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Emilio Estevez

 
Actor: Emilio Estevez
  • Born: May 12, 1962 in New York City, New York
  • Occupation: Actor, Director, Writer
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Breakfast Club, Repo Man, St. Elmo's Fire
  • First Major Screen Credit: In the Custody of Strangers (1982)

Biography

Both a member of Hollywood royalty and the Brat Pack, Emilio Estevez had the odds (and the press) against him when it came to forging a long-term career in show business. Yet, though he did become the butt of many jokes, Estevez has had the last laugh: he grew up into a prolific, if not acclaimed, actor/writer/director who managed to sidestep the celebrity pratfalls that befell his family and his Brat Pack colleagues.

Born in New York on May 12, 1962, Estevez is the eldest son of actor Martin Sheen (formerly known as Ramon Estevez) and his wife, Janet. He grew up on Manhattan's Upper West Side with his two younger brothers, Ramon and Charlie, and his younger sister, Renée. Though Estevez started attending school in the New York public-school system, he transferred to a prestigious private academy once his father's career blossomed. In 1968, after Sheen landed a starring role in Catch-22 (1970), the family moved west to Malibu, CA. There, the young Estevez began writing short stories and poems. By the time he turned eight, he had already submitted a script to Rod Serling's Night Gallery television series (it was, unfortunately, rejected).

When Estevez was 11, his father bought the family a portable movie camera. Estevez, his brother Charlie, and their friends, Sean and Chris Penn, and Chad and Rob Lowe, used it to make short films, which Estevez would often write. He then began acting in all the junior-high-school plays, including The Dumb Waiter, Hello Out There, and Bye, Bye, Birdie. While accompanying his father to the Philippine set of Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1979), Estevez got his first professional acting role as a messenger boy in the film. His scene, however, did not make the picture's final cut. After returning home to attend Santa Monica High School, Estevez grew interested in sports and did not become involved with the drama department until his senior year. Uninspired by the usual high-school productions, he wrote an original play and drafted Sean Penn to direct it. Titled Echoes of an Era, the story was based on the life of a Vietnam vet whom Estevez met while staying in the Philippines. Around the same time, he landed his first professional stage role opposite his father in Mr. Roberts at the Burt Reynolds Dinner Theater in Jupiter, FL.

Estevez made his small-screen debut right after graduating from high school. He appeared in the ABC Afterschool Special Seventeen Going on Nowhere (1980) before joining his father in the cast of To Climb a Mountain (1981), an installment of the religious television series Insight. In 1981, after returning from India where he served as his father's stand-in during the taping of Gandhi (1982), Estevez landed his first feature-film role opposite Matt Dillon in Tex (1982). The film marked the first of three adaptations of S.E. Hinton's books in which Estevez would appear. A year later, he starred in Francis Ford Coppola's unforgettable adaptation of Hinton's novel The Outsiders (1983), with Dillon, Patrick Swayze, Tom Cruise, Rob Lowe, C. Thomas Howell, and Ralph Macchio.

By 1983, Estevez found himself on the short list of young actors. Oliver Stone asked him to star in his Academy Award-winning Vietnam film Platoon (1986), but the director could not finance the project in time (Estevez's brother, Charlie, took the role five years later). Instead, Estevez decided to play a punk rocker-turned-car repossessor in Alex Cox's Repo Man (1984). Co-executive produced by former Monkee Mike Nesmith, the wacky comedy also starred cult favorite Harry Dean Stanton and was a lasting underground hit. Estevez next gave a successful reading for John Hughes' The Breakfast Club (1985), a film about five very different high-school kids who are forced to spend a Saturday together in detention. Judd Nelson, Anthony Michael Hall, Molly Ringwald, and Ally Sheedy rounded out the cast in what turned out to be the quintessential teen-angst film of the '80s.

On the set of The Breakfast Club, Estevez refined a screenplay he had begun writing with Tom Cruise while working on The Outsiders. Based on another S.E. Hinton novel, That Was Then...This Is Now (1985) went into production under the auspices of Paramount and director Christopher Cain, with Estevez as its star. It opened to scathing reviews and little praise for its young writer, but was a moderate box-office success.

