Print

Print


 FROM: Daily Herald (Chicago)
Actor says stem cell issue personal, not political 
BY MARNI PYKE
Daily Herald Staff Writer
Posted Tuesday, October 24, 2006 

Michael J. Fox played a conservative Republican on the television 
series "Family Ties," but Tuesday he was clearly in the other camp.

Appearing at a rally for 6th Congressional District Democratic 
candidate Tammy Duckworth Tuesday in Wheaton, the actor, who suffers 
from Parkinson's disease, called for change in Congress to allow for 
federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. Duckworth is running 
against Republican Peter Roskam.

Asked if his character in "Family Ties" Alex P. Keaton would approve, 
Fox said yes.

"It's a nonpartisan problem that needs a bipartisan solution," he 
said. "People on both sides of the aisle are in favor of it."

In fact, Fox said he's supported lawmakers such as Republican Sen. 
Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, who favors the policy. 

  
Ed Lee/Daily Herald Actor Michael J. Fox believes that embryonic stem 
cell research holds the clue to curing Parkinson's and other 
diseases. 
 
 
For Fox, the issue is personal because of his diagnosis with 
Parkinson's in 1991. He made his condition public in 1998 and 
established a foundation to raise money toward a cure.

"It's the first thing I deal with when I wake up in the morning and 
the last thing I deal with when go to sleep at night," he said.

Parkinson's is a brain disorder that damages the cells that 
coordinate the body's movements.

Wearing a dark suit and tie, Fox displayed the same humorous spark he 
had in the blockbuster movie "Back to the Future." But the toll the 
disease has taken shows in his thin face and the fidgeting and 
involuntary movements that are offshoots of Parkinson's.

"There's a million little losses," he said. "I can't move the way I 
used to move. There's a lack of spontaneity."

Still, he considers himself lucky.

"If you wait and pay attention, something will come in and fill that 
hole. On a personal level, it made me a better parent and a better 
husband. I wrote a book," he said. "It's allowed me to do this."

He passionately believes that embryonic stem cell research holds the 
clue to his condition and others such as Alzheimer's disease and 
diabetes.

"Seventy percent of the country is in favor of it, but it's one of 
those issues that seems to be easily put aside at the last minute," 
he said. "We expected it to happen, but when President Bush vetoed 
it, it just hurt. It hurt all of us."

As part of his crusade, Fox has made a commercial for Claire 
McCaskill, a Democratic Senate candidate in Missouri. The commercial, 
which shows Fox shaking as he speaks, was greeted with skepticism by 
conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh, who suggested he was either 
off his medication or acting.

Fox didn't rise to the bait.

"So many people speculate about your symptoms," he said. "It's a very 
confusing disease for people who aren't familiar with it. On a macro 
sense, nobody has the same disease. We all have our own version of 
it."

The body motion he displayed in the ad is a result of dyskinesia, 
involuntary movements that can be caused by Parkinson's medications, 
Fox said.

"The reason we're all hoping for a cure is the efficacy of the drug 
wears off after a time," he said. "Fifteen years ago, I could hide it.

"The drug is a masking agent. Then, it starts to wear off and doesn't 
work as well or you get side effects from it, and then you have to 
make decisions."

As he sat waiting to make his appearance, Fox acknowledged he'd 
rather be home.

"My wife would rather I be home - there were four kids she had to get 
ready for school today."

But the stakes are too high, he said he believes.

"The answers are there, but they're not going to fall out of a clear 
blue sky. We have to take responsibility for seeking them out. 

"For some people it may mean a tough choice; for some people it may 
be an easy choice. But it's a choice that has to be made and we have 
to be proactive," he said.

"And if it's important to us, it should not be a chip in the game but 
something we claim as a right as Americans. To have our best 
researchers and our best scientific minds have the support of the 
government to act in our best interests for our welfare."

[log in to unmask]

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn