Aaron Sorkin was born on June 9, 1961 in New York City, New York. After graduating from Syracuse University with a degree in Theater, Aaron started to pursue a career in acting. However, he soon discovered that his real passion and talent was writing.
As a Broadway writer, Aaron wrote several plays including
A Few Good Men, which was later made into a major motion picture and helped jump-start is career as a Hollywood writer. Sorkin then went on to write two more plays, 1990's
Hidden in this Picture and 1992's
Making Movies, and was involved in the writing of several films including
Malice,
The American President,
Bulworth, and the upcoming
The Farnsworth Invention.
In 1998, Aaron made his television writing debut on the ABC series
Sports Night which he created and produced. Prior to
Sport Night's cancellation in 2000, Sorkin created, wrote and produced NBC's
The West Wing. Sorkin's critically acclaimed writing, memorable lines and fast-paced dialogue for
The West Wing landed the show 9 Emmys in its debut season and the Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series in 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2003. At the end of the show's fourth season, Sorkin decided to leave the show.
Sorkin was arrested for the possession of hallucinogenic mushrooms, marijuana and crack cocaine on April 15, 2001 at a security checkpoint at the Burbank Airport. He was able to avoid jail time for the incident and was ordered to attend a drug-diversion program.
In 2005, NBC announced that Sorkin's newest project,
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, had been picked up by the network and is set to premiere on September 18, 2006.
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Aaron Sorkin was born on June 9, 1961 in New York City, New York. After graduating from Syracuse University with a degree in Theater, Aaron started to pursue a career in acting. However, he soon discovered that his real passion and talent was writing.
As a Broadway writer, Aaron wrote several plays including
A Few Good Men, which was later made into a major motion picture and helped jump-start is career as a Hollywood writer. Sorkin then went on to write two more plays, 1990's
Hidden in this Picture and 1992's
Making Movies, and was involved in the writing of several films including
Malice,
The American President,
Bulworth, and the upcoming
The Farnsworth Invention.
In 1998, Aaron made his television writing debut on the ABC series
Sports Night which he created and produced. Prior to
Sport Night's cancellation in 2000, Sorkin created, wrote and produced NBC's
The West Wing. Sorkin's critically acclaimed writing, memorable lines and fast-paced dialogue for
The West Wing landed the show 9 Emmys in its debut season and the
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