Basic Information About Aaron Sorkin
Full Name | Aaron Sorkin |
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Category | Business βΊ Producers |
Professions | Screenwriter, Television producer, Playwright, Script doctor, Actor |
Net worth | $90,000,000 |
Date of birth | 1961-06-09 (63 years old) |
Place of birth | Manhattan |
Nationality | United States of America |
Education | Syracuse University |
Curiosities and Trademarks | Appears as an extra in a bar scene in titles that he writes Rapid quick fire exchange of tightly-scripted dialogue for characters 'Walk and talks' (or 'pedeconferencing') where two characters have a conversation while walking together. His scripts often represent his liberal political views Long character-driven speeches representing a character's beliefs and actions Characters with Sarcastic dispositions Stories regarding Government or Government Institutions Intelligent and cocky but troubled Protagonists Intelligent Female Characters Often employs non-linear storytelling methods Characters who successfully undergo psychoanalysis Many of his films feature at least once character with an alliterative name (Sam Seaborn, Harriet Hayes, Matthew Markinson) Often uses a legal proceeding as a plot device (trials, depositions, etc.) Shows often center around the behind-the-scenes of a television show (Sports Night, Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip, The Newsroom) witty and humorous dialouge. his stories often involve fictional presidents. |
Father | Bernard Sorkin |
Mother | Claire Sorkin |
Siblings | Noah Sorkin, Deborah Sorkin |
Spouse | 13 April - Julia Bingham (Β 1996 - 2005)Β (divorced)Β (1 child) |
Kids | Roxy Sorkin |
Gender | Male |
Social Media | βοΈ Wikipedia βοΈ Instagram βοΈ Twitter βοΈ Facebook βοΈ Imdb |
Famous Network of Business with Similar Net Worth
What Movie Awards did Aaron Sorkin win?
Oscar |
Golden Globe |
Golder Raspberry |
BAFTA |
Other |
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0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 47 |
Aaron Sorkin awards
Award Name | State | Movie / Series Name | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Golden Globe - Best Screenplay - Motion Picture | Winner | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
Movies for Grownups Award - Best Director | Winner | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
AFCA Award - Best Original Screenplay | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
Bodil - Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film) | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
CFCA Award - Best Original Screenplay | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2020 |
CEC Award - Best Foreign Film (Mejor PelΓcula Extranjera) | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
Gold Derby Award - Original Screenplay | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2020 |
IFJA Award - Best Original Screenplay | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2020 |
ICP Award - Best Screenplay | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2020 |
KCFCC Award - Best Director | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
ALFS Award - Screenwriter of the Year | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
SDFCS Award - Best Director | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
Kanbar Award for Storytelling - | Winner | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2020 |
UFCA Award - Best Original Screenplay | Winner | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
VFCC Award - Best Screenplay | Winner | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
WGA Award (Screen) - Original Screenplay | Nominee | The Trial of the Chicago 7 | 2021 |
ACCA - Best Adapted Screenplay | Winner | A Few Good Men | 1992 |
Edgar - Best Motion Picture | Nominee | A Few Good Men | 1993 |
SLFCA Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Call Me by Your Name | 2017 |
NCFCA Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Winner | The Disaster Artist | 2018 |
Oscar - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
BAFTA Film Award - Best Screenplay (Adapted) | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
Movies for Grownups Award - Best Screenwriter | Winner | Molly's Game | 2018 |
EDA Award - Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
AFCA Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
ACCA - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2017 |
DFCS Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in First-Time Feature Film | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
Golden Carp Film Award - International - Best New Director | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
FFCC Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2017 |
Gold Derby Award - Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
LAOFCS Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Winner | Molly's Game | 2017 |
Audience Award - U.S. Cinema | Winner | Molly's Game | 2017 |
NCFCA Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Winner | Molly's Game | 2018 |
OFTA Film Award - Best Feature Debut | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
OFCS Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2017 |
SFFCC Award - Best Screenplay, Adapted | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2017 |
SLFCA Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2017 |
USC Scripter Award - Film | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
WAFCA Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2017 |
WGA Award (Screen) - Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Molly's Game | 2018 |
BAFTA Film Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Nominee | Moneyball | 2012 |
AACTA International Award - Best Screenplay | Nominee | Moneyball | 2012 |
Movies for Grownups Award - Best Screenwriter | Nominee | Moneyball | 2012 |
EDA Award - Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay | Winner | Moneyball | 2012 |
ACCA - Best Adapted Screenplay | Winner | Moneyball | 2011 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Adapted Screenplay | Winner | Moneyball | 2012 |
CFCA Award - Best Screenplay, Adapted | Winner | Moneyball | 2011 |
DFCS Award - Best Screenplay | Winner | Moneyball | 2011 |
Aaron Sorkin roles
Aaron Sorkin's Quotes
- I love writing but hate starting. The page is awfully white and it says, "You may have fooled some of the people some of the time but those days are over, giftless. I'm not your agent and I'm not your mommy, I'm a white piece of paper, you wanna dance with me?" and I really, really don't. I'll go peaceable-like.
