge that he had made the film to accuse. "It doesn't attempt to prosecute the French," he said. "Who can say their nation would have behaved better in the same circumstances?" Born in Frankfurt on Nov. 1, 1927, Marcel Ophuls was the son of legendary German-Jewish filmmaker Max Ophuls, director of "La Ronde," "Letter from an Unknown Woman", and "Lola Montès." When Hitler came to power in 1933, the family fled Germany for France. In 1940, as Nazi troops approached Paris, they fled again — across the Pyrenees into Spain, and on to the United States. Marcel became an American citizen and later served as a U.S. Army GI in occupied Japan. But it was his father's towering legacy that shaped his early path. "I was born under the shadow of a genius," Ophuls said in 2004. "I don't have an inferiority complex — I am inferior." He returned to France in the 1950s hoping to direct fiction, like his father. But after several poorly received features — including "Banana Peel" (1963), an Ernst Lubitsch-style caper starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jeanne Moreau — his path shifted. "I didn't choose to make documentaries," he told The Guardian. "There was no vocation. Each one was an assignment." That reluctant pivot changed cinema. After "The Sorrow and the Pity," Ophuls followed with "The Memory of Justice" (1976), a sweeping meditation on war crimes that examined Nuremberg but also drew uncomfortable parallels to atrocities in Algeria and Vietnam. In "Hôtel Terminus" (1988), he spent five years tracking the life of Klaus Barbie, the so-called "Butcher of Lyon," exposing not just his Nazi crimes but the role Western governments played in protecting him after the war. The film won him his Academy Award for Best Documentary but, overwhelmed by its darkness, French media reported that he attempted suicide during production. In "The Troubles We've Seen" (1994), he turned his camera on journalists covering the war in Bosnia, and on the media's uneasy relationship with suffering and spectacle. Despite living in France for most of his life, he often felt like an outsider. "Most of them still think of me as a German Jew," he said in 2004, "an obsessive German Jew who wants to bash France." He was a man of contradictions: a Jewish exile married to a German woman who had once belonged to the Hitler Youth; a French citizen never fully embraced; a filmmaker who adored Hollywood, but changed European cinema by telling truths others wouldn't. He is survived by his wife, Régine, their three daughters, and three grandchildren.

Marcel Ophuls, the Oscar-winning filmmaker who forced France to face its WWII past, is dead at 97

Marcel Ophuls, the Oscar-winning filmmaker who forced France to face its WWII past, is dead at 97 PARIS (AP) — Marcel Ophuls, the Academy Aw...
Here's who is performing at the American Music Awards tonightNew Foto - Here's who is performing at the American Music Awards tonight

The2025 American Music Awards, celebrating the past year in music, will kick off Monday night from Las Vegas. The ceremony, which is the largest fan-voted award show, airs live onCBS television stationsand streams onParamount+at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. It will be hosted by Jennifer Lopez, who will also perform.Janet Jacksonwill perform and receive the ICON Award, given to "an artist whose music has had undeniable cultural and global influence over the music industry," according to the AMAs. Rod Stewart, who will receive a lifetime achievement award at the show, is also set to perform. Here's who else has been announced as performers: List of American Music Awards performersBenson Boone, a first-time AMAnominee, will perform the latest single from his upcoming album "American Heart"Gloria Estefan is set to perform at the AMAs for the first time in more than 30 yearsJanet Jackson's performance will be her first TV performance since 2018Jennifer Lopez, who has performed at the AMAs more than 10 times, is also hosting the show for the second timeReneé Rapp will make her live award show performance debut, singing from her upcoming sophomore albumBlake Shelton makes his AMAs performance debut, singing a track from his album "For Recreational Use Only"Gwen Stefani is set to preform a medley celebrating the 20th anniversary of her album "Love. Angel. Music. Baby."Rod Stewart's AMAs performance will be his first in more than 20 yearsAlex Warren will make his award show performance debut at the AMAs,Billboard reportedLainey Wilson will perform ahead of the start of the U.S. leg of her Whirlwind World Tour The AMAs also announced several participants and presenters: List of American Music Awards presentersWayne BradyKai CenatJordan ChilesCiaraDan + ShayCara DelevingneAlix EarleDylan EfronNikki GlaserTiffany HaddishMegan MoroneyShaboozey Delta Air Lines' 100th year takes flight 9 young siblings killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza Full interview: Jack McCain on "Face the Nation"

