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Charlie Sheen : |
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Charlie Sheen
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Birth name : Carlos
Irwin Estevez |
| Date of birth :
3 September 1965 |
| Place of birth: New York, New York, USA |
| Nickname:
The Machine, Good Time Charlie |
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| Height: 5' 10" (1.78 m) |
| Spouse: Denise Richards (15 June 2002 - present) (filed for divorce) 2 children, Donna Peele (3 September 1995 - 19 November 1996) (divorced). |
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"Sometimes it's work, sometimes it's that something extra. I'm not going to lie to you, there are times you show up on the set and have two lines, and you simply walk through. It's just work. Then there are certain scenes and moments, based on the intensity or intent of what you're trying to pull off, that call for more of an all- out effort. That's when you bring out your best." |
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Charlie Sheen, Profile, Biography, Trivia, Filmography, Movies (you can purchase and buy), Photos Gallery, Magazines, Icons, Posters (if you want to see the posters all over your walls you can get them here) , Books, Famous Quotes, and a beautiful collection of
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Charles Irwin Sheen (born September 3, 1965) is a Golden Globe Award-winning and Emmy-nominated American actor. Sheen was born Carlos Irwin Estévez in New York City, the son of artist Janet (née Templeton) and actor Martin Sheen (who was born "Ramón Estévez"). His parents moved to Malibu, California after Martin Sheen's Broadway turn in The Subject Was Roses. Sheen has two brothers and one sister, all of whom are actors: Emilio Estévez, Ramón Estévez Jr. and Renée Estévez.
The third son of actor Martin Sheen, intense, square-jawed Charlie Sheen exploded into the public's consciousness as the narrator-grunt of Oliver Stone's autobiographical Vietnam War picture "Platoon" (1986), a deja vu of sorts that returned him to the Philippines, the scene of his first feature film (as an extra), Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now" (1979), starring his father. That performance coupled with his role as Michael Douglas' unscrupulous protégé whose naked ambition leads him into conflict with his blue-collar father (played by his real-life dad) in Stone's "Wall Street" the following year, catapulted him to the status of one of the hottest young actors in Hollywood. Since then, Sheen has worked prolifically, but for much of the 90s, it was his profligacy that earned the biggest headlines and arguably prevented him from fulfilling his early promise.
Sheen attended Santa Monica High School in Santa Monica, California, where he was a star pitcher and shortstop for the baseball team. He also showed an early interest in acting, making several Super-8 films with schoolmates Rob Lowe and early best friend Christopher Penn. Just a few weeks before graduation, Sheen was expelled from the school for poor grades and bad attendance.
Sheen started acting in 1974 at the age of nine, appearing in a small role alongside his father in the TV movie The Execution of Private Slovik. Sheen's film career began in 1984 with minor and supporting roles in films such as Red Dawn (1984), Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986), and his first major role, in Platoon (1986). In 1987, he starred with his father in Wall Street. In 1988, he appeared opposite his brother Emilio Estevez in Young Guns and again in 1990 in Men at Work. Also in 1990, he starred alongside Clint Eastwood in the buddy cop action film The Rookie.
Sheen, who was appearing in his family's home movies by the time he was in kindergarten, made his professional debut as an extra in the TV-movie "The Execution of Private Eddie Slovik" (NBC, 1974), starring his father. Growing up in Malibu, he made countless Super-8 movies and videos with childhood friends Sean and Chris Penn and Rob and Chad Lowe and had his sights set on following in his father's acting footsteps, but the bad boy side of him also surfaced early with arrests for marijuana possession and credit card forgery coming prior to his unceremonious failure to graduate from high school. Sheen did not look back, however, appearing in nine films in the three years following his feature acting debut in "Grizzly II – The Predator" (1984). He showed some screen presence in John Milius' "Red Dawn" (also 1984), starred as a bored California teenager who embarks on a violent rampage in Penelope Spheeris' "The Boys Next Door" (1985) and attracted attention for his role as a sensitive high school jock in "Lucas" (1986), all before "Platoon" put him over the top.
Sheen has pretty much eschewed the small screen, only appearing in "Silence of the Heart" (CBS, 1984), as the guilt-ridden friend of a suicide, "Out of Darkness" (CBS, 1985), a vehicle for his father, and "Beyond the Law" (HBO, 1994). On the other hand, his feature work has varied widely in genre, quality and popularity. The actor proved effective amid largely male ensembles in the youth-oriented Western "Young Guns" and John Sayles' period baseball film, "Eight Men Out" (both 1988), and he also demonstrated an aptitude for sports comedy in "Major League" (1989) and action adventure with "Navy SEALS" and Clint Eastwood's "The Rookie" (both 1990). Sheen has also appeared in such unremarkable fare as "Wisdom" (1986) and "Men at Work" (1990), both co-starring and directed by brother Emilio, Adam Rifkin's "The Chase" and "Terminal Velocity" (both 1994). His starring turn in the surprise comedy hit "Hot Shots!" (1991), a wacky spoof of "Top Gun" (1986) and its ilk, represents his best work of the 90s and led to the inevitable "Rambo" send-up "Hot Shots! Part Deux" (1993). Both showed Sheen's unsuspected talent as a deadpan comic and increased his reputation as a sex symbol, further enhanced by his dashing Aramis in the umpteenth remake of "The Three Musketeers" (1993).
