Kevin Costner: Difference between revisions
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===Controversy=== |
===Controversy=== |
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On [[24 April]], [[2006]], it was revealed that Costner was the mystery celebrity involved in a controversial court case in a hotel at the [[St Andrews]] golf course, [[Scotland]]; owned by his friend [[Herbert Kohler, Jr.]]. While on his honeymoon in October [[2004]], a hotel employee complained that Coster had performed a lewd act while she was attempting to massage him. When she informed the hotel management, she was dismissed. The woman, who remains unnamed, settled out of court with the hotel <ref>http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/tm_objectid=16993340%26method=full%26siteid=66633%26headline=exposed-name_page.html</ref>. |
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==Filmography== |
==Filmography== |
Revision as of 11:13, 4 October 2006
Kevin Michael Costner (born January 18, 1955) is an Oscar winning American film actor and director who has often produced his own films. During his career, Costner's films have grossed over $1.3 billion.
Biography
Early life
Costner was born in Lynwood, California, the youngest of the three sons (the middle son died at childbirth) of William Costner, an electrician, and Sharon Tedrick; he has English, Irish, and distant Native American and German ancestry. He spent his teenage years and pre-actor adulthood in Orange County, California, attending Mt. Whitney High School in the baseball town of Visalia, California, graduating from Villa Park High School in Villa Park, California in 1973, and earning a B.A. in business from California State University, Fullerton in 1978, where he was a member of the Delta Chi Fraternity. He became interested in acting while still in college, and began taking acting lessons five nights a week. Costner later worked briefly with a California marketing firm. During a chance encounter with actor Richard Burton, who struck up a conversation with him, Burton advised the young man that if he wanted to pursue acting, he should give everything up completely and go after it with both hands. Costner married a Portuguese-American by the name of Cindy Silva. With his wife behind him, Costner worked on fishing boats and as a truck driver, and gave tours of stars' Hollywood homes to support the two while he made the audition rounds.
Career
Costner appeared in a commercial for the Apple Lisa in 1983. He was cast in the hit The Big Chill (1983). He filmed several scenes which were planned as flashbacks, but they never made it to the final cut. He was the friend who committed suicide, the event around which the plot of the movie revolves. All that is seen of him are his slashed wrists as the mortician dresses his corpse in the movie's opening scenes. Costner was a friend of director Lawrence Kasdan, who later promised the actor a role in a future project, which became Silverado and became a breakout role for Costner. In return, Costner helped to get Kasdan's 1975 script for the The Bodyguard produced.
Costner's most popular success was the epic Dances With Wolves. He directed and starred in the film and served as one of two producers. The film was nominated for twelve Academy Awards and won seven, including two for him personally (Best Picture and Best Director). Costner followed this with Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves, the Oliver Stone-directed JFK and The Bodyguard, all of which provided huge box office takings or critical acclaim. Some of his subsequent film efforts have been criticized for being too long and overly serious, and for squandering financial resources. Costner has included his family members in several of his films, including Dances With Wolves (his children Annie, Lily and Joe), Tin Cup (his son Joe and his own parents), For Love of the Game (childhood home movies) and The Postman (again featuring his children Annie, Lily and Joe).
He also took the title role in the biopic Wyatt Earp, directed by established collaborator Lawrence Kasdan, which fizzled at the summer 1994 box office. The science fiction epics Waterworld and The Postman, the latter of which Costner also directed, were both initially considered major disappointments at the box office. However, Waterworld grossed $264 million worldwide from a $175 million budget (according to IMDB), despite generally poor reviews. Costner developed the film Air Force One and was set to play the lead role, but ultimately decided to concentrate on finishing The Postman instead. He personally offered the project to Harrison Ford.
Costner's career revived somewhat in 2001 with Thirteen Days. Open Range, which he directed and starred in, received high critical acclaim in 2003 as a Revisionist Western, though it was only a minor success commercially. In 2006, he branched into the music field, performing free concerts for charity. A June 2006 concert netted almost $100,000 for four Shreveport, Louisiana charities. Costner will star in The Guardian, which also stars Ashton Kutcher and was released September 29, 2006, and in the upcoming Mr. Brooks, where he will play a serial killer, also starring William Hurt, that will be released in the spring of 2007. Costner was honored on September 6, 2006 when his hand and foot prints were set in the concrete in front of Grauman's Chinese Theatre along side other great actors and entertainers.
