for AARP Magazine, saying he was diagnosed in 2016 but started to show real signs of decline two years later, while he was recording an album with Lady Gaga. “There’s a lot about him that I miss,” his wife, Susan Bennett, told the magazine. “Because he’s not the old Tony anymore … But when he sings, he’s the old Tony.”The 94-year-old’s condition has progressed since his diagnosis, but according to the magazine, he has thankfully “been spared the disorientation that can prompt patients to wander from home, as well as the episodes of terror, rage or depression.”Bennett first expressed concern about his health in 2015 when he had trouble remembering fellow musicians’ names.
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