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Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Rob Lowe remembers Emilio Estevez & Charlie Sheen in "Stories I Only Tell My Friends"

"Stories I Only Tell My Friends: An Autobiography" by Rob Lowe (Publisher: Henry Holt and Co., 2011)

"A lovely autobiography, equal parts dish and pathos" -Vanity Fair

"[Lowe's] charming, honest, even affectionate memoir is the story of strong guts behind a strikingly handsome face... A book to recommend widely." -Booklist

"At school we all began to buzz about Halloween, which was fast approaching and was a big deal on Point Dume. Stocked with a dozen eggs and a full canister of Barbasol, I met up with a group of kids to make our rounds. It was a a perfect, dry, breezy, moonless night. None of us wore costumes; that was for kids, not young men on a mission. If we felt like trick-or-treating, we might pull out a twenty-cent mask, if needed. My first stop was the Sheen's house. Knocking on the door, I hoped I might get a glimpse of the by-now legendary Martin Sheen, who recently returned from his two-year odyssey of making "Apocalypse Now". There were rumors that the movie had almost killed him and that he might have gone insane while shooting it in the fetid jungle of the Philippines. Although I'd spent some time with Charlie and Emilio making our amateur movies, they never discussed their father. I was even more curious about him when I learned that he, too, had begun his acting career in his hometown of Dayton, Ohio.
I've begun to put my toe into school politics. I'm savvy enough to know that I can't compete with the handsome, older, and more athletic Emilio Estevez for "Boys' Vice President", so I choose an office that no one else wants: parliamentarian. Back at school, friends are trying out for the school's tennis and baseball teams.
Charlie Sheen has an absolute bazooka for an arm and wants to be a pro ballplayer. We are constantly in his backyard batting cage or playing "tennis ball baseball", the Malibu version of stickball. Every once in a while his dad, Martin, will join us, cigarette dangling from his mouth, and completely crush a ball out of the park. He laughs at us and then, maddeningly, runs the bases backward. Charlie's brother, Emilio, still wants to be an actor, and has taken their original family name, Estevez, to ensure he is not riding his dad's coattails. Emilio is a few years older than me; he's got a car and is really making the rounds, auditioning for tons of roles. Charlie and I (and often my brother Chad) still make the occasional 8 mm movie together, but now that I've been to the "bigs" I see little point in backyard movies. I'm moving forward - not backward.
In history class I bond with a hilarious, madrigal-singing maniac named Robert Downey Jr. No one is funnier or more brilliant at stream of consciousness banter. Charlie Sheen is also one of a kind. While his brother is serious and always has his eye on the ball, Charlie, a Polo preppy clotheshorse in a world of O.P. shorts and surf T-shirts, is a wonderful mix of nerd (he's a member of the AV club and won't go near the ocean) and rebel (always ready to ditch class to go to the Dodgers game to root for our beloved Reds). He is also a conspiracy-theory freak, who sometimes wears a bulletroof vest under his clothes to school, and together we debate everything from the likelihood that the moon is hollow and whether the trilateral commission killed JFK to the authenticity of the moon landings.
Apparently there is an amazing part in an upcoming movie that Robert Redford is directing. Emilio is preparing for his audition. I hear the mysterious Sean Penn is also gung-ho about the part. They say the role of Connor in "Ordinary People" is the kind of role that changes your life.
I look over at Tom Cruise, the only "exploring" he'll be doing here today is to try to find a way to bash my brains in and take my role from me. Francis Ford Coppola points for three actors to step into the lilghts. "Say your name into the camera and what role you are reading for", he instructs. Rob Lowe as Soda Pop in Francis Coppola’s film "The Outsiders" (1983)

I pray that I'm still in the running for Sodapop. Other than Ponyboy, Sodapop is the most coveted role in the movie. The part is huge, romantic, and, with the big breakdown scene at the end of the movie, unforgettable. I'm worried I've lost it. I spend all my free time four houses down at the Sheens.
Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek in “Badlands” (1973)

