In 1991, Michael J. Fox was the personification of the American “Everyman”—witty, agile, and seemingly invincible. At 29, he was navigating the stratospheric success of Back to the Future and Family Ties when a persistent twitch in his pinky finger led to a life-altering diagnosis: young-onset Parkinson’s disease. For an actor whose craft relied on precise physical comedy and boyish energy, …
👇 👇 👇 👇 👇