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Steve McQueen

Terrence Stephen McQueen (March 24, 1930 – November 7, 1980)[4] was an American actor. His antihero persona, emphasized during the height of the counterculture of the 1960s, made him a top box-office draw for his films of the late 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. He was nicknamed the "King of Cool" and used the alias Harvey Mushman in motor races.

Steve McQueen
McQueen in The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)
Born
Terrence Stephen McQueen[1]: 292 [2]: 233 

(1930-03-24)March 24, 1930
DiedNovember 7, 1980(1980-11-07) (aged 50)
OccupationActor
Years active1952–1980
Spouses
  • (m. 1956; div. 1972)
  • (m. 1973; div. 1978)
  • (m. 1980)
Children2, including Chad McQueen[3]
RelativesSteven R. McQueen (grandson)
Military career
Allegiance United States
Service/branch
Years of service
  • 1946 (Merchant Marine)
  • 1947–1950 (USMC)
RankPrivate first class
Websitestevemcqueen.com

McQueen received an Academy Award nomination for his role in The Sand Pebbles (1966). His other popular films include Love With the Proper Stranger (1963), The Cincinnati Kid (1965), Nevada Smith (1966), The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), Bullitt (1968), Le Mans (1971), The Getaway (1972), and Papillon (1973). In addition, he starred in the all-star ensemble films The Magnificent Seven (1960), The Great Escape (1963), and The Towering Inferno (1974).

In 1974, McQueen became the highest-paid movie star in the world, although he did not act in film for another four years. He was combative with directors and producers, but his popularity placed him in high demand and enabled him to command the largest salaries.[5]

Early life

Terrence Stephen McQueen was born to a single mother on March 24, 1930, at St. Francis Hospital in Beech Grove, Indiana, a suburb of Indianapolis.[6][7][8] McQueen, of Scottish descent, was raised a Roman Catholic.[9][10] His parents never married. McQueen's father, William McQueen, a stunt pilot for a barnstorming flying circus, left his mother, Julia Ann (or Julianne) Crawford,[6][11]: 9  six months after meeting her.[7][12] Several biographers have stated that Julia Ann was an alcoholic.[11]: 72 [13][14]: 7–8 [15] Unable to cope with caring for a small child, she left the boy with her parents (Victor and Lillian) in Slater, Missouri, in 1933. As the Great Depression worsened, McQueen and his grandparents moved in with Lillian's brother Claude and his family at their farm in Slater.[7] McQueen later said that he had good memories of living on the farm, noting that his great-uncle Claude "was a very good man, very strong, very fair. I learned a lot from him."[7]

Claude gave McQueen a red tricycle on his fourth birthday, a gift that McQueen subsequently credited with sparking his early interest in car racing.[7] McQueen's mother married and when the boy was eight, she brought him from the farm to live with her and her new husband in Indianapolis. His great-uncle Claude gave McQueen a special gift at his departure. "The day I left the farm," he recalled, "Uncle Claude gave me a personal going-away present—a gold pocket watch, with an inscription inside the case." The inscription read "To Steve – who has been a son to me."[14]

Dyslexic and partially deaf due to a childhood ear infection,[7] McQueen did not adjust well to school or his new life. His stepfather beat him to such an extent that at the age of nine he left home to live on the streets.[13] He later recalled, "When a kid doesn't have any love when he's small, he begins to wonder if he's good enough. My mother didn't love me, and I didn't have a father. I thought, 'Well, I must not be very good.'"[16] Soon he was running with a street gang and committing acts of petty crime.[7] Unable to control his behavior, his mother sent him back to her grandparents and great-uncle in Slater.

When McQueen was 12, Julia wrote to her uncle Claude, asking that her son be returned to her again to live in Los Angeles, California, where she lived with her second husband. By McQueen's own account, he and his new stepfather "locked horns immediately".[7] McQueen recalls him being "a prime son of a bitch" who was not averse to using his fists on McQueen and his mother.[7] As McQueen began to rebel again, he was sent back to live with Claude for a final time.[7] At age 14, he left Claude's farm without saying goodbye and joined a circus for a short time.[7] He drifted back to his mother and stepfather in Los Angeles—resuming his life as a gang member and petty criminal.[17] McQueen was caught stealing hubcaps by the police and handed over to his stepfather, who beat him severely. He threw the youth down a flight of stairs. McQueen looked up at his stepfather and said, "You lay your stinking hands on me again and I swear, I'll kill you."[7]

