Steve McQueen filmography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steve McQueen (March 24, 1930 – November 7, 1980) was an American actor who had an extensive career in film and television.[1] Popularly known as the "King of Cool",[2] McQueen's screen persona was that of portraying cool, reticent antihero roles, which appealed strongly to the masses. This led him to cement his status as one of the most famous celebrities in Hollywood during the counterculture of the 1960s.[3]

A photograph of Steve McQueen as Josh Randall in the television series Wanted Dead or Alive.
Steve McQueen as Josh Randall in Wanted Dead or Alive (1958–1961)

McQueen made his film debut appearing in an uncredited role in the crime drama Girl on the Run (1953),[4] He played the uncredited role of Fidel, a member of the protagonist's gang, in Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956).[5][6] In 1958, he appeared in the science fiction film The Blob, which was his first film as the lead actor.[7] It proved to be commercially successful at the box office, grossing $4 million ($45,000,000 in 2022) against a budget of $110,000 ($1,000,000 in 2022).[8] McQueen became known for portraying bounty hunter Josh Randall in the CBS television series Wanted Dead or Alive (1958–1961).[3][9][10] He continued to act in films, playing the lead in The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery (1959), and in a supporting role as a corporal in Never So Few (1959), his first of three films with John Sturges.[11]

In 1960, McQueen achieved stardom when he co-starred alongside Yul Brynner in Sturges' Western, The Magnificent Seven, which was based on Akira Kurosawa's 1954 film Seven Samurai.[1][3] After a series of unsuccessful films over the next two years, McQueen teamed up with Sturges again in the war drama The Great Escape (1963), in which he played Virgil Hilts,[12] a World War II prisoner of war who, along with fellow Allied POWs, makes an escape from a high security prisoner-of-war camp.[13] It emerged as one of the highest-grossing films of the year, winning McQueen the award for Best Actor at the Moscow International Film Festival.[14] In The Great Escape, a shot of Hilts riding a motorcycle and jumping a series of barbed-wire fences (performed by stuntman Bud Ekins) to escape from German soldiers is considered one of the most memorial motorcycle stunts.[13][15][16]

McQueen received his first Golden Globe Award for Best Actor nomination for his role of a musician in Love with the Proper Stranger (1963),[17][18] in which he was paired opposite Natalie Wood.[19] He achieved critical and commercial success with The Cincinnati Kid (1965) and The Sand Pebbles (1966),[3][20][21] the latter garnering him the only Academy Award for Best Actor nomination of his career.[22][23] In 1968, McQueen appeared as millionaire Thomas Crown in the crime film The Thomas Crown Affair,[24] and in the thriller Bullitt as the eponymous police detective Frank Bullitt.[25][26] These films fared well at the box office, the latter garnering acclaim for its stunt sequences, particularly the car chase.[26][27] For his performance in The Reivers (1969), McQueen earned a third Golden Globe Award nomination.[28]

McQueen began the 1970s with the sports drama Le Mans (1971), a fictional take on the annual 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance races. The film was a critical and commercial disappointment, leaving him almost bankrupt.[29][a] He followed it by starring in two back-to-back films under Sam Peckinpah: the Western Junior Bonner (1972), in which he featured as the titular character, a rodeo rider,[31] and the action film The Getaway (1972), in which he appears as an ex-conman who flees to Mexico with his wife after being double-crossed by his partners-in-crime.[32] In the latter, he was paired opposite his second wife, Ali MacGraw.[32] Both films were critically acclaimed. While Junior Bonner did not enjoy box office success, The Getaway went on to become one of the highest-grossing films of the year, marking a comeback for McQueen.[33]

In 1973, he featured alongside Dustin Hoffman in the prison film Papillon playing Henri Charrière, a prisoner convicted of murder who makes an escape attempt with fellow convict Louis Dega (Hoffman).[34] McQueen's performance earned him his fourth and final Golden Globe Award nomination in the Best Actor category.[35] He then starred alongside Paul Newman as a SFFD chief in the disaster drama The Towering Inferno (1974).[36] McQueen received $12 million for acting in the film, making him the highest-paid actor in the world up to that point.[37][38] The film was commercially successful, grossing $139 million ($907,000,000 in 2022) against a $14 million ($91,000,000 in 2022) budget.[39] After a four-year hiatus during which he focused on his motorcycle racing career,[38] McQueen returned to acting when he was cast against type as a scientist in An Enemy of the People.[40][41] He completed two more films before his death: Tom Horn and The Hunter (both released in 1980).[40]

