Emilio Estevez
Best Known As:
Film Actor
Gist:
Emilio Estevez (born May 12, 1962) is an American actor, 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.
Life Facts:
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
In 2006, Estevez announced his engagement to writer Sonja Magdevski.
Career Facts:
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. 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.
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. 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.
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.
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.