After this incident, McQueen's stepfather persuaded his mother to sign a court order stating that McQueen was incorrigible, remanding him to the California Junior Boys Republic in Chino.[7] Here, McQueen began to change and mature. He was not popular with the other boys at first:

Say the boys had a chance once a month to load into a bus and go into town to see a movie. And they lost out because one guy in the bungalow didn't get his work done right. Well, you can pretty well guess they're gonna have something to say about that. I paid my dues with the other fellows quite a few times. I got my lumps, no doubt about it. The other guys in the bungalow had ways of paying you back for interfering with their well-being.[18]

McQueen gradually became a role model and was elected to the Boys Council, a group who set the rules and regulations governing the boys' lives.[7] He left the Boys Republic at age 16. When he later became famous as an actor, he regularly returned to talk to resident boys and retained a lifelong association with the center.[19]

At age 16, McQueen returned to live with his mother, who had moved to Greenwich Village in New York City. There he met two sailors from the Merchant Marine and decided to sign on to a ship bound for the Dominican Republic.[7] Once there, he abandoned his new post, eventually being employed in a brothel.[13] Later McQueen made his way to Texas and drifted from job to job, including selling pens at a traveling carnival, and working as a lumberjack in Canada. He was arrested for vagrancy in the Deep South and served a 30-day assignment on a chain gang.[20]

Military service

In 1947, after receiving permission from his mother (since he was not yet 18 years old), McQueen enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. He was sent to Parris Island for boot camp.[2]: 106 [21][22] He was promoted to private first class and assigned to an armored unit.[7] He initially struggled with conforming to the discipline of the service, and was demoted to private seven times. He took an unauthorized absence, failing to return after a weekend pass expired. He was caught by the shore patrol while staying with a girlfriend (Barbara Ross) for two weeks. After resisting arrest, he was sentenced to 41 days in the brig.[7]

After this, McQueen resolved to focus his energies on self-improvement and embraced the Marines' discipline. He saved the lives of five other Marines during an Arctic exercise, pulling them from a tank before it broke through ice into the sea.[7][23] He was assigned to the honor guard responsible for guarding the presidential yacht of US President Harry S Truman.[7] McQueen served until 1950, when he was honorably discharged.[2]: 106 [21][22] He later said he had enjoyed his time in the Marines.[24] He remembered this period with the Marines as a formative time in his life, saying, "The Marines made a man out of me. I learned how to get along with others, and I had a platform to jump off of."[25]

Acting

1950s and 1960s

In 1952, with financial assistance under the G.I. Bill, McQueen began studying acting in New York at Sanford Meisner's Neighborhood Playhouse and at HB Studio[26] under Uta Hagen.[7] He reportedly delivered his first dialogue on a theatre stage in a 1952 play produced by Yiddish theatre star Molly Picon. McQueen's character spoke one brief line: "Alts iz farloyrn." ("All is lost.").[27] During this time, he also studied acting with Stella Adler, in whose class he met Gia Scala.[28]

Long enamored of cars and motorcycles, McQueen began to earn money by competing in weekend motorcycle races at Long Island City Raceway. He purchased the first two of many motorcycles, a Harley-Davidson and a Triumph.[12] He soon became an excellent racer, winning about $100 each weekend (equivalent to $1,000 in 2021).[7][29] He appeared as a musical judge in an episode of ABC's Jukebox Jury, which aired in the 1953–1954 season.[30]

McQueen had minor roles in stage productions, including Peg o' My Heart, The Member of the Wedding, and Two Fingers of Pride. He made his Broadway debut in 1955 in the play A Hatful of Rain, starring Ben Gazzara.[7]

In late 1955 at the age of 25, McQueen left New York and headed for Los Angeles. He moved into a house on Vestal Avenue in the Echo Park area, and sought acting jobs in Hollywood.[31]

When McQueen appeared in a two-part Westinghouse Studio One television presentation entitled The Defenders, Hollywood manager Hilly Elkins took note of him[32] and decided that B-movies would be a good place for the young actor to make his mark. McQueen's first role was a bit part in Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956), directed by Robert Wise and starring Paul Newman. McQueen was subsequently hired for the films Never Love a Stranger; The Blob (his first leading role, science fiction); and The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery (1959).

