Considered a Hollywood treasure thanks to his role as Hawkeye Pierce on the much-loved TV show โM*A*S*H,โ Alan Alda is also admired for overcoming many childhood struggles on his road to success.

The now 89-year-old actor, director, and writer gained international fame playing the wisecracking doctor Benjamin Franklin โHawkeyeโ Pierce in the long-running TV show.
Sadly, heโs now battling Parkinsonโs disease, and recently, he revealed some of the biggest challenges that come with the condition.

The wartime comedy and drama M*A*S*H, which ran from 1972 to 1983, is one of the highest-rated shows in U.S. television history and its final episode remains one of the most-watched finales of any television series.
Alan Alda ended up winning a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Television Series six times for his part in the beloved show.
Despite coming from a showbiz family the highly-rated actorโs childhood was one of many upheavals, struggles, and trauma, which began at a young age.
Born in the Bronx in 1936 Alan spent his childhood with his parents traveling around the United States in support of his fatherโs job as a performer in burlesque theatres. His father Robert Alda (born Alfonso Giuseppe Giovanni Roberto DโAbruzzo) was an actor and singer, and his mother Joan Browne was a homemaker and former beauty-pageant winner.

In his memoir, โNever Have Your Dog Stuffed โ and Other Things Iโve Learned,โ Alan revealed that his father often spent many nights away from home working and his mom struggled with her mental health.
During the 40s and 50s mental illness was a taboo subject with very few resources to help so many families were left to deal with it alone.
โHow much easier it could have been for my father and me to face her illness together; to compare notes, to figure out strategies. Instead, each of us was on [our] own,โ he wrote in his 2005 memoir.
He recalled a traumatic childhood memory of when he was just six years old and had stayed up with his mother while his father was working late.
When Robert got home, his wife accused him of sleeping with another woman. The argument led to Alanโs mother attempting to stab his father with a paring knife. Before anyone was harmed, Alan grabbed the knife from his parents and rammed it into the table, bending the point.

He admits that weeks later when he mentioned it to his parents they denied all knowledge of the incident and his mother said he had imagined it.
The following year Alan was diagnosed with Polio, a disabling and life-threatening disease.
โI got it when I was 7,โ he said to AARP magazine. โI had a stuffy nose at Warnerโs movie theaterโhonking the whole evening. I couldnโt clear my nose. When I got home, I threw up, and my legs were unsteady. The next day, I had a stiff neck. I couldnโt sit up in bed.โ

Astonishing recovery
Alan spent two weeks in hospital and then six months of painful therapy which involved wrapping his arms and legs with hot towels to help increase the blood flow and combat the muscle weakness that could be caused by the disease.
โI had nearly scalding blankets wrapped around my limbs every hour,โ Alan recalled. โIt was hard on me. It was harder, I think, on my parents, who couldnโt afford a nurse and had to torture me themselves. Itโs always better to pay somebody to torture your kid.โ
Thankfully the treatment worked and Alan made an astonishing recovery with no sign that he had ever had the disease.
As well as the many traumas and obstacles he overcame Alan had an unconventional childhood where he watched burlesque shows from a young age and made his first stage debut as a baby.

