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“Don’t make me the story,” Michael J. Fox insists, both gentle and firm. “The story is the power of optimism. It’s a choice. Acceptance doesn’t mean giving up; it means looking at the truth and asking: ‘What does this truth require of me?’” After more than three decades of living with Parkinson’s disease, the 62-year-old actor still frames his life around that philosophy: facing pain without letting it define him.
Born in Canada, Fox quit school early and moved to Los Angeles, eventually landing the role of Alex P. Keaton on the hit sitcom Family Ties. His career exploded with Back to the Future, making him an international sensation. By the summer of 1985, Fox had the No. 1 movie (Back to the Future), the No. 2 (Teen Wolf), and one of the top-rated TV shows at the same time.
More hit films followed—The Secret of My Success, The Hard Way, Casualties of War—and Fox married his Family Ties co-star Tracy Pollan. But in 1989, at just 29, he noticed a twitch in his finger. Doctors diagnosed him with Parkinson’s disease, warning him that his expected lifespan might be shortened.
No Glossing Over: Honesty and Humor
In the documentary Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie, Fox allowed cameras to capture his tremors, falls, and even flashes of humor in the middle of hardship. There was no sugarcoating, but no self-pity either. “Do I feel sad seeing myself young and athletic? No. Do I sometimes change the channel? Yes,” he says.
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