Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Eric Roberts

 
Actor: Eric Roberts
  • Born: Apr 18, 1956 in Biloxi, Mississippi
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Thriller, Drama
  • Career Highlights: King of the Gypsies, Runaway Train, The Cable Guy
  • First Major Screen Credit: King of the Gypsies (1978)

Biography

Eric Roberts is an acquired taste: those watching his movies fall into two distinct camps -- they either love him and consider him one of Hollywood's most intense and underrated actors, or they loathe him and consider him a pretentious, shameless ham. Both viewpoints are not without merit for Roberts has seen many ups and downs in his career. Tall and dark-haired, with a chiseled face, swarthy complexion, and arresting eyes, the young Roberts had the look of a classic movie rebel and off-screen displayed an arrogance and self-possession coupled with a tendency toward womanizing, drug abuse, and behavior that created a bad boy image on and off the screen. A serious car accident roughened his facial features and led to the second phase of his career during the '80s in which he primarily played villains; he spent the third phase during the late '90s trying to establish himself as a character actor.

Growing up in Atlanta, GA, Roberts was no stranger to actors and the theater as his parents ran a successful acting and writing school from their home. A terrible stutterer as a child, Roberts and his father discovered that he could speak normally if he memorized his speeches ahead of time. Thus Roberts participated in his father's classes as a form of therapy. It was while watching English character actor Robert Donat during a late-night showing of Goodbye Mr. Chips that Roberts became inspired to become a movie actor. He made his acting debut at age five playing a cripple in a locally produced Saturday morning TV show, The Little Pioneers. He also performed for poor kids on his father's "showmobile." Roberts was quite close to his father, who taught him the spiritual side of acting, but after his parents divorced, became estranged from his mother, who married a man Roberts detested. He was however, a loving brother to his younger sisters, Julia and Lisa, both of whom became actresses. Roberts began experimenting with drugs at age 11 and by 13 was an avowed pot smoker. Later, he admitted that smoking dope was a way of coping with his broken family and that the drug in many ways arrested his emotional development. During his late teens, Roberts' father sacrificed much to send him to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.

By the time he finished training, Roberts was a hardcore Method actor, something that somewhat hindered his personal life as he was unable to easily disassociate from his characters after appearing in a film. In 1976, Roberts' first break was portraying Ted Bancroft in the daily soap Another World. He disliked the job and left to work off-Broadway until agent Bill Treusch discovered him and helped Roberts land the role of a young man who is crowned a gypsy leader by his dying grandfather in King of the Gypsies. The film flopped at the box office, but like his two subsequent films, it has become a cult favorite among video fans. Roberts then appeared in a television movie before starring his next feature as a handsome sailor who falls for Texas divorcée Sissy Spacek in The Raggedy Man (1981). In June that year, Roberts was involved in a serious car crash while driving home from visiting his much older lover Sandy Dennis. He was comatose for three days afterwards with a bruised brain and much facial trauma, a broken collarbone, and an injured hand. No longer suitable for the same roles as before, Roberts bounced back with what became his most famous role, that of the sleazy Paul Snider, the man who killed actress Dorothy Stratten, in Bob Fosse's disturbing Star 80 (1983). The actor made a chilling villain and after playing another bad guy in The Pope of Greenwich Village (1984), found himself typecast. Roberts proved well suited to those roles and received an Oscar nomination for playing an escaped convict in Runaway Train (1985).

After that, Roberts chose quick money over artistic integrity and played in a long series of B-movies and direct-to-video fare; while he disappeared from mainstream view, he still maintained a loyal following. Meanwhile the career of his sister Julia Roberts, who made her debut co-starring opposite Roberts in Blood Red (1988), became the most popular female star of the late '80s. Though both were in Hollywood, the formerly close siblings argued and have remained bitter and estranged. In 1987, a drugged Roberts was arrested for harassing a woman and for striking a police officer. He spent 36 hours in jail, pleaded guilty for harassment, and had all other charges dropped. In 1991, he made Hollywood news for a bitter breakup with his live-in girlfriend, Kelly Cunningham. He lost the battle for custody of their daughter, Emma. The next year he married again.