Estevez's next role featured him as a recent college graduate opposite Rob Lowe, Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Andrew McCarthy, Demi Moore, and Mare Winningham in St. Elmo's Fire (1985). The film debuted at the same time as a New York magazine cover story that labeled its actors (many of whom had worked together before) as the Brat Pack and elected Estevez as the "unofficial president" of the group. The actor immediately tried to shake the moniker with a part in Stephen King's directing debut, Maximum Overdrive (1986), but the film flopped. He then tried his own hand behind the camera. At age 23, he wrote, directed, and starred in Wisdom (1986), making cinematic history as the youngest feature filmmaker to take on all three roles. The picture, a meandering heist-road film, flopped.

Estevez revived his career with Stakeout (1987), a hit action comedy that co-starred veteran actor Richard Dreyfuss, and Young Guns (1988), a successful youth-oriented Western helmed by That Was Then...This Is Now director Christopher Cain. The actor reprised his Young Guns role as Billy the Kid for its sequel, Young Guns 2 (1990), before writing, directing, and starring in Men at Work (1990). The buddy film, a comedy about two garbage men who become wrapped up in a murder case, also featured his brother, Charlie Sheen.

After an embarrassing turn in the bizarre sci-fi thriller Freejack (1992), Estevez starred as a lawyer who is forced to coach a children's hockey team in Disney's triumphant The Mighty Ducks (1992). He filmed the spoof National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1 (1993) and Another Stakeout (1993), before coaching the Mighty Ducks again in D2 (1994). Estevez then agreed to make a cameo appearance in the third installment of the franchise, D3 (1996), if Disney helped finance his own picture, The War at Home (1996). Estevez produced, directed, and starred in the Vietnam-era drama, along with his father and Academy Award winner Kathy Bates. Sadly, after premiering at the Austin Film Festival, The War at Home played in only three cities.

In 1998, Estevez made a comeback as the cowboy in the TNT made-for-cable spaghetti Western, Dollar for the Dead. Two years later, he directed Rated X (2000), a Showtime original movie based on brothers Jim and Art Mitchell, the troubled directors of the infamous adult film Behind the Green Door. After casting himself as Jim, Estevez recruited his own brother Charlie to play Art -- a move which gave the heralded film added clout and a moneymaking edge. Its positive press also put both brothers back in the spotlight.

Nevertheless, the actor-cum-director maintained a comparatively low profile over the following half-decade, with only a scant few film appearances here and there. 2005 broke the silence, with the release of the live performance film Culture Clash in AmeriCCa -- a documentary record of an infamously acerbic Hispanic-American comedy troupe (Richard Montoya, Ricardo Salinas, Herbert Siguenza). The picture -- which received severely limited distribution (read: only a few theaters across the country) -- went almost straight to video, and the few critics who did see it scourged it as an insult to spectators and to the film's subjects.

Despite this and other disappointments on the filmmaker's spotty track record, however, expectations soared for his sixth turn in the director's chair -- which also marked his most ambitious outing to date. The massive period piece/ensemble drama Bobby (2006) darkly recounted -- via a multilayered and multi-plotted script and a massive, Altmanesque ensemble cast to rival even Altman's most impressive assemblages of talent -- the events in Los Angeles' Algonquin Hotel on June 6, 1968, the night Robert F. Kennedy was shot. The cast included William H. Macy, Martin Sheen, Demi Moore, Anthony Hopkins, Sharon Stone, and Elijah Wood. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Emilio Estevez
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Emilio Estevez
Born May 12, 1962 (1962-05-12) (age 47)
New York City
Occupation Actor, director, screenwriter, producer, voice actor
Years active 1979–present
Spouse(s) Paula Abdul (1992–94)