Sheen's outspokenness has made him a favorite with entertainment journalists who rarely went away disappointed, relaying such pearls as "I'd like to jam Bridget Fonda" (upsetting her then-beau Eric Stoltz) or "[Stephen] Dorff is a pretty good actor, but he was j---ing off in some high school gymnasium when I made ['Platoon']." His randiness (which includes relationships with at least two adult screen stars) extended to a penchant for call girls (and paying for them with Travelers Checks purchased in his name); Sheen revealed under oath during the investigation into Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss that he had spent more than $50,000 for trysts with her employees during a 15-month period. Sheen then married Donna Peele, a model he met filming a cigarette commercial in Japan, saying "She's an angel sent from Heaven to take me through the rest of the journey." The always quotable one then let slip the wonderful analogy, "You buy a car, it breaks down," when the marriage ended six months later. His biggest cross to bear, however, has been substance abuse, and that more than his other peccadilloes (including his 1996 battery of girlfriend Brittany Ashland) has removed him from the Hollywood A-list.
Sheen attempted to alter his image in 1996, announcing he had "found God" (and that a voice had told him his marriage to Peele wouldn't work). He made a well-received guest appearance as a Naval officer romantically involved with Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) on the NBC sitcom "Friends" but also headlined the bombs "The Arrival,” a sci-fi epic about an astronomer obsessed with finding extra-terrestrials, and "The Shadow Conspiracy,” as a presidential aide who becomes targeted for assassination. Finally, the actor had a box-office hit teamed with rising black comic Chris Tucker in the comedy "Money Talks" (1997), his stiff tabloid TV reporter contrasting well with Tucker's loose street con in a pairing deemed comparable to that of Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. On the heels of this high came new lows when a drug overdose landed him in the hospital in May 1998 and earned him a subsequent sentencing to a detox clinic. His father (himself a recovering alcoholic) said at the time, "It's my hope that he will accept, recover and become free."
The book on Charlie Sheen had many chapters yet to be written. At the time of his overdose, he had not yet celebrated his 33rd birthday, despite plenty of mileage on the chassis. He formed a production company with Bret Michaels (former lead singer of Poison) and branched out into screenwriting ("On the Border" and "No Code of Conduct,” both lensed 1997), and he has indicated that directing is in his future. "I'm going to direct. It's getting real close. I'm just getting tired of being the guy on the set who knows more than the cat calling the shots."
Sheen began his rehabilitation co-starring with his brother Emilio Estevez as real-life brothers Jim and Artie Mitchell, the porn producers of "Behind the Green Door" (1972) in the Showtime biopic "Rated X" (2000). The film allowed Sheen and his sibling the opportunity to bury their differences over the former's drug use (which led to a 10-year estrangement). Then Sheen further jump-started his career taking over the lead from Michael J. Fox in the politically-themed sitcom "Spin City" in fall 2000. While there were naysayers who weren't sure that the intense actor could pull off working in a weekly comedy series, he more than proved them wrong, developing a nice rapport with the cast (particularly Heather Locklear). Not only did he reinvigorate his own career (he would ultimately receive a Golden Globe nomination in the role), but he also rejuvenated the flagging series. Of course, it didn't hurt – in a case of life imitating art – that his character, Charlie Crawford, was something of a dissolute with a shady past who was trying hard to rehabilitate himself.
Sheen's "reel" life impacted his real life when he co-starred with actress Denise Richards in the mildly amusing comedy "Good Advice" (2001) – the two quickly fell in love and were married, leading to Richards taking a recurring role in "Spin City." The two would also appear together in the horror spoof sequel "Scary Movie 3" – playing a farmer and his wife while parodying the lugubrious Mel Gibson crop circle thriller "Signs" – in 2003, the same year Sheen starred in the hit sit-com "Two and a Half Men" (CBS, 2003- ), playing hedonistic jingle writer Charlie Harper, who takes in his newly divorced brother (Jon Cryer) and his 10-year-old nephew (Angus T. Jones). Sheen also appeared as the enforcer for a Hawaiian development baron (Gary Sinise) in the meandering, Elmore Leonard-derived caper film "The Big Bounce" (2004). Sheen also appeared opposite Richards on a pair of episodes of his sit-com before their divorce made headlines in 2005: Richards announced her intent to split from the actor while several months pregnant.
