It's back to the future for Michael J Fox, who is to revive his illness-stalled career with a new comedy sitcom on NBC.
The decision to rejoin the sitcom fray by Fox, 51, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1991, is a bolt of lightning that has lit up the television universe. It triggered a fierce bidding war between the American broadcast giants and NBC - the same network that propelled Fox to stardom in Family Ties 30 years ago - eventually won.
"To bring Michael J Fox back to NBC is a supreme honour," Robert Greenblatt, chairman of NBC Entertainment, said in a statement. "We are thrilled that one of the great comedic television stars is coming home again." He called the Canadian-born actor "utterly relatable, optimistic and in a class by himself".
The new show, which has not been named and will not debut until the autumn of 2013, will follow the fortunes and tribulations of a New York father of four trying to juggle his family and professional commitments while at the same time coping with Parkinson's.
If the art-imitating-life premise does not immediately sound funny, there are reasons to assume that the show will be a smash big enough to bulldoze any competition. Viewers will be curious, first off, to see the return of Fox to a fully fledged television role. He publicly disclosed his affliction in 1998 and dropped out of his role on the ABC hit Spin City two years later when the symptoms became too great.