Michael J Fox has said that watching Leonardo DiCaprio in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time In Hollywood inspired him to retire from acting for good.
Fox was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1991 at the age of 29. He revealed the diagnosis in 1998 and in 2020, the Back To The Future actor said that he was beginning a “second retirement” after initially returning to work with the disease.
In a new interview with Empire, Fox said his decision to step away was inspired by Tarantino’s 2019 film after once scene in the film reminded him of the issues he faced on a daily basis.
Fox said when filming The Good Fight, a spin-off to The Good Wife, he struggled to remember his lines due to the disease.
âI thought of Once Upon A Time in Hollywood,â Fox recalled in the interview. âThereâs a scene where Leonardo DiCaprioâs character canât remember his lines any more.
âHe goes back to his dressing room and heâs screaming at himself in the mirror. Just freaking insane.â
Fox continued: âI had this moment where I was looking in the mirror and thought, âI cannot remember it any more. Well, letâs move on.â It was peaceful.â

Speaking on CBS Sunday Morning, Fox told anchor Jane Pauley that Parkinsonâs was âbanging on the doorâ.
âIâm not gonna lie. Itâs getting harder. Every day, itâs tougher but thatâs the way it is,â he said.
âIâve had spinal surgery. Iâve had a tumour on my spine, it was benign, but it messed up my walking and then I started to break stuff. I broke this arm, and I broke this arm. I broke this elbow. I broke my face. I broke my hand.â
âFalling is a big killer with Parkinsonâs, [so is] aspirating food and getting pneumonia,â he continued before saying it was âall these subtle ways it gets youâ.
âYou donât die from Parkinsonâs. You die with Parkinsonâs,â said the 61-year-old. âIâve been thinking about the mortality of it. Iâm not gonna be 80.â
A documentary about Foxâs life was released this week. Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie premiered on May 12 on Apple TV+ and is directed by An Inconvenient Truth filmmaker Davis Guggenheim.
The film explores Foxâs career including his breakthrough role in Back To The Future, and includes rare interviews and clips looking back at his huge rise to fame in the 1980s. The film also covers his Parkinsonâs diagnosis and how he persevered and went on to raise over $2billion (ÂŁ1.7billion) towards research for the condition.
In a four star review of the film, NME said: “Hinting that he wants to tell his story now because he suspects he wonât be around for much longer, the sadness of the film runs as deep as it does because Fox seems like such a genuinely decent person.
“By opening up to show us what life with Parkinsonâs looks like (as embarrassing and painful as it often is funny and unpredictable), itâs hard to think of a better spokesperson for the condition â and harder still to think of anyone who deserves it less.”
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