Careerwise, Roberts' tempestuous personality and lifestyle did little to make him bankable to studios. In 1995, Roberts gave up drugs and has worked on becoming a more ingratiating, congenial person. That year he made a comeback with his first romantic lead in It's My Party, playing an AIDS-afflicted homosexual who hosts one last bash for family and friends before committing suicide. His hope was that the film would allow him to return to his original dream of becoming a great character actor. In 1996, he played the Master in a new installment of the long-running Dr. Who saga. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Filmography: Eric Roberts
Top

National Security

Buy this Movie

The Brotherhood III: Young Demons

Buy this Movie

Spun

Buy this Movie

Roughing It

Buy this Movie

Breakaway

Buy this Movie

Stiletto Dance

Buy this Movie

Frozen in Fear

Buy this Movie

Raptor

Buy this Movie
Show More Movies

Mind Storm

Buy this Movie

Rough Air

Buy this Movie

The Long Ride Home

Buy this Movie

Cecil B. Demented

Buy this Movie

Sanctimony

Buy this Movie

Mercy Streets

Buy this Movie

Race Against Time

Buy this Movie

TripFall

Buy this Movie

The King's Guard

Buy this Movie

Strange Frequency

Buy this Movie

Lansky

Buy this Movie

Facade

Buy this Movie

Purgatory

Buy this Movie

Hitman's Run

Buy this Movie

Bittersweet

Buy this Movie

No Alibi

Buy this Movie

Agent of Death

Buy this Movie

Restraining Order

Buy this Movie

Heaven's Fire

Buy this Movie

The Prophecy II

Buy this Movie

La Cucaracha

Buy this Movie

The Shadow Men

Buy this Movie

Two Shades of Blue

Buy this Movie

Most Wanted

Buy this Movie

The Odyssey

Buy this Movie

Dead End

Buy this Movie

The Grave

Buy this Movie

It's My Party

Buy this Movie

Power 98

Buy this Movie

The Cable Guy

Buy this Movie

American Strays

Buy this Movie

Heaven's Prisoners

Buy this Movie

In Cold Blood

Buy this Movie

Past Perfect

Buy this Movie

The Glass Cage

Buy this Movie

The Immortals

Buy this Movie

Public Enemies

Buy this Movie

Saved by the Light

Buy this Movie

Freefall

Buy this Movie

Love, Cheat & Steal

Buy this Movie

Babyfever

Buy this Movie

Love is a Gun

Buy this Movie

The Specialist

Buy this Movie

The Hard Truth

Buy this Movie

Sensation

Buy this Movie

Best of the Best 2

Buy this Movie

Voyage

Buy this Movie

Final Analysis

Buy this Movie

A Family Matter

Buy this Movie

Lonely Hearts

Buy this Movie

By the Sword

Buy this Movie

The Ambulance

Buy this Movie

Descending Angel

Buy this Movie

The Lost Capone

Buy this Movie

Best of the Best

Buy this Movie

Options

Buy this Movie

Rude Awakening

Buy this Movie

Blood Red

Buy this Movie

Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam

Buy this Movie

Nobody's Fool

Buy this Movie

Slow Burn

Buy this Movie

The Coca-Cola Kid

Buy this Movie

Runaway Train

Buy this Movie

The Pope of Greenwich Village

Buy this Movie

Star 80

Buy this Movie

Raggedy Man

Buy this Movie

Paul's Case

Buy this Movie

King of the Gypsies

Buy this Movie
Show Fewer Movies
Wikipedia: Eric Roberts
Top
Eric Roberts
Born Eric Anthony Roberts
April 18, 1956 (1956-04-18) (age 53)
Biloxi, Mississippi, U.S.
Occupation Actor
Years active 1978–present
Spouse(s) Eliza Garrett (1992-present)

Eric Anthony Roberts (born April 18, 1956) is an American actor. His career began with King of the Gypsies (1978), earning a Golden Globe nomination for best actor debut. He starred as the protagonist in the 1980 dramatisation of Willa Cather's 1905 short story, Paul's Case. He earned both a Golden Globe and Academy Award nomination for his supporting role in Runaway Train (1985). Through the 1990s and 2000s he maintained dramatic film and TV-movie roles while appearing in TV series. His television work includes three seasons with the sitcom Less Than Perfect. His sisters Julia Roberts and Lisa Roberts Gillan, and daughter Emma Roberts, are actresses.

