The actress said "this is not an easy time for any of us" as she nods to
    prior health scares, her brother Patrick's recent death and losing money:
    "I'm not having some politician tell me what I can and cannot do."
 Sharon
    Stone prepared some remarks to offer in return for receiving the Courage
    Award on Thursday night during the Women’s Cancer Research Fund’s (WCRF) An
    Unforgettable Evening fundraiser. But she didn’t seem to need any help in
    delivering a speech that, at times, had her in tears and ended with a
    standing ovation.
  
“I brought a couple of notes tonight,” said Stone from the
    podium inside the Four Seasons’ Beverly Wilshire ballroom. “I usually just
    speak off the cuff because, as you well know, I don’t give a shit.”
    
 The line drew lots of laughter from a crowd that included
    Rebel Wilson, Nia Vardalos, Rachel Zoe, Lisa Rinna and Harry Hamlin,
    Julianne Hough, Chord Overstreet, Maria Bello and Dominique Crenn, Kathy and
    Rick Hilton, Lori Loughlin, Olivia Jade Giannulli, Paul Wesley and NJ Falk.
    Rockers Maroon 5 closed the show with a set of their biggest hits in a
    performance they donated to the night’s cause.
  
Gala chair Jamie Tisch presented Stone with the trophy by
    saying, “What makes you a shining star, to me, is not just your talent, your
    beauty and your grace, but your resilience no matter what life throws your
    way. Thank you for rising up, time and time again, and inspiring all of us
    by your radiant example.”
Courage Award recipient Sharon Stone: “I brought a couple of notes tonight. I usually just speak off the cuff because, as you well know, I don’t give a shit.” pic.twitter.com/9PfaUSAA3k
— Chris Gardner (@chrissgardner) March 17, 2023
  
 The Oscar-nominated actress used her time on stage to pay
    respect to the night’s other honorees, Hero Award recipients Dr. Stacie J.
    Stephenson and Richard J. Stephenson, encourage attendees to open their
    pocketbooks even more to benefit WCRF, and to shine a light on living
    examples of courage by asking breast cancer survivors to stand and be
    recognized. She also spent time detailing her own prior health
    challenges.
“Those mammograms are not fun,” she explained. “And
    for someone like me who was told that I had breast cancer because I had a
    tumor that was larger than my breast and they were sure that I couldn’t
    possibly have a tumor without it being cancer, it wasn’t. But I went to the
    hospital, saying, ‘If you open me up and it’s cancer, please take both my
    breasts,’ because I am not a person defined by my breasts. You know, that
    might seem funny coming from me since you’ve all seen ‘em.”
Sharon Stone on health scare when she was told she had breast cancer. “I went to the hospital saying, ‘If you open me up and it’s cancer, please take both my breasts’ because I am not a person defined by my breasts. That might seem funny coming from me since you’ve all seen ‘em.” pic.twitter.com/YTr17fB8jD
— Chris Gardner (@chrissgardner) March 17, 2023
  
 Not only that, she added, “You’ve all seen ‘em since the
    surgery and you don’t even know it. So don’t ever feel compelled not to get
    a mammogram, not to get a blood test, not to get surgery because it doesn’t
    matter. I’m standing here telling you I had one-and-a-half and more tissue
    of my breasts removed and none of you knew it.” 
  
 Per Stone’s memoir, The Beauty of Living Twice, the
    actress underwent breast reconstruction surgery in 2001 after doctors
    removed benign tumors that she writes were “gigantic, bigger than my breasts
    alone,” according to People. More recently, Stone revealed last November
    that she was misdiagnosed and had an “incorrect procedure” that left her
    with worsening pain. As a result, she fielded a second opinion and found out
    that she had “a large fibroid tumor” that also required surgery.
From
    the stage, Stone also explained that her hairstylist arrived to do her hair
    for tonight’s event after receiving her first chemotherapy treatment for
    breast cancer. “They told her that she will lose her hair in a week, so
    tonight before we did my hair, we picked out her hats, her beanies, her
    do-rags, her lipsticks and made sure that it was going to look great and she
    was going to have some way to deal with it. And that was really fun. Really
    fun.”
  
Then she got serious. Stone broke down in tears as she tried to
    rally the crowd to give more money in a passionate showing reminiscent of
    her decades of activism in raising money for HIV/AIDS and other causes on
    behalf of organizations like amfAR.
“I know that thing that you
    have to get on and figure out how to text the money is difficult. I’m a
    technical idiot, but I can write a fucking check. And right now, that’s
    courage, too, because I know what’s happening. I just lost half my money to
    this banking thing, and that doesn’t mean that I’m not here,” said Stone.
    
 Though she didn’t elaborate on the specific “banking
    thing” that caused her losses, her remarks come on the heels of the collapse
    of Silicon Valley Bank and resulting financial market volatility. Banking
    stocks have been hit and broader markets rattled by fears over the
    situation, even after regulators moved to contain the fallout of the bank’s
    collapse and avoid a domino effect. U.S. President Joe Biden told investors
    early this week that their money was safe, saying: “No losses will be borne
    by the taxpayers.” He also attempted to reassure Americans “that the banking
    system is safe,” adding, “Your deposits will be there when you need them.
    Small businesses across the countrythat deposit accounts at these banks can
    breathe easier knowing they’ll be able to pay their workers and pay their
    bills, and their hard-working employees can breathe easier as well.”
  
Stone then referenced her brother, Patrick Stone, who died last
    month at age 57 due to heart disease.
“My brother just died, and
    that doesn’t mean that I’m not here. This is not an easy time for any of us.
    This is a hard time in the world, but I’m telling you what, I’m not having
    some politician tell me what I can and cannot do. How I can and cannot live,
    and what the value of my life is and is not. So stand up. Stand up and say
    what you’re worth. I dare you. That’s what courage is.”
Sharon Stone breaks down in tears asking guests to donate more money. She says writing a check for her requires courage since she “lost half my money to this banking thing,” presumably referring to Silicon Valley Bank collapse. “This is not an easy time for any of us.” pic.twitter.com/ZTSP5TQ2od
— Chris Gardner (@chrissgardner) March 17, 2023Rebel Wilson introduces nights’ headline performers, the “guys who’ve got moves like Jagger,” Maroon 5. The band donated their performance to the Unforgettable Evening fundraiser. pic.twitter.com/YWRyCzZQMK
— Chris Gardner (@chrissgardner) March 17, 2023
