
Seeing a man play one of the most physically intimidating characters on British television while secretly battling a condition that previously prevented him from completing drama school is subtly amazing. For more than 25 years, Jeff Hordley has played Cain Dingle on Emmerdale. He is a violent, moody character who fights first and may later apologize. However, the actor wearing the leather jacket has had to deal with Crohn s disease for the majority of his adult life. This chronic inflammatory bowel disorder affects about 115,000 individuals in the UK and almost ended his career before it even began.
When Hordley was a drama student in Manchester in his early twenties, he became aware that something was off. The symptoms, which included exhaustion, stomach discomfort, and inexplicable weight loss, appeared gradually. Initially, doctors recommended irritable bowel syndrome, a painfully frequent error for those with Crohn s disease.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Jeff Hordley |
| Date of Birth | 1971 (age 54) |
| Profession | Actor |
| Best Known For | Playing Cain Dingle in Emmerdale (ITV) |
| Years Active | 2000βpresent |
| Education | Manchester Metropolitan University School of Theatre |
| Spouse | Zoe Henry (married 2003) |
| Children | Violet (b. 2005), Stan (b. 2008) |
| Health Condition | Crohn’s Disease (diagnosed mid-1990s) |
| Advocacy | Former Ambassador, Crohn’s & Colitis UK |
| Residence | Yorkshire Dales, England |
| Reference | NHS β Crohn’s Disease |
He continued to shed pounds. He was too tired to attend lectures, so he was skipping them. He eventually had to completely withdraw from his final year plays. That kind of setback is more than just annoying for a young actor attempting to establish a career. It s scary. When the diagnosis was eventually made following a referral to a specialist at Manchester Royal Crohn s disease, which had killed his mother in 1979 due to complications following surgery, was the infirmary. The weight of that specific detail being informed that you had the illness that killed your parent is difficult to ignore.
After that, he underwent traditional treatment, which included medication and ultimately surgery to remove a portion of his colon. Hordley passed out in a theater in 2002 while already well established on Emmerdale. Although he made a full recovery, the event appears to have been a turning point. He and his wife Zoe Henry, who portrays Rhona Goskirk in the same soap opera, started rebuilding their life from the bottom up instead of continuing down a road of reactively handling flare ups.
At their Yorkshire Dales house, they set up an allotment. They began cultivating their own produce. They prepare meals from scratch. He followed a nutritionist s advice to eliminate alcohol, sweets, meat, dairy, and wheat from his diet. When you put it like way, the lifestyle change seems nearly unachievable, yet Hordley discusses it with a casualness that implies it has simply become second nature to him.
Hordley was open about the current situation in an interview with the Another Day Another Collar podcast. He no longer serves as an ambassador for Crohn s & Colitis UK because, in his words, the illness is under wraps. This is not because his dedication to the cause has diminished. He exercises frequently, eats seasonally, mostly from the allotment, and perhaps most remarkably does not take any medication. It s worth pausing to consider that final section.
There is no cure for Crohn s disease, which is a chronic illness. For survival, many patients require steroids, immunosuppressants, or biologic treatments. Hordley is cautious to admit that it is uncommon that he has survived for years without any of them. Not all Crohn s patients are able to accomplish this. Different bodies react in different ways. However, he claims that the mix of nutrition, exercise, and what he refers to as a holistic approach has helped him in ways that medicine by itself has never truly been able to.
The timing of his stability in real life is quite ironic. 2026 has been one of Cain Dingle s harshest years on screen to yet. While the character was in the hospital after being filmed for the January Corriedale crossover special, medical professionals found a tumor that turned out to be prostate cancer. Hordley describes it as the narrative of a man who doesn t talk about his feelings being forced to confront something very intimate and ego threatening.
Hordley has clearly committed himself to this plot. Knowing that the actor has spent decades navigating the betrayals of his own body adds to the intensity of watching him do those situations, such as Cain sobbing in a prison visiting room while informing Moira of his illness. There s a rawness there that feels earned rather than performed, but it s hard to discern if that personal experience intentionally influences the performance or just exists somewhere beneath it.
Additionally, Hordley has been refreshingly honest about the challenges of working on a long running soap opera. He claims that the cast feels uneasy whenever a big stunt is announced. Characters pass away. Contracts expire. Any soap opera role has a limited shelf life, and the authors control the direction the story takes. He has discussed this with a disarming kind of shrugging honesty that is neither theatrical nor bitter, but rather accepting the fact that job security in serial drama is never assured,
regardless of how long you ve been there. As of early April 2026, Hordley s departure from the show has not been officially confirmed, and Cain was recently struck by a car in a cliffhanger episode. He might not be leaving after all. However, in soap operas, certainty is a luxury that no one can enjoy for very long.
For the thousands of Crohn s patients who have looked to Hordley as a public spokesperson for the illness, the food and medical details are not the most memorable aspects of his narrative. It s everything s silence. He did not turn his allotment into a wellness business or create a brand around his sickness. He simply altered his lifestyle, continued to work, and occasionally discussed it when questioned.
Zoe, his wife, has talked on Loose Women about how the diagnosis changed their lives, and there s a feeling that this is not a hyperbole rather, the change occurred gradually, in the kitchen and the soil, as opposed to a big public reinvention. As the charity s ambassador,
Hordley once stated that patients should understand they are not alone, even when the illness makes them feel that way. Those remarks have a certain weight coming from someone who saw his mother succumb to the same illness, who passed out at work, and who restored his health one veggie season at a time. Not inspiring in the shiny, viral sense.
i) https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/tv/emmerdale-jeff-hordleys-life-screen-33195002
ii) https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/showbiz-news/emmerdales-jeff-hordley-keeps-chronic-31015189
iii) https://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/health/emmerdales-jeff-hordley-reveals-lifestyle-31012508
iv) https://www.entertainmentdaily.com/soaps/emmerdales-jeff-hordley-battling-chronic-health-condition-while-cain-fights-cancer/