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(HORN BEEPS)
(FOOTSTEPS)
It's really steep.
- (CAMERA SHUTTERS CLICK) - (APPLAUSE)
- MAN: Huge fan, huge fan. - Would you like to have your photo taken?
Can I have your picture?
Come on, you guys. Want to have your picture?
- Here you go. - Pleased to have you here.
Cheesy grin.
- (GIGGLES) - Smile.
Another cheesy grin.
MAN: All the great scientists and this is one of 'em - Kepler and...
Galileo, Newton - we've got one right here. It's fantastic. Amazing!
My name is Stephen Hawking.
For the past 50 years, I have travelled the world
studying and lecturing about time and space
and the laws that govern the universe.
- Hey, Stephen, break a leg. - Don't say that! (LAUGHS)
I'll have to look after him.
This film is a personal journey through my life
told in my own words.
Come with me and I will show you how I live and work today...
...and tell you the story of how I became who I am.
(APPLAUSE)
Welcome to my world.
(MACHINE BEEPS)
So are you going to take your lunch in the cafeteria?
- It's up to you. - Yes.
I just have to give Judith a call...
WOMAN'. I think it would kill him
if he was in a home, being cared for by nurses.
I think that would be the end for him.
He likes to be able to choose what he wants to do with his life,
he loves the danger of flying, he wants to go into space
and he's been in submarines!
He's just the most craziest man.
(LAUGHS) He's got a lot of guts in him.
Just through here is the nurses' room.
So if anything medical happens, we'll just grab a phone, phone 999,
but there is not much we can actually do
because Stephen is on a Nippy, which he'll breathe on.
If that fails, the only other thing we could do and we do have -
we have oxygen cylinders and we can give him oxygen,
but if he's in a total state then we will have to let him go.
STEPHEN: I have lived over two thirds of my life
with the threat of death hanging over me.
Because every new day could be my last,
I have developed a desire to make the most of each and every minute.
(BICYCLE BELL RINGS)
Although I'm 71 now,
I still go to work every day at Cambridge University.
I'll see you in a bit. Enjoy your shopping.
Keeping an active mind has been vital to my survival,
as has been maintaining a sense of humour.
- Morning, Judith. - Hello.
NIKI: When I went to my job interview,
I thought he was going to ask me
about my past medical history and what I've done before in care,
but he didn't, he asked whether I could cook poached eggs!
And... (LAUGHS) ...I was 19 at the time and I lied,
cos I didn't know how to cook poached eggs, but I got the job straightaway.
Er...it ain't like going to work any more,
it's like just gonna go and see a friend...
well, family.
Stephen's been there through the years of me growing up
and, like, turning into an adult.
So he's been there through most of the important stages of my life.
I've had a very privileged life, thanks to Stephen.
Do you enjoy my company?
- Maybe. - (LAUGHS)
You're horrible to me, ain't ya?
- Yes. - (LAUGHS)
STEPHEN: As you can see, the gradual advance of my illness
has meant that I am totally reliant on those around me.
71 years ago, life started that way too.
I was born in 1942, exactly 300 years after the death of Galileo.
My parents were both at Oxford University,
where my father studied medicine.
He later specialised in tropical diseases.
It is often said that a person's early years
are a good indication of how they will turn out.
Perhaps my eldest sister, Mary, remembers me best.
MARY: I remember Stephen was very bright, always into things.
I remember my father made me a dolls' house,
so Stephen put in both plumbing and lighting!
He liked to win.
He liked to win in everything.
We all learnt to play draughts.
I beat Stephen once, once at draughts,
and he immediately took up chess and I never beat him at that again!
STEPHEN: [also spent a lot of time playing on my own as a boy.
I had a passion to understand how things worked,
from toy trains to the whole universe.
He would spend a lot of time looking at the sky,
looking at the, um...
stars and wondering where... eternity came to an end.
He couldn't conceive that there could be something
without a finish.
STEPHEN: Home life was always stimulating for me and my siblings.
My mother and father were intellectuals
and naturally they expected their children to follow.
MARY: Both my parents were moving in the Highgate-Hampstead intelligentsia,
that sort of circle.
We always talked -
everyone talked, and everybody argued.
We used to argue theology a lot. It's a great thing for kids
because you don't need any facts whatsoever.
STEPHEN: To outsiders, the Hawking household was considered eccentric,
but, for me, it was a place where my mind was constantly challenged.
There were books everywhere.
Bookshelves that were double-banked. Bookshelves that had,
on top of upright books,
rows of other books shoehorned in wherever there was space.
It was a less conventional house -
one in which the children had a great deal of freedom
and I remember being
quite gob-smacked by the conversation over lunch.
It was about subjects which were never talked about in my house -
sex, homosexuality, arguments for and against abortion
and various other subjects that were quite unusual.
STEPHEN: As I developed into a teenager, my parents taught me
to always question things and think big.
Stephen devised - and remember, this was in the early 1950s -
not just one, but two, computers,
which we built from scratch.
It was about the size of a half-depth fridge,
but about as tall and about as wide.
It solved logical problems posed in binary - if this condition is true
and that condition is true or that condition instead is true, then...
and it would give you what the "then" meant.
STEPHEN: At school, my classmates gave me the nickname Einstein,
even though I was only ever halfway up the class.
It was, I like to think, a very bright class.
MARY: It was always assumed that Stephen would go to Oxford.
Both my parents had been to Oxford, you know, he was extremely bright,
there was never any doubt about this.
He and my father had a difference of opinion about what he should study.
Father thought it would be a good thing if Stephen did medicine,
but Stephen was not into medicine -
he'd have made the most awful doctor... (LAUGHS)
...so they compromised.
STEPHEN'. We agreed on a degree in natural sciences, specialising in physics.
The prevailing attitude at Oxford at the time was very anti-work.
