Dame Judi Dench Says Vision Loss Keeps Her Out of Public Eye
The 90-year-old Oscar winner says she can no longer go out solo: Somebody “will always be with me…because I can’t see and I will walk into something or fall over.”
The veteran English actress said that she now needed to attend public events with someone else, because of her worsening macular degeneration.
Who wants to be Judi Dench’s plus one to every event? Because she really needs the help. On Trini Woodall’s Fearless podcast, Dench says her failing eyesight is now preventing her from going out alone.
But "fortunately," she doesn't have to go out alone now "because I pretend to have no eyesight," she said.
Judi Dench can no longer see on film sets due to her macular degeneration eye condition. The 90-year-old actress appeared on British entrepreneur Trinny Woodall’s “Fearless” podcast last week and revealed that she can’t go out alone anymore due to the disease.
DAME Judi Dench has revealed she can no longer leave her house alone due to her deteriorating eyesight. The legendary actress, 90, first opened up about her age-related
Renowned actress Dame Judi Dench has opened up about her devastating current health battle that means she has to be accompanied when leaving home
Judi Dench says she can no longer leave her home alone as her eyesight deteriorates, saying she needs someone to “always be with me”.
This executive order stated that continued withholding of the John F. Kennedy records is long overdue and not in the public interest
Judi Dench revealed her vision has become so poor that she refrains from going out on her own. The actress, who was diagnosed with macular degeneration in 2012‚ discussed her health woes on a recent episode of the "Fearless" podcast with Trinny Woodall.
Symptoms of a little-known condition have been shared after Dame Judi Dench opened up about her deteriorating health. She revealed she can no longer go out alone due to one rarely reported issue. The actress was diagnosed with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) back in 2012. The condition typically blurs vision in the centre of an eye.