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Aaron Sorkin

Aaron Sorkin

Born in Manhattan, Aaron Sorkin was reared in Scarsdale, NY by a school teacher mom and lawyer dad. He went to Scarsdale High School, where he got interested in acting and became vice president of the drama club. Because it offered a degree in musical theater, Sorkin attended Syracuse University, where he played Young Scrooge in "A Christmas Carol" and was the top pyramid acrobat for a performance of "Carnival." After graduation, he struggled to find work as an actor in New York, sporadically doing children's theater while tending bar and sleeping on friends' floors. But fortune smiled when a friend asked him to housesit for a few days: Sorkin found a typewriter among the domestic accoutrements and began pounding out a few pages of dialogue. He eventually churned out his first play - "Removing All Doubt" - which he sent to Arthur Storch, his old theater teacher at Syracuse, who was impressed enough to have it staged for drama students at the school in 1984. Sorkin made his New York City stage debut in 1988 with his one-act play "Hidden in This Picture," which was seen by producer John McQuiggan, who commissioned him to make it a full-length play called "Making Movies." Then in 1989, Sorkin launched his career in earnest by penning "A Few Good Men," a tense courtroom drama about a Navy lawyer probing a Marine's death after a hazing ritual known as a Code Red was ordered to punish the soldier for threatening to reveal an illegal shooting. Based loosely on a real military court martial Sorkin learned about from his older sister, "A Few Good Men" got a tryout at the University of Virginia before opening off-Broadway at the Music Box Theater in New York. Prior to its opening, Sorkin's agent sent the play to producer David Brown ("Jaw" and "The Verdict") who got the film made through director Rob Reiner's Castle Rock Entertainment. The film version, released in 1992, starred Tom Cruise, Jack Nicholson and Demi Moore, and grossed over $140 million dollars. Almost overnight, Sorkin went from a struggling unknown to a successful and highly-paid Hollywood writer.Sorkin next penned the script for "Malice" (1993), a psychological thriller starring Bill Pullman as a university dean dealing with a serial rapist on campus and whose wife (Nicole Kidman) takes an immediate disliking to their new house guest (Alec Baldwin), an arrogant, but brilliant surgeon. Sorkin then teamed up again with director Rob Reiner for "The American President" (1995) - a lighthearted romantic comedy about the leader of the free world (Michael Douglas) trying to balance the demands of his job with his wooing of an environmental lobbyist (Annette Benning). After "A Few Good Men," Sorkin spent two years holed up in the Four Seasons Hotel with the curtains drawn, writing the script for "The American President" while smoking endless amounts of crack. After the movie was finished, his addiction raised concerns among friends, who convinced him to check into the Hazelden Institute in Minnesota to clean up. Meanwhile, Sorkin was nominated for several awards for "The American President," including a Golden Globe for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture and the Writers Guild of America award for Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen.His next feature, "Enemy of the State" (1998), was a political thriller about a successful attorney (Will Smith) who unwittingly becomes the target of rogue elements inside the National Security Agency, after he learns about the murder of a U.S. Senator. Sorkin deviated from the heart-warming confines of "The American President" to tell a gritty and thrilling yarn that echoed the government-induced paranoia of the 1970s while displaying the secretive and intrusive technology of the late-1990s. Produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, directed by Tony Scott and costarring Gene Hackman in a semi-reprisal of his role from "The Conversation" (1974), "Enemy of the State" faired well at the box office, earning over $110 million in domestic receipts.Sorkin then made his first foray into series television with, "Sports Night" (ABC, 1998-2000), a half-hour comedy that focused on the behind-the-scenes doings of researchers, producers and on-air talent frantically struggling to turn sport highlights into a nightly feast of entertaining programming peppered with witty banter. Critically acclaimed and loved by a small, but devoted audience, "Sports Night" never managed to capture mainstream viewers and was canceled after two seasons. Despite critical kudos, Sorkin failed to grab any awards for "Sports Night." But that changed with his next series, "The West Wing," which earned the creator several Emmys and Golden Globes over the course of