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Media & EntertainmentWednesday, July 1, 2026

Danny Glover’s Quiet Revelation: Living with Alzheimer’s, and the Stories That Remain

The Lethal Weapon star, 79, speaks publicly about his diagnosis, as his family hopes to challenge the stigma surrounding the disease.

The first sign was not a dramatic collapse but a quiet erosion of the familiar. For years, Danny Glover’s daughter Mandisa had heard her father recount family stories with the same precise details, the same rhythms, as if the past were a well-worn script. Then, in 2022, the details began to blur. A tale he had told a hundred times suddenly lost its texture; the names, the sequence, the punchline all grew faint. It was, she later told People magazine, the moment she knew something had shifted. Not long after, in 2023, came the diagnosis: Alzheimer’s disease.

Glover, who turns 80 in July, chose to make the condition public this week in a pair of interviews with NBC’s Today show and People. Speaking from his home in San Francisco, he described a life now lived with a neurodegenerative disease that has already slowed his speech, his movements, and his memory. “I can live with it, in a sense,” he said, his voice steady. “I’m sure as it advances, things are going to be different and changing.” His family — his daughter, his brother Marty, who lives with him — sat beside him, part of a deliberate decision to let the actor tell his own story while he still could. “It’s important because people ask questions sometimes, and I don’t want to be a dishonest person and say, ‘Oh, yeah, everything is all right,’” Mandisa explained.

The announcement landed with particular weight because of who Glover is. Over a career spanning more than 170 film and television credits, he became one of the most recognisable faces in Hollywood, from his breakout in Steven Spielberg’s The Color Purple to the four Lethal Weapon films, where his weary detective Roger Murtaugh — forever “too old for this” — anchored a blockbuster franchise. Yet his public identity has always been double: actor and activist. He served as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, campaigned against poverty and HIV/Aids across Africa and the Caribbean, and in 2022 received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, an honorary Oscar for his social engagement. Viewed from Europe, the news was framed as much around his humanitarian legacy as his filmography; in Latin America, headlines emphasised his message that “life continues”; in the United States, the Alzheimer’s Association noted that Black men suffer from the disease at twice the national average, lending the story a public-health urgency.

Glover himself resists the language of finality. “I don’t feel like it’s the end of my life,” he said. “There’s work to do.” His mornings, when his mind is clearest, are spent reading or watching the news programme Democracy Now! He still speaks of the responsibility of talking to young people, of art as “a refrain, a way of looking at” the world’s challenges. And amid the fog of a disease that steals memory, some moments remain startlingly vivid. He recalled, with a laugh, the day Nelson Mandela emerged from prison and, spotting Glover, turned to his wife Winnie and said, “There’s your other husband.” It is a fragment of a life lived at the intersection of art and history, a story he can still tell.

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Upd. 12:37 AM2 languages · 3 outlets
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3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Danny Glover’s Quiet Revelation: Living with Alzheimer’s, and the Stories That Remain

The Lethal Weapon star, 79, speaks publicly about his diagnosis, as his family hopes to challenge the stigma surrounding the disease.

The first sign was not a dramatic collapse but a quiet erosion of the familiar. For years, Danny Glover’s daughter Mandisa had heard her father recount family stories with the same precise details, the same rhythms, as if the past were a well-worn script. Then, in 2022, the details began to blur. A tale he had told a hundred times suddenly lost its texture; the names, the sequence, the punchline all grew faint. It was, she later told People magazine, the moment she knew something had shifted. Not long after, in 2023, came the diagnosis: Alzheimer’s disease.

Glover, who turns 80 in July, chose to make the condition public this week in a pair of interviews with NBC’s Today show and People. Speaking from his home in San Francisco, he described a life now lived with a neurodegenerative disease that has already slowed his speech, his movements, and his memory. “I can live with it, in a sense,” he said, his voice steady. “I’m sure as it advances, things are going to be different and changing.” His family — his daughter, his brother Marty, who lives with him — sat beside him, part of a deliberate decision to let the actor tell his own story while he still could. “It’s important because people ask questions sometimes, and I don’t want to be a dishonest person and say, ‘Oh, yeah, everything is all right,’” Mandisa explained.

The announcement landed with particular weight because of who Glover is. Over a career spanning more than 170 film and television credits, he became one of the most recognisable faces in Hollywood, from his breakout in Steven Spielberg’s The Color Purple to the four Lethal Weapon films, where his weary detective Roger Murtaugh — forever “too old for this” — anchored a blockbuster franchise. Yet his public identity has always been double: actor and activist. He served as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, campaigned against poverty and HIV/Aids across Africa and the Caribbean, and in 2022 received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, an honorary Oscar for his social engagement. Viewed from Europe, the news was framed as much around his humanitarian legacy as his filmography; in Latin America, headlines emphasised his message that “life continues”; in the United States, the Alzheimer’s Association noted that Black men suffer from the disease at twice the national average, lending the story a public-health urgency.

Glover himself resists the language of finality. “I don’t feel like it’s the end of my life,” he said. “There’s work to do.” His mornings, when his mind is clearest, are spent reading or watching the news programme Democracy Now! He still speaks of the responsibility of talking to young people, of art as “a refrain, a way of looking at” the world’s challenges. And amid the fog of a disease that steals memory, some moments remain startlingly vivid. He recalled, with a laugh, the day Nelson Mandela emerged from prison and, spotting Glover, turned to his wife Winnie and said, “There’s your other husband.” It is a fragment of a life lived at the intersection of art and history, a story he can still tell.

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