Gary Sinise Opens Up About Leaving Hollywood and Losing His Son to Cancer: “I Just Want to Be Around Family”
Gary Sinise is standing in a bright green grove outside his rural Nashville-area home, smiling as he talks about the starring role that’s now his favorite — “Papa” to his five grandchildren, ages 1 to 8.
“It’s just the most wonderful thing,” says the Forrest Gump and CSI: NY actor, 70, who moved to Tennessee nearly two years ago. Earlier that morning, he’d handled the school run, and it’s not unusual to find him hanging out at a Chuck E. Cheese or a local trampoline park.
“He spoils them rotten,” says Sinise’s daughter Sophie, 36, laughing. “There’s always ice cream at Papa’s house. They know they’ll get fed a lot of it when they come. And hugs — lots of hugs.”
That love, Sinise says, kept him going through the hardest chapter of his life — the loss of his son, Mac, who died in January 2024 at 33 after a five-year battle with a rare bone cancer.

A Life Turned Upside Down
Sinise was one of the most recognizable actors of the ’90s — earning an Oscar nomination for Forrest Gump, starring in Apollo 13, and headlining CSI: NY for nine seasons. But everything changed in 2018.

That summer, his wife of nearly 44 years, Moira Harris, was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer. And just as they were navigating her treatment, their son Mac was diagnosed with chordoma, a rare spinal cancer that affects only 300 people a year in the U.S.
“It looked like a monster grabbing my son’s spine,” Sinise recalls of the MRI scan. “Suddenly, we were fighting two battles at once.”
Moira endured eight rounds of chemo and 35 radiation treatments before being declared cancer-free. But Mac’s tumor returned. Doctors removed it, but the disease kept coming back. Between film shoots, Sinise spent every free minute researching the illness and calling doctors.
“Dad dove into the storm,” says his daughter Ella, 32. “He doesn’t do things halfway. It was hard to watch, but it showed his character — he doesn’t let adversity slow him down.”

A Father’s Mission
By 2020, Mac was in the hospital six of the first eight months of the year. That’s when Sinise decided to step away from acting entirely. “I started putting everything I had into trying to find a miracle for Mac,” he says.
He became what he calls his son’s “air-traffic controller.” “I didn’t want Mac to think about the next treatment or worry. So I thought about cancer all the time. You’re trying to take the pain away. A few times I felt like I couldn’t do enough. Then you say a little prayer, get back up, and go back into the fight.”
Through his work with the Gary Sinise Foundation — which supports veterans, first responders, and their families — he’d already seen how others endured unimaginable loss. “God prepared me for this,” he says softly.

Faith, Family, and Music
Even after Mac became paralyzed from the chest down, the family’s deep Catholic faith kept them going. “Hope keeps you in the fight,” Sinise says.
Moira, still recovering from her own health issues, encouraged her son to keep creating music. A graduate of USC’s music school and a lifelong drummer, Mac taught himself harmonica and began composing again.
“With the harmonica, he learned to play Oh Shenandoah,” says Sophie. “As his body grew weaker, his faith grew stronger. He carried on with so much bravery.”
In 2023, Mac recorded his original music in Nashville with producer Oliver Schnee. Those sessions became his album Resurrection & Revival. Just weeks later, on Dec. 30, Mac was hospitalized again. He passed away Jan. 5, 2024, surrounded by family.
“He didn’t want to go,” Sinise says. “But I know he was at peace. He dealt with it with grace and courage.”

Keeping Mac’s Legacy Alive
In the months that followed, Sinise discovered more of Mac’s unfinished compositions on his laptop. He recruited friends and musicians to complete them. The result: Resurrection & Revival – Parts 1 & 2, released through the Gary Sinise Foundation — with proceeds supporting the causes Mac loved.
“I want people to hear his music,” Sinise says. “I’m on a mission.”
This May, Sinise will co-host the National Memorial Day Concert in Washington, D.C. — an event he’s participated in for years — and hopes to one day see Mac’s music performed by a live orchestra.
“I thought the other day, ‘What happens when all these projects are done?’” he admits. “Well, I’m going to drag them on as long as I can.”

A New Chapter in Tennessee
Today, Sinise and Moira live quietly in their Tennessee home, close to family. The move, he says, was also practical: “With no acting income, I wanted to spend less. But I also wanted to be near my kids and grandkids.”
The man once known worldwide as Lieutenant Dan has found his truest role off-screen. “Since losing Mac, I hold my daughters a lot tighter,” he says. “You think about what’s really important.”
As for returning to Hollywood, Sinise isn’t ruling it out entirely — but for now, the stage lights have dimmed by choice.
“Something might come along and it’ll feel right,” he says. “But it’s harder to leave home now. I just want to be around family.”

“Mac Left Us Things That Are Beautiful.”
Even in grief, Sinise’s purpose remains clear: to share his son’s story — and music — with the world. “Mac left us things that are beautiful,” he says quietly. “I want people to know who he was.”


Post Comment