New sitcom The Michael J Fox Show is being promoted as the titular actor's return to the screen after retiring 13 years ago when he was diagnosed with early-onset Parkinson's disease. (A not-so-fun fact: Fox first noticed his related tremors while in New Zealand filming Peter Jackson's The Frighteners).
Actually, the star of Family Ties, Back to the Future and Spin City has continued acting during the intervening years, including providing the voice of an animated mouse in three Stuart Little movies and doing guest spots on such TV series as Boston Legal and Damages.
This is the first time in more than a decade that he's headlining a TV show though and, as the title suggests, it's one that has strong autobiographical elements. The most obvious is, of course, the inescapable fact of Fox's Parkinson's, which renders his speech slurry and his movements stiff and jerky.
Fox plays Mike Henry, a father-of-three who left his role as New York's most beloved newscaster after his Parkinson's diagnosis to, as they say, spend more time with his family.