The Guardian (USA)

Beach Boys star Brian Wilson has dementia

- Ben Beaumont-Thomas

It has been announced that the Beach Boys co-founder and musical mastermind Brian Wilson has dementia, as his family move to appoint new conservato­rs to help him following the death of his wife.

A statement on Wilson’s website reads: “Following the passing of Brian’s beloved wife Melinda, after careful considerat­ion and consultati­on among Brian, his seven children, [housekeepe­r] Gloria Ramos and Brian’s doctors (and consistent with family processes put in place by Brian and Melinda), we are confirming that longtime Wilson family representa­tives LeeAnn Hard and Jean Sievers will serve as Brian’s co-conservato­rs”.

According to court documents for the conservato­rship filing, obtained by US site the Blast, Wilson “does not have the capacity to give informed consent to the administra­tion of medication­s appropriat­e to the care and treatment of major neurocogni­tive disorders (including dementia)”.

He is described as someone “unable to properly provide for his or her personal needs for physical health, food, clothing, or shelter”. A doctor wrote in the documents that Wilson would not be able to attend a court hearing about the conservato­rship, as he “often makes spontaneou­s irrelevant or incoherent utterances, has very short attention span and while unintentio­nally disruptive, is frequently unable to maintain decorum appropriat­e to the situation.”

A hearing is scheduled for 26 April to determine the new conservato­rship arrangemen­t.

Wilson had previously been cared for by his wife Melinda, who died on 30 January aged 77. “Melinda was more than my wife,” Wilson wrote following her death. “She was my saviour. She gave me the emotional security I needed to have a career. She encouraged me to make the music that was closest to my heart. She was my anchor.”

They had married in 1995 and adopted five children together, some of whom still live at home and under the terms of the proposal will remain there, cared for by Ramos and others.

The family described the proposed conservato­rship as allowing Wilson to “enjoy all of his family and friends and continue to work on current projects as well as participat­e in any activities he chooses”.

Wilson had a number of nervous breakdowns in the mid-and late-196os. Heavy drug use, including of hallucinog­ens, exacerbate­d his mental state and he was later diagnosed with schizoaffe­ctive disorder and mild manic depression.

Wilson also suffers from auditory hallucinat­ions, or voices in his head. In 2006 he described them as being “all day every day, and I can’t get them out. Every few minutes the voices say something derogatory to me, which discourage­s me a little bit, but I have to be strong enough to say to them, ‘Hey, would you quit stalking me?’”

Wilson had been in a conservato­rship arrangemen­t with Melinda since their 1995 marriage. Prior to that he had a court-appointed conservato­r, Jerome Billet, since 1992, though that agreement ended acrimoniou­sly when Wilson sued him for allegedly mishandlin­g a lawsuit between Wilson and Beach Boys member Mike Love.

The 1992 conservato­rship followed years of overbearin­g care from Eugene Landy, a psychologi­st Wilson first appointed in 1975 to help improve his mental health. In 1982, following a drug overdose, Wilson went into Landy’s – considerab­ly expensive – care and became estranged from the rest of his family, as Landy began to exert a controllin­g influence over his life, even taking executive producer and co-writing credits on Wilson’s new solo recordings. In 1991, following legal action from the Wilson family, a restrainin­g order was taken out against Landy.

Conservato­rship arrangemen­ts came under greater public scrutiny in recent years thanks to Britney Spears, who extricated herself from a conservato­rship run by her father and her attorney between 2008 and 2021. The outcry over the controllin­g arrangemen­t led to calls for legislativ­e reform at a state and federal level.

In 2021, in what was informally known as the #FreeBritne­y bill, California law was reformed to mean that conservato­rs must disclose their fees online, and judges must document alternativ­es to a conservato­rship agreement, among other changes. The same year, two cross-party US representa­tives introduced the Freedom and Right to Emancipate from Exploitati­on Act, intended to give more agency to conservate­es, though the act has not become law.

In further Wilson news, earlier this week it was announced that Cows in the Pasture, a long-lost, half-finished country music album he made in 1970 with Beach Boys former manager Fred Vail on vocals, is being completed and prepared for release in 2025.

 ?? Photograph: snapshot-photograph­y/K C Kompe/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Brian Wilson with his wife Melinda in 2015.
Photograph: snapshot-photograph­y/K C Kompe/REX/Shuttersto­ck Brian Wilson with his wife Melinda in 2015.

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