Contents

Early life

Roberts was born in Biloxi, Mississippi. Roberts' parents, one-time actors and playwrights, met while performing theatrical productions for the armed forces and later co-founded the Atlanta Actors and Writers Workshop in Atlanta, Georgia off of Juniper Street in Midtown. Roberts' mother Betty filed for divorce in 1971 and it was finalized early in 1972.[1] His younger siblings, Julia Roberts (from whom he was once estranged but reconciled since 2004) and Lisa Roberts Gillan, are also actresses. His mother later married Michael Motes and had a daughter, named Nancy Motes, who was born in 1976. Roberts was raised in Atlanta, Georgia and attended Grady High School.

Career

Roberts received Golden Globe nominations for his early starring roles in King of the Gypsies (1978) and Star 80 (1983). He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 1985 for his role as the escaped convict Buck in the film Runaway Train. In 1987, he won the Theatre World Award for his Broadway debut performance in Burn This.

Roberts's other starring roles included Raggedy Man (1981), The Pope of Greenwich Village (1984), The Coca-Cola Kid (1985), Nobody's Fool (1986), Best of the Best (1989), By the Sword (1991), Best of the Best 2 (1993), The Immortals (1995), La Cucaracha (1998), and Purgatory (1999), Stiletto Dance (2001). He also had major supporting roles in Final Analysis (1992), The Specialist (1994), and the upcoming film Shannon's Rainbow (2009). He played the Archangel Michael in The Prophecy II (1997).

In 1996, he appeared in the Doctor Who TV movie in the role of the Master. As of 2007, he is the only American actor to play the role. When SFX listed previous Masters in Doctor Who, the magazine said of Roberts: "Out-acted by a CGI snake in the same production."

His recent projects include A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, DOA: Dead or Alive and Royal Kill. He appeared in The Dark Knight as Sal Maroni, a Gotham City Mafia boss who hires The Joker to kill the titular superhero and a renegade mob accountant.[2]

Roberts co-starred on the ABC sitcom Less Than Perfect. He appeared in an episode of CSI: Miami as Ken Kramer, a murderer on death row convicted of killing a young couple. Another notable TV appearance was the episode "Victims" of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit where he played Sam Winfield, a former cop turned vigilante. In the same year, he was also guest starred on The L Word as Shane McCutcheon's father, Gabriel. In early January 2007, Roberts starred in the two-part mini-series Pandemic as the mayor of Los Angeles.

Roberts voiced the Superman villain Mongul in the animated series Justice League and reprised his role in Justice League Unlimited in the episode "For the Man Who Has Everything". He performed the voice of Dark Danny in Nickelodeon's Danny Phantom. He appeared in the first season of Heroes as Thompson, an associate of Mr. Bennet.[3] He then reprised the role in the third-season episode "Villains".

Roberts appeared in The Killers music video for their song "Mr. Brightside" as well as in the music videos for Mariah Carey's "We Belong Together" and "It's Like That". In 2006, he appeared in the video for Akon's "Smack That", featuring Eminem. In 2007, he appeared in the video for Godhead's "Hey You". He appeared as a panelist on the television game show Hollywood Squares. In February 2009, Oscar nominee Mickey Rourke, who starred with Roberts in The Pope of Greenwich Village, said he hoped that Roberts would soon be offered a role which would resurrect his career in the way that The Wrestler rejuvenated Rourke's.[4]

He currently is portraying the role of "Seth Blanchard" on the STARZ series of "Crash".

Personal life

Roberts had his daughter Emma Roberts on February 10, 1991 with his then-girlfriend Kelly Cunningham. After that relationship ended, he married Eliza Garrett in 1992.[5] His daughter Emma has joined her father and aunts in the acting business. She had a starring role on the Nickelodeon series Unfabulous and appeared in the films Blow (2001), Aquamarine (2006), and starred as the title character in Nancy Drew (2007) and Wild Child (2008).

