Categories: Movie News

Aaron Sorkin Suffered Stroke in November: ‘You’re Supposed to Be Dead,’ Doctor Said

Published by
Tim Molloy

Aaron Sorkin had a stroke in November, the Oscar-winning screenwriter of The Social Network and creator of The West Wing says in a new interview.

Sorkin, whose latest film was 2021’s Being the Ricardos, discussed the realization that he’d had a stroke during a New York Times profile focused on his new version of Camelot on Broadway.

Also Read: Aaron Sorkin Had One Rule for The Trial of the Chicago 7 (Cover Story)

The 61-year-old said that last November, he woke up in the middle of the night and noticed while walking to the kitchen that he was bumping into walls and corners. The next morning, he noticed he was shaking so much that he spilled his orange juice, and called his doctor, who told him to come in right away.

“You’re supposed to be dead,” he said his doctor told him, noting his very high blood pressure.

Aaron Sorkin on Recovering

The screenwriter and director explained that for a month after the stroke, he slurred words and had trouble typing. His doctor also urged him not to fly, and until recently he had trouble signing his name. Everything has improved, except that he still can’t really taste food.

Sorkin told the Times that he believed for years he thought “I was one of those people who could eat whatever he wanted, smoke as much as he wanted, and it’s not going to affect me. Boy, was I wrong.”

He said that though he smoked two packs a day since high school, he stopped because of the stroke, and now works out twice a day and eats carefully.

“I take a lot of medicine,” he told the Times. “You can hear the pills rattling around in me.”

The Newsroom creator initially told the Times about his medical condition off the record, but decided to go public with it in the hopes that it might help someone else.

“If it’ll get one person to stop smoking,” he said, “then it’ll be helpful.”

Aaron Sorkin Tries to Fix Camelot

The Times‘ Sorkin profile notes that Camelot has always been a troubled production, despite its place in history as a symbol of the Kennedy Administration. It is a story of King Arthur, filled with romance and politics, sometimes criticized for an overly complicated book.

A promotional video for the new Camelot

Before it debuted on Broadway in December 1960, writer Alan Jay Lerner collapsed with an ulcer as he was in the midst of trying to trim it. A week later, playwright Moss Hart suffered a heart attack while trying to complete the task.

One can understand how Sorkin would embrace the challenge of fixing the musical’s book: He broke into Hollywood when his first Broadway drama, A Few Good Men, became a hit Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson film, directed by Rob Reiner. His last Broadway play, an adaptation of the Harper Lee novel To Kill a Mockingbird, was a massive success.

It is a natural for Sorkin, who is fascinated by how government can serve people and improve their lives, because Camelot is ultimately about “the birth of democracy,” director Alan Paul, who has staged his own Camelot, told the Times.

Because of Sorkin’s stellar track record, nostalgia for the play, and the hopes that one of our greatest writers can finally help Camelot achieve its full potential, the Aaron Sorkin version of Camelot is one of the most anticipated Broadway musical of the year.

Starring starring Phillipa Soo, Andrew Burnap and Jordan Donica, it is now in previews at Lincoln Center Theater and is scheduled to debut on April 13.

Main image: Aaron Sorkin on the set of The Trial of the Chicago 7 in 2020, courtesy of Netflix.

Tim Molloy

Recent Posts

  • Festivals

Heather Graham on Her Conservative Parents and Chosen Family

Heather Graham wrote, directed and stars in the new film Chosen Family, and chosen family…

1 day ago
  • Movie News

Ghostlight, a New Vision of Romeo and Juliet, Opens 30th Annual SLO International Film Festival

San Luis Obispo International Film Festival executive director Skye McClennan opened the festivities Thursday by…

3 days ago
  • Movie News

Apple TV+’s Manhunt Cinematographer Tells Us How to Recreate 1865 With Lighting

Cinematographer Robert Humphreys got creative with lighting to recreate the warm glow of fire and…

3 days ago
  • Movie News

Hugh Grant ‘Crushed’ His Tony the Tiger Audition for Unfrosted, Wine Glass in Hand

Hugh Grant went full-send on his homemade audition tape for his Tony the Tiger role…

3 days ago
  • Movie News

An LSD-Spiked 1950s Dinner Party and a Horror Movie Loop Highlight NFMLA’s InFocus: Female Cinema Program

A 1950s dinner party that gets spiked with LSD and characters who decide to flip…

4 days ago
  • Movie News

Zendaya on ‘Pressure’ of First Leading Film Role in Challengers: ‘I Am Always Nervous’

Zendaya is opening up about the challenges of starring in the new Luca Guadagnino movie…

4 days ago