his four years on the show (executive producer John Wells took over for Sorkin when he left in 2002.) When the show first aired in 1999, Sorkin was writing both "Sports Night" and "West Wing," a problem amplified by his obsessive need to write every single episode, much to the frustration of his staff writers. Once "Sports Night" went off the air, Sorkin was able to focus his nervous energies on "The West Wing," turning the series into a ratings winner for the network. But his controlling need to write all the episodes proved difficult in the long run; he was routinely late in having scripts ready for shooting, though he and producing partner Tommy Schlamme eventually left on their own accord. Making matters worse, Sorkin refused to allow Rick Cleveland, co-writer on the Emmy-winning episode "In Excelsis Deo," the chance to speak at the awards ceremony. Sorkin later apologized, but the damage was done.Sorkin further complicated his life prior to departing "The West Wing" when he was arrested at the Burbank Airport for drug possession while boarding a plane for Las Vegas. On his person was marijuana, psychedelic mushrooms, crack cocaine and a $4 metal pipe that set off the gate's metal detector. Though he claimed to have been doing better with the drug habits, Sorkin nonetheless faced public humiliation over the event. His wife, former film executive Julia Bingham and a prime influence on his decision to go Hazelden in 1995, filed for divorce soon after. While Sorkin remained out of the spotlight for much of 2004-05, "The West Wing" continued to rack up Emmy Awards with John Wells at the helm, though the ratings did begin to lag. The show enjoyed its seventh and final season in 2006, ending with the predictable changing of administrations from the dynamic Josiah Bartlett (Martin Sheen) to unknown congressman Matthew Santos (Jimmy Smits). Sorkin returned to regular series work with a new creation, "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" (NBC, 2006-07), a behind-the-scenes look at a sketch comedy show resembling "Saturday Night Live" that has been suffering from years of comedic stagnation. Reviews for "Studio 60" were favorable - even gushing - prior to the series opener, as NBC launched its biggest marketing campaign of the fall season with expectations that Sorkin's new show would be another cash cow. Unfortunately, the series struggled to find both a consistent tone and an audience, and was canceled after a single season. Meanwhile, Sorkin signed on to write his first feature in almost a decade, penning "Charlie Wilson's War" (2007), an adaptation of George Crile's nonfiction book about an alcoholic, womanizing Congressman from Texas (Tom Hanks) who persuades the CIA to arm and train Afghan freedom fighters in the 1980s, only to create a new breed of terrorists that include Osama bin Laden.Sorkin next wrote the script for director David Fincher's highly acclaimed drama, "The Social Network" (2010), which focused on the legal battle between Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg) and the Harvard roommates who accused him of stealing their idea. A box office smash, the film was showered with almost universal praise from critics, many of whom cited it as being the best of the year's offerings. While much of the adulation fell upon Fincher and stars Eisenberg and Andrew Garfield, Sorkin also earned his due with several critics' awards and a Golden Globe win for Best Screenplay. Only a month later, he received an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Sorkin was poised for a repeat with his next film, "Moneyball" (2011), an adaptation of Michael Lewis' book about Billy Beane (Brad Pitt), the unorthodox general manager of the Oakland As, who in 2002 turned baseball traditions upside-down in his efforts to turn a team with the lowest payroll into a playoff contender. While a majority of the critical praise was heaped on Pitt and co-star Jonah Hill, Sorkin earned his due alongside fellow scribe Steven Zaillian with an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay, setting himself up for a second consecutive win. Sorkin briefly returned to television with "The Newsroom" (HBO 2012-14), starring William Hurt as a cable news host. For his next big screen project, Sorkin teamed with director Danny Boyle for "Steve Jobs" (2015), a biopic starring Michael Fassbender as the co-founder and public face of Apple Computers, based on the biography by Walter Isaacson. Sorkin won the Golden Globe for Best Screenplay for the film but was not nominated for an Academy Award. Sorkin made the leap from screenwriter to screenwriter/director with his next film, "Molly's Game" (2017), a true-life tale of a high-stakes underground poker ring starring Jessica Chastain.
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