
Watching Jeff Hordley play one of the most emotionally taxing roles of his career—Cain Dingle navigating prostate cancer on Emmerdale—while also coping with a chronic illness that has followed him since his early twenties is almost unbelievably amazing. The majority of viewers are unaware of that section. Unlike a dramatic soap opera plot, it doesn’t make headlines. However, it exists and runs beneath everything.
Although symptoms had started to show up when he was about 20, Hordley was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease at the age of 26. Crohn’s disease, a long-term inflammatory condition of the digestive system that falls under the larger category of inflammatory bowel disease and affects over half a million people in the UK, is one of those conditions that is genuinely hard to explain to people who haven’t experienced it. The symptoms, which include chronic exhaustion, weight loss, and stomach cramps—sometimes much worse—do not always lend themselves to simple public disclosure. Hordley’s candor about it over the years is therefore truly noteworthy.
Initially, medical professionals diagnosed him with irritable bowel syndrome. People with Crohn’s disease frequently get misdiagnosed, which can prevent them from receiving the proper care for months or even years. Due to the delay, Hordley’s condition got worse while he was still studying drama in Manchester. He remembered being too exhausted to attend lectures and ultimately having to withdraw from his final year plays. That must have felt like the ground shifting beneath him for someone with serious acting aspirations. Reading between the lines of his different interviews gives the impression that he was genuinely uncertain about his ability to carry on.
It has more weight because of the loss that accompanied his diagnosis. Jeff’s mother also had Crohn’s disease and died from post-surgery complications. He has never dwelt on this publicly at great length, but it’s hard to imagine it didn’t shape the way he approached his own illness — with a kind of determined pragmatism rather than panic. He went on to have surgery himself, with part of his bowel removed, and then began the slower, less dramatic work of rebuilding his life around the condition rather than fighting against it.
What makes his story particularly interesting now is what he’s managed since. Speaking on the Another Day Another Collar podcast, Hordley revealed he is no longer on any medication for Crohn’s, managing it instead through diet, seasonal eating from his and wife Zoë Henry’s allotment, and regular exercise. He was clear that this isn’t an option available to everyone with the condition — it’s possible that his particular combination of dietary discipline and lifestyle choices has produced results that simply won’t apply to many sufferers. However, the fact that he has done it at all is worth praising. He noted that people often look for quick fixes rather than taking a holistic view of rest, exercise, and what they’re putting into their bodies. Put that way, it sounds almost too simple. But thirty years of managing a chronic disease tends to clarify what actually works.
His wife Zoë, who plays Rhona Goskirk in Emmerdale, has spoken about how Jeff’s illness changed their lives entirely and how he feared it might prevent him from becoming an actor at all. The notion that one of ITV’s most enduring soap opera characters almost didn’t exist because the man portraying him was too sick to complete drama school is worth pondering for a moment. Without Cain Dingle, a character who has supported some of the most popular plotlines on Emmerdale for more than 20 years, the village would be a very different place.
Hordley’s year has taken on an unexpected real-world dimension thanks to the on-screen prostate cancer arc. He revealed that the plot had inspired him to take a PSA test, and that colleagues of a similar age had done the same. It’s still unclear how many discussions like that take place in private as a result of soap opera plots that decide to take a truly challenging turn. However, Hordley appears to comprehend—possibly better than most—that having a chronic illness lends you a certain level of credibility when the cameras are focused on someone else’s medical emergency.
