🔴 Website 👉 https://u-s-news.com/
Telegram 👉 https://t.me/usnewscom_channel
Don’t blame him.
Harrison Ford is finally revealing why he hasn’t acted alongside his wife, “Ally McBeal” star Calista Flockhart, and it’s not his fault.
During PaleyLive’s “An Evening of Shrinking” event at Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills, Ford, 82, was asked why he’s never blurred the lines between work and home in this way.
“That’s just the circumstantial reality where we haven’t been offered something where we’d work together,” the Oscar-nominated actor said of Flockhart, 60.
Making sure there was no confusion, Ford shared that he would “love to work” with his wife of nearly 15 years.
The pair met at the 59th Golden Globe Awards in 2002 when he was 59 and she was 37.
Ford popped the question while the pair were on vacation together in 2009, and they wed in June 2010 at the Governor’s Mansion in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The “Indiana Jones” actor had already been married twice and had four children from those marriages. He later adopted Flockhart’s son, Liam, whom she adopted in 2001.
While he would happily star alongside his wife, the legendary action hero is content with his current project: Apple TV+’s “Shrinking.”
Ford plays Dr. Paul Rhoades on the hit show with co-stars Jason Segel, Jessica Williams, Michael Urie, Christa Miller and Ted McGinley.
“This is the best job I’ve ever had,” he told the outlet. “I live half an hour away. I go home and I sleep in my own bed. I’m in the same town as my wife and children and I’m doing really smart, intelligent storytelling with incredibly talented people.”
“Shrinking” premiered in 2023. It follows Segel’s character, a therapist who becomes too attached to his patients while grieving the loss of his wife, and Ford’s Dr. Rhoades, a senior therapist at the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Center who is struggling with Parkinson’s disease.
Ford recently opened up about the responsibility he feels playing a character battling Parkinson’s.
“There’s no intention to make it into a joke,” he told People in December.
“But there are people that absorb these kinds of experiences with grace and courage and a little bit of wisdom. And that is not to say that some people do not,” the actor continued.
“It’s just to say that this is a person particularly equipped to communicate what it is that it’s like, and that is something that I feel that is worth sharing with our audience.”
The creator of “Shrinking,” Bill Lawrence, gushed over Ford’s commitment to the role, telling The Post that same month: “The greatest gift of my professional career is getting to be involved in this stage of Harrison Ford’s career. It’s been really cool. He’s so conscientious. He’s so passionate.”