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Emilio Estevez survived the “Brat Pack” stigma that tainted the early part of his career and emerged as a mature actor and director with a knack for choosing ambitious and thoughtful feature projects.

Born May 15, 1962, Estevez was the oldest son of actor Martin Sheen, and brother to fellow performers Charlie Sheen, Renee Estevez, and Ramon Estevez. The Sheen family relocated from New York to Malibu, CA in 1968, with Estevez spending his childhood palling around with future stars like Rob Lowe and Sean and Chris Penn....

Filmography

Culture Clash in AmeriCCa - ( Director / 2005 / In-Production / )
Arthur and the Invisibles - ( Voice of Ferryman / 2006 / Released / )
Bobby - ( Director / 2006 / Released / )
Bobby - ( Screenplay / 2006 / Released / )
Bobby - ( Tim Fallon / 2006 / Released / )
L.A. Riot Spectacular - ( Officer Powell / 2006 / Released / )
Sand - ( / 1998 / Released / )
D3: The Mighty Ducks - ( Gordon Bombay / 1996 / Released / )
Mission: Impossible - ( (uncredited) Electronics Whiz / 1996 / Released / )
The War At Home - ( Director / 1996 / Released / )
The War At Home - ( Producer / 1996 / Released / )
The War At Home - ( Jeremy Collier / 1996 / Released / )
The War At Home - ( Music Performer / 1996 / Released / )
The Jerky Boys - ( Executive Producer / 1995 / Released / )
D2: The Mighty Ducks - ( Gordon Bombay / 1994 / Released / )
Another Stakeout - ( Bill Reimers / 1993 / Released / )
Judgment Night - ( Frank Wyatt / 1993 / Released / Victor Company of Japan Ltd )
National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1 - ( Jack Colt / 1993 / Released / Meteor Film/The Movies )
Freejack - ( Alex Furlong / 1992 / Released / SMA )
The Mighty Ducks - ( Gordon Bombay / 1992 / Released / )
Men At Work - ( James St James / 1990 / Released / Sony Pictures Releasing International )
Men At Work - ( Director / 1990 / Released / Sony Pictures Releasing International )
Men At Work - ( Screenplay / 1990 / Released / Sony Pictures Releasing International )
Young Guns II - ( William H Bonney/ Billy the Kid / 1990 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Never on Tuesday - ( Tow-Truck Man / 1988 / Released / )
Young Guns - ( William H Bonney / 1988 / Released / Hoyts Distribution )
Stakeout - ( Bill Reimers / 1987 / Released / )
Maximum Overdrive - ( Bill Robinson / 1986 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Wisdom - ( Director / 1986 / Released / )
Wisdom - ( Screenplay / 1986 / Released / )
Wisdom - ( John Wisdom / 1986 / Released / )
St. Elmo's Fire - ( Kirbo / 1985 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
That Was Then...This Is Now - ( Screenplay / 1985 / Released / )
That Was Then...This Is Now - ( Mark Jennings / 1985 / Released / )
The Breakfast Club - ( Andrew Clark / 1985 / Released / )
Nightmares - ( J J Cooney / 1983 / Released / Universal )
Repo Man - ( Otto Maddox / 1983 / Released / )
The Outsiders - ( Two-Bit Matthews / 1983 / Released / )
Tex - ( Johnny Collins / 1982 / Released / )
TV Credits
The 2007 Screen Actors Guild Awards ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
Close to Home ( 2005 / Released ): Director
Criminal Minds ( 2005 / Released ): Director
CSI: New York ( 2004 / Released ): Director
The Closer ( 2005 )
TV Episode Director

TV Episode Director

Cold Case ( 2003 / Released ): Director
Wishing ( 2005 )
TV Episode Director

Sleepover ( 2004 )
TV Episode Director

After Dark: South Beach ( 2002 / Released ): Narrator
Jon Bon Jovi ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Rated X ( 2000 / Released ): Director / Actor
Late Last Night ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The Brat Pack: The E! True Hollywood Story ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Dollar For the Dead ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
Earth Day at Walt Disney World ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Nightbreaker ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Funny, You Don't Look 200 ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
In the Custody of Strangers ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
The Guardian ( Released ): Director
The Watchers ( 2004 )
TV Episode Director

All Is Mended ( 2004 )
TV Episode Director

Full Biography (Back to top)

Emilio Estevez survived the “Brat Pack” stigma that tainted the early part of his career and emerged as a mature actor and director with a knack for choosing ambitious and thoughtful feature projects.

