Dramatizing a dramatic diagnosis
A Conversation with Sam Simon
Trained
as a lawyer, Samuel A. (Sam) Simon started his career as a member of Ralph
Nader’s first legal advocacy group in Washington, D.C. He went on to start his
own consulting firm and became a regular commentator on national news programs.
In 2018 he was diagnosed with MCI (Mild Cognitive Impairment). In 2021 he was
diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s disease. He is writing a play, Dementia
Man: An Existential Journey, about his experience with the disease.
Your
background is in the law and public affairs. How did you come to write your
first play, The Actual Dance, about being the spouse of someone living
with cancer? You became a playwright and performer.
I was taking
improv classes with a theatre group in New York in 2000 when my wife was
diagnosed with advanced breast cancer. We had been married for 34 years. I had
to come to terms with it. She was not supposed to survive. One improv exercise
was to stand up and talk for 20 minutes. In that 20 minutes I began talking
about something I had not realized was in me. It’s what I call spiritual
trauma. I had an experience that I needed to talk about. Theatre enabled me to
find an outlet.
Susan
did come through her cancer but now you have a different diagnosis to deal with
and have again turned to dramatic expression.
Yes, my diagnosis of Alzheimer’s. It never occurred to me
that I could write and perform a play with Alzheimer’s. A theatrical friend and
colleague, Gail Schickele, who markets
solo artists and who was a fan of my work, encouraged me. She had seen The
Actual Dance. I can’t tell you how energizing it is. I have a huge need to
change the narrative around and reimagine the use of that dirty word dementia
and the stereotypes. This feels like the most important work of my life. My
mission is to make it available to everybody who needs it. I believe in the
power of the arts.
Theatre discovered me through the role of being a
caregiver of the wife I was expected to lose. It’s a privilege to be there for
that person. Now the shoes are on the other foot.
The
preview portion of Dementia Man that you have finished was showcased in
January at the highly selective Association of Performing Arts Professional
Conference in New York. What was the reaction?
It had an extraordinary reception. I held the script
because I didn’t have it memorized. The playwright Jeffrey Sweet said, “Keep
the script. It becomes part of the show. When you got on the stage and talked
we heard you. We didn’t notice the script.” It makes sense in the context of
the play. I was humbled by the feedback and encouraged to get this out there.
Your
character describes your shockingly insensitive treatment by your first
neurologist. When you asked, “What’s next?” he replied, “There’s only one
future for you, down. Things will get worse.” What do you have to say about
that now?
The neurological world is profoundly broken. I
experienced Susan going through breast cancer. People were there to help. There
were support groups. There was literature. With my diagnosis of dementia (I prefer neuropsychological disease) it was,
“Get your affairs in order.” I wasn’t told about any support groups. It was
about as stark a contrast as you can get.
What’s
next for you and the play?
I’m delighted to report that Dementia Man, An
Existential Journey, was selected for premiere in the Washington, DC.
Capitol Fringe Festival in July. I’ve already had one reading at community
center, and ANDTheater Company hosted a work-in-progress performance in New
York. We received terrific feedback we
will use to keep getting better.
My goal is to show that even with a cognitive disorder it
is possible to live with dignity and have a meaningful life. I am so animated.
I’m in the early stages and everyday I learn something new. There’s no doubt
I’m impaired but only mildly impaired now.
I’m not going to walk away from my disease and feel sorry
for myself. I will embrace the life I’m given. Choose life. That’s a bit of my
faith. The cardinal rule of Judaism is to choose life. I’ve been made to use my
disease to be useful to myself and others.
Excerpt from
Dementia Man:
I am now at
the five-year mark from the initial MCI diagnosis. We have since learned a lot
more about Alzheimer’s. And I can sense things getting worse. It raises the
stakes on what to do next. What are my choices?
. . . maybe, I should stick around, and figure out
how to live a meaningful life as a deeply forgetful and confused person. Maybe
I can cause trouble, and advocate for the world to accommodate me as I will be.
I have been a troublemaker most of my life.
I wrote this feature for Alzheimer’s TODAY magazine,
published by the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America.
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