Ozzy Osbourne, who was so hardcore a metal rocker he bit the head the head off a bat at a live show (or so the lore goes) is no humbled to be stuck in a chair.
On Feb. 5, Ozzy’s wife Sharon spoke to The Sun about her husband’s battle with the disease while sharing her excitement that Ozzy, 76, will be reuniting with Black Sabbath for the first time in 20 years for his final concert in July.
“He’s very happy to be coming back and very emotional about this,” she said.
“Parkinson’s is a progressive disease. It’s not something you can stabilize. It affects different parts of the body and it’s affected his legs,” she added. “But his voice is as good as it’s ever been.”
“I may be moaning that I can’t walk but I look down the road and there’s people that didn’t do half as much as me and didn’t make it,” he added.
Sharon later told RadioX that Ozzy has to work with a physiotherapist every day to keep his muscles moving. “He’s fine,” she adds, “…as fine as you can be with Parkinson’s.”