McQueen's first breakout role came on television. He appeared on Dale Robertson's NBC western series Tales of Wells Fargo as Bill Longley. Elkins, then McQueen's manager, successfully lobbied Vincent M. Fennelly, producer of the western series Trackdown, to have McQueen read for the part of bounty hunter Josh Randall. He first appeared in Season 1 Episode 21 of Trackdown in 1958. He appeared as Randall in that episode, cast opposite series lead Robert Culp, a former New York motorcycle racing buddy. McQueen appeared again on Trackdown in Episode 31 of the first season, in which he played twin brothers, one of whom was an outlaw sought by Culp's character, Hoby Gilman.

 

McQueen next filmed a pilot episode for what became the series titled Wanted: Dead or Alive, which aired on CBS in September 1958. This became his breakout role.

In interviews associated with the DVD release of Wanted, Robert Culp of Trackdown claims credit for bringing McQueen to Hollywood and landing him the part of Randall. He said he taught McQueen the "art of the fast-draw." He said that by the second day of filming, McQueen beat him at it. McQueen became a household name as a result of this series.[7] Randall's special holster held a sawed-off .44–40 Winchester rifle nicknamed the "Mare's Leg" instead of the six-gun carried by the typical Western character, although the cartridges in the gunbelt were dummy .45–70, chosen because they "looked tougher." Coupled with the generally negative image of the bounty hunter, noted in the three-part DVD special on the background of the series, this added to the antihero image infused with mystery and detachment that made this show stand out from the typical TV Western. The 94 episodes that ran from 1958 until early 1961 kept McQueen steadily employed, and he became a fixture at the renowned Iverson Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, where much of the outdoor action for Wanted: Dead or Alive was shot.

At 29, McQueen got a significant break when Frank Sinatra removed Sammy Davis Jr. from the film Never So Few after Davis supposedly made some mildly negative remarks about Sinatra in a radio interview, and Davis's role went to McQueen. Sinatra saw something special in McQueen and ensured that the young actor got plenty of closeups in a role that earned McQueen favorable reviews. McQueen's character, Bill Ringa, was never more comfortable than when driving at high speed—in this case in a jeep—or handling a switchblade or a tommy gun.

After Never So Few, the film's director John Sturges cast McQueen in his next movie, promising to "give him the camera". The Magnificent Seven (1960), in which he played Vin Tanner and starred with Yul Brynner, Eli Wallach, Robert Vaughn, Charles Bronson, Horst Buchholz, and James Coburn, became McQueen's first major hit and led to his withdrawal from Wanted: Dead or Alive. McQueen's focused portrayal of the taciturn second lead catapulted his career. His added touches in many of the shots (such as shaking a shotgun round before loading it, repeatedly checking his gun while in the background of a shot, and wiping his hat rim) annoyed top-billed Brynner, who protested that McQueen was stealing scenes.[7] (in his autobiography,[33] Eli Wallach reports struggling to conceal his amusement while watching the filming of the funeral-procession scene where Brynner's and McQueen's characters first meet: Brynner was furious at McQueen's shotgun-round-shake, which effectively diverted the viewer's attention to McQueen. Brynner refused to draw his gun in the same scene with McQueen, not wanting his character outdrawn.[7]

McQueen played the top-billed lead role in the next big Sturges film, 1963's The Great Escape, Hollywood's fictional depiction of the true story of a historic mass escape from a World War II POW camp, Stalag Luft III. Insurance concerns prevented McQueen from performing the film's notable motorcycle leap, which was done by his friend and fellow cycle enthusiast Bud Ekins, who resembled McQueen from a distance.[34] When Johnny Carson later tried to congratulate McQueen for the jump during a broadcast of The Tonight Show, McQueen said, "It wasn't me. That was Bud Ekins." This film established McQueen's box-office clout and secured his status as a superstar.[35]

Also in 1963, McQueen starred in Love with the Proper Stranger with Natalie Wood. He later appeared as the titular Nevada Smith, a character from Harold Robbins's novel The Carpetbaggers portrayed by Alan Ladd two years earlier in a movie version of that novel. Nevada Smith was an enormously successful Western action adventure prequel that also featured Karl Malden and Suzanne Pleshette. After starring in 1965's The Cincinnati Kid as a poker player, McQueen earned his only Academy Award nomination in 1966 for his role as an engine-room sailor in The Sand Pebbles, in which he starred opposite Candice Bergen and Richard Attenborough, whom he had previously worked with in The Great Escape.[14]

