This rare paparazzi photo captures a legendary actor at 79, seen in a quiet public moment years after a life-changing health event in 2012 2

This rare paparazzi photo captures a legendary actor at 79, seen in a quiet public moment years after a life-changing health event in 2012 2

Now in his late seventies and using a wheelchair, he carries himself with a disarming frankness about his condition. He does not romanticize suffering, nor does he indulge in it.

His oft-quoted dismissal—“whining is a f—ing bore”—is not bravado, but philosophy. It reflects a lifelong resistance to self-pity, a refusal to let adversity rewrite his tone.

The flamboyance that once defined his onstage persona has not disappeared; it has simply condensed into something sharper, more distilled.

His wit remains intact, his voice—though altered—still capable of delivering that unmistakable blend of elegance and irreverence.

In his memoir Vagabond, Curry offers glimpses into this reconfigured life with the same sardonic clarity that made him iconic.

The title itself feels apt: not a wanderer in the physical sense anymore, but a traveler of memory, of thought, of perspective.

There is a quiet bravery in how he confronts limitation—not by denying it, but by integrating it into his identity without letting it dominate.

He acknowledges the realities: the paralysis on his left side, the gaps in short-term memory. Yet these are presented not as defining tragedies, but as conditions within a larger, ongoing narrative.

PART3

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