Car accident and arrests

In 1981, Roberts was involved in a car crash that left him comatose for three days and with facial trauma, a broken collarbone, and an injured hand. His appearance changed significantly as a result that he had to change the type of role he played, taking "heavy" roles rather than the "pretty boy" parts he had played previously.[6] In 1987, Roberts was arrested for resisting arrest and possession of cocaine and marijuana after he tried to assault a New York police officer.[7] He spent 36 hours in jail, pleaded guilty for harassment, and had all other charges dropped.[6] In 1991, Roberts faced accusations of domestic violence from then-girlfriend Kelly Cunningham.[8] In February 1995, Roberts was arrested for shoving his wife, Eliza Garrett, into a wall.[7] He subsequently announced that he was renouncing drug use entirely.[6]

On January 12, 2001, Roberts visited The Howard Stern Radio Show with his wife during a segment called "The Gossip Game" with Mike Walker of the National Enquirer on the telephone and shared a bit of personal information. He confirmed that he and his sister Julia Roberts had been estranged for several years. The source of the estrangment had been his past drug abuse, and her siding with his ex-girlfriend over the custody battle over Emma Roberts. In 2004, he told People magazine that he and his sister reconciled when he went to visit her in the hospital after she gave birth to twins.[9]

In popular culture

An episode of the satiric cartoon series South Park featured Roberts as a star in a re-enactment of America's Most Wanted. He plays the genetically engineered half-man, half-monkey sidekick of the character Mephisto. The portrayal is less than kind, depicting Roberts as a washed-up overactor. During the re-enactment's taping, a snowstorm forces a group of characters to resort to cannibalism, to Roberts' demise.

He was also name-checked in an episode of Seinfeld; after giving away the ending of the film, Kramer tells George that Roberts' performance as the husband in the film The Other Side of Darkness was "unforgettable".

He was portrayed as a clay figure on MTV's Celebrity Deathmatch where he fought alongside his sister, Julia, against Donny and Marie Osmond.

Roberts was parodied in the web cartoon series College University, participating in a martial arts competition for washed-up action stars. He never got to compete, though, as the Transformer Optimus Prime knocked him out and stole his name tag. Although in writing he was dubbed Eric Roberts, throughout the entire episode everybody referred to him as "Julia Roberts' Brother". The cartoon can be viewed at College University Character Bios.[10]

Roberts also appeared in season five of Entourage as himself in the episode "Tree Trippers." He is portrayed as a mushroom and drug fanatic as he joins the boys to Joshua Tree National Park to trip on mushrooms as they contemplate Vince's next movie decision.

Roberts is also an interesting staple of music videos, featuring in videos for The Killers, Mariah Carey and Akon, the latter of which he plays a cop named 'Jack Gates' who escorts Akon to a strip club as part of a mission.

