NEW YORK – Sharon Stone has taken on a new role in genuine life: memoirs.
“I’ve been informed to forgive the unforgivable,” says Stone, whose “Beauty of Living Twice” premieres in March. “I hope that by sharing my trip, you will also be informed to do the same.”
Alfred A. Knopf announced Tuesday that the 62-year-old actress would reflect on everything from her painful years of training in Pennsylvania to films such as the star erotic mystery “Basic Instinct” and Martin Scorsese’s gangster epic “Casino,” for which she earned an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe. He will also write about his two marriages, his near-fatal stroke in 2001 and his humanitarian paintings in the name of AIDS and other causes.
Stone in those pages echoes the stone that has made the headlines of her career: she is brave, fair and frank, and refuses to hit when she talks about the facets of the trauma and violence she suffered as a child and how she chose to pursue an acting career. echoes many of those same attacks, ” knopf said in a statement.
Stone’s other films include Albert Brooks’ “The Muse,” Jim Jarmusch’s “Broken Flowers” and Steven Soderbergh’s 2019 film “The Laundromat.”