Autism may bring challenges for those who live with it, but celebrities with autism have shown they can achieve tremendous things and fulfill their dreams.
Here are some notable celebrities who have autism.
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Dan Aykroyd
The famous "Saturday Night Live" alum and star of several movies in the '80s was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome and Tourettes syndrome when he was 12. In the early 1980s, he found out he had severe obsessions with policemen and ghosts, which led to him to write the 1984 hit movie, "Ghostbusters."
The movie, in which Aykroyd starred in along with Bill Murray and Rick Moranis, grossed $295 million worldwide after its release.
“My very mild Asperger’s has helped me creatively,” he said once in an interview. “I sometimes hear a voice and think, ‘That could be a character I could do.’”
Matt Savage
A 30-year-old who was diagnosed with pervasive development disorder, a form of autism, at age 3, Savage has gone on to become an accomplished jazz musician. He has toured the world and performed on “The Today Show,” the “Late Show with David Letterman” and “Late Night with Conan O’Brien.”
Savage has released 12 albums and in 2014, composed and recorded the score for a full-length documentary film, "Sound of Redemption: The Frank Morgan Story." Read more.
Daryl Hannah
A star in films such as "Blade Runner," "Splash," "Wall Street" and "Steel Magnolias," Hannah was diagnosed with autism as a child, but that fact about her wasn't revealed until a 2013 report in Forbes magazine.
Hannah now spends a lot of her time as an environmental activist.
Courtney Love
Love was diagnosed with a mild form of autism at age 9, and has become an accomplished singer/songwriter and actress. Love has starred in films such as "The People vs. Larry Flynt," "Man on the Moon," and "Trapped," and also was the lead vocalist in the band Hole.
In 1998, Hole's album, "Celebrity Skin," was nominated for three Grammy awards.
Dan Harmon
The creator and producer of the NBC sitcom, “Community” and co-creator of the animated series, “Rick and Morty,” Harmon was diagnosed with autism in 2011 while working on the character Abed for “Community,” according to published reports.
Harmon has also done voice-overs for several TV shows, including, “The Simpsons,” and has been a writer for the Academy Awards and the MTV Video Music Awards.
This story was first published in 2019. It has since been updated.