Born May 15, 1962, Estevez was the oldest son of actor Martin Sheen, and brother to fellow performers Charlie Sheen, Renee Estevez, and Ramon Estevez. The Sheen family relocated from New York to Malibu, CA in 1968, with Estevez spending his childhood palling around with future stars like Rob Lowe and Sean and Chris Penn. It was with these close friends that he got his first exposure to filmmaking via a home video camera that the pre-Brat Pack used to make their own short films. Estevez’s first screen appearance came in 1979 with Francis Ford Coppola’s “Apocalypse Now,” for which he acted as his father’s stand-in and had a cameo as a messenger. Unfortunately, the scene was cut from the theatrical version (Estevez would also serve as Sheen’s stand-in in “Gandhi,” 1981).

By the early 1980s, Estevez began to delve more seriously into acting. He also made the all important decision to use his father’s real last name, rather than his more familiar stage name, avoiding comparisons to dad and charges of nepotism. He earned his first notices for his feature debut in “Tex” (1982) as Matt Dillon’s best friend. This minor success was followed by the more popular (and legendary) flick, 1983’s “The Outsiders” (which, like “Tex,” was adapted from a novel by S.E. Hinton), wherein Estevez starred as the wise-cracking Two-Bit Matthews – the comic relief of the Greasers. The film, directed by Francis Ford Coppola and starring a host of up-and-coming young actors, including Lowe, Dillon, Tom Cruise, and Diane Lane, became a pop cultural phenomenon, thanks in now small part to the rabid teenage girls who plastered their lockers with pictures of the Teen Beat cover boys. Moving away from those cover boys, Estevez cemented his status with his next film, the cult sci-fi/comedy “Repo Man” (1984), in which he played a young and rowdy punk schooled in the ways of car repossession by a worldly mentor (Harry Dean Stanton).

Estevez nearly played the lead in an early version of Oliver Stone’s “Platoon” (1986), but financing fell through on the film (and five years later, brother Charlie Sheen would take the role that established his career). Instead, he joined the young and hot cast of John Hughes’ comedy/drama “The Breakfast Club” (1985), which became (and remained) a touchstone movie generation X teens. While working on “Club,” Estevez worked on a script based on another Hinton novel, “That Was Then… This is Now,” which he had begun in collaboration with Tom Cruise. The script was purchased by Paramount and was released with Estevez in the lead, but fared only modestly at the box office.

Estevez graduated to college-age roles in his next feature, “St. Elmo’s Fire,” which again featured a cast of friends (Lowe) and up-and-comers (Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Andrew McCarthy). The making of the film was profiled in an issue of New York magazine, which dubbed the close-knit group “The Brat Pack” – a label which dogged many of the actors for years. Estevez attempted to shake the moniker by starring in “Maximum Overdrive,” a horror film directed by author Stephen King, but the picture was annihilated by fans and critics alike. Undaunted, Estevez moved forward on his behind-the-camera career, and with 1986’s “Wisdom,” he became the youngest Hollywood star to ever direct and write a film that he also top-billed. Unfortunately, the film, a road movie/romance co-starring his then real-life girlfriend Demi Moore, also tanked at the box office.

Estevez bounced back with a grown-up role in 1987’s “Stakeout,” a breezy comedy-thriller in which he deftly played opposite Richard Dreyfuss’ sober police partner. The pair’s easy comedic camaraderie worked well enough to warrant a sequel, “Another Stakeout” (1993), but lacked the sparkle of its predecessor. Estevez’s hot streak continued with another considerable hit – the slick Western “Young Guns” (1988). The combination of old-school shoot-em-ups and hot stars (including brother Charlie) proved a winning combination. Estevez’s gleeful portrayal of Billy the Kid, complete with his infectious laugh, was singled out for praise. Estevez returned to the role for “Young Guns II” in 1990, which proved a slightly lesser box office hit. At the peak of his success in front of the camera, he made his second attempt behind the camera, writing and directing the feature comedy “Men at Work,” starring he and brother Charlie as garbage men who become entangled in a murder. Though greatly maligned at the time, the film became a minor cult favorite.

His glory days as a young Brat Pack leading man behind him, Estevez stumbled once again with the inert sci-fi action flick, “Freejack” (1992) – though the project did yield a lasting friendship with his co-star Anthony Hopkins. Disney came calling next with the kiddie comedy “The Mighty Ducks” (1992), a charming sports picture which cast Estevez as a greedy lawyer forced to coach a misfit hockey team. The film was a big hit with children and parents alike. Estevez returned for the 1993 sequel “D2” after logging time yet another dire comedy, the “Lethal Weapon” spoof “Loaded Weapon” (1993), in which he played the Mel Gibson part. When the expected third “Ducks” film was put on the table, Estevez agreed to make a cameo in the film if the studio would help him finance his next directorial project, a post-Vietnam family drama titled “The War at Home” (1996). Despite excellent performances by Estevez, Martin Sheen, and Kathy Bates; generally positive reviews for his direction and scripting; and two ALMA award nominations, the film died a quick death due to poor distribution.

