
Savannah Guthrie Speaks in Emotional Interview After Mother's Disappearance
The broadcaster and journalist is finally saying out loud what her family has been living with in private, and the heartbreak in her words is hard to shake. What she reveals does not offer closure, but it does show just how raw this nightmare still is.
For weeks, the public has watched from a distance as the search for Nancy Guthrie unfolded in Arizona. Now, with Savannah Guthrie sitting down for her first interview since her mother's disappearance, the family's grief, fear, and determination are back at the center of the story.

Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb at Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade - Season 99 on November 27, 2025. | Source: Getty Images
Savannah's First Interview Is Filled with Pain
Savannah's upcoming conversation with Hoda Kotb marks her first interview since police said Nancy, 84, was taken from her home outside Tucson overnight on January 31, 2026. The full interview is set to air in two parts on TODAY on Thursday, March 26, and Friday, March 27.
In a preview, Savannah did not soften the agony her family is carrying. She said, "Someone needs to do the right thing. We are in agony. It is unbearable. And to think of what she went through. I wake up every night in the middle of the night, every night."
"And in the darkness, I imagine her terror. And it is unthinkable, but those thoughts demand to be thought. And I will not hide my face. She needs to come home now," the host continued.
Those words land with force because they strip the story down to its most painful truth. Behind the investigation, the headlines, and the updates is a daughter who is living with unrelenting fear and no answers.
The interview also signals a shift. Until now, Savannah's public comments had largely come through statements and social media posts, but this sit-down puts her heartbreak in full view and makes clear that the family's desperation has only grown.
The Family's Plea Has Become More Urgent
On March 22, Savannah shared a public plea on behalf of her family. It was both grateful and devastating. In the caption, she wrote, "Someone knows how to find our mom and bring her home. 💛"
That post began by thanking the people who have supported the family. But the message quickly turned into a direct appeal for help. The family said they believed people in Tucson and the wider southern Arizona community may hold the key to resolving the case, even if they do not yet realize the importance of what they know.
They asked people to revisit memories tied to January 31, the early morning hours of February 1, and the late evening of January 11. They also urged the public to check camera footage, notes, messages, observations, and conversations, stressing that no detail is too small.
The most emotional line may have been the simplest. "We miss our mom with every breath, and we cannot be in peace until she is home. We cannot grieve; we can only ache and wonder."
That statement says everything about where the family stands. They are not in mourning. They are stuck in the far more brutal space between hope and horror.
What Authorities Have Said About Nancy's Disappearance
Investigators have said they believe Nancy was taken from her home against her will. Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos previously described the home as a crime scene, and authorities said the case involved a possible kidnapping or abduction.
Nancy was last seen Saturday night at her home near East Skyline Drive and North Campbell Avenue. According to authorities, she had limited mobility and needed daily medication, and Chris said going without that medication could be fatal.
At the same time, officials pushed back on any idea that confusion or dementia explained what happened. Chris described Nancy as "of sound mind" and "sharp as a tack."
The family reported her missing around noon on February 1. The search that followed involved trained personnel, drones, an airplane, a helicopter, volunteers, and search-and-rescue dogs.
Chris told NBC News, "I think she was abducted." He later clarified through the department that earlier comments about Nancy being taken from her bed were figurative, not literal.
Authorities have also said they believe Nancy was harmed when she was taken, though they have not released additional details. That alone has kept this case especially haunting.

A photo of Nancy Guthrie on the FBI website on a cellular phone February 10, 2026 in Tucson, Arizona. | Source: Getty Images
The Evidence Only Makes the Case More Disturbing
Details from the investigation have painted a deeply troubling picture. Investigators have said there were no signs of forced entry and that Nancy's personal property appeared to still be in the home. Blood found at the house was matched to Nancy. Other DNA samples that did not belong to Nancy or people close to her were sent off for testing.
Nancy's doorbell camera was disconnected the morning she disappeared. Still, video and photos of a suspect were recovered from servers and later released.
The suspect was described as a man of medium build, about 5-foot-9 to 5-foot-10, wearing a ski mask and gloves, with a 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack. He also appeared to have a flashlight in his mouth during part of the footage.
There were other alarming details. Nancy's pacemaker was disconnected from the app on her phone, and investigators later looked into power and internet outages from the night she was taken.
Authorities also said they were reviewing alleged ransom notes and messages sent to the media, though they did not say whether any were legitimate. A California man was arrested earlier in the case for sending an imposter ransom note to the family.
Even with all of that, no suspect had been identified or arrested in the updates provided. Nancy's family, meanwhile, has been cleared.
The January 11 Question Added Another Layer of Confusion
One of the stranger turns in the case involved January 11. NBC News correspondent Liz Kreutz reported on March 23 that she had spoken with Chris about why investigators were asking neighbors for footage from that date.
According to Chris, Google initially told investigators that a surveillance image of a masked man at Nancy's front door, recovered from a Nest camera, was possibly from January 11. But that changed. Chris said Google first reported the date as a "possibility" and later retracted that statement.
Authorities were then told the company could not definitely determine whether the image came from that day or any other specific date. That means investigators still do not know whether the suspect showed up at Nancy's home before the night of the abduction. And that uncertainty makes an already chilling case even harder to piece together.

Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos speaks during a news conference. | Source: Getty Images
Savannah Has Tried to Show Up, Even While Living Through This
Earlier in March, there was public attention around Savannah returning to the TODAY studio. A spokesperson said on March 5 that she had stopped by to be with and thank her colleagues.
The same spokesperson said Savannah planned to return on air, but at that moment, she remained focused on supporting her family and helping bring Nancy home. That studio visit marked the first time she had returned since Nancy went missing.
That detail matters now because it shows how long Savannah has been trying to balance public life with a private crisis. The interview with Hoda is not a polished comeback moment. It feels more like a daughter refusing to look away from unbearable reality.
Viewers Are Reacting with Heartbreak
The reaction online has been immediate and emotional. One person wrote, "This is so hard to watch- my heart breaks for you SG. 😢" Another called it an "Absolutely bizarre situation. What a gut[-]wrenching interview."
Someone else noted, "This is a living nightmare. I don't know how you're even getting out of bed. May God expedite you peace. ❤️" Other comments captured the emotional toll of a disappearance with painful clarity.

Savannah Guthrie poses alongside her mother Nancy | Source: Getty Images
"A loved one going missing has to be psychological torture. 💔💔" one person declared. One sympathetic commenter suggested, "I feel so so bad. She needs to get some counseling cause her mom is gone. There is no other answer."
Those responses underline why Savannah Guthrie's interview is likely to hit such a nerve. This is not just a crime story or a celebrity headline. It is a family's ongoing emergency, told by a daughter who sounds exhausted, heartbroken, and still determined to bring her mother home.
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