Steve Coogan Discusses Cocaine Addiction: 'I'll Always Be A Recovering Drug Addict'

Steve Coogan Opens Up About Cocaine Addiction

Steve Coogan has opened up about his addiction to cocaine, admitting that the drug eventually caused him to have debilitating panic attacks.

The British comedian says he first became hooked on the drug in the early 1990s, claiming it was so readily available to him that he didn’t even need to buy it.

Steve Coogan

In new excerpts from his book ‘Easily Distracted’, which have been published in The Guardian, he recalls the first cocaine-induced panic attack he suffered, which he feared at the time could kill him.

“Patrick put me in a car and drove through red lights to get me to hospital. I cried all the way. I couldn’t stop thinking, ‘I’m going to die. This is it. My headstone will say: Stephen Coogan, born in Middleton in 1965, died in Edinburgh in 1992, aged 26 years’. What a waste!”

He goes on to say that after leaving hospital he had repeated panic attacks in the ensuing days, and “quickly became depressed”.

“When I came back from Edinburgh, I saw a therapist. He asked if I had a feeling of impending catastrophe. That was the perfect word: catastrophe. He then described a panic attack and I was immediately calmer – I wasn’t going mad. This was a condition, and as soon as I could label it, I felt better.”

Steve, best known for his comedy character Alan Partridge, says that therapy helped him conquer his panic attacks, and eventually went to rehab to try and deal with his addiction.

He insists: “Wanting and then needing some sort of constant stimulus becomes debilitating. I don’t take drugs or drink any more, but I am in no denial about my past: I will always be a recovering addict.”

Steve Coogan’s memoir, ‘Easily Distracted’, is released on 8 October.

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