He followed his Oscar nomination with 1968's Bullitt, one of his best-known films, and his personal favorite, which co-starred Jacqueline Bisset, Robert Vaughn, and Don Gordon. It featured an unprecedented (and endlessly imitated) car chase through San Francisco. Although McQueen did the driving that appeared in closeup, this was about 10% of what is seen in the film's car chase. The rest of the driving by McQueen's character was done by stunt drivers Bud Ekins and Loren Janes.[36] The antagonist's black Dodge Charger was driven by veteran stunt driver Bill Hickman; McQueen, his stunt drivers and Hickman spent several days before the scene was shot practicing high-speed, close-quarters driving.[37] Bullitt went so far over budget that Warner Brothers cancelled the contract on the rest of his films, seven in all.

When Bullitt became a huge box-office success, Warner Brothers tried to woo him back, but he refused, and his next film was made with an independent studio and released by United Artists. For this film, McQueen went for a change of image, playing a debonair role as a wealthy executive in The Thomas Crown Affair with Faye Dunaway in 1968. The following year, he made the southern period piece The Reivers.

1970s

In 1971, McQueen starred in the poorly received auto-racing drama Le Mans, followed by Junior Bonner in 1972, a story of an aging rodeo rider. He worked for director Sam Peckinpah again with the leading role in The Getaway, where he met future wife Ali MacGraw. He followed this with a physically demanding role as a Devil's Island prisoner in 1973's Papillon, featuring Dustin Hoffman as his character's tragic sidekick.

In 1973, The Rolling Stones referred to McQueen in the song "Star Star" from the album Goats Head Soup for which an amused McQueen reportedly gave personal permission.[38] The lines were "Star fucker, star fucker, star fucker, star fucker, star / Yes you are, yes you are, yes you are / Yeah, Ali MacGraw got mad with you / For givin' head to Steve McQueen."

By the time of The Getaway, McQueen was the world's highest-paid actor,[39] but after 1974's The Towering Inferno, starring with his long-time professional rival Paul Newman and reuniting him with Dunaway, became a tremendous box-office success, McQueen all but disappeared from the public eye, to focus on motorcycle racing and traveling around the country in a motor home and on his vintage Indian motorcycles. He did not return to acting until 1978 with An Enemy of the People, playing against type as a bearded, bespectacled 19th-century doctor in this adaptation of a Henrik Ibsen play. The film was never properly released theatrically, but has appeared occasionally on PBS.

His last two films were loosely based on true stories: Tom Horn, a Western adventure about a former Army scout-turned professional gunman who worked for the big cattle ranchers hunting down rustlers, and later hanged for murder in the shooting death of a sheepherder, and The Hunter, an urban action movie about a modern-day bounty hunter, both released in 1980.

Missed roles

McQueen was offered the lead male role in Breakfast at Tiffany's, but was unable to accept due to his Wanted: Dead or Alive contract (the role went to George Peppard).[7][40] He turned down parts in Ocean's 11,[41] Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (his attorneys and agents could not agree with Paul Newman's attorneys and agents on top billing),[7][40] The Driver,[42][43] Apocalypse Now,[14]: 172  California Split,[44] Dirty Harry, A Bridge Too Far, The French Connection (he did not want to do another cop film),[7][40] Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Sorcerer.

According to director John Frankenheimer and actor James Garner in bonus interviews for the DVD of the film Grand Prix, McQueen was Frankenheimer's first choice for the lead role of American Formula One race car driver Pete Aron. Frankenheimer was unable to meet with McQueen to offer him the role, so he sent Edward Lewis, his business partner and the producer of Grand Prix. McQueen and Lewis instantly clashed, the meeting was a disaster, and the role went to Garner.

