“HE MADE MILLIONS LAUGH FOR 4 DECADES. BUT HIS 3 CHILDREN REMEMBERED SOMETHING THE WORLD NEVER SAW.” Robin Williams had 102 acting credits, 6 Golden Globes, and one Oscar. He could become 52 different characters in a single animated movie. His voice could fill stadiums. His face could change a room in seconds. But when he died on August 11, 2014, at 63, his son Zak didn’t talk about any of that. He said he lost his father. And his best friend. And the world got a little grayer. That’s when you realize — the man who made the whole planet laugh had a quieter side. Zak remembered walking through San Francisco and watching his dad stop for people living on the streets. Not for cameras. Not for press. Robin would sit with them, talk to them, listen. His son watched that, and it stayed with him forever. His daughter Zelda protected that private version of him like it was sacred. She once wrote that her family always kept their time together private — it was the one thing that was theirs. When your dad belongs to the entire world, even a quiet dinner becomes something you guard with everything you have. Her last day with Robin was his birthday, July 21. Gifts. Laughter. Family. The kind of moment that feels ordinary… until it becomes the last one. And Cody, Robin’s youngest, didn’t need a long speech. He just said there were no words strong enough. That he would carry his father everywhere, for the rest of his life. After Robin’s death, the world learned about the illness he’d been silently fighting — diffuse Lewy body disease, discovered only after he was gone. But his three children refused to let that ending become his whole story. The world heard his jokes. But what Zak, Zelda, and Cody heard behind closed doors… that was something else entirely.
He Made Millions Laugh for Four Decades, But Robin Williams’s Children Remembered the Man the World Rarely Saw Robin Williams…