You were supposed to be brilliant without effort...
or to accept your limitations and get a fourth-class degree.
To work hard to get a better class of degree
was regarded as the mark of a ”grey man " -
the worst epithet in the Oxford vocabulary.
I think Steve and I fell,
both of us, right into that category,
that there was no need to work or to appear to work,
and Steve was a very funny guy.
He was able to appreciate jokes
and tell jokes the whole time
and spontaneous humour was really his forte.
Row! Row!
Row!
STEPHEN'. At Oxford, I joined the Rowing Club and became a ***.
I relished in the freedom, the speed
and, of course, calling the shots.
The Rowing Club also introduced me
to one of my favourite pastimes at Oxford...
(DANCE MUSIC)
...partying.
I once calculated that I did about a thousand hours' work
in the three years I was there, an average of an hour a day.
I'm not proud of this lack of work,
I'm just describing my attitude at the time,
which I shared with most of my fellow students.
GORDON: Within the whole year, people gradually thought of Steve
as being the brilliant guy in the year,
but he was brilliant in the sense that he could
make off-the-cuff remarks which were deep...
...so he was definitely a stand-out person of intellect.
The question always was
whether he would use that intellect to go anywhere.
(BACKGROUND CHATTER)
MAN: Good evening, Professor Hawking.
STEPHEN'. Well, if the number of champagne receptions one goes to
is a measure of success, then it would seem that I have made it.
Tonight, I am guest of honour
at the launch of a supercomputer called Cosmos, in Cambridge.
Cosmos is one of the most powerful computers in the world
and will enable us to better understand our place in the universe.
Stephen's perhaps the world's
most famous scientist, you know, and one can't deny that it's fantastic
to have his support.
It really is a big day for theoretical cosmology in the UK.
STEPHEN'. The notion of fame is a curious thing to me.
In my mind, I am a scientist who has been lucky to work
on some of the fundamental mysteries of our universe.
Sometimes I wonder if I am as famous for my wheelchair and disabilities
as I am for my discoveries.
As my student days were in full swing,
I was gradually becoming aware that all was not well.
During my final year at Oxford, I had noticed
that I was getting rather clumsy
in my movements
and I fell over once or twice for no apparent reason.
But then one evening, late at night, something more serious happened.
I recall the time that Steve fell down the stairs.
He fell downstairs all the way to the bottom.
He'd lost consciousness and then he couldn't remember who he was.
He couldn't remember where he was, so it was a very serious thing.
STEPHEN'. When I look back at that fall,
I didn't realise at the time it was a warning sign of things to come...
...but I recovered and soon had more pressing things on my mind.
Despite my relaxed attitude to study,
I graduated with first-class honours
and left Oxford for Cambridge University to begin my PhD.
Yet little did I know
I would soon be diagnosed with a crippling illness
that would change my life forever.
Well, Stephen's speed of communication has very gradually slowed down.
A few years ago, he was still able to use his hand switch
and able to communicate by
clicking this switch on his wheelchair.
When he wasn't able to do that any more,
we switched over to a switch that he mounted to his cheek,
but with him slowing down with that
we've approached his sponsors
and so they've been looking into facial recognition.
This is a high-speed camera
which will allow us to see very fine details
on the facial expressions and this will help us to improve
- the rate of your speech and input. - Yeah.
STEPHEN'. I have had to learn to live with my slow rate of communication.
I can only write by flinching my cheek muscle
to move the cursor on my computer.
One day I fear this muscle will fail,
but I would like to be able to speak more quickly.
Do you want me to change it to English Alphabetic?
Yeah. I'm buzzing.
Yeah?
(MACHINE BEEPS)
Is that all...? Is that all OK, Stephen?
Yeah?
(MACHINE BEEPS)
(LAUGHS) I'm not getting this at all, Stephen.
Sometimes he can make a mistake
and then he deletes it and then
he makes another mistake and deletes it
and, you know, it can be frustrating there watching
and he can see the frustration on his face as well.
STEPHEN'. I am hoping this current generation of software experts
can harness what little movement I have left in my face
and turn it into faster communication.
Your current piece of software is a little dated, well, it's a lot dated,
but you're very used to using it,
so we've changed the method by which
your next word prediction works
and it can pretty much pick up
the correct word every single time,
even if you're...even if you're letters away from it.
STEPHEN: This is a big improvement over the previous version.
I really like it.
- That's pretty amazing, the... - I think it's actually gone brilliantly.
The stuff that we've showed him he was excited about.
Anything better than what he's doing,
I think, is going to be a success and anything
that doesn't complicate Stephen's life any more than it is,
I think that will be a success as well.
STEPHEN: ATV120, thank you very much.
STEPHEN'. In 1962, aged 20,
when I arrived at Cambridge to begin my PhD,
I was also desperate for my voice to be heard as I embarked
on my first real scientific challenge.
At the time, two theories battled to correctly describe the universe.
The steady-state theory
held that the universe had always existed
and would exist forever.
But there was another, more exciting idea.
The big-*** theory suggested
that the universe had begun with a huge explosion.
I decided to try to see
if I could shed any light on how the big *** came to be.
But, by now, the immediate challenge I was facing
was to keep control of my body.
My movements were becoming even more erratic,
though I was determined not to worry my family,
so I tried to keep it to myself.
Stephen went home for Christmas after one term
and the symptoms that he had
had become too severe to hide from his parents.
His father insisted on taking him to, I think, the family doctor first
and then that doctor recommended a specialist in London.
So, after Christmas, Stephen and his father went to London
and St Bartholomew's Hospital.
STEPHEN'. I was in hospital for two weeks
and had a wide range of unpleasant tests.
They took a muscle sample from my arm and stuck electrodes into me.
Then they injected some liquid into my spine and took X-rays.
Eventually, I was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis...
...otherwise known as motor neurone disease or ALS.
The prognosis was not good.