Personal life
Costner has three children with Cindy: Annie (born in 1984), Lily (born in 1986) and Joe (born in 1988). Lily is currently attending college. Joe is currently a freshman, and Annie graduated from Brown University in 2006. All three of his children with Cindy were educated in part at the Chandler School in Pasadena, California. He also has a son, Liam (born in 1996), with Bridget Rooney, with whom he had a brief relationship following his divorce from Cindy. Only through blood tests was it revealed that Costner was Liam's father. Kevin and Cindy divorced in 1994 after 16 years of marriage.
On September 25, 2004, after ten years of being single, Costner married his girlfriend of four years, Christine Baumgartner.
Costner was registered as a Republican until the 1996 election, when he changed his registration to Independent. He supported Democratic candidates in the 1992, 1996, 2000, and 2004 Presidential elections; however, he still prefers to be known as a "conservative".
Costner plays regularly in celebrity golf tournaments, including the annual BMW Pro-Am held each April in Greenville County, South Carolina. He owns the "Midnight Star" casino in Deadwood, SD. The casino, its sports bar "Diamond Lil's", and its restaurant "Jake's" are all named after characters and locations from the movie Silverado. The facility contains posters, costumes, and other memorabilia from Costner's films.
Several of Costner's films have included a baseball theme. They include Bull Durham, Field of Dreams, and For Love of the Game. Costner has a love for baseball and has stated he loves to play baseball even more than he loves to watch it.
Controversy
On 24 April, 2006, it was revealed that Costner was the mystery celebrity involved in a controversial court case in a hotel at the St Andrews golf course, Scotland; owned by his friend Herbert Kohler, Jr.. While on his honeymoon in October 2004, a hotel employee complained that Coster had performed a lewd act while she was attempting to massage him. When she informed the hotel management, she was dismissed. The woman, who remains unnamed, settled out of court with the hotel [1].
Filmography
- Stacy's Knights (1982)
- Chasing Dreams (1982)
- Night Shift (1982)
- Frances (1982)
- Table For Five (1983)
- The Big Chill (1983) (scenes deleted)
- Testament (1983)
- The Gunrunner (1984)
- Fandango (1985)
- Silverado (1985)
- American Flyers (1985)
- Sizzle Beach, U.S.A. (1986) (originally filmed in 1974)
- Shadows Run Black (1986)
- The Untouchables (1987)
- No Way Out (1987)
- Bull Durham (1988)
- Field Of Dreams (1989)
- Revenge (1990) (actor and executive producer)
- Dances With Wolves (1990) (actor, director and producer)
- Madonna: Truth Or Dare (1991) (documentary)
- Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves (1991) (actor, producer)
- JFK (1991)
- Oliver Stone (1992) (documentary)
- Beyond 'JFK': The Question Of Conspiracy (1992) (documentary)
- The Bodyguard (1992) (actor, producer)
- Amazing Stories: Book One (1992), episode: The Mission, in which he plays the captain of the plane
- A Perfect World (1993)
- A Century Of Cinema (1994) (documentary)
- Wyatt Earp (1994) (actor, producer)
- The War (1994)
- Waterworld (1995) (actor, producer, and uncredited director)
- Tin Cup (1996)
- Sean Connery, An Intimate Portrait (1997) (documentary)
- The Postman (1997) (director, producer, and actor)
- Message in a Bottle (1999) (actor, producer)
- For Love of the Game (1999)
- Play It To The Bone (1999) (Cameo)
- Thirteen Days (2000) (actor, producer)
- 3000 Miles to Graceland (2001)
- Dragonfly (2002)
- Open Range (2003) (actor, director, and producer)
- The Upside of Anger (2005)
- Rumor Has It (2005)
- The Guardian (2006)
- Mr. Brooks (2007) (currently filming)
- The Tortilla Curtain (2006) (currently in pre-production) (actor, producer)
External links
- 1955 births
- American film actors
- American film directors
- Baptists from the United States
- Best Actor Academy Award nominees
- Best Director Academy Award winners
- Delta Chi brothers
- English-language film directors
- Living people
- People from the Greater Los Angeles Area
- Worst Actor Razzie
- Worst Actor Razzie nominees