Awakenings
2021
with

Joyce Sprafkin

Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, Psychiatry, SUNY Stony Brook

and

Stephen Post

Ph.D., Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care and Bioethics, SUNY Stony Brook

and

Iris Granek

M.D., Chairperson Family Medicine Department, SUNY Stony Brook

and

Lory Bright-Long

M.D., Geriatric Psychiatrist, SUNY Stony Brook

Awakenings— Neuroscience and ethics in experimentation

Details to come!

Rosendale Theatre Collective Rosendale, NY

Film Synopsis

The victims of an encephalitis epidemic many years ago have been catatonic ever since, but now a new drug offers the prospect of reviving them.

Based on a true story as told by neurologist Oliver Sacks, Awakenings follows Dr. Malcolm Sayer (Robin Williams), who works at a Bronx psychiatric hospital in 1969. There he's put in charge of several seemingly catatonic patients who, under Sayer's careful guidance, begin responding to certain stimuli. Sayer is then given permission to test a new drug called L-DOPA, effective in treating those suffering from degenerative diseases. One of his patients, Leonard Lowe (Robert De Niro), has not communicated with anyone since lapsing into catatonia as a child. Gradually, Lowe comes out of his shell, encouraging Sayers to administer L-DOPA to the other patients under his care, who must learn to cope with a new life in a new time.