Garner later for the interview said this:

Oh, McQueen. Crazy McQueen. McQueen and I get along pretty good, McQueen looked to me kind of like an older brother and he didn't want to have much with me, till he got into trouble, then he'd call and, you know, he knew, I could tell him just what I thought. A lot of people wouldn't do that. And then we had a falling out. It wasn't a falling out, as I did Grand Prix. Steve was originally slated to do that movie, but he couldn't get along with Frank Frankenheimer. So that lasted about 30 minutes, and I was in and Steve was out. And Steve went over to do Sand Pebbles, which went about year longer than they wanted to go. Big production spent a lot of money and stayed in China too long there, in Taiwan. So, when I got the part in Grand Prix, I called him. In Taiwan. And I started: "Steve, I want to tell you, before somebody else, that I'm going to do Grand Prix." Well, there was about a 20 dollars' silence there (laugh), on the telephone. He didn't know, what to say, and finally said "Oh, that's great, that's great, I'm glad to hear that.", because he planned to do Le Mans, which was another title at the time. But we were about to release, before he even got to that film. But he said: "Great, great, well, I'm glad to hear it; that's good. You know, if anybody's gonna do it, I'm glad, you're going to do it. He didn't talk to me for about year and half, and we were next-door neighbors (laugh). So, it got to him a little bit, finally by his son. Chad took him to go see Grand Prix. And from that time on, we were talking again. But Steve was a wild kid. He didn't know where he wanted to be or what he wanted to do.[45]

Director Steven Spielberg said McQueen was his first choice for the character of Roy Neary in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. According to Spielberg, in a documentary on the Close Encounters DVD, Spielberg met him at a bar, where McQueen drank beer after beer. Before leaving, McQueen told Spielberg that he could not accept the role because he was unable to cry on cue.[46][47] Spielberg offered to take the crying scene out of the story, but McQueen demurred, saying that it was the best scene in the script. The role eventually went to Richard Dreyfuss.

William Friedkin wanted to cast McQueen as the lead in the action/thriller film Sorcerer (1977). Sorcerer was to be filmed primarily on location in the Dominican Republic, but McQueen did not want to be separated from Ali MacGraw for the duration of the shoot. McQueen then asked Friedkin to let MacGraw act as a producer, so she could be present during principal photography. Friedkin would not agree to this condition, and cast Roy Scheider instead of McQueen. Friedkin later remarked that not casting McQueen hurt the film's performance at the box office.

Spy novelist Jeremy Duns revealed that McQueen was considered for the lead role in a film adaptation of The Diamond Smugglers, written by James Bond creator Ian Fleming; McQueen would play John Blaize, a secret agent gone undercover to infiltrate a diamond-smuggling ring in South Africa. There were complications with the project which was eventually shelved, although a 1964 screenplay does exist.[48]

McQueen and Barbra Streisand were tentatively cast in The Gauntlet, but the two could not get along, and both withdrew from the project. The lead roles were filled by Clint Eastwood and Sondra Locke.

McQueen expressed interest in the Rambo character in First Blood when David Morrell's novel appeared in 1972, but the producers rejected him because of his age.[49][50] He was offered the title role in The Bodyguard (to star Diana Ross) when it was proposed in 1976, but the film did not reach production until years after McQueen's death (which eventually starred Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston in 1992).[51] Quigley Down Under was in development as early as 1974, with McQueen in consideration for the lead, but by the time production began in 1980, McQueen was ill and the project was scrapped until a decade later, when Tom Selleck starred.[52] McQueen was offered the lead in Raise the Titanic, but felt that the script was flat. He was under contract to Irwin Allen after appearing in The Towering Inferno and offered a part in a sequel in 1980, which he turned down. The film was scrapped and Newman was brought in by Allen to make When Time Ran Out, which was a box office bomb. McQueen died shortly after passing on The Towering Inferno 2.[citation needed]

Stunts, motor racing and flying

 
McQueen with two forms of transportation – his horse, Doc, and his Jaguar XKSS (1960)

McQueen was an avid motorcycle and race car enthusiast. When he had the opportunity to drive in a movie, he performed many of his own stunts, including some of the car chases in Bullitt and the motorcycle chase in The Great Escape.[53] Although the jump over the fence in The Great Escape was done by Bud Ekins for insurance purposes, McQueen did have considerable screen time riding his 650 cc Triumph TR6 Trophy motorcycle. It was difficult to find riders as skilled as McQueen.[54] At one point, using editing, McQueen is seen in a German uniform chasing himself on another bike. Around half of the driving in Bullitt was performed by Loren Janes.[36]

McQueen and John Sturges planned to make Day of the Champion,[55] a movie about Formula One racing, but McQueen was busy with the delayed The Sand Pebbles. They had a contract with the German Nürburgring, and after John Frankenheimer shot scenes there for Grand Prix, the reels were turned over to Sturges. Frankenheimer was ahead in schedule, and the McQueen-Sturges project was called off.

