The truth about Robin Williams is revealed by Sam Neill, and it is heartbreaking…

When Robin Williams passed away, the world lost a real treasure.

Williams, a beloved comedian and entertainer who was nearly incomparable, passed away in 2014 after receiving an incorrect diagnosis of Parkinson’s illness.

In 2019, it will have been a whole decade since we last saw the Jumanji and Mrs. Doubtfire star. His death has

left an enormous void in the entertainment business, and he will be sorely missed by millions of people around the world.

The extent of Williams’ problems was perhaps the most tragic facet of his death, and it was only brought to public notice after his passing.

Despite his outwardly positive demeanor and his undying dedication to making other people laugh, he had been struggling internally for quite some time.

A similar story was told in the memoir Did I Ever Tell You This? by actor Sam Neill. what a “lonely man on a lonely earth” Williams was….

Sam Neill, who played Ian Malcolm in Jurassic Park, reportedly opened out about his friendship with Robin Williams, and the details are heartbreaking.

Did I Ever Tell You This? is Neill’s memoir about his time working with Robin Williams in 1999’s Bicentennial Man and the friendship they formed on set.

The New Zealand actor, who has been fighting stage three cancer, wrote about Williams in his autobiography, calling him the ‘funniest’ and ‘saddest’ person he had ever encountered.

People published an excerpt from Neill’s autobiography in which he recalled how he and his colleagues would ‘chat about this and that, sometimes even the task we were about to accomplish.’

The words ’irresistibly, outrageously, irrepressibly, gigantically humorous’ were used to describe Williams.

Although Neill acknowledged his co-comic star’s persona, he was as open about the agony he observed behind it.

Neill penned, ‘The world was his oyster; he was famous, wealthy, well-liked, and the proud father of two wonderful children.’

Even yet, I was overcome with compassion for him.
A lonely man on a lonely world best describes him.

Neill continued, saying that he could tell Williams was ’inconsolably alone, and genuinely miserable’ the moment he ripped open the door, describing Williams as having a ‘black void inside.’

It can’t be denied that Williams was in a battle with forces out to kill him. He was initially diagnosed

with Parkinson’s disease in 2014, but it was later determined that he actually had Lewy body dementia.

Robin’s wife, Susan Schneider Williams, who he wed in 2011, has revealed, ‘Almost every region of his brain was under attack.’ He felt himself falling apart.

There is no treatment for his sickness,’ she said.Even though Robin’s brain was one of the worst examples of Lewy body dementia doctors had ever seen, he had a positive attitude.

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