I was given two to three years to live.
MARY: It was always hard to tell how Stephen took it,
because for one thing he wouldn't talk about it.
You know, if you can't do anything about it, you...
probably don't want to talk about it, or...
...or have people talk about it.
He did seem pretty depressed
and I don't think he accepted it emotionally.
The whole family went to pieces.
SARAH: It was such a shock for everybody.
My aunt turned white in the night
and we all thought he'd be, you know...
he was not going to be able to live for very long.
STEPH EN: Not knowing what was going to happen to me
or how rapidly the disease would progress,
I was at a loose end.
The doctors told me to go back to Cambridge and carry on with my research...
...but I was not making much progress and anyway
I might not live long enough to finish my PhD.
I felt somewhat of a tragic character,
I took to listening to Wagner.
(# RICHARD WAGNER: The Annunciation Of Death)
(WOMAN SINGS IN GERMAN)
STEPHEN: Wagner's The Annunciation Of Death made a great impression on me
when I first heard it, as I had just developed motor neurone disease.
I identified with it and still do today.
But as it turned out, I didn't die.
At first, the disease seemed to progress fairly rapidly.
As time went by, however, it seemed to slow down.
I also began to make progress with my work.
But what really made the difference
was falling in love with a girl called Jane Wilde
whom I had met about the same time I was diagnosed.
This gave me something to live for.
Oh, he was great fun, he was eccentric.
I was really drawn to his very wide smile
and his beautiful grey eyes...
...and I think that's what made me fall in love with him.
We were going to defy the disease,
we were going to defy the doctors
and we were going to challenge the future.
STEPHEN: Jane was beautiful and gentle
and seemingly undaunted by the harsh reality of my illness.
Falling in love and getting engaged
was the motivation that I needed.
If I were to get married, I had to get a job,
and to get a job I had to finish my PhD.
I therefore started working hard for the first time in my life.
To my surprise, I found I liked it.
KITTY: Well, Stephen had found his groove, he'd found his trajectory
and when Stephen finds a trajectory he pursues it.
MARY: It was terribly exciting because he had been so depressed
and here he was with a new lease of life.
STEPH EN: Perhaps because I realised I might not have much time,
I renewed my efforts
to tackle the big question in cosmology in the early '60s...
...did the universe have a beginning or not?
Many scientists were instinctively opposed to the idea of a big ***,
because it implies a moment of creation...
...the hand of God.
For me, though, religion has no role to play in physics,
so I wondered if the big *** could have happened on its own
without the need for a god to get it going?
The key was in the theory of black holes.
At the time, physicist Roger Penrose was working on what happens
when a star collapses under the force of its own gravity.
Penrose claimed the star would crush itself
to a tiny point of infinite density
where even time itself would come to a stop.
He called it a "singularity" - the heart of a black hole.
ROGER: When I was doing this work on gravitation collapse, black holes,
I'd never heard of Stephen,
so I had a little private session, and he was somebody
who picked up ideas quickly.
He sort of stood out as being someone
who asked extremely awkward questions. I do remember that!
STEPHEN: I worked relentlessly to see
if I could apply the notion of a singularity to the entire universe.
Then, suddenly, I had it.
I imagined going backwards to the beginning
and worked out that, right at the start,
the universe would have been a singularity too.
Here, time stops - you've reached the true beginning of everything.
There is no previous time in which the universe could have had a cause.
It spontaneously created itself in the big ***.
ROGER: The work that Stephen did basically showed there was
a singular state which couldn't have come
from a previous universe.
So you could say it is a theory which tells you the universe had a beginning.
ST E P H E N: By addressing the question of creation
that physicists had avoided,
I had controversially shown the laws of nature suggest
there is no need for a creator or a god.
The universe just came into existence all by itself.
(BIRDSONG)
My findings about the big *** and the possible beginning
of the universe gave me the results I needed to enhance my PhD.
I applied for a research fellowship
at Gonville and Caius College which proved successful.
The money from the fellowship meant that Jane and I could get married,
which we did in July 1965.
JANE: We had the maximum number of guests in the tiny chapel.
Stephen was walking with a stick and he was losing strength in his arms
and we went off for our honeymoon to upstate New York
to a physics conference at Cornell University
and there I got to know that a goddess in Stephen's life,
with whom I was sharing the marriage, was physics!
(BICYCLE BELL RINGS)
STEPHEN'. After returning from our honeymoon,
Jane and I bought a house
in Little St Mary's Lane in the centre of Cambridge.
In March 1966, I completed and submitted
my PhD thesis, with the help of Jane,
who had spent many painstaking hours at the typewriter, typing it up.
The findings in my thesis greatly enhanced my reputation in cosmology.
ROGER: Stephen's profile certainly did, I think, rocket.
It's important to know that there was a big ***
because that governs our cosmology.
It's also important to know what it was like
and why it was like what it was like,
because when you trace back everything in nature
you get ultimately to the big ***,
and the fact that it was a singular state
is very much part of that understanding.
(LIFT PINGS)
Stephen, I'll just do a quick recap, um... of my PhD, yeah? That's fine, yeah?
STEPHEN'. My early work went some way to answering
how our universe began,
but there is still plenty more to find out.
Brane-world black holes should radiate if they aren't extreme, but slowly.
At Cambridge, I mentor a new generation of cosmologists
who are tackling ever-tougher questions.
It's this work that I enjoy the most.
You might as well say the Schwarzschild solution doesn't exist
because it radiates.
Well, I'll have to think about it.
He's in the office every day and, I mean, it's basically
for us PhD students. It's great - I mean, he's there for us
if we want him to, kind of, right, so, no, no, I mean, it's...it's a great privilege.
STEPHEN'. I have always wanted to share my enthusiasm and excitement.
There's nothing like the eureka moment
of discovering something that no-one knew before.
I won't compare it to sex, but it lasts longer.