Emilio Estevez (born May 12, 1962) is an American actor, film director, poet, and writer. He started his career as an actor and is famous for being a member of the acting Brat Pack of the 1980s, appearing in The Breakfast Club and St. Elmo's Fire. He is also known for The Mighty Ducks, Maximum Overdrive, and his performances in western films such as Young Guns and its sequel. One of his first appearances was "Two-Bit" in The Outsiders.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Emilio was born in New York City, the eldest child of actor Ramón Estévez (Martin Sheen) and artist Janet Templeton. His siblings are Ramon Estevez, Carlos Estevez (Charlie Sheen), and Renee Estevez. Unlike his brother Charlie, Emilio and his other siblings did not adopt their father's stage name.[1]

Estevez initially attended school in the New York public school system, but transferred to a prestigious private academy once his father's career took off. He lived on Manhattan's Upper West Side until his family relocated to Malibu in 1968. When Estevez was eleven years old, his father bought the family a portable movie camera. Emilio attended Santa Monica High School and graduated in 1980. Estevez, his brother Charlie, and their high school friends, Sean and Chris Penn, and Chad and Rob Lowe used the camera to make short films, which Estevez would often write.[2]

Brat Pack years

In the beginning of his career, Estevez appeared as an extra in Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now, which starred his father Martin Sheen, but the scenes in which Estevez appeared were deleted.[3] Estevez also appeared in a short film produced at his high school, entitled "Meet Mr. Bomb," an anti-nuclear power movie. He made his stage debut with his father in Mister Roberts at the Burt Reynolds' Dinner Theatre in Jupiter, FL.[4]

Estevez received great attention during the 1980s for being a member of the Brat Pack, and was credited as the leader of the group of young actors.[5] Estevez and Rob Lowe established the Brat Pack when cast as supporting "Greasers" in the first Brat Pack movie, The Outsiders based on the novel, casting Lowe as C. Thomas Howell's older brother Sodapop, with Estevez as the drunken Two-Bit Matthews. During production, he also approached his character as a laid-back guy, and thought up Two-Bit's interest in Mickey Mouse, shown by his uniform of Mickey T-shirts and watching cartoons.

After The Outsiders, Estevez appeared as the punk-rocker turned car-repossessor Otto Maddox in the cult film Repo Man before costarring in The Breakfast Club and St. Elmo's Fire. Following the success of these back-to-back Brat Pack staples, he starred in That Was Then, This Is Now (which he cowrote), the horror film Maximum Overdrive (for which he was nominated for a Razzie), and the crime drama Wisdom (with fellow Brat Packer Demi Moore). He went on to lead roles in the comedy/action Stakeout and the westerns Young Guns and Young Guns II.

Later career

In the early 1990s Estevez directed, wrote and starred with his brother Charlie Sheen in the garbage comedy Men at Work. Estevez later stated, "People come up to me on the street and say, Men at Work is the funniest movie I ever saw in my life. But, you know, I do have to question how many movies these people have seen for that film."[3]

In 1992, Estevez starred in The Mighty Ducks as Coach Gordon Bombay, a retired professional hockey player, who is forced into coaching a pee wee hockey team as a form of community service. The film was so successful that it was followed with two sequels. The following year Estevez starred in three films: the dark thriller Judgment Night, the spoof comedy Loaded Weapon 1 and comedy/action Another Stakeout, which was the sequel to his film Stakeout. Estevez has acted alongside his father several times. He starred with him in The War at Home (1996) in which he played a Vietnam War veteran dealing with posttraumatic stress disorder, and guest starred in one episode of The West Wing. Estevez also appeared in an uncredited role, in the Saturn Award-nominated film Mission: Impossible. From 1998 to 1999, he appeared in three television movies: the spaghetti western flick Dollar for the Dead (1998), the comedy Late Last Night (1999), and Rated X (2000), which he also directed. In 2000, Estevez starred in the Moxie! Award-winner thriller Sand, which also starred an ensemble cast that included Denis Leary, Jon Lovitz, Harry Dean Stanton, and Julie Delpy. In 2003, he made his voice acting debut when he helped create the English dub version in The 3 Wise Men with his father Martin Sheen. Later, Estevez starred in The L.A. Riot Spectacular and also voiced the English version of the film Arthur and the Invisibles. He recently guest-starred on Two and a Half Men as an old friend of real-life brother Charlie Sheen’s character.[6]

