This week a man died. In entirely awful, tragic circumstances.
It’s a death we would not have heard much about if it weren’t for the tenuous involvement of a celebrity.
The man was Dr Frederic Brandt. The 65-year-old was a high-profile dermatologist who had been treating wealthy clients in New York City since 1982. Dr Brandt – nicknamed the Baron of Botox – had written two books on his beloved fillers, charged around $7000 per appointment, had luxury homes in New York and Miami and was most famed for something called the Y Lift, where fillers are injected under the cheekbones to create a “non invasive” facelift.
He treated Madonna, who says, “If I have nice skin, I owe a lot to him.” And Stephanie Seymour, and Kelly Ripa, and many, many others.
This is Dr Brandt:
Dr Brandt also suffered from depression. And on Sunday, April 5, he killed himself at his Miami home.
Why are we discussing the death of a doctor on the other side of the world, when the planet is full of far greater horrors this week? This is why:
That is an image from comedy show called The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt. It is written and produced by Tina Fey.
The character pictured above is a flamboyant, syringe-wielding cosmetic surgeon called Dr Franff. Played by Martin Short, Franff has had so much filler injected into his own face that he can barely open his mouth to speak, or close his eyes to blink, and his face contorts deflates and reflates with the puff of a straw.
As soon as the show was uploaded, comparisons were drawn between Dr Brandt and the fictional Dr Franff (post continues after video).