(DOG BARKS)
(NEWS ON IN THE BACKGROUND)
My next major eureka moment happened
when I was least expecting it.
In the autumn of 1970,
I had been concentrating my research on black holes.
By now, Jane and I had two children -
Robert, aged three years, and Lucy, who had just been born.
One evening in November, as I was getting ready for bed,
an idea charged through my brain.
Only cosmologists would truly grasp it,
but it would greatly enhance my reputation.
JANE: I was sitting on one side of the bed
and Stephen was sitting on the other side of the bed
tussling with his buttons
and this was one evening when he took longer about it than usual.
So I finished feeding the baby
and then he said...
think I've solved a problem."
STEPHEN'. Suddenly, I had a revelation about what happens
when two black holes collide and merge.
I realised that the surface area of the new black hole
could only get bigger - it could never decrease in size.
This may sound like an obscure discovery,
but it revealed some fundamental properties of the universe.
Even though few physicists could understand it at the time,
for me, it was very exciting.
I was writing the rule book for black holes.
Now my voice would really be heard.
JANE: I knew he'd done something very important,
so I was absolutely thrilled
and this, of course, made his name in a big way in physics -
he'd been recognised as somebody with great potential,
but now he really had a discovery to his name.
(BELL PEALS)
STEPHEN'. By the early 1970s, my career in cosmology
and my understandings of the universe were beginning to blossom.
But as my mind grew in confidence
my body was going into a rapid decline.
At home, I was reluctant to ask for help from outsiders
and was relying upon Jane more and more to help me
get up in the morning, get dressed and get to work.
And when I got to Cambridge I needed my students to help me too.
- Are we signing this? - (LAUGHS)
Yes.
I first met Stephen
in 1972 at Cambridge when I became his PhD student.
He was in a wheelchair, but a push wheelchair,
and so I also had a role in helping him - with eating
and moving around and having coffee and tea and things like that,
so it was a rather unusual relationship.
In those days, Stephen, of course, was still speaking with his voice,
but his voice was still weak,
so it wasn't so easy to hear what he was saying.
(SPEAKS IN DISTINCTLY)
And, indeed, when I travelled with Stephen,
I would often be acting as an interpreter,
so Stephen would say something
and if the person he was speaking to couldn't understand,
I would then repeat it.
STEPHEN'. Although I was becoming increasingly trapped
inside my dysfunctioning body, fortunately my mind was unaffected.
I had a new big question I felt compelled to find the answer to.
My reputation in the field of black holes was established
as we entered a golden age.
But my next discovery would throw
all of cosmologists' findings to date up in the air.
The calculations I was working on
in valved what happened to particles on the edge of a black hole
that were sucked in and disappeared.
To my great surprise,
I found that some particles could escape the black hole,
which seemed to make a mockery of the known laws of physics.
At first, I thought this must be a mistake.
BERNARD: I do remember when he was working on this problem
and, indeed, I even remember when he told me he was working out
the quantum effects of these black holes and he seemed to be getting
this flux of particles coming out.
When Stephen's thinking about a problem
he will become obviously obsessed with it.
JANE: It was a very intense period.
It was when he could be surrounded by children
and not notice what was going on, because he was like Rodin's Thinker
with his head in his hands,
often accompanied by Wagner blaring out from the loudspeakers.
(OPERA MUSIC PLAYS)
It used to drive me spare!
STEPHEN: Finally, after months of exhaustive work,
I found what I was looking for.
Contrary to all previously held theories on black holes,
I discovered that they must emit particles,
like a hot body losing heat.
This "evaporation" meant, in theory,
a black hole could eventually disappear.
I announced my findings on St Valentine's Day in 1974
at a cosmology conference in Oxford, to a packed audience.
JANE: He came to an end.
And there was absolute silence in the lecture hall...
...and I can see it now - the chairman of the lecture
jumped to his feet and instead of saying,
"Oh, I must thank Professor Hawking for his remarkable lecture,"
he said, "This is preposterous! I have never heard anything like it!"
The whole place was abuzz.
People couldn't believe what they had heard.
STEPHEN: My controversial discovery
initially shocked the world of physics...
...but eventually it became accepted and known as Hawking radiation.
I am proud to have discovered it.
BERNARD: This was a remarkably important result because it was a result which...
unified relativity theory and quantum theory and thermodynamics.
And physics is really all about unifying ideas.
These three subjects seemed to be brought together
and this was the first time we'd seen that kind of unification.
BERNARD: Every now and then in physics, you get a result which is...
it's so beautiful, it really is like rolling candy on the tongue.
JANE: Oh, I was enormously proud...
enormously proud of what Stephen had achieved.
STEPH EN: After! announced my theory of Hawking radiation
and a later discovery of exploding black holes,
a procession of international awards followed.
In the spring of 1974, I was inducted into the Royal Society,
one of the most prestigious bodies of scientists.
My name now sat alongside Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin.
A year later, I received the Gold Medal for Science,
from Pope Paul VI.
Aged 32, I was thrilled to have such high-profile awards to my name
and exciting new opportunities beckoned.
- # All the leaves are brown - # All the leaves are brown
- # And the sky is grey - # And the sky is grey
- # I've been for a walk - # I've been for a walk
- # on a winter's day - # on a winter's day
- # I'd be safe and warm - # I'd be safe and warm
- #11'! was in LA - #11'! was in LA--- #
STEPH EN: In 7.974, doors started to open for me- - .
...and I was invited on a visiting professorship
to the California Institute of Technology in Los Angeles.
This meant moving with the whole family for the academic year
and the lure of the American West Coast was irresistible.
We were in the midst of a revolution
in the application of quantum physics to black holes.
I was simply hoping to have a year in which
the result would be better science done by Caltech scientists,
by my research group and others
and better science done by Stephen.
STEPHEN'. Life in California was very different from Cambridge.