Directing career

Aside from acting, Estevez has also directed television shows and motion pictures. Most recently, he has directed episodes of the television series Cold Case, Close to Home, The Guardian, Criminal Minds, CSI: NY and Numb3rs. The films he has directed include Men at Work, The War at Home and Bobby. He made his directional debut with the film Wisdom, which made Emilio the youngest person to ever write, direct, and star in a major motion picture.[7]

Estevez has stated that he will direct and star in an independent film called "The Bang Bang Club", as well as that he currently has six screenplays that he has written that remain unproduced. Estevez said during an interview after one of the first screenings of Bobby that his next film will likely be Johnny Longshot.[8]

At the moment, Emilio is in Spain filming his latest project, The Way , where he directs his father Martin Sheen in a story about a man who decides to make the Camino de Santiago after the tragic death of his son in the French Pyrénées.[1]

Music videos

Estevez appeared in John Parr's "St. Elmo's Fire (Man in Motion)" music video from the soundtrack of his film with the same name, where he played Kirby Keger. The music video featured all seven of the main cast of the film, looking sadly through the foggy windows of a run-down and fire-damaged version of the St. Elmo's Bar set. The Canadian version of the video intersperses images of Hansen's trek.

Emilio Estevez is a close friend of Jon Bon Jovi.[citation needed] He appeared in Bon Jovi's music video "Blaze of Glory" as Billy the Kid. In turn, Bon Jovi also made a cameo appearance in Young Guns II. Blaze of Glory was in the Young Guns II soundtrack, and was nominated for an Academy Award. In 2000, Estevez made an appearance in another Bon Jovi video "Say It Isn't So", along with Matt LeBlanc, Claudia Schiffer and Arnold Schwarzenegger.[citation needed]

Personal life

Estevez has two children with his ex-girlfriend, model Carey Salley. They have a son, Taylor Levi Estevez (born in June 1984), and a daughter, Paloma Rae Estevez (born in February 1986). He was briefly engaged to actress Demi Moore before the relationship ended but remain good friends. The two even starred as a feuding married couple in Bobby, alongside Moore's husband Ashton Kutcher.[9]

On April 29, 1992, Estevez married singer-choreographer Paula Abdul. They divorced in May 1994, with Abdul later stating that she wanted children and Estevez, who already had two children from a previous relationship, did not.[10]

In 2006, Estevez announced his engagement to writer Sonja Magdevski.[11]