We work out, play hoops, call our agents, call up girls, hide our booze from Martin, hit baseballs with Charlie and Chad, anything to try not to lose our minds with anticipation. I have settled on USC as my college. If I don't get a part, I will enroll and study film. Finally my agent calls. I'm still alive in "The Outsiders" sweepstakes. "What part am I reading? Soda or Randy?", I ask, holding my breath. "Both". I put down the phone. It rings in my hand. It's Emilio. "Dude, did they call you? Are you going to New York?", "Yeah! I made it. What about you?", "We're going, too! Me and Cruise!", "What parts?", "I'm going for Soda, Randy, and maybe Darrel", says Emilio. I hang up, exicted that my friends are among the chosen. We are competitors and it will likely come down to one of us versus the other. But until then, it's down to the Sheen's Gilligan's Island pool to celebrate.
We lounge together in a giant loftlike waiting arena in some dingy office building somewhere near Broadway. I find a spot on the floor next to a radiator and take a nap (to this day, when I feel too much stress I want to fall asleep). "Dude, wake up", says Emilio, banging me in the ribs. I try to clear my head as I roll up off the floor. "Francis wants us in the studio".
I walk down to the Sheen's house, looking for Martin. We crack open the vanilla Häagen-Dazs and I ask him every question I can think of. He is gracious and patient; I am vulnerable and a little scared, but excited. I thank him. At the door he stops me. "One last thing...", "Sure, Martin, what is it?", "Don't let Francis make you do anything you're uncomfortable with".
I'm flying alone. Tom and Emilio were offered parts at the last minute and are driving out in Emilio's pickup. Tom is playing my best friend, Steve, and Emilio, Two-Bit Matthews, another of the Curtis brothers' circle of friends. The Sheen family's complicated history with Francis runs so deep that before he accepted the role, Emilio literally put the script under his mattress and "slept on it" before finally saying yes. The plane comes in for a bumpy landing on an early spring afternoon in the beginning of March 1982. It's two weeks before my eighteenth birthday. The Tulsa Excelsior sits smack in the middle of downtown. This will be my home for the next ten weeks. At the front desk I'm handed a new shooting script, crew list, an envelope with a wad of cash, per diem, and a key to room 625. "You are right next door to Tommy Howell and across the hall from Mr. Macchio. Welcome to Tulsa", says the man behind the counter. I look up and recognize Diane Lane coming through the revolving door of the lobby. At only sixteen, she already seems like a legend. She has starred with Laurence Olivier and been on the cover of Time magazine. Oh, and she may be the prettiest girl on the planet. She will play Cherry Valance, the queen Soc. Too shy to introduce myself, I watch as she breezes by with her chaperone.
Now Howell and Emilio have their blood up. They don't want to be upstaged, so they begin digging in earnest. Splaat! One goes down. Thunk! Another hits the deck, making the sound of a side of beef hitting the pavement. Eventually some of the guys figure it out and then, mercifully, it's time for our next assignment back in the rehearsal hall. Francis tells us that we will be shooting the entire movie on video, in front of a green screen in the gym, before we begin real, principal photography. Later he can use new Sony technology to put in any background he chooses. But before we shoot, he asks us to do a lengthy improvisational exercise that culminates with us attempting to go to sleep on camera. "Very good job, Rob", he says, and I'm thrilled. Diane Lane and the other Socs, led by the teen idol Leif Garrett, arrive to do the big drive-in sequence. The minute Diane enters the room, a competition for her attention commences. Matt Dillon clearly has the inside track and soon we all know that we have no chance. Francis appears to dote on Matt as well - he's clearly grooming him to be the James Dean of the movie.
I am in awe of Emilio's bold choice for his "look". He will wear a Mickey Mouse T-shirt throughtout the movie. Francis likes it so much that not onlyh does he pay Disney exorbitant rights so Emilio can wear the character on his shirt, he writes a scene where we all watch Mickey on TV. And indeed, Emilio's relentless ad-libbing and ideas took a peripheral character and made him a focal point.
I still hang out with my girlfriend, Melissa, and my high school buddies, I'm spending more and more time down the block at the Sheens. Emilio and I are inseparable and in constant touch with Cruise and Tommy Howell. "Pass me a beer", I call to Emilio as we sit, going over a script. There are stacks on his desk and I recognize all of them. And now, as I sit sipping a Corona, Emilio and I are preparing to read for a cool romantic comedy called "Class". We are both trying for the same part, a boarding-school virgin who mistakenly falls in love with his rich roommate's mom.
In the Sheen's backyard there is a professional batting cage. My brother Chad and Charlie play all the time, still hoping to become baseball players. They rib Emilio and me mercilessly about being "Serious actors!" Somehow Emilio has gotten word that the very first coming attractions, or trailer, for "The Outsiders" is playing in front of a movie called "Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone", with Peter Strauss and an unknown fifteen-year-old girl named Molly Ringwald. We are all dying to see it, and so Emilio, Cruise, and I pile into a car and drive to the only theater we can find that's playing it. We end up thirty miles away, in Marina Del Rey. There are only about fifteen people in the theater. "The Outsiders" trailer comes on, and it's like watchig our future flash before our eyes. On the drive back to the Sheen's house we are ecstatic. We aren't looking to form some sort of "actors club" (Brat Pack, anyone?) or to be cool, we just want to be around people who are dealing with the same new, mysterious, frustrating issues. I try to calm myself and enjoy the amazing scenes that weren't cut out: the rumble; the beautiful scenes with Tommy and Ralph; Emilio's ad-libbed laugh lines. But it's hard. At least I will finish strong with my big breakdown scene in the park. The lights come up. I'm dazed. My entire story line was cut from "The Outsiders", easily ten scenes and twenty minutes of screen time.
I meet with John Hughes for "The Breakfast Club", but he wants to make his own discovery of an "unknown". So the fantastic part of John Bender goes to newcomer Judd Nelson.
“I’m not a winner because I want to be one. I’m a winner because I’ve got strength and speed… kinda like a racehorse. It’s about how involved I am in what’s happening to me.” - Andrew Clark (Emilio Estevez) in "The Breakfast Club" (1985)