I now had a large salary and a big house
just a stone's throw from the university.
JANE: Well, America could have been on another planet.
We were living in the lap of luxury,
no expense spared to make us welcome,
and this great gift of an electric wheelchair
provided for Stephen's use.
STEPHEN: Yet, although we had all the mod cons that America could offer us,
it was becoming clear that the demands of home life on Jane
were becoming too intense.
(CHILD CRIES)
Looking after two young children
and trying to cope with my ever-increasing disabilities
were causing too much strain.
JANE: I could not see my way through
what it was going to demand of me...
...and this wonderful idea came to me -
if we were going to go to California
and the students were going to come too,
why didn't we offer them a bed in our house
in return for some help with Stephen?
BERNARD: Of course, it's not the normal relationship
between a student and the PhD supervisor,
but, for me, that was a good deal because I lived rent free
in exchange for sort of helping Stephen out around the home,
you know, at bath times and helping with meals and things like that.
STEPHEN'. But the excitement of a new life in California
was harshly interrupted by my motor neurone disease.
The physical symptoms took an irreversible turn for the worse.
KIP: That was the year in which he lost the use of his hands.
When he arrived, he could still write equations,
though with some difficulty.
By the end of the year, he couldn't.
So it was...in terms of his physical development,
it was a more difficult period.
On the other hand, in terms of his mental development,
as he gradually lost the use of his hands,
he further developed his unique ways of thinking
by manipulating shapes and topologies in his head
and became even more advanced than the rest of us.
STEPH EN: By losing the finer dexterity of my hands,
I was forced to travel through the universe in my mind
and try to visualise the ways in which it worked.
He could move at lightning speed across the frontiers of knowledge
and see things that nobody else could see.
The disability forced him to carry himself in new ways, new directions.
(BACKGROUND CHATTER)
STEPHEN'. Turning problems over in my mind has been my main method
of discovery for nearly half my life now.
While all around me people have buzzed away,
deep in conversation,
I have often been transported afar,
lost inside my own thoughts, trying to fathom how the universe works.
(BACKGROUND CHATTER CONTINUES)
When we returned from California in the summer of 1975,
much of the future, living with my illness, seemed uncertain.
So Jane and I took comfort in the security of a happy family life...
...and, to make home life easier,
we realised my disabilities meant that we needed
a student living with us full-time.
I knew that Stephen Hawking was a brilliant scientist
and I was told that he was severely disabled
and I was told that his voice was very weak,
so it would probably take about a week
before, you know, I could understand what he was saying.
Of course, because of Stephen's circumstances,
you could say no day was really normal. (CHUCKLES)
Stephen had these massive batteries that...in his wheelchair
and, of course, he had spares, and so I loaded as many as I could
on the bottom of Stephen's wheelchair
and Stephen didn't know that I had loaded it down so heavily
and I didn't want to have to carry the thing, so he starts up the hill
and then I see him turning the corner and he's about...
1 O...about 20 metres away and I see him slowly tipping backwards
and he fell over into the bushes.
Yeah, it was somewhat alarming to see the master of gravity being overcome
by the Earth's gravitational field and falling into the...into the bushes.
I went up to retrieve him and he was, of course, quite upset
and it was perhaps good
that I couldn't understand all that he said on that occasion.
I could have caught that if I realised it was gonna stop.
STEPH EN: Although my increasing disabilities
were greatly affecting my life more and more,
I was fiercely reluctant to accept nursing care.
I was convinced that I could build a team of people around me
who could care for me in their own way.
We didn't have any nurses
at all in the department - that was part of my role. I would look after him.
- You'd like to reply to that one? - Mm-hm.
Well, I had to wipe his nose,
comb his hair for him if it was falling down into his eyes
and I could see that when he was eating or drinking
this could cause a problem and a very big one for me
because I didn't have any nursing training whatsoever.
(COUGHS)
He would have these coughing fits that would be quite severe
and, you know, you'd sort of think he was gonna choke and die at any moment.
(COUGHS)
I felt responsible to try to give him the best care that I could,
but it was scary thinking what might happen to him.
JANE: One night Stephen had the most horrendous choking fit
and I just didn't know what to do
and everything just shook,
windows rattled, doors shook.
It was the most terrifying experience
and it could have been critical.
STEPHEN: Although I was able to live and work as I wanted,
I was never really able to understand
the strain it was placing on the people around me...
...especially my wife, Jane.
JANE: I was beginning to feel that there were two faces to our situation...
...one was the public image, the wunderkind of physics, um...
who had overcome motor neurone disease,
who was whizzing round the world in his wheelchair
to receive honours and medals,
and the other side, the other face, was the home situation,
where sometimes the illness forced us into our own little black hole.
STEPH EN: The decline in my health was a stark reminder that time was against me.
Yet despite the pressures on my family
I was determined to realise a lifelong ambition
by writing a popular book about how the universe had begun.
I wanted the book to be read
by millions of people around the world, like a bestselling airport novel.
I did not think it would work.
I did not think it would work because basically
if you look at all the other books in airports
there are none like that!
STEPHEN'. However, I felt sure that the mass market
would want to know about how the universe began.
By 1984, I had completed the first chapter.
AL: There was great interest in him.
He was a great public figure,
so actually every publisher in town was interested in the book.
I guess we had a contract ready for him to sign
and I had heard that he was going to be in Chicago,
so I was there and waiting,
and then this car pulls into the parking lot
and this gentleman gets out and he goes back to the passenger door
and scoops out what looks like a kind of life-size, broken doll into his arms,
and brings it back to the wheelchair
and kind of gently eases the doll into place
and suddenly the doll becomes animated.
As soon as that hand is on the controls,
the thing literally kicks into life, spins around two, three times and takes off.
