Pop
star David Cassidy said he lied about dementia, drinking
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[June 07, 2018] LOS
ANGELES (Reuters) - Former teen idol David Cassidy did
not have dementia, as he claimed before he died, and
lied about giving up drinking, the singer told the
makers of a documentary about him in the months before
his death.
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Cassidy, 67, who shot to fame in the 1970s TV show "The
Partridge Family," died of organ failure at age 67 in Florida in
November 2017, nine months after declaring he was fighting
dementia in a bid to stave off reports about odd behavior.
But in an excerpt released on Wednesday from documentary "David
Cassidy: The Last Session," Cassidy told producers that his
problems were due to alcoholism.
"I have a liver disease," Cassidy told one of the producers in a
recorded telephone call after an emergency hospital admission in
September.
"There is no sign of me having dementia at this stage of my
life. It was complete alcohol poisoning. The fact is, I lied
about my drinking," he added.
Cassidy, whose hits "Cherish" and "I Think I Love You," had teen
girls swooning in the 1970s, was arrested three times for
drunken driving between 2010 and 2014 and ordered to rehab as
part of his sentence in 2014.
Speaking of his alcoholism, Cassidy told the documentary
producers, "I did it to myself, to cover up the sadness and the
emptiness."
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The documentary, which was chronicling the singer's attempts to make
a comeback and cope with dementia, was filmed in the months before
his death and is due to be broadcast on cable channel A&E on June
11.
Cassidy, who was married three times, left a son, Beau, and a
daughter Katie.
"We, the Cassidy family, were not affiliated with the A&E
documentary. All we are interested in is maintaining the legacy of
the icon he was," Beau Cassidy said in a statement on Wednesday.
Co-producer Saralena Weinfield told People magazine that the
documentary makers were unsure at first what to do with the footage
and the telephone recording.
"We didn't want to exploit him. But ultimately he was honest about
what killed him and we decided that his legacy would be best served
if we shared that," Weinfield told People in an interview released
on Wednesday.
(This version of the story removes extraneous "the" in eighth
paragraph)
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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