Now reading: Harrison Ford Is Still Full of Surprises

8 February 2025 Off By Bambam

<p>Harrison Ford is, by all accounts, busier than ever.</p><p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m acting my ass off!&rdquo; the Hollywood veteran told John Jurgenson of the Wall Street Journal, in a <a href="https://www.wsj.com/style/harrison-ford-shrinking-1923-captain-america-7b1f9b3f?st=L5Vx9H&amp;reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink" target="_blank">profile published Wednesday</a>.</p><p>In two recent hit shows and a new Marvel movie, the 82-year-old actor has embraced parts that have surprised fans and critics.</p><p>But there&rsquo;s one role he has kept consistently for more than three decades: as a member of the board of Conservation International, where he is now vice chair.</p><p>As Jurgenson writes in the Journal story, the actor &ldquo;reacts &mdash; with a visible cringe &mdash; to anything that might come off as pretentious.&rdquo; Unsurprisingly, Ford has brought that same ethos to Conservation International, where his painstaking work has largely been behind the scenes, such as his discussions with <a href="https://www.conservation.org/blog/france-backs-bold-new-pact-to-save-amazon">French President Emmanuel Macron in 2019</a> that led France to pledge $100 million to protect the Amazon.</p><p>That&rsquo;s not to say there haven&rsquo;t been highly visible moments, such as his acclaimed turn as the <a href="https://www.conservation.org/nature-is-speaking/harrison-ford-is-the-ocean">surly voice of The Ocean</a> in the award-winning &ldquo;<a href="https://www.conservation.org/nature-is-speaking">Nature Is Speaking</a>&rdquo; series of short films. (More recently, in a nod to his longtime commitment to conservation, he had a <a href="https://www.conservation.org/blog/tachymenoides-harrisonfordi-a-new-snake-species-named-after-harrison-ford">species of snake</a> named after him.)</p><ul><li><strong>&lsquo;I&rsquo;m the source&rsquo;:</strong> <a href="https://www.conservation.org/nature-is-speaking/harrison-ford-is-the-ocean">Watch &lsquo;The Ocean,&rsquo; starring Harrison Ford</a></li></ul><p>His work to help protect nature and the climate took on a new meaning in a recent brush with a disaster that was <a href="https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2025/01/climate-change-made-deadly-los-angeles-wildfires-35-more-likely-new-attribution-study/" target="_blank">fueled in part</a> by climate change: His Los Angeles home is perilously close to an area that was destroyed in January by wildfires.</p><p>Jurgenson writes:</p><p style="margin-left:30px;">In January, when M. Sanjayan, chief executive of the nonprofit Conservation International, heard that Ford was among L.A.&rsquo;s wildfire evacuees, he thought of a line the actor delivered at a 2019 United Nations summit amid massive fires in the Amazon rainforest. Comparing the global effects of environmental crisis to an up-close emergency, Ford said in the address, &ldquo;When a room in your house is on fire you don&rsquo;t say, &lsquo;There&rsquo;s a fire in a room in my house,&rsquo; you say, &lsquo;My house is on fire.&rsquo; And we only have one house.&rdquo;</p><p style="margin-left:30px;">&ldquo;This thing has always been deeply personal for him,&rdquo; Sanjayan said, noting that now, as an L.A. resident swept up in a natural disaster, &ldquo;he walks in a different set of shoes.&rdquo;</p><p><a href="https://www.wsj.com/style/harrison-ford-shrinking-1923-captain-america-7b1f9b3f?st=L5Vx9H&amp;reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink" target="_blank">Read the profile of Ford here</a>.</p><p><em>Bruno Vander Velde is the managing director of storytelling at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? <a href="https://www.conservation.org/act/subscribe">Sign up for email updates</a>. Also, <a href="https://www.conservation.org/act">please consider supporting our critical work</a>.</em></p>