Bruce Willis may have stepped back from the public eye in recent years due to his frontotemporal dementia (FTD) diagnosis, but every now and then, fans are thrilled to catch a glimpse of him on social media.
The latest update comes from his daughter Scout Willis, who posted a series of recent photos as the year draws to a close.
The “Over and Over” singer is one of three daughters that the Die Hard actor shares with his ex-wife Demi Moore, to whom he was married from 1987 to 2000; they also have Rumer, 35, and Tallulah, 30. Additionally, he shares daughters Mabel Ray, 12, and Evelyn Penn, ten, with his wife Emma Heming Willis, whom he married in 2009.
On Monday, Scout, 33, took to Instagram and shared a photo dump, beginning with a mirror selfie of her wearing a fringed suede jacket and a baseball cap that reads “actor.”
Other photos included one of her mother Demi sitting on the couch with her granddaughter Louetta, Rumer’s daughter, on her lap next to Tallulah, as well as a video of her knitting, along with several selfies with friends.
She also included a heartwarming video of her in a tight embrace with her father, who resides in Los Angeles but presumably spends a significant amount of time at the family’s second home in Idaho.
“Some December, and a formal announcement that I’m an actor now fyi,” Scout wrote in her caption, and fans quickly flocked to the comments section under the post to express their admiration.
“Your whole family is so wholesome I’m a fan of each and every one of you now,” one user affectionately commented, while others chimed in with: “Beauty!!!!” and: “All these pics are golden,” as well as: “The Dad hug,” accompanied by a happy tears emoji.
The Willis family first revealed Bruce’s health challenges in 2022 when they announced that he had been diagnosed with aphasia, a symptom of frontotemporal dementia, which he was later diagnosed with.
During an appearance on The Drew Barrymore Show to promote her new film The Substance, Demi discussed his condition: “Given the circumstances, he is in a stable place,” adding: “What I tell my children is to meet them where they are.”