When Emilio gets a role in the movie, I decide that I need to choose a movie of my own. After a long night of "research" for "St. Elmo's Fire" (it's about a bar after all), I find myself with Emilio and Judd Nelson at the top of these stairs, peering into the darkness below. Once again I'm working with Ally Sheedy and Emilio. It's my second movie with Andrew McCarthy. I adore the wildly talented Mare Winningham and envy Emilio's on-screen romance with the stunning Andie MacDowell.
Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore, Rob Lowe and Melissa Gilbert

Demi and I connect so well on-screen that I don't mind when she jumps ship and switches to a more serious relationship with Emilio.
For weeks, Emilio has been trailed by a reporter from New York magazine, who is doing a cover story on him as the youngest writer, director and star to make a movie since Orson Welles (it's true, you can look it up). He's been swamped in postproduction, in editing rooms, and in marketing meetings on his movie "Wisdom". The reporter, a balding, skinny guy who made no real impression on anyone, eats and drinks with us like it's his last night before the electric chair. Emilio, always generous, picks up the very large tab. "Thanks, guys. I think that went really well", says Emilio happily. A few weeks later, the writer drops his story about Emilio as an auteur. Instead, he writes a sneak-attack, mean-spirited hatchet job about our dinner in his honor. New York magazine runs it on its cover with a studio photo from the soon-to-be-released "St. Elmo's Fire". The headline: "Hollywood's Brat Pack". "Thee Brat Pack" article was an instant classic.
I rush to Hancock Park. The wedding goes without a hitch. Sheryl and I say our vows in front of our semistunned friends and family, including Steve Tisch, Garry Marshall, and Emilio. Sheryl is breathtaking in her gown, and I feel like, together, we will blaze a new trail of love, hope, and possibility.
The first person I ever knew to play the then new California State Lottery was Emilio and Charlie's dad. Martin bought enough rolls of tickets at the Mayfair Market on Point Dume to choke a donkey. He never did find that winning ticket when we were kids. But years later, with "The West Wing", he finally did.

Extracts from "Stories I Only Tell My Friends: An Autobiography" by Rob Lowe (2011)

Scenes of Martin Sheen in "The Way" directed by Emilio Estevez


"The Way" directed by Emilio Estevez in 2010, starring Martin Sheen, Deborah Kara Unger, Yorick van Wageningen, James Nesbitt


Four years after his impressive ensemble biopic Bobby screened at the Festival, actor-director Emilio Estevez returns with another ambitious drama that also features his father, Martin Sheen.

The Way is a touching film about the testy yet unbreakable bond between father and son, as well as the supportive, familial connections that can form among strangers.
Tom (Sheen), an American ophthalmologist, is informed that his son (Estevez) has been killed in a freak accident on a pilgrimage along the Camino de Santiago, also known as The Way of Saint James, in the northwest of Spain. Upon arriving in France to collect his son’s remains and return to the United States, Tom is hit with a profound sense of sadness and quickly changes his plans. Equipped with his deceased son’s guidebook and backpack, he embarks on the 800km pilgrimage from the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela in an attempt to honour his son’s memory by finishing what he had started.
Along the way, Tom encounters several eccentric travellers, each with their varied motivations: a gregarious Dutchman (Yorick van Wageningen) wants to lose weight, a Canadian woman (Deborah Kara Unger) hopes to quit her addiction to cigarettes, an Irish author (James Nesbitt) struggling to write a travel book. Their apparent weaknesses frustrate the stoic and determined Tom, yet the farther they travel together the more they come to form a surrogate family unit and support each other through their various tribulations.
Set against gorgeous vistas of France and Spain, The Way, like all great road trip movies, depicts how travelling through an unknown land can lead to greater self-knowledge and understanding. A moving and potent character study buoyed by a great soundtrack and an immensely likable cast, The Way is a journey of self-discovery that follows four very different people as they learn to better love themselves and each other.

