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Strictly Come Dancing’s Chris McCausland’s devastating revelation about becoming a dad

Strictly Come Dancing champion Chris McCausland has opened up about his daughter Sophie in his brand new memoir, Keep Laughing

Michael Moran and Katy Hallam

17:19, 31 Oct 2025

(Image: Dave J Hogan/Getty Images)

Comedian and Strictly Come Dancing winner Chris McCausland has revealed he felt “guilty” about becoming a father to his daughter.

The Liverpool-born star reflected on cherished childhood memories of his own dad taking him to funfairs, reading him bedtime stories and “watching the Mighty Reds play at Anfield,” but was troubled by fears he couldn’t give his daughter Sophie the same experiences.

“I thought that my blindness would preclude me from being able to do the things I thought a proper dad should do,” he wrote in his memoir Keep Laughing.

Read more Strictly’s Amber Davies’ sister urges ‘be kind’ and reveals she won’t be watching anymore

Whilst his wife Patricia had “made her own choice” to share her life with Chris, despite his visual impairment, “a child doesn’t get to choose their parents,” he observed.

Yet children prove remarkably resilient, and Sophie – now aged 13 – has matured accepting that her father’s sight differs from her mother’s.

However, Chris remembered one particular moment when it became clear she understood he couldn’t see, reports the Mirror.

He described an occasion in his kitchen when he was searching for one of Sophie’s plastic beakers that had dropped onto the floor.

“Patricia was in the bedroom with Sophie and told her to go and help me find it,” he explained.

Sophie questioned him: “You can’t find the cup, Daddy? Because your eyes are broken?”.

It proved a striking realisation, he confessed: “This knocked me off my stride for a moment, as it was the first time she had made this connection with the understanding that I couldn’t see.”

He disclosed that during that period of his life, he’d grown “comfortable in his own skin” and was flourishing in his stand-up comedy career, but Sophie’s question forced him to view himself through fresh eyes.

Understandably, Chris also harboured concerns about potentially passing on his condition – Retinitis pigmentosa – to his daughter.

This inherited disorder causes progressive vision loss beginning in childhood, and Chris is delighted to confirm that Sophie appears to have escaped this particular genetic inheritance.

“It has now been several years since we passed the point at which the symptoms of my condition should have made themselves known,” he explained, “and I’m pleased to say that they never have.

“The coin landed favourably this time, and if she hasn’t got it, she can’t pass it on.”

And, he acknowledges, he’s made peace with his original “guilt” regarding Sophie: “There is lots I’m unable to do as her dad, but she doesn’t care about that and neither do I any more.”

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