He writes in his memoir of the constant traveling he did with his parents so his father could sing with the burlesque troop and sat and watched the raunchy shows as a toddler sometimes five times a day.
Alan also shared in his memoir that when he was two years old, his father had posed him with a tobacco pipe for a newspaper to get publicity for the burlesque club where he worked.
โA photographer from the Toronto Daily Star came backstage, and my father got the idea that if he posed me in a way that made me look as if I were smoking a pipe, the paper would be sure to print the picture and the burlesque company would get some unusual publicity. They dressed me up in my woolen suit and posed me gravely holding a pipe with tobacco in it,โ he wrote.
Despite his chaotic upbringing and overcoming a life-threatening disease Alan went on to do very well at school, studied English at Fordham University in the Bronx, New York City, and then joined an improv comedy group where he honed his performance skills and comedic timing.
His career officially started in 1959 when he made his Broadway debut in โOnly in America.โ
Marriage to Arelene
A few years later, he made his film debut in โGone Are the Daysโ in 1963, a film version of the theater play, โPurlie Victorious,โ which he had starred in too. He went on to appear in multiple Broadway shows and movies before landing his most notable role as Hawkeye Pierce in โM*A*S*H.โ
Since then he has had recurring roles on TV shows such as โThe West Wingโ and โ30 Rockโ. He received critical acclaim for his appearances in films such as Same Time, Next Year, and for his directorial debut film The Four Seasons. In 2004, Alan was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Aviator.
Behind the scenes, his personal life was also a triumph; he married musician, photographer, and writer Arlene Wiess in 1957. And 65 years later, they are still happily married.
Alan met the woman of his dreams, and when he first met her, the actor knew that she was the woman he would spend the rest of his life with.
The rum cake incident
The couple first laid eye on each other at a party in Manhattan โ long before Alan would become widely known as the iconic Hawkeye.
Arelene was studying at New York Cityโs Hunter College and made quite an impression on Alan, especially when she picked up the clarinet at the party and started playing Mozart.
They met again a couple of weeks later when a mutual friend invited them for dinner. Alan and Arelene were sitting opposite each other and were having a good time. But all of a sudden, a rum cake placed on the top of the fridge fell on the floor. Bang!
Due to the refrigerator shaking, it landed in front of Alan and Arelene. They were the only ones who decided to grab a bite of the cake, eating it from the floor. After that drama, they knew that they matched.
They shared the same humor and could laugh together โ and at each other.
โMy wife says the secret of a long marriage is a short memory,โ Alan told Closer Weekly at the New York Film Festival premiere of Marriage Story, adding that it โseems to work!โ

โI donโt think we spoil each other, we just love each other,โ he added. โWithout her, I wouldnโt do an awful lot because every time Iโm leaving the house to do some work, she says, โYouโre going to be great.โ And I say the same thing to her. Sheโs a writer and a photographer, busy all the time, and Iโm very proud of her.โ
But Arlene did sacrifice her musical career to have more time for her marriage, and sheโs been very supportive and always by Alanโs side โ especially since he was diagnosed with Parkinsonโs disease in 2015.
Alan Alda children
The couple has three daughters; Elizabeth and Beatrice, both started as actresses, but over time, their careers have followed different paths with Elizabeth becoming a special education teacher and Beatrice becoming a director.
โElizabeth decided she didnโt really care for acting. She became a teacher of the deaf and a special education teacher in general,โ Alan told Closer Weekly.

Alanโs eldest daughter Eve decided to stay out of the spotlight. According to her Facebook page, Eve studied psychology at Connecticut College and currently lives in Winchester, Massachusetts. Her profile also indicates that she studied at the Simmons School of Social Work in Boston as well.
Alan reveals he had the most fun making the 1981 movie The Four Seasons โbecause I wrote it and directed it, two of my daughters were in it [and] my wife photographed it.โ
Parkinsonโs disease
In 2015, Alan Alda was diagnosed with Parkinsonโs disease, a progressive nervous system disorder. It all began when he read an article in The New York Times, where doctors shared some strange Parkinsonโs symptoms they had noted in some of their patients.
According to the doctors, the patients tended to act out their dreams while still asleep, in a physical way. The condition is also referred to as REM sleep behavior disorder. Alan recognized the whole thing and decided to go to a neurologist and ask for a brain scan.
โI had dreamed somebody was attacking me, and in the dream I threw a sack of potatoes at him. In reality, I threw a pillow at my wife. So, believing there was a good chance I had Parkinsonโs,โ he told AARP Magazine in 2020.
โIโve had a full life since then,โ he said.
Since he was diagnosed, he said heโd notice a few twitches here and there but had taken up boxing.
โIโm taking boxing lessons three times a week. I do singles tennis a couple of times a week. I march to Sousa music because marching to music is good for Parkinsonโs,โ he said.