MARTIN SHEEN: It's the most fun, you know. With The Way, having my son write it, direct it and star alongside me in, playing my character's son, that's just perfection to me. It doesn't get any better than that for me.
Is it not a little difficult, taking direction from your own offspring?
Yeah, there were times when I struggled with that a little. My sense memories would kick in, and I didn't think my son should be telling me what to do [laughs]. But I adore him. A reporter once asked me about Emilio, and I said, ‘Oh, I have known him all of my life'. And the guy said, ‘Now, you mean you've known him all of his life'.
And I said, ‘No, no, when he arrived, I was 21, and I thought, ah, he's the guy I've been waiting for all this time. He's arrived!'. I just thought of him as a companion, as a little brother really, and that's the way our relationship has been all our lives. Source: www.movies.ie

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Kristen Stewart won Best Actress Award at Milan International Film Festival 2011 for 'Welcome to the Rileys'

Poster of "Welcome to the Rileys" (2010) directed by Jake Scott, starring Kristen Stewart, James Gandolfini, and Melissa Leo.

MIFF AWARDS 2011 – BEST FEMALE ACTING: KRISTEN STEWART in Welcome to the Rileys

Kristen Stewart won Best Actress Award at Milan International Film Festival 2011 for 'Welcome to the Rileys'. Source: www.miff.it

Vote for Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart in MTV Awards 2011(Best Kiss) Source: www.mtv.com

Olivia Wilde plans to direct movie about Haitian Baseball Team, Wild Thing (Charlie Sheen video)

Olivia Wilde out and about in Beverly Hills, on 28th April 2011

"Actress Olivia Wilde is planning to turn director after signing on to make a movie about a Haitian children's baseball team. The "Tron Legacy" star was among the first celebrity aid volunteers to travel to the Caribbean nation in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake, which left Haiti devastated, and she admits the journey was an "amazing" experience.
Now, she's heading back to make a film about a group of young survivors. She tells America's Glamour magazine, "I'm going to Haiti to work on a documentary about a Little League team."
Olivia Wilde at LAX Airport, Los Angeles, CA May 3, 2011

The actress is hoping to turn the trip into an extended vacation, although she's hesitant to leave so soon after purchasing her first home following her marriage split. She says, "I'm thinking about traveling, but I should stay in one place. I just bought a house (in Los Angeles)". Source: www.aceshowbiz.com

Honoree Sean Penn arrives at the HELP HAITI benefiting The Ben Stiller Foundation and The J/P Haitian Relief Organization at the Urban Zen Center on February 11, 2011 in NY

Sean Penn told US magazine that Charlie Sheen would be welcome to join him in his ongoing efforts to help Haiti recover from the January 2010 earthquake.
Sean Penn and Charlie Sheen in the episode "Back Off Mary Poppins" from "Two and a Half Men" TV series

"I think his energies, intelligence and passion could be both of service and servicing to him, as it is to all who are touched by the struggle of the Haitian people", Sean Penn said in a statement Friday. "Charlie is one of the very few public people who cannot be accused of using the media to his own benefit. I would very much like to show my old friend the world of needs on the ground in Haiti, and introduce him and his tremendous wit to our hard working Haitian staff."
Source: www.foxnews.com


Charlie Sheen ("Wild Thing") video: featuring stills of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (1986) and scenes from "Major League" (1989) and "Major League II" (1994), starring Charlie Sheen (as Rick 'Wild Thing' Vaughn), Corbin Bernsen, James Gammon, Michelle Burke, etc. Songs "Wild Thing" by The Troggs and "Wild Thing" by The Wild Ones.

Rachel McAdams is a romantic in Elle US magazine, June 2011

Rachel McAdams in Elle US magazine, June 2011

On working with Owen Wilson in Midnight in Paris: “It’s definitely a different dynamic from the last time we were together [in Wedding Crashers]. It wasn’t as fun being mean. I love that [director] Woody [Allen] likes good guys to be good guys and bad guys to be bad guys. Owen seemed to respond really well when I was a really bad guy.”

Rachel McAdams - Sighting in Paris (2011-01-14)

On being a romantic: “I am. When Billie Holiday comes on, I can’t help but be transported—and I’m sure it wasn’t as romantic then at all - but that’s the wonderful part of my job: dressing up and walking down the street in New York or Toronto, pretending I’m in the ’40s.”

Michael Sheen and Rachel McAdams holding hands

On her expectations for relationships: “You grow up and you assume that everyone is like that, and you quickly realize that they’re not, and then you have those days when you wonder if you’re going to find it for yourself. It’s such a hard thing to find. I think it was more that realization that rocked me.” Source: www.elle.com