By all accounts, Joan Cusack looked perfect when she walked the red carpet in London last week. A black maxi skirt, a white button-up shirt, a well-groomed brunette bob, and a steadfast husband, Richard Burke. Her last public appearance had been eleven years ago. Her last on-screen role was seven years ago. And yet there she was at the London premiere of Toy Story 5, calm and unhurried, as though neither time nor much time had passed.
It’s difficult not to wonder what those eleven years were really like. The simple explanation, or official non-answer, is that she just took a step back. opted for privacy. Chicago, her family, and her Old Town gift shop were her choices. Perhaps that is the entire truth. However, the rumors surrounding Joan Cusack’s health and her protracted absence from public life haven’t completely subsided, and it seems worthwhile to consider them, even gently.

The fact that Cusack had a severe physical ailment long before Hollywood was aware of her name is known, but it is not given nearly enough attention. She had gigantomastia, a medical condition that causes excessive breast tissue growth, by the time she was fifteen. As a result of the ongoing physical strain, she had noticeable shoulder indentations and excruciating back pain. It’s the type of illness that doesn’t announce press releases. Over the years, it quietly and persistently shapes a person’s life. She hasn’t publicly addressed whether it affected her into adulthood, but it’s important to recognize it as a part of her physical history, which predates any red carpet.
In addition, she played the agoraphobic, anxious character Sheila Jackson on Shameless for five seasons, winning one Emmy in 2015 after receiving five consecutive nominations. In the same year, it was both her last significant role and her last public appearance. The timing might have been a coincidence. It’s also possible that managing one’s own personal life while portraying a character overcome with loneliness and anxiety carries a burden that is hard to measure from the outside. It’s speculative as to whether that played a role in her withdrawal. However, the pattern is present, both noticeable and silent.
She made a comeback for Toy Story 5, providing the voice of Jessie, a role she has played since 1999. She looked genuinely relaxed at the London premiere. No performative effort, no obvious strain. Just a woman who appeared to be modestly happy to be there. Her grown sons, Miles and Dylan, were not photographed at the function. It was Richard Burke. He still stands beside her when she chooses to show up after thirty years of marriage.
In one version of this tale, Joan Cusack is just a private individual who made a personal decision. No severe illness. No emergency. Just someone who got to the point where living in Chicago felt adequate, and the work felt optional. Of all the possible explanations, that one is the most plausible and, in some respects, the most human. Long absences are often viewed by Hollywood as mysteries that need to be solved. Some exits might just be exits. What is still known is that she departed at the height of her fame and came back at her own pace.