Selected filmography

Year Film Role Other notes
1978 King of the Gypsies Dave Nominated: Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Acting Debut - Male
1980 Paul's Case Paul
1981 Raggedy Man Teddy
1983 Star 80 Paul Snider Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
Nominated: Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama
1984 The Pope of Greenwich Village Paulie
1985 The Coca-Cola Kid Becker
Runaway Train Buck Nominated: Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated: Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture
1986 Slow Burn Jacob Asch TV-movie
Nobody's Fool Riley
1989 Best of the Best Alex Grady
1990 The Ambulance Josh Baker
1990 The Lost Capone Al Capone
1991 By the Sword Alexander Villard
1992 Final Analysis Jimmy Evans
1993 Best of the Best 2 Alex Grady
1994 The Specialist Tomas Leon
1995 The Nature of the Beast Adrian
The Immortals Jack
Saved by the Light Dannion Brinkley TV-movie
1996 Power 98 Karlin Pickett
The Grave Cass
It's My Party Nick Stark
Doctor Who The Master/Bruce TV-movie
Heaven's Prisoners Bubba Rocque
The Cable Guy Himself
The Drew Carey Show Steven TV episode "Drew's Other Man"
In Cold Blood Perry Smith TV miniseries
Nominated: Satellite Award for Best Actor - Miniseries or Television Film
Public Enemies Arthur Danlop TV
1997 Frasier Chet TV episode "Roz's Krantz & Gouldenstein Are Dead"
The Odyssey Eurymachus TV miniseries
Most Wanted Assistant Deputy Director Spencer
Oz Richard L'Italien TV episode "Capital P"
1998 The Prophecy II Michael
The Shadow Men Bob Wilson
La Cucaracha Walter Pool
1999 Purgatory Blackjack Britton
Lansky Ben Siegel (age 40) TV-movie
Touched by an Angel Nick Stratton TV episode "Made in the U.S.A"
Wildflowers Jacob
Spawn Petey (voice) TV episode "The Mindkiller"
Heaven's Fire Dean McConnell TV-movie
2000 Cecil B. DeMented Honey's Ex
Tripfall Mr. Eddie
Mercy Streets Rome
2001 The King of Queens Strohmeyer TV episode "Paint Misbehavin'"
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Sam Winfield TV episode "Victims"
Raptor Sheriff Jim Tanner
2002 Spun The Man
Wolves of Wall Street Dyson Keller
Less Than Perfect Will Butler TV (59 episodes, 2002-2005)
Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor - Television Series Musical or Comedy
Justice League Mongul (voice) TV (3 episodes)
2003 National Security Nash
L.A. Confidential Pierce Patchett TV pilot
2004 Miss Cast Away Maximus Powers
Six: The Mark Unleashed Dallas
2005 Danny Phantom Dark Danny (voice)
CSI: Miami Ken Kramer TV episode "Whacked"
The Civilization of Maxwell Bright Arlis
2006 Phat Girlz Robert Myer
A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints Older Antonio
DOA: Dead or Alive Donovan
The L Word Gabriel McCutcheon TV (3 episodes, 2006-2007)
Fatal Desire Joe TV-movie
Aurora Mr. Brown
2007 Pandemic Mayor Dalesandro TV-movie
Heroes Agent Thompson TV (6 episodes)
2008 Edgar Allan Poe's Ligeia Vaslov
Witless Protection Wilford Duvall
Fear Itself Harry Siegal/Harry Bender TV episode "Spooked"
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Roy Hubert TV episode "Betrayed"
Dark Honeymoon L.A. Guy
The Dark Knight Salvatore Maroni
The Cleaner Ray Crin TV episode "Here Comes the Boom"
Entourage Himself TV episode "Tree Trippers"
2009 Royal Kill Dad
The Steam Experiment Grant
Shannon's Rainbow Mitchell Prescott
2010 The Expendables Monroe

References

  1. ^ "Julia: Her Life", James Spada. St Martin's Press, New York. Page 32
  2. ^ "Heroic Save". NYPost.com. http://www.nypost.com/seven/05142007/entertainment/heroic_save_entertainment_michael_kane.htm?page=0. Retrieved 2007-05-14. 
  3. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (January 23, 2007). "Dale, Cohen, Roberts get casting calls". The Hollywood Reporter. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003535962. Retrieved 2007-01-26. 
  4. ^ [1] Rourke steals Spirit Awards show - BBC News. Accessed 2009-02-22
  5. ^ http://www.absolutecelebrities.com/mugshot/eric_roberts.html
  6. ^ a b c answers.com
  7. ^ a b Celebrity mug shots
  8. ^ NetGlimpse page of Emma Roberts
  9. ^ Michael Fleeman (December 15, 2004) Julia Roberts, Brother Eric Reunited People. Accessed 2008-01-30.
  10. ^ "College University Character Bios". Coggeuniv.com. http://www.collegeuniv.com/html/module-Pagesetter-viewpub-tid-1-pid-13.html. Retrieved 2007-04-08. 

External links

Preceded by
Anthony Ainley
The Master
(Doctor Who)

1996
Succeeded by
Derek Jacobi

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Eric Roberts" Read more

 

Mentioned in