Legendary comic Sir Billy Connolly has opened up about facing death and living with Parkinson’s.
The Scottish star revealed that he has seen the funny side to death and has come to terms with his illness.
Sir Billy was diagnosed with prostate cancer and Parkinson’s on the same day in 2013 and has since recovered from cancer.
Now in a new BBC show, Sir Billy is opening up about his life and health struggles in a series called ‘In My Own Words’
Speaking on the show, Sir Billy shares how he laughed off his diagnosis: “Yes, it was a funny week I had.
“On the Monday, I had hearing aids. On the Tuesday I got pills for heartburn, which I have to take all the time, and on the Wednesday I got news that I had prostate cancer and Parkinson’s.
“The doctors told me on the phone, ‘Look we have had the results and it is cancer.’ I said ‘Oh, nobody has ever said that to be me before’.” Revealing the first thing his wife did, Sir Billy added: “My wife Pamela (Stephenson) was standing behind me and gave me a cuddle. I was not unduly worried.”
Sir Billy had previously joked in an interview with The Mirror that his Parkinson’s must have been caused by appearing on Michael Parkinson’s chat show so much.
Telling the paper: “I just thought ‘I have got Parkinson’s. I wish he (Michael) had kept it to himself!’ It was easy (making fun if it).
“You just confront it and make decisions based on it. You just have to think ‘Don’t think you are being badly treated (in life) or you have the bad pick of the straws. You are one of millions’. Just behave yourself and relax.
“You then realise it (death) is not the big thing everyone has made it out to be. It is nothing. It is just a sudden nothing.”
BBC’s new show ‘In My Own Words’ will see Sir Billy discuss his friendship with comic Robin Williams, open up about his struggles with alcohol and his thoughts on how good he is as a father.
The comic will also share what it was like growing up in Glasgow in poverty, sharing that he and his siblings had to sleep in a recess off the kitchen and wash in the kitchen sink.
Sharing: “It was not a happy time. It was a dark time. It was very violent and I was beaten up by my aunts. It had a profound influence on me. I felt kind of abandoned as a child and trapped.
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