It was the 1990s and Sharon Stone was on top of the world.
She was one of the most popular movie stars of her times.
Her big breakthrough came when she landed a part in the 1990 science fiction action film "Total Recall."
In 1992 she catapulted to international stardom when she appeared in the big-screen thriller "Basic Instinct."
Later she would play a role in the 1995 epic crime drama "Casino," which ended up delivering the best reviews of her career, along with an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
Numerous films would follow, cementing her position as a top Hollywood actress.
Her life was going exceptionally well with her career soaring, due in large part to the Oscar nomination, which credentialed her as a serious actress.
Her personal life was blossoming too. She and her then-husband adopted a child, experiencing the joy and fulfillment that new parenthood brings.
Unbeknownst to Stone, her world was about to turn upside down. Within a few months, life would take a sudden and tragic change for the worse.
She suffered a type of stroke in which a vertebral artery ruptures. For nine straight days bleeding was occurring in her brain, and she was given only a 1% chance of surviving.
Sadly, at a time when she needed them the most, her Hollywood friends and acquaintances all but abandoned her. The only person who really stood by her side in this most difficult time was her devoted Dad.
"My father was there for me, but I would say that was about it," Stone shared.
After the terrible health crisis, she faced further personal and professional challenges. Her marriage disintegrated and the Hollywood phone eerily stopped ringing.
"I lost everything," she said. "I lost all my money. I lost custody of my child. I lost my career. I lost all those things that you feel are your real identity and your life."
Stone's Hollywood experience provides the opportunity to examine the changes that have taken place in our cultural attitudes and behaviors with regard to celebrity.
Stone was a genuine movie star, the kind that in these continuing digital revolution times seems to have disappeared.
Lost, in large part, is the sense of mystique that Hollywood stars of the past possessed. Lost oftentimes, too, is the basis for admiration given.
So who are today's stars? And has the arc of fame been irretrievably altered?
The answers to these questions seem to depend chiefly on the medium as well as the manner in which entertainment is presented to and consumed by an anticipated audience.
Over the last several years the changes that have taken place within the entertainment business have no doubt been profound. Movie theater attendance has significantly declined. And for lack of a better word, so have "conventional" movie stars.
At the same time there has been a rise in the actual number of celebrities as well as the types of venues in which fame can be attained.
We now have multiple categories of film stars, television stars, music stars, sports stars, political stars, preacher stars, internet stars, social media stars, etc., all of whom vie for the public's attention and the varying levels of fame that accompany it.
The opportunity for people to achieve Andy Warhol moments has expanded exponentially. And so it is that anyone with a smartphone and an internet connection can potentially claim their 15 minutes of fame.
While there may be a lot more famous faces around, it is also much more difficult for those faces to maintain their celebrity status over time. In other words, fame seems to be even more fleeting than it was in the past. And the arc of fame seems to have been altered in length and breadth.
For an individual, life in the fame lane can take you from the highest of highs to the lowest of lows.
Stone has lived it.
She shares her story of survival and serves as an example of the triumph of the human spirit.
She does offer the following admonition, though. "If you want to live with solid citizens, don't come to Hollywood."
Don't know if anyone is going to stop chasing fame, but it's worth thinking about for at least an LA minute.
James Hirsen, J.D., M.A., in media psychology, is a New York Times best-selling author, media analyst, and law professor. Visit Newsmax TV Hollywood. Read James Hirsen's Reports — More Here.
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