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More News

  • King's Speech Wins 13th Honor: The Stuttering Foundation Gives It 'A Hero's Welcome'

    -From the Summer 2011 Newsletter

  • Comments from Across the Globe

  • Stuttering Foundation Makes Headlines Around the World

  • An Eloquently Golden Ride on the Red Carpet

    "We have a voice. We have been heard."
    David Seidler, while accepting his Oscar for The King's Speech

  • Screenwriter Seidler Triumphed Over His Own Stutter

  • A Third Generation view of the King

    By Jean Gruss

    Editor’s Note: Jean Gruss, the author of this article, is the grandson of Stuttering Foundation founder Malcolm Fraser and Mark Logue is the grandson of Lionel Logue.

    For decades, Lionel Logue’s name was an obscure footnote in biographies of British King George VI.

    But thanks to his grandson and a blockbuster movie, he’s quickly become the most famous speech therapist in history.

  • Stuttering Foundation Gets Starring Role on The King's Speech DVD

    While the Oscar-winning movie The King’s Speech is universally treasured by the stuttering community, there is a hidden gem on the DVD and Blu-ray editions released in mid-April.

  • The King's Speech

    Reviewed by John M. Williams

    I was very slow to see the movie The King’s Speech. I had wanted to see it for many months after I read my first review in late 2010. I am overjoyed with having seen it. It is a movie I will watch many times. I enjoyed it that much.

    As I watched the movie, I drew many parallels between the sometimes despicable ways speech therapists and others treated the future King and me.

  • Stuttering: The Heartless Enemy of Communication

    By Ed Arrington

    Many years ago when I was in the Air Force, stationed in San Antonio, Texas, I went through a traumatic, distressing, and humiliating experience.

  • The Stuttering Foundation Receives a Helping Hand

    Behind the scenes of some of our King's Speech media exposure

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Archived Articles

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CELEBRITY FOCUS

Dave Taylor

Dave Taylor has been on the Stuttering Foundation's list of  Famous People Who Stutter for many years, but probably few people know all of the unique accomplishments of this former hockey great who was born on December 4, 1955, in Levack, Ontario.

Frank Wolf

This Virginian congressman has served in the U.S. House of Representatives since 1981. The longtime supporter of the Stuttering Foundation drew national attention to childhood stuttering in 2006 when he submitted an article about Tiger Woods from the SFA newsletter to the Congressional Record. The congressman is featured in the Stuttering Foundation's Famous People Who Stutter brochure.

Winston Churchill

Seeking to "remove Winston Churchill's stutter by second guessing the diagnosis" indicates neither a truthful retelling of history nor an informed opinion about a complex speech disorder, say experts in the field of speech-language pathology.

Recent news reports that quote Dr. John Mather, a Washington physician, as saying that Churchill's stutter "is a lie" brought adamant critical response from specialists in the field of stuttering and fluency disorders.

Emily Blunt

Actress Emily Blunt struggled with stuttering early in her life. A teacher encouraged her to act in a school play at age 12 despite her stuttering.

Blunt’s name is prominently featured on the Stuttering Foundation's list of Famous People Who Stutter. 

Lewis Carroll

The recent Disney version of Lewis Carroll’s classic, Alice in Wonderland, garnered a great deal of media hype. Even though the mainstream media has not made mention that Carroll was a person who stuttered, his family history gives credence to the discovery of the genetic link to stuttering. Carroll was born to parents who were first cousins; almost all of their eleven children, three girls and seven boys, struggled with stuttering past childhood.

Famous People Who Stutter

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