Film

More information Film, Year ...
Film Year Role(s) Notes Ref(s)
Girl on the Run 1953 Young Man Trying to Ring the Bell Uncredited extra [4]
Somebody Up There Likes Me 1956 Fidel Uncredited role [5][42]
Never Love a Stranger 1958 Martin Cabell [7]
The Blob Steve Andrews Credited as Steven McQueen [7]
The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery 1959 George Fowler [43]
Never So Few Bill Ringa [43]
The Magnificent Seven 1960 Vin Tanner [44]
The Honeymoon Machine 1961 Lieutenant Ferguson "Fergie" Howard [45]
Hell Is for Heroes 1962 John Reese [46]
The War Lover Buzz Rickson [47]
The Great Escape 1963 Captain Virgil Hilts (The Cooler King)[b] [12][14]
Soldier in the Rain Sergeant Eustis Clay [47]
Love with the Proper Stranger Rocky Papasano [17][48]
Baby the Rain Must Fall 1965 Henry Thomas [48]
The Cincinnati Kid Eric Stoner (The Cincinnati Kid)[b] [48]
Nevada Smith 1966 Max Sand (Nevada Smith)[b] [48]
The Sand Pebbles Machinist's Mate First-Class Jake Holman nominated for Best Actor Academy Award [22][23][48]
The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 Thomas Crown [25]
Bullitt Lieutenant Frank Bullitt [25]
The Reivers 1969 Boon Hogganbeck [25][28]
Le Mans 1971 Michael Delaney [49]
On Any Sunday Himself Documentary film [50]
Junior Bonner 1972 Junior "JR" Bonner [51]
The Getaway Carter "Doc" McCoy [52]
Papillon 1973 Henri Charrière (Papillon)[b] [34][35]
The Towering Inferno 1974 Michael O'Hallorhan [53]
An Enemy of the People 1978 Thomas Stockmann Also executive producer [40]
Tom Horn 1980 Tom Horn [40]
The Hunter Ralph "Papa" Thorson final film role [54]
Close

Television

More information Title, Year ...
Title Year Role(s) Notes Ref.
Goodyear Television Playhouse 1955 Guest appearance Episode: "The Chivington Raid" [55]
The United States Steel Hour 1956 Bushy Episode: "Bring Me a Dream" [citation needed]
Westinghouse Studio One 1957 Joseph Gordon Episode: "The Defender": Part 1 [56]
Episode: "The Defender": Part 2 [57]
The West Point Story Rick Episode: "Ambush" [58]
The 20th Century Fox Hour Kinsella Episode: "Deep Water" [59]
The Big Story Chuck Milton Episode: "Car 83" [60]
Climax! 1958 Anthony Reeves, Henry Reeves[c] Episode: "Four Hours in White" [citation needed]
Tales of Wells Fargo Bill Longley Episode: "Bill Longley" [62]
Trackdown Josh Randall Episode: "The Bounty Hunter" [63]
Mal Cody, Wes Cody[c] Episode: "The Brothers" [61]
Wanted Dead or Alive 1958–1961 Josh Randall Main role: 94 episodes [3][9][64]
Alfred Hitchcock Presents 1959 Bill Everett Season 4 Episode 32: "Human Interest Story" [65]
1960 Gambler Season 5 Episode 15: "Man from the South" [66]
Close

Notes

  1. McQueen's production company, Solar Productions, was a shareholder in Le Mans. After the film's lackluster performance, McQueen received a notice from the Internal Revenue Service, which urged him to pay $2 million as tax. He had to make use of whatever profits he made as well as shut down his company to pay the tax.[30]
  2. McQueen played a single character in the film who has two or more different names.
  3. McQueen appeared in dual roles in this episode.[61]

References

Bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI