Colin Egglesfield’s private war began in the prime of his career, just months after landing All My Children. Two days after learning he had aggressive testicular cancer, he was in surgery, then on set, then in radiation, pretending nothing was wrong. The secrecy felt like strength, until the day he crumbled in front of a director who simply asked, “Are you alright?” In that instant, he realized that “doing it alone” was slowly destroying him.
When he finally told the truth, his castmates surrounded him with rides to appointments, meals, and quiet companionship. That support would carry him through a second testicular cancer diagnosis, and, years later, a third: prostate cancer. Now cancer‑free again, he calls vulnerability his greatest act of courage. His message is painfully simple and hard-earned: you are allowed to be scared, and asking for help is not weakness—it is how you survive.