Here's who is performing at the American Music Awards tonight

Here's who is performing at the American Music Awards tonight The2025 American Music Awards, celebrating the past year in music, will ki...
Queen Elizabeth's Cousin Flora Vesterberg Reveals Autism Diagnosis at Age 30: 'I Feel Relieved'New Foto - Queen Elizabeth's Cousin Flora Vesterberg Reveals Autism Diagnosis at Age 30: 'I Feel Relieved'

Dave Benett/Getty Princess Alexandra's granddaughter Flora Vesterberg shared that she was diagnosed with autism earlier this year Flora, 30, said she navigated challenges around her neurodiversity since childhood but felt compelled to pursue testing before undertaking a PhD The British royal family member said the diagnosis empowered her with a framework "to understand my experiences and sensitivities" Queen Elizabeth's cousinFlora Vesterberghas shared that she was diagnosed with autism at age 30. Flora is the granddaughter of Princess Alexandra, a first cousin of the late Queen, and opened up about her diagnosis in a first-person essay forBritish Vogueon May 25. "Earlier this year, I was diagnosed with autism. I've struggled quietly with the challenges of my neurodiversity since childhood, but am now also able to perceive its strengths," Flora began the essay. "Like many women, I only recently felt compelled to pursue a clinical assessment. It followed an urgent need for clarity ahead of beginning my PhD at The Courtauld Institute of Art," the art historian and broadcaster said. Following the diagnosis, Flora said that she felt "empowered by having a framework with which to understand my experiences and sensitivities," and that the diagnosis gave her "a sense of relief as well as validation." Sam Simpson/Dave Benett/Getty "I know that this will not only help me to be kinder to myself, but also help my community to support me effectively," she wrote. Flora said the diagnosis followed testing with Dr. Dimitrios Paschos, a leading consultant psychiatrist and honorary research fellow at King's College London, and mentioned that she was reflecting during Autism Awareness Month, which is observed around the world in April. The royal family member also shouted out theNow I Knowcampaign organized by the National Autistic Society of the U.K., which features a series of videos and photographs highlighting the experiences of women and non-binary individuals who were also diagnosed with autism later in life. "As someone who has previously felt overwhelmed by the limitations of undiagnosed autism, this series offered a powerful sense of community and relatability," Flora wrote. "It was also a reminder that autism comes in many different forms and can affect anyone, regardless of their background or career." The daughter of James and Julie Oglivy said that the diagnosis brought her clarity and voiced a wish to help other women with autism advocate for what they need. Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty "Whilst my journey with autism feels like it only truly began with my diagnosis, I feel relieved to now have a clearer understanding of my emotional needs as well as the strengths that I should lean into," she wrote elsewhere in the essay. "...These can sometimes be overshadowed by the accompanying struggles, but that's when I hope to encourage myself – and other autistic women – to be open with their community, and develop rituals to help them embrace their neurodiversity." Flora turned 30 in December 2024 and cited a statistic from Dr. Paschos that 80% of women with autism remain undiagnosed by age 18. She said she penned the essay "in the hope that I can contribute to advocating for a shift in that statistic over time." Jonathan Brady/PA Images via Getty Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more! The PhD. student married Timothy Vesterberg, a Swedish financier and former professional hockey player, in a private ceremony at the Chapel Royal of St. James's Palace in September 2020 amid the COVID pandemic,followed by a church blessing one year laterwith royal wedding energy. There, the bride sparkled in Princess Alexandra's Ogilvy Tiara in its pearl setting for the celebration attended byPrince Edward,Sophie, the Duchess of Edinburgh, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, Lord Frederick Windsor, his wife Sophie Winkleman and more royal family members. Read the original article onPeople

Queen Elizabeth's Cousin Flora Vesterberg Reveals Autism Diagnosis at Age 30: 'I Feel Relieved'

Queen Elizabeth's Cousin Flora Vesterberg Reveals Autism Diagnosis at Age 30: 'I Feel Relieved' Dave Benett/Getty Princess Alexa...

 

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