Actress Teri Garr Battles Multiple Sclerosis
Lynn Rosellini - Dec 17, 2021
The tingling began in her right foot. Then, jogging in New
York's Central Park, Teri Garr stumbled. That's odd, she thought. What am I tripping
on? Before long, she felt a stabbing pain in her arm.
Actress Teri Garr Battles Multiple Sclerosis
That was 1983, and Garr was at the peak of her career. She
had won audiences' hearts in Young Frankenstein and Close Encounters of the
Third Kind. That same year, at 38, she'd received an Oscar nomination for her
portrayal of the scorned girlfriend in Tootsie. No way was she going to let a
little pain or clumsiness slow her down—especially since doctors couldn't tell
her what was wrong. Garr wasn't the only one with a medical mystery. Here are
some medical mysteries that were solved.
So Garr kept working. She hosted "Saturday Night
Live" and appeared in a slew of sitcoms, from "Life with Bonnie"
to "Friends." David Letterman thought she was so funny he kept
inviting her back, whether she was plugging a project or not.
Over the next 16 years, her symptoms came and went, puzzling
the many specialists she consulted.
"What can I do?"
"Right now," said one doctor, "nothing."
Finally, in 1999, she got a definitive diagnosis: multiple
sclerosis (MS). The chronic, often debilitating disease pits the body's immune
system against the central nervous system, according to the Mayo Clinic.
This is the part in the story when the tears usually come,
then depression and maybe even thoughts of suicide—at least in the classic
celebrity-confronts-adversity tale. But Teri Garr, who had trained as a dancer,
was simply angry. Her body had betrayed her, but along with the anger came
something else—memories of her mother.
Garr grew up in a showbiz family: Her father was an
ex-vaudevillian named Eddie Garr, and her mother, Phyllis, was a former Radio
City Rockette. But work was uneven for Eddie, and the Garrs just scraped by.
Phyllis came up with one scheme after another to make money. At one point, the
family split their house in half and rented out the front.
When Teri was 11, her dad died and left her mom with three
kids to support. Devastated, Phyllis managed to keep hold of her optimism. She
made a pin that she wore on her blouse. It said, "EGBOK"
(Everything's going to be OK).
To make ends meet, Phyllis Garr worked 18 hours a day mending
and sewing costumes at NBC. When Teri couldn't afford a dress for the prom, her
mom borrowed one of Dinah Shore's—a Dior—from the studio stockroom. And when
Teri's brother Ed, who was studying to be a doctor, complained he didn't have
room to study in the family's small house, she bought a tiny 1950s trailer and
parked it in the backyard. On the rear was a wooden license plate. It said:
Kwit Your Bitchin.
"We have to take this off, Mom," Teri told her.
"It's tacky." But Phyllis refused. She ultimately put Teri and her
two brothers through college. "That was my role model," says Teri.
"Someone who takes care of things, copes. So I was conditioned to do
that." There are ways to practice optimism as well.
The problem was, other people didn't share her optimism. In
Hollywood, a physical handicap can be a career death sentence. So, Garr kept
her diagnosis quiet and tried to hide her symptoms. At her Los Angeles home,
though, she routinely tumbled down the stairs and dropped dishes. One
Christmas, she tripped over a skateboard, crashed into the fireplace and broke
her collarbone. The accidents she could handle. "Getting depressed or sad
wouldn't have helped me," she says.
Finally, she decided to let the world know her secret.
Talk-show host Montel Williams had appeared on "Larry King Live,"
discussing his own MS. He confessed he woke up "not wanting to get out of
bed." Later, he admitted he'd attempted suicide twice.
"I thought, there's too much drama here," said
Garr. "What if someone went out and talked about it like a stand-up comic?
If you get somebody laughing -- and then stick in a point about something
important -- they'll remember it." Maybe she could use her talent to
change the way people thought about MS.
Going public about multiple sclerosis
On October 8, 2002, Garr went on "Larry King" and
spoke publicly about her illness. King pressed her about the pain she must
feel. Wasn't she frightened? But Garr, smiling and cracking jokes, was not about
to betray her mom's legacy. "I really don't think negatively about any of
this stuff," she said.
Garr began using the same wit that made her shine on
"Letterman" to educate and uplift the spirits of MS patients and
their families. She'd tell listeners about her own symptoms: the sudden,
extreme fatigue, the difficulty controlling her right hand, the stumbling.
"Another big problem is memory loss," she'd say
with a pause. "Now, what was I talking about?" Every so often, she
says, her doctor asks discretely about sexual functions. "I don't
know," she sighs. "I haven't been invited to any lately."
In between the quips, Garr would deliver the substance: New
drugs can slow MS. Exercise is physically and emotionally beneficial. "It
doesn't help to contemplate how sad your life is," she says. "You
have to move on."
A lifelong performer, Garr was used to fans' applause. But
these days, there is a different reward that has nothing to do with Hollywood
opening nights. It's ordinary people, some in wheelchairs, waiting to shake her
hand. People saying that because of her, their symptoms will no longer get in
the way of their dreams. Sometimes, Garr tells them about her mom. Sometimes,
she mentions "EGBOK." Sometimes, she just squeezes a hand and says, "Everything's
going to be OK."
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