Filmography

Film
Year Film Role Other notes
1979 Apocalypse Now Messenger Boy Scenes deleted[3]
1982 Tex Johnny Collins
1983 The Outsiders Keith "Two-Bit" Matthews
Nightmares J.J. Cooney Segment: Bishop of Battle
1984 Repo Man Otto Maddox
1985 The Breakfast Club Andrew "Andy" Clark
St. Elmo's Fire Kirby "Kirbo" Keger
That Was Then... This Is Now Mark Jennings Writer
1986 Maximum Overdrive Bill Robinson
Wisdom John Wisdom Director/Writer
1987 Stakeout Det. Bill Reimers
1988 Never on Tuesday Tow Truck Driver Cameo Role
Young Guns William H. "Billy the Kid" Bonney/Henry McCarty
1990 Young Guns II William H. "Billy the Kid" Bonney/Henry McCarty
Men at Work James St. James Director/Writer
1992 Freejack Alex Furlong
The Mighty Ducks Gordon Bombay
1993 National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1 Sgt. Jack Colt
Another Stakeout Det. Bill Reimers
Judgment Night Francis Howard "Frank" Wyatt
1994 D2: The Mighty Ducks Gordon Bombay
1995 The Jerky Boys only executive producer
1996 Mission: Impossible Jack Harmon Uncredited role
The War at Home Jeremy Collier Director and producer
D3: The Mighty Ducks Gordon Bombay
2000 Sand Trip
2000 Rated X
2003 The 3 Wise Men Jimmy Uncredited Voice Role (English Dub)
2005 The L.A. Riot Spectacular Laurence Powell
Culture Clash in AmeriCCa only director
2006 Bobby Tim Fallon Director/Writer
Arthur and the Invisibles Ferryman Voice Role (English Dub)
2010 The Public Stuart [12] Pre-production
director,writer and producer
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1980 Insight Episode: 17 Going Nowhere
1981 To Climb a Mountain
1982 Making the Grade Episode: 1.5
In the Custody of Strangers Danny Caldwell ABC TV-Movie
1987 Funny, You Don't Look 200:
A Constitutional Vaudeville
Himself/Vietnam Soldiers TV-Movie/TV Special documentary
1989 Nightbreaker Dr. Alexander Brown (Past) TNT TV-Movie
1994 Saturday Night Live Host Episode: Emilio Estevez/Pearl Jam
The Legend of Billy the Kid Himself Interview from the set of Young Guns II
1998 Dollar for the Dead Cowboy TNT TV-Movie
1999 Late Last Night Dan TV-Movie
2000 Rated X James Lowell "Jim" Mitchell Showtime TV-Movie
Director
2001 Jon Bon Jovi Himself — Interviewee TV-Special
2002 After Dark: South Beach Narrator TV-Special
2003 The West Wing Young Josiah "Jed" Bartlet Episode: Twenty Five
Cameo Role
2003, 2004 The Guardian Director:
Episode: Hazel Park
Episode: All is Mended
Episode: The Watchers
2004, 2005 Cold Case Director
Episode: The Sleepover
Episode: Wishing
2005 CSI: NY Director
Episode: The Dove Commission
Episode: The Closer
Close to Home Director
Episode: Baseball Murder
Criminal Minds[13] Director
2008 Numb3rs Episode: Charlie Don't Surf
Director
Two and a Half Men Andy Episode: The Devil's Lube

Awards and nominations

ALMA Awards

  • 1998: Nominated, "Outstanding Latino Director of a Feature Film" – The War at Home
  • 1998: Nominated, "Outstanding Individual Performance in a Crossover Role in a Feature Film" – The War at Home
  • 2006: Nominated, "Outstanding Director – Motion Picture" – Bobby
  • 2006: Nominated, "Outstanding Screenplay – Motion Picture" – Bobby
  • 2006: Nominated, "Outstanding Motion Picture" – Bobby

Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards

  • 2006: Nominated, "Best Cast" – Bobby (shared w/co-stars)

Hollywood Film Festival

  • 2006: Won,, "Ensemble of the Year" – Bobby (shared w/co-stars)

Golden Globe Awards

  • 2006: Nominated, "Best Film" – Bobby

Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards

  • 2006: Won, "Behind the Camera Breakout Performance of the Year – Bobby

Razzie Awards

  • 1987: Nominated, "Worst Actor" – Maximum Overdrive

Screen Actors Guild Awards

  • 2007: Nominated, "Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture" – Bobby (shared w/co-stars)

Venice Film Festival

  • 2006: Nominated, "Golden Lion (Best Film)" – Bobby
  • 2006: Won, "Biografilm Award" – Bobby

Western Heritage Awards

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Bronze Wrangler Awards
Preceded by
Carroll Ballard
for Never Cry Wolf
Bronze Wrangler for Theatrical Motion Picture
1989
for Young Guns
Succeeded by
Kevin Costner, Jim Wilson & Rodney A. Grant
for Dances With Wolves
Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards
Preceded by
none give
Breakout Performance of the Year – Behind the Camera
2006
for Bobby
Succeeded by
Ethan Coen & Joel Coen
for No Country for Old Men

 
 
Learn More
Emilio Estevez: Saturday Night Live (TV Episode) (1994 Comedy TV Episode)
Wisdom (1986 Drama Film)
Late Last Night (1998 Comedy Film)

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