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He broke his back, his knees, and his fingers making one of TV's most iconic shows — then walked away from a second hit series to be a dad.
In 1985, Richard Dean Anderson became the star of a television show unlike anything else on the air.
MacGyver didn't carry a gun. He didn't throw punches to solve problems. He used a paperclip, a rubber band, and whatever else he could find. The character became a cultural icon — and the show was built entirely around one man.
Anderson was in nearly every scene for seven seasons. And he insisted on doing as many of his own stunts as the production would allow.
The cost was staggering.
Years later, in a candid interview, Anderson laid it all out: back surgery after an exploded disc that left him filming in what he described as a "fairly crippled" state for a year and a half. Two foot surgeries. Two knee surgeries. Four broken fingers. A dislocated shoulder. Two concussions. A broken nose.
"It broke everything," he said of the show. "Broke me entirely."
By the time MacGyver ended in 1992 after 139 episodes, Anderson's body had paid a price most viewers never saw. The chronic pain in his back, his knees, and his feet would follow him for the rest of his life. Decades later, he was still getting procedures on the same vertebrae that were damaged during that first season fall.
But he wasn't done.
In 1997, Anderson returned to television as Colonel Jack O'Neill in Stargate SG-1, a science fiction series that became another massive hit. The show would run for ten seasons. Anderson starred in eight of them.
He was commuting every weekend from the Vancouver set to Los Angeles to see his daughter Wylie, who had been born in 1998. She was, in his words, "my reason for living."
Then in 2005, with the show still running strong and the franchise expanding into spin-offs, Anderson did something almost unheard of in Hollywood.
He stepped away.
Not because of a contract dispute. Not because ratings had dropped. Not because he'd been replaced.
He left because his daughter was seven years old and he didn't want to miss any more of her childhood.
"Being a father makes me want to get out of here faster," he said. "Get off the clock."
He made a handful of appearances after that — a few guest spots on Stargate spin-offs, a brief cameo in 2013. Then he was gone. He called himself "semi-retired" and poured his energy into raising Wylie, supporting environmental causes through the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, and showing up at the occasional fan convention where thousands of people still lined up to thank him.
The entertainment industry doesn't know what to do with someone who walks away voluntarily. Momentum, visibility, and long-term earnings are supposed to keep lead actors in their chairs. Studios plan around them. Agents build around them. Careers are measured in years on screen.
Anderson measured his in something else.
He spent seven years breaking his body to keep one show running. He spent eight more years commuting across state lines every weekend to see his little girl. And then, at the peak of a second franchise, he chose to go home and stay there.
No scandal. No public conflict. No dramatic farewell.
Just a man who had given everything he had to two of television's most beloved shows — and decided there was something he didn't want to miss more.
Richard Dean Anderson is seventy-five years old now. He lives quietly. His daughter is grown. And somewhere in a modest home far from any studio lot, the man who once improvised his way out of every impossible situation on screen made the most straightforward decision of his life.
He chose to be there.