Bruce Willis enjoys ride through LA after wife revealed dementia-stricken actor is now living in separate home

Bruce Willis enjoys ride through LA after wife revealed dementia-stricken actor is now living in separate home
By: dailymail Posted On: September 12, 2025 View: 224

Bruce Willis has been pictured enjoying a ride through town after his wife Emma Heming Willis revealed they had moved the dementia-stricken star into a separate residence for round-the-clock care. 

Willis, 70, who is suffering from frontotemporal dementia, appeared in good spirits as a driver took their vehicle in for a car wash.

The pair were seen travelling down a road in sunny Los Angeles on Thursday, the driver drinking a coffee as Willis relaxed in the front passenger seat with a pair of stylish black sunglasses shielding his eyes. 

Willis was diagnosed in 2023 with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), a cruel condition that strips away language and personality. 

He has since stepped back from Hollywood, while Emma has taken on the role of guiding their family through the heartbreaking changes.

Married for 16 years, the couple share two daughters, Mabel, 13, and Evelyn, 11.

Bruce Willis was pictured enjoying a ride through Los Angeles on Thursday

Emma revealed last week that her 'hardest decision' was moving Bruce into a separate residence, where he is now supported by a round-the-clock care team as his health declines.

In her new book, The Unexpected Journey: Finding Strength, Hope, and Yourself on the Caregiving Path, Emma recounts the traumatic moment she sat her girls down to share the devastating news — a memory she describes as both heartbreaking and life-altering.

'"We’ve come to a point in Daddy’s disease where the care he requires is changing. It has to be more tailored to his every need," I told them. "And you should be in a home that is more tailored to your needs now,"' Emma wrote, per TooFab

'"Also, Daddy would want you to have playdates, sleepovers, and more freedom than you’ve been able to have here. That would make him so happy."' 

Emma said she tried to soften the blow for Mabel and Evelyn by telling them Bruce’s new residence would simply be their 'second home.' 

She explained that the house was set up as 'a place they’d keep personal things like toys, arts and crafts supplies, bathing suits, pjs, and games, and that we could go stay with him anytime they wanted.”

Though she admitted the decision was 'painful,' Emma emphasized that it reflected what Bruce would have wanted for their family.

Willis watched the sights through a pair of stylish black sunglasses
The driver sipped on a cup of coffee as they travelled through sunny LA
It comes several weeks after his wife Emma revealed the actor is now living separately from her and their young daughters; (pictured 2013)
Married for 16 years, the couple share two daughters, Mabel, 13, and Evelyn, 11

'Even though they’d lived with his disease for so long that they understood, and even though this decision ensures Bruce’s overall well-being and safety and allows our young children to thrive, it was an uncertain and painful time for us,' she shared. 

'In fact, it’s still painful for me. After all, this is my husband, and having him in another home was not part of the future we’d mapped out together. You really can’t dream this stuff up.'

The book reveals comes after Emma revealed the devastating day she learned her husband was facing a future with dementia.

'
Emma said she tried to soften the blow for Mabel and Evelyn by telling them Bruce¿s new residence would simply be their 'second home'

'I'm sure the doctor was explaining what FTD is, [but] I couldn't hear a single thing,' she recently told People

'I had pins and needles going through my body. My ears were wafting. I'm sure he was feeding us information but all I heard was just, "Check back in and here's a pamphlet".'

While the diagnosis finally explained Bruce’s troubling behavioral changes, Emma says she was left shaken by the lack of direction or support.

'I was grateful to get to a diagnosis, but there is no cure for this disease, and being sent on our way with no support, no nothing was really traumatic,' she admitted. 

'It's not just happening to us. This is how many people are receiving their diagnosis.' 

Like millions of Americans facing dementia in their families, Emma found herself without a clear path forward after Bruce’s diagnosis. 

With little guidance from doctors, she turned to her own research.

'I ended up searching the web to figure out what to do,' she admitted.

'I'm sure the doctor was explaining what FTD is, [but] I couldn't hear a single thing,' she told People on Friday; 'I had pins and needles going through my body. My ears were wafting. I'm sure he was feeding us information but all I heard was just,

That period, she recalls, was profoundly isolating and 'bleak.'

‘Early on, life felt very dark, very one-note of just grief and sadness,’ she explained.

As the primary caregiver, Emma says she felt overwhelmed — balancing Bruce’s needs, safeguarding his privacy, and raising their two young daughters largely on her own.

Eventually, she began carving out a way forward. 

She leaned on medical experts, connected with others in similar situations, and found a sense of purpose in speaking out. 

‘Early on I was too scared to say anything to anyone. It felt like what was happening was only happening to us,’ she said. 

‘I realized it would be beneficial to talk about it and raise awareness so people get to the doctor sooner, can be diagnosed sooner, get into clinical trials.’

That hard-won perspective has now shaped her new book, The Unexpected Journey: Finding Strength, Hope, and Yourself on the Caregiving Path, written as a guide for families navigating neurodegenerative disease. 

'I was grateful to get to a diagnosis, but there is no cure for this disease, and being sent on our way with no support, no nothing was really traumatic,' she admitted

‘I wrote the book that I wish someone had handed me on the day we received the diagnosis,’ she explained.

‘Caregiving is hard, and there are many people doing it with little to no support ... The only way I can get through this is to help someone else feel less alone.’

Her remarks come after a family insider informed the Daily Mail that Bruce is 'going downhill fast' to the point he 'doesn't know some faces' anymore.

Bruce's blended family has rallied around him amid his illness, including his ex-wife Demi Moore and their daughters Rumer, 37, Scout, 34, and Tallulah, 31.

The Daily Mail source said Bruce's daughters are 'are all spending as much time with him as they can,' adding: 'He lights up when he sees his children.' 

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