Aaron Sorkin Worried He'd Never Write Again After Having a Stroke.
The Oscar winner opens up about an episode so serious it prompted one doctor to tell him, Youre supposed to be dead.
As Aaron Sorkin prepares for the April 13 opening of Broadways Camelot, the Oscar-winning screenwriter turned musical-book writer is sharing the health scare that almost stopped it from happening.
Last November, two months before rehearsals on his latest show were scheduled to begin, Sorkin learned that he had suffered a stroke, he revealed in an interview with The New York Times published Wednesday. A doctor told the 61-year-old, who sought medical advice after crashing into walls and corners of his home, that his blood pressure was so high, Youre supposed to be dead.
In the days after discovering his stroke, Sorkin said, he began slurring his words and found it nearly impossible to type or even sign his own name. There was a minute when I was concerned that I was never going to be able to write again, he told the Times, and I was concerned in the short-term that I wasnt going to be able to continue writing Camelot.
The screenwriter, who smoked heavily since high school but has since gone cold turkey, said this event was a loud wake-up call, adding, I thought I was one of those people who could eat whatever he wanted, smoke as much as he wanted, and its not going to affect me. Boy, was I wrong. Initially resistant about going public with his stroke, Sorkin said he was coming forward with hopes of warning others about their health. If itll get one person to stop smoking, he told the Times, then itll be helpful. >>>
https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2023/03/aaron-sorkin-worried-hed-never-write-again-after-having-a-stroke?