Following that, Estevez maintained a low profile as an actor, preferring to focus on developing projects to direct. Aside from an uncredited role in buddy Tom Cruise’s “Mission: Impossible” (1996) and several independent features, Estevez was seen mostly on television – first in “A Dollar for the Dead” (1998), a solid tribute to spaghetti Westerns that aired on TNT, followed by “Rated X,” a biopic of the porn producing Mitchell Brothers, responsible for “Behind the Green Door” (1972) and other popular adult titles before murder separated them in the early ‘90s. The film, co-starring brother Charlie, earned respectable reviews. In recent years, he directed several episodes of series television, including such programs as “Cold Case” (CBS, 2003- ) and “CSI: NY” (CBS, 2004- ), all in preparation for his make-or-break theatrical feature, “Bobby” (2006) – a project crammed with high expectations and A-list stars such as Sharon Stone, Lindsay Lohan and Anthony Hopkins. While preparing the highly publicized film, which concerned the events surrounding the night that Senator Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated, Estevez and his financers were the subject of a scathing and anonymous 2006 Esquire article which depicted the production as out of control.


Profession(s):
Actor, director, screenwriter
Sometimes Credited As:
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Family
brother:Charlie Sheen (born on September 3, 1965)
brother:Ramon Estevez (born c. 1963)
daughter:Paloma Estevez (born c. 1986; mother, Carey Salley)
father:Martin Sheen
sister:Renee Estevez (born c. 1967)
son:Taylor Levi Estevez (born in June 1984; mother, Carey Salley)
wife:Paula Abdul (married in 1992; divorced in 1994)
Companion(s)
Carey Salley , Companion , ```..together c. 1983-86; mother of Estevez's two children, Taylor and Paloma
Demi Moore , Companion , ```..engaged c. 1986; no longer together as of 1987; later married Bruce Willis
Julie Briggs , Companion , ```..dated in 1996; no longer together
Mimi Rogers , Companion , ```..rumored to have had a romantic relationship
Sheryl Berkoff , Companion , ```..later married Rob Lowe
Sonja Magdevski , Companion , ```..engaged Summer 2006


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Education
Santa Monica High School Santa Monica, California
Milestones (Back to top)
2006 Made directorial debut with "Bobby," a film centered on the hours leading up to Robert F Kennedy's assassination; also wrote screenplay and co-starred with a huge all-star cast
2004 Made television directorial debut with the CBS dramas "The Guardian" and "Cold Case"
1996 Made uncredited appearance in "Mission: Impossible"
1996 Wrote, produced and starred in "The War at Home"; film co-starred father Martin Sheen and featured sister Renee Estevez and daughter Paloma Estevez
1995 Executive produced "The Jerky Boys"
1993 Demonstrated comedic talents in "National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon I"
1993 Reteamed with Dreyfuss, joined by Rosie O'Donnell for the sequel "Another Stakeout"
1992 Reteamed with Murphy for the futuristic "Freejack"
1992 Appeared as a lawyer forced to coach a pee-wee hockey team in "The Mighty Ducks"; also reprised role in two sequels in 1994 and 1996
1990 Wrote, directed and co-starred with brother Charlie Sheen in "Men at Work"
1990 Reprised role of Billy the Kid in "Young Guns II"; first collaboration with Geoff Murphy
1988 Played Billy the Kid in "Young Guns", directed by Christopher Cain
1987 Teamed with Richard Dreyfuss in the comedy "Stakeout"
1986 Directorial debut, "Wisdom"; also acted and wrote
1985 Became associated with what was called the "Brat Pack", co-starring in John Hughes' "The Breakfast Club" and Joel Schumacher's "St. Elmo's Fire"
1985 Wrote first screenplay "That Was Then...This Is Now", based on Hinton's novel; also starred; film directed by Christopher Cain
1984 Co-starred with Harry Dean Stanton in the cult hit "Repo Man"
1983 Directed by Coppola in "The Outsiders", also based on a book by Hinton
1982 Feature film acting debut, "Tex", adapted from an S E Hinton book
1982 Acted with father (playing parent and child) in the ABC TV-movie "In the Custody of Strangers"
1979 Appeared as an extra in Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now", starring Martin Sheen
Appeared in short film produced in his high school, entitled "Meet Mr. Bomb", an anti-nuclear power movie
Stage debut with father in "Mister Roberts" at the Burt Reynolds' Dinner Theatre in Jupiter, FL


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