And then Brian shouts to me, I've gotten out of my car,
he shouts, "Is that you? Is that Peter Guzzardi?"
and I said, "Yes, it's...it's me!"
and he says, "Well, quick, follow us - that's Professor Hawking!"
STEPHEN: I signed up with Peter
and set to work completing the first draft of my book.
I tried to simplify the physics as best I could, and by the end
I was pleased and felt it was in pretty good shape.
But Peter wasn't convinced.
I was pretty disappointed, yeah.
I thought, "This is gonna be really difficult."
But I just decided we'd made a substantial commitment to it
and, by God, we were gonna do this book,
so let's just start slogging and then maybe lightning would strike,
or something wonderful would happen.
(LABOURED BREATHING)
STEPHEN: Lightning did indeed strike,
but not in the way that Peter and I were hoping.
That summer, I had taken a break from rewriting,
to travel to Switzerland on holiday...
...but while I was there I caught a chest infection
that developed into pneumonia and quickly became very serious.
I was put into a drug-induced coma and onto a life-support machine.
The doctors thought I was so far gone,
they offered to Jane to turn off the machine.
But she refused.
Finally, Jane insisted that I was flown back to Cambridge.
JUDY: I remember very vividly
walking through the doors and being really
quite rocked by what I saw when I got in there
and I realised that Stephen was really very, very ill.
Things were not looking good.
He could have died.
We were just told that he couldn't breathe
and, of course, we knew how weak he was at that time, and he had been ill before
and we all knew that he was on borrowed time.
STEPHEN'. The weeks of intensive care were the darkest of my life.
I felt I had always fought my illness so hard that I was not prepared
to give in so easily.
Slowly, the drugs began to work and the infection passed,
but the surgeons had to perform a tracheotomy to allow me to breathe,
which made a small incision in my windpipe
and connected me to a ventilator via the hole in my throat.
As a result, I was now robbed of the ability to talk.
I faced a life unable to properly communicate.
BRIAN: It was a very worrying time for everyone around him
and you're thinking, "Do you think you'll ever be able to talk again?"
or, "How will you work if you can't talk?"
So, yes, it was a very bleak time.
STEPH EN: All hopes of finishing my book, and perhaps even my career,
seemed to be over.
JUDY: It was very tense for everybody. It was incredibly tense.
It was difficult to think that Stephen was going to come out of there
and be OK.
STEPH EN: As the weeks of my recovery turned into months,
it became obvious to me, and everyone around me, that being on a ventilator
meant that I needed constant care and monitoring to keep alive.
JUDY: This was a very big realisation that things were going to dramatically change
and that this was going to be needing 24-hour-a-day nursing care.
Their lives were never, ever going to be the same again.
Once nurses came into the house... life changed.
And that was very difficult for all of us - for me, for the children.
Home was no longer home.
There was no privacy, no privacy,
because the walls were listening to everything.
ST E P H E N : Despite the intrusions on family life,
with the nurses' help, I grew stronger.
Yet I still felt trapped inside my body.
For a time, at home, I could communicate
only by raising my eyebrows
when someone pointed to letters on a card.
All thoughts of work and finishing my book grew distant.
But then, quite unexpectedly, a glimmer of hope
came from across the water.
I got a call from a physicist and he said, "I know
"you're working on computer systems for people with ALS."
He says, "I've got someone in England,
"he's a professor of physics,
"who lost the ability to speak and he needs a system."
The system was called Equalizer
and the top part of the screen was a set of letters,
rows of letters, and then the bottom part of the screen was rows of words -
36 very frequently used words,
so he could choose the top part or the bottom part.
He learned that very quickly and I was blown away by it.
He was... He was scanning just amazingly fast.
STEPHEN'. I had enough movement in my right hand
to be able to click the computer system and write the words I wanted.
Finally, I was free to communicate again.
I was keen to make up the lost time that my illness had forced upon me.
I had a stack of notes from Peter Guzzardi
suggesting changes and clarifications to my book,
but I needed practical help with the rewrite at my end,
someone who could act as a go-between.
MAN ON PHONE: ...is keeping the graphic as simple as we can.
BRIAN: The people in the States
were speaking on a loudspeaker phone in his office
and Stephen was writing, using his new computer system on the screen
and then you would say what he was saying over the phone.
We were just sort of cobbling it together,
I think, is probably the right term.
I had no idea what was going on on Stephen's side of this,
where it seems that he was persuading Stephen that this was OK,
helping Stephen off the walls if Stephen started to think,
"Why the hell am I spending all this time
"making this idiot understand this basic stuff?"
STEPH EN: After months of work, the rewrite was complete.
None of us really knew whether the book would be liked
and would sell as we all hoped for.
All we could do now was give it a title -
A Brief History Of Time - send it off to the printers and wait.
But to everyone's surprise the book sold copy after copy
and very quickly bookshops were selling out.
BRIAN: When it hit the bestseller list, you're obviously surprised.
It was a pleasant surprise and it certainly was a surprise.
I don't think you'll find anybody - maybe I'm wrong - who'll say,
"'Oh, yes, we knew all along this was going to be a major hit."
AL: I had no expectation that it was going to be
the number-one bestselling book in the world.
I mean, not just here, but in Germany, Slovenia,
France, Italy - everywhere in the world there was the hope
that someone had found the mystery of life.
And from then on it was just a race to keep the book in print
and marching towards a million copies sold.
You know, it was very gratifying!
Er, you know, in the 38 years that I've been in this business,
um...I don't think I've ever had a book
that stayed at the top of the bestseller list that long.
KIP: Well, I was amazed at how well it did. I think it worked.
He inspired people.
He gave people some overall sense of the birth of the universe
and it made this subject become a subject of conversation
among people in all walks of life.
FEMALE NEWSREADER: Professor Stephen Hawking's book
A Brief History Of Time, an unlikely
but successful publishing phenomenon...
DAVID FROST: A Brief History Of Time has sold about eight million copies...
