LONDON, April 5: Michael J. Fox said he would consider a return to acting if he was offered the right role that incorporated the “realities” of his Parkinson’s disease.
The ‘Back To The Future’ star announced his retirement from on-screen work in 2020, having been open about how the disease affected his memory and made it difficult to remember lines of dialogue.
The 62-year-old told ‘Entertainment Tonight’ he would consider acting again if he could “figure it out.”
“If someone offers me a part and I do it and I have a good time, great,” he said, according to PA Media.
“I would do acting if something came up that I could put my realities into it, my challenges, if I could figure it out.”
The activist and former Hollywood actor was diagnosed with young-onset Parkinson’s disease a year after ‘Back To The Future Part III’ was released in 1990.
Fox first noticed a tremor in his little finger before his diagnosis at the age of 29 and the progressive neurological condition has severely affected his mobility. He has suffered broken bones from numerous falls.
During the interview with ‘Entertainment Tonight’, Fox said his goals were always shifting, but his biggest goal had been “to raise a family” with his wife Tracy Pollan.
“We have four amazing kids and that’s been the big thing,” Fox said referring to Pollan, who he married in 1988.
“And then the other is with the foundation.”
Fox founded the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s research in 2000, which has raised more than US$2 billion (£1.58 billion), CBS News reported in November.
In 2023, he starred in the Apple+ documentary ‘Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie’, exploring how Parkinson’s impacted his life.
As well as starring in the ‘Back To The Future’ trilogy, Fox is known for films including ‘Teen Wolf’ and ‘Doc Hollywood’ along with the TV series ‘Spin City’.
In February, he received a standing ovation after making a surprise appearance in a wheelchair at the BAFTA film awards in London to present the best film award to Christopher Nolan for ‘Oppenheimer’.
— BERNAMA-PA Media/dpa