Sheen is perhaps best known for his comedy roles, including the Major League films, Money Talks and the spoof Hot Shots! films. In 1999, Sheen played himself in the comedy Being John Malkovich. He also recently appeared in the spoof series Scary Movie 3 and Scary Movie 4. In 2001 and 2002, Sheen played the lead role in the political television sitcom, Spin City (as Michael J. Fox's replacement on that show). In 2002, he won the Golden Globe Award for "Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy" for this role. Sheen has been playing the role of Charlie Harper on the sitcom Two and a Half Men, which debuted in 2003.
Luckily for Sheen, the actor’s personal problems did not seem to have as much of a negative impact on his career the second time around. An extremely popular fixture within CBS’s powerful comedy line-up, Sheen received three consecutive Emmy nominations for Best Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for his role on “Two and a Half Men” in 2005, 2006 and 2007.
Sheen and his former girlfriend Paula Profit, had a daughter together, Cassandra Jade Estevez (born 1985). Cassandra was born when he was twenty, but he and Paula did not marry. In 1990, Sheen accidentally shot his then-fiancée, Kelly Preston, in the arm; she suffered only a minor injury requiring two stitches. The relationship ended shortly thereafter.
In 1993, his name was found among Hollywood Madam Heidi Fleiss's list of her most frequent customers, and it was revealed that Sheen hired highly compensated call girls from escort agencies. During this time, it was reported that he was addicted to cocaine. In the Empire magazine interview, he stated that he took a bullet for the industry when he was called to the court to testify to name names. In 1995, Sheen married Donna Peele. The marriage lasted a little more than a year--September 3, 1995 to November 19, 1996. In 1996, Sheen announced that he had become a born-again Christian.
Although Sheen was involved with a number of Hollywood personalities, his long-term relationship with Ginger Lynn in the late 1990s garnered the most media attention. He was also involved for a time with former porn star Heather Hunter. On June 15, 2002, he married actress Denise Richards after meeting her while filming Good Advice in 2001. They have two daughters, Sam J. Sheen (born March 9, 2004) and Lola Rose Sheen (born June 1, 2005). On April 19, 2006, Denise Richards filed for divorce from Sheen. Sheen and Richards's divorce was official on November 30, 2006.
Sheen and Richards are engaged in an acrimonious custody dispute over their two daughters, with Richards requesting a custody evaluation, no overnight visits for Sheen, and authority to make decisions regarding the care of the children. Richards alleges abusive behavior by Sheen toward her and staff, paranoid behavior regarding the care of the children, and that he continues to have gambling and drug addictions. Sheen denies these allegations and further alleges that Richards later requested sperm from him in order to have another child. Richards also cited Sheen's beliefs about 9/11 in the divorce proceedings.
Sheen was the 2004 spokesperson for the Lee National Denim Day breast cancer fundraiser that raised millions of dollars for research and education regarding the disease. Sheen stated that a friend of his died due to breast cancer, and he wanted to try to help find a cure for the disease.
As of 2007, Sheen is engaged to Brooke Mueller, a real estate investor. Jason Itzler, owner of the escort service NY Confidential, claimed in March of 2008 that Sheen paid $20,000 for the services of two prostitutes, one of which was Ashley Dupre, of Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal fame. Sheen denied the allegations.
On March 20, 2006, Sheen revealed during an Alex Jones interview that he questions the "official story" concerning the September 11, 2001 attacks. Sheen stated during the interview, "...it just didn't look like any commercial jetliner I've flown on any time in my life and then when the buildings came down later on that day I said to my brother, 'Call me insane, but did it sorta look like those buildings came down in a controlled demolition?'" During a March 22, 2006 appearance on CNN's Showbiz Tonight, Sheen stated "...19 amateurs with box cutters taking over four commercial airliners and hitting 75 percent of their targets, that feels like a conspiracy theory". On October 27, 2007, his views on 9/11 were echoed by his father Martin Sheen.
In a 1997 Empire magazine interview, Sheen was asked what was the largest number of people Sheen had sex with at any one time. He replied: "...five girls at once. It was a pile-up...and it wasn't so much about going Caligula, it was very organized. Very ordered...all six people in that room came out of it pretty satisfied"as of today charlie sheen admitts that himself and denise richards made a 23 minute porno at their mansion in Los Angelas,California. Sheen was listed as #2 on Maxim's "Top 10 Living Legends of Sex", citing an alleged 5,000 women that he has slept with.
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