MALE NEWSREADER: A popular book about his theories
is already topping the American bestsellers' list...
FEMALE NEWSREADER: The hugely successful A Brief History Of Time
by Stephen Hawking...
STEPHEN: A Brief History Of Time stayed in the bestseller list
for over four years
and entered into The Guinness Book Of Records for doing so.
To date, over 10 million copies have been sold worldwide.
Over the next few years, a lot of fuss was made about my book.
I became famous nationally and around the world,
as it was translated into 40 different languages.
TERRY WOGAN: ...delighted to welcome Professor Stephen Hawking.
(APPLAUSE)
STEPHEN'. I was invited onto chat shows...
Well, I think people do think of you as a genius,
not just as a disabled genius.
STEPH EN: ---and I've made a cameo appearance on Star Trek,
my favourite sci-fl' show.
- You are bluffing. - Wrong again, Albert!
I enjoyed the media attention
and witnessing everyday people getting more involved in understanding
the physics of our universe.
But soon the press wanted to know more about me, my illness
and my family life.
(APPLAUSE)
KITTY: He wanted this worldwide celebrity, he enjoys that.
Part of his whole outlook on life and his science is that it's fun
and celebrity was fun
and he embraced it
in a way that was not necessarily very good for the family, the children.
So this was a further real problem in the marriage.
JANE: We were engulfed and swept away
by this great wave of fame and fortune...
...and I have to say
that really it all got rather too much for me to cope with
and I suppose that's when we ceased to be as happy as we had been
and when the marriage broke up
I felt as if a rug,
not just had been pulled up from under my feet,
but the earth had opened up under that rug and swallowed me up,
because the marriage had been my raison d'étre.
And it took me quite a little while to recover my sense of my own identity.
STEPHEN: It was clear that my life and Jane 's
were beginning to follow different paths.
In 1990 we separated, and were divorced in 1995.
(CAMERA SHUTTERS CLICK)
In the same year, I announced my engagement to Elaine Mason
and married again.
Elaine had been one of my nurses
from the start of my 24-hour wraparound care.
Over the years, we had become extremely close as Jane and I drifted apart,
each seeking comfort and love through new relationships.
KITTY: Elaine became closer to Stephen than any of the other nurses.
When he travelled, he would prefer to have her with him over the others.
It became a close relationship.
STEPHEN'. My marriage to Elaine was passionate and tempestuous.
She saved my life on several occasions
and we were together for 11 years, before divorcing in 2006.
The low point was when the press printed unsubstantiated allegations
that I had been the victim of domestic violence.
To my mind, this was a gross invasion of our privacy
and it was an extremely hurtful and damaging time for us both.
Unfortunately, being in the public eye can have its drawbacks.
Living a very public life does, however, have its upsides too.
At work, I am often visited by famous people who share
an interest in space and the universe we live in.
Sometimes, even astronauts drop by.
BUZZ ALDRIN: My voice is listened to because I did something 43 years ago
and I have the sense of humans
reaching outward and succeeding,
but I believe that he is valued more because
he has the pure analytical combined with
the philosophical
that comes from his understanding
of the beginnings and the ends of the universe.
STEPHEN'. I have often dreamt about travelling through space myself.
Recently, I got closer by experiencing a zero gravity flight.
I t was also a moment that temporarily stripped me of my disability -
a feeling of true freedom.
(CHEERING)
(EXCITED CHATTER)
I believe the pioneering efforts of the early astronauts like Buzz
need to be taken onto the next level.
I am convinced that one day
humans will have to colonise other planets in order to survive.
Space travel will become an everyday necessity.
Until then, I hope to be one of the first ordinary people
to blast off into space.
But I will need a little help.
RICHARD BRANSON: I just couldn't think of anybody in the world
that we'd rather send to space than Stephen Hawking,
and, you know, we haven't offered anybody a free ticket,
but it was the one person in the world that we felt, you know,
we'd love to invite you to space.
(BEEPING)
Pressure check.
And it was incredible when he accepted and I went up and saw him that day
and he told me to hurry up
and get the spaceship built because he wasn't going to live forever,
and hopefully next year we'll take him up and I think that, you know,
he feels that if he goes into space personally, he can...he can lead the way.
STEPHEN'. My hopes for space travel have been with me throughout my life.
But as my wheels are still firmly planted here on Planet Earth,
I will keep on dreaming.
As I am now considered a so-called "famous" person,
more and more of my time is taken up with my public life.
For this, I rely greatly upon my team around me.
You are really the gatekeeper in this role.
You get the general fan mail, hero-worshipping him, really,
then you get people who are obsessed
with religion and God and the fact that Professor Hawking doesn't appear to have
a god as such that they can, um, feel comfortable about,
so you get a huge range of what we call the "god letters",
and then you get letters from the disabled,
serious scientists - mostly people
full of admiration for Professor Hawking and what he has achieved.
He is a great iconic figure
and he enjoys his public appearances
and it's great that, you know, he's still very engaged
with everything that surrounds him.
STEPHEN: So if you want to explore the inside of a black hole,
choose a big one.
(LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE)
People have searched for many black holes of this mass
but have, so far, not found any.
This is a pity because, if they had, I would have got a Nobel Prize.
(LAUGHTER)
If you had asked me 40 years ago
if I ever thought I would be talking in front of a sell-out crowd
and be a part of popular culture, I would have laughed.
But if my getting involved with the zeitgeist that is upon us
has encouraged people to question our universe, then I am OK.
ALL: Stephen Hawking!
- The world's smartest man. - What are you doing here?
If you are looking for trouble, you've found it.
Yeah, just try me, you... Oh!
JIM CARREY: He's willing to teach people in whatever way he has to teach people -
you can't take yourself too seriously no matter how intelligent
or how important the work you're doing is.
- This is Jim's phone. - It's for me!