- [speaking about freebased cocaine] I had found a drug I absolutely love and that gave me a real break from a certain nervous tension that I kind of carry with me moment to moment.
- When things that are very mean-spirited and voyeuristic go on TV, I think it's [like] bad crack in the schoolyard.
- When I am setting out to do something, I don't consider the state of the culture. I can't possibly conceive of what the most people are going to like. Honest to God, I write something that I like, that I think my friends would like and that I think my father would like, and I keep my fingers crossed that enough other people are going to like it that I can earn a living.
- I am all for everyone having a voice, I just don't think everyone has earned the microphone. And that's what the Internet has done.
Interesting Facts about Aaron Sorkin
- In July 2000, he signed a four-year deal with Warner Bros. TV for approximately $15 million. The deal marks the first time that he has signed an exclusive long-term production deal.
- In 19 June 2001, a judge sentenced him to a drug-diversion program as a result of his arrest at a California airport for carrying marijuana, rock cocaine and hallucinogenic mushrooms.
- His daughter, Roxy Sorkin, was born November 17, 2000.
- Graduated from Syracuse University with a BFA in Musical Theatre.
- Wrote a 1988 Rolling Stone Magazine article about the top acting schools in the U.S. One of the featured schools was the State University of New York at Purchase (S.U.N.Y. Purchase) where Janel Moloney ("Donna" on The West Wing (1999)) happened to be attending at the time.
- Many of his works contain references to the operas of Gilbert & Sullivan. In Malice (1993), the doctor played by Alec Baldwin boasts that he is "never, ever sick at sea", lyrics from "The HMS Pinafore". In The West Wing (1999), Sam Seaborn (Rob Lowe) says that he was recording secretary of the Princeton Gilbert & Sullivan society, and many of the regular characters welcome Ainsley Hayes (Emily Procter) to her new office by decorating it with G&S posters and singing "He is an Englishman", also from "Pinafore", to her. The second episode of Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (2006) closes with the cast of the show-within-the-show singing a parody of "I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major-General" from "The Pirates of Penzance". In Charlie Wilson's War (2007), he gives Gust a throwaway line of "...and I'm never, never sick at sea", which is a line from "HMS Pinafore".
- He is considered one of Scarsdale High School's "Distinguished Alumni." His picture hangs among the other alumni near the school's cafeteria.
- His sister, Deborah Sorkin, is a Navy Judge Advocate General, who worked with David Iglesias. She told Aaron about a real-life case she had worked on with David, which became the basis of A Few Good Men (1992). The character played by Demi Moore was based on his sister. David Iglesias was a Republican, who would later gain fame as one of the U.S. Attorneys fired by the George W. Bush administration.
- All of his four television shows feature a season finale episode entitled "What kind of day has it been?".
- His play "The Farnsworth Invention" at the TimeLine Theatre Company in Chicago, Illinois, was awarded the 2010 Joseph Jefferson Award for Production of a Play (Midsize).
- After he wrote the screenplay for A Few Good Men (1992), Sorkin rewrote the Broadway play for the National Touring Company, since there were elements added to the film that weren't originally in the play.
- Sorkin seems to have an affinity for Nobel prize-winning economists. His fictional President in The American President (1995), "Andrew Shepherd", studied under a Nobel prize-winning economist. His President on The West Wing (1999), "Jed Bartlet", actually was a Nobel prize-winning economist.
- He originally wanted to be an actor and did not discover writing until he was in his early twenties.
- Worked odd jobs including limousine driver and singing telegram worker while struggling as an actor.
- Working on a new show, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (2006), set to premiere on NBC in the fall. [June 2006]
- Was paid $700,000 to rewrite Warren Beatty's astronaut love story "Ocean of Storms" in 1996. He worked on several drafts of the script through 1997, which was originally written by Ben Young Mason & Tony Bill, who sold it in 1989.
- Describes his creative process as long brainstorming sessions, followed by short writing periods.
- As of 2021, has written three films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: A Few Good Men (1992), The Social Network (2010), Moneyball (2011), and The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020).
- Sorkin has the habit of chain smoking while he works on scripts for hours.
- He did an uncredited polish on the script for Excess Baggage (1997).
Additional information of Aaron Sorkin
Zodiac | Virgo |
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Lucky Number | 5 |
Lucky Stone | Sapphire |
Lucky Color | Green |
Best Match for Marriage | Taurus, Capricorn |
Break Up | Kristin Chenoweth |
Divorce | Julia Bingham |
Eye Color | Brown |
Hair Color | Golden Brown |
References & Fact Checks β
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