Acting has become impossible for me/ the problem of vision loss

The famous British actor says that acting has become impossible for him due to the loss of vision.
Charso Press: According to Variety, the famous British actress Judi Dench has talked about her poor eyesight many times in recent years. This 88-year-old actor has been completely honest with his fans in telling the truth and the difficulty of reading his dialogue lines.
Dench has recently revealed in a new interview that due to the loss of her eyesight, it is no longer possible for her to read her lines of dialogue. This is despite the fact that he was previously known for having a memory that was referred to as script photography.
This veteran actor said: Now I have to find a machine that will tell me the lines of my dialogues and tell me which dialogue it is now. While I have a memory that is used to photographing the script and I can play all of Twelfth Night right now.
Earlier, in an interview with the Vision Foundation, which is a charity about vision loss in the UK, he said that he asked his friends to help him remember new scripts by reading them.
Dench said at that time, in short, you can find a way to do things that are difficult for you, and now I learn and remember dialogues that my friends read to me through repetition and repetition.
Dench is still in good spirits and has even talked about how her sight loss has sometimes made for some funny moments on set. He said: “A few years ago, I performed “Winter’s Tale” with Kenneth Branagh and I was on stage as Paulina, and after three weeks of performance, he told me that I should give a speech to the fans. In the end, he told me: If you were going to say your words to someone else, you would only be talking to me, not to the fans!
Judi Dench won an Oscar nomination in 2022 for playing a supporting role in “Belfast” by Kenneth Branagh. He recently had a cameo in the musical comedy Live, starring Will Farrell and Ryan Reynolds, and starred in Richard Ayer’s 2022 drama Hallelujah, based on Alan Bennett’s play of the same name.