- It's such an honour. ...It's for you. - Hello!
Whenever I do a talk show, I'm trying to think of ways to do things
that are completely different and completely ridiculous.
Most people see Dumb & Dumber and they assume that that's who I am,
so I thought, "Well, wouldn't it be wonderful to, like, partner up
"with the smartest man on the Earth?"
- (PHONE RINGS) - Oh, excuse me!
Hello.
Oh, hi, Stephen Hawking! I can't believe it!
He was wonderful. He was just fantastic.
I was... I was expecting him to be so serious about himself
and, er, I think it was a relief for him
to, er...to completely make fun of the whole thing.
It's amazing.
Yeah, I know.
He did a great job of doing the lines that I'd written
and...and, er, and he was just gung ho the whole time.
OK.
(LAUGHTER)
Oh!
No, you're a genius!
No! You are!
After we did the routine, we kind of struck up a friendship,
so I was invited to his home
and one of the funny highlights of the night
was that, er...was that while we were having dinner
I asked him, you know, just for a picture,
"Could you run over my foot with your wheelchair?"
And that... So I have a picture of me grimacing in agony and stuff,
so it was wonderful, wonderful to be there, wonderful to talk to him
and ask him important questions like,
"How many Higgs boson does it take to screw in a light bulb?'
And, er, I think he's still struggling with that.
(BELL TOLLS)
- Look out! - (BICYCLE BELL RINGS)
STEPH EN: It has been a lot of fun and also very strange
to see myself depicted in so many ways,
but perhaps the strangest is to have had
part of my early life portrayed by an actor.
I felt a huge onus of responsibility to get that part of his life right.
There was so much that happened to him.
It's a terrifying prospect
to have a completely functioning mind inside a body
that locks you in, that keeps you stationary.
One of the things I wanted to get right was to show the stages
of the progression of his condition and where the instability and fear came from.
The very obvious details, such as being at the top of a flight of stairs,
that suddenly becomes the most enormous obstacle,
being on any sort of uneven ground - those feelings of vulnerability.
He's incredibly stoic.
I think that was probably the case when he was younger as well.
I think he rolled up his sleeves and got on with it,
and look at the results.
I mean, it's self-evident -
the man became, er, a spokesperson for the most complex ideas.
Right, Stephen, we're going to put
your hat on you, so you don't get wet.
The straps go round, so it holds the hat on.
- Look at you! (LAUGHS) - He thinks we're mean.
"Have you got a hat?" "Yeah, gangster hat."
- It's the don! - (LAUGHTER)
STEPHEN'. One advantage of being a public figure
is being asked to do special things.
Today I am centre stage at the opening ceremony of the Paralympics Games
and it's an honour to do so.
Ever since the dawn of civilisation,
people have craved for an understanding of the underlying order of the world.
There ought to be something very special about the boundary conditions
of the universe...
...and what can be more special than that there is no boundary?
And there should be no boundary to human endeavour.
The Paralympic Games are all about transforming our perception of the world.
We are all different.
There is no such thing as a standard or run-of-the-mill human being,
but we share the same human spirit.
However difficult life may seem,
there is always something you can do and succeed at.
The Games provide an opportunity for athletes to excel,
to stretch themselves and become outstanding in their field.
So let us together celebrate excellence, friendship and respect.
Good luck to you all.
(HUGE CHEER)
Oh! Goodness!
Oh!
STEPHEN'. Having lived on this wonderful planet for over 71 years,
I feel my proudest achievement has been to inspire people
to think about the cosmos and our place in it.
Since I believe there is no afterlife,
I think it's important to realise
we only have a very short time alive and should make the best of it.
Today, I enjoy time together with family and friends...
...and despite my disabilities
I'll always keep wondering about the mysteries of the universe.
MARY: Stephen's been ill since he was 20.
You come to terms with the impending bereavement
and then suddenly find that it's not that impending after all.
I'm sure there's plenty more he'd like to know about.
Think how awful it would be to come to the end of questions.
Stephen will carry on until they... push him underground.
You... You don't just stop your mind.
BERNARD: Stephen's always had this determination to survive, I guess,
and every time Stephen gets critically ill, I always think
"Oh, dear, I hope," you know, "he's going to get through this time,"
and he always does.
He's just got this tremendous determination to live
and I...and I do think there is such a thing as the will to live.
KIP: There are several components to his long survival.
One is that he's, by a very large margin,
the most stubborn person I've ever met.
He is one of those very few people
who can see far beyond the borders of current knowledge
and see how things really work and set the directions
for other people's research and attempts to prove him right or wrong.
JANE: To recover from a broken marriage, it was very, very difficult.
At first, we were in touch...
...but then it got very, very difficult,
but, lately, we have been able to associate.
I call on him perhaps once a fortnight.
All those years with Stephen were a huge part of my life.
They were my young years.
They were my children.
And I can't just wipe those from the record, and I wouldn't want to.
It would be self-destructive to wipe those away
and I'm very, very proud of what Stephen has done.
STEPHEN'. Life has thrown at me both good times and bad.
Perhaps it is human nature that we adapt and survive.
As for me,
I have lived with the prospect of an early death most of my life.
I am not afraid of dying, but I'm in no hurry to die.
I have so much I want to do and find out first.
(APPLAUSE AND CHEERING)
So, for now...
...goodbye and thank you for coming on a journey through my world.
# Zauberfest
# Bezähmt ein Schlaf
# Der Holden Schmerz und Harm
# Da die Walküre zu mir frat
# Schuf sie ihr den wonnigen Trost?
# Sollte die grimmige Wal
# Nicht schrecken ein gramvolles Weib?
# Leblos scheint sie, die dennoch lebt
# Der Traurigen kost ein lächelnder Traum
# So schlummre nun fort Bis die Schlacht gekämpft
# Und Friede dich erfreu'! #