McQueen considered being a professional race car driver. He had a one-off outing in the British Touring Car Championship in 1961, driving a BMC Mini at Brands Hatch, finishing third.[56] In the 1970 12 Hours of Sebring race, Peter Revson and McQueen (driving with a cast on his left foot from a motorcycle accident two weeks earlier) won with a Porsche 908/02 in the three-litre class and missed winning overall by 21.1 seconds to Mario Andretti/Ignazio Giunti/Nino Vaccarella in a five-litre Ferrari 512S.[57] This same Porsche 908 was entered by his production company Solar Productions as a camera car for Le Mans in the 1970 24 Hours of Le Mans later that year. McQueen wanted to drive a Porsche 917 with Jackie Stewart in that race,[58] but the film backers threatened to pull their support if he did. Faced with the choice of driving for 24 hours in the race or driving for the entire summer making the film, McQueen opted for the latter.[failed verification][59]

McQueen competed in off-road motorcycle racing, frequently running a BSA Hornet and using alias Harvey Mushman.[14] He was also set to co-drive in a Triumph 2500 PI for the British Leyland team in the 1970 London-Mexico rally, but had to turn it down due to movie commitments.[14] His first off-road motorcycle was a Triumph 500 cc, purchased from Ekins. McQueen raced in many top off-road races on the West Coast, including the Baja 1000, the Mint 400, and the Elsinore Grand Prix.

In 1964, McQueen and Ekins were part of a four-rider (plus one reserve) first-ever official US team-entry into the Silver Vase category of the International Six Days Trial,[60] an Enduro-type off-road motorcycling event held that year in Erfurt, East Germany.[61] The "A" team arrived in England in late August to collect their mix of 649 cc and 490 cc twins from the Triumph factory before modifying them for off-road use.[60] Initially let down with transport arrangements by a long-established English motorcycle dealer, Triumph dealer H&L Motors stepped-in to provide a suitable vehicle.[62] On arrival in Germany, the team, with their English temporary manager, were surprised to find a Vase "B" team, comprising expat Americans living in Europe, had entered themselves privately to ride European-sourced machinery.[63]

McQueen's ISDT competition number was 278, which was based on the trials starting order.[64] Both teams crashed repeatedly.[63][65] McQueen retired due to irreparable crash damage,[66] and Ekins withdrew with a broken leg, both on day three (Wednesday). Only one member of the "B" team finished the six-day event.[65] UK monthly magazine Motorcycle Sport commented: "Riding Triumph twins...[the team] rode everywhere with great dash, if not in admirable style, falling off frequently and obviously out for six days' sport without too many worries about who was going to win (they knew it would not be them)".[66]

He was inducted in the Off-road Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1978. In 1971, McQueen's Solar Productions funded the classic motorcycle documentary On Any Sunday, in which McQueen is featured, along with racing legends Mert Lawwill and Malcolm Smith. The same year, he also appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated magazine riding a Husqvarna dirt bike.

McQueen designed a motorsports bucket seat, for which a patent was issued in 1971.[59]: 93 [67]

In a segment filmed for The Ed Sullivan Show, McQueen drove Sullivan around a desert area in a dune buggy at high speed. Afterward, Sullivan said, "That was a 'helluva' ride!"

By testimony of McQueen's son, Chad, Steve owned around 100 classic motorcycles, as well as around 100 exotics and vintage cars, including:

In spite of numerous attempts, McQueen was never able to purchase the Ford Mustang GT 390 he drove in Bullitt, which featured a modified drivetrain that suited McQueen's driving style. One of the two Mustangs used in the film was badly damaged, judged beyond repair, and believed to have been scrapped until it surfaced in Mexico in 2017,[83] while the other one, which McQueen attempted to purchase in 1977,[84] is hidden from the public eye. At the 2018 North American International Auto Show the GT 390 was displayed, in its current non-restored condition, with the 2019 Ford Mustang "Bullitt".[85]

McQueen also flew and owned, among other aircraft, a 1945 Stearman, tail number N3188, (his student number in reform school), a 1946 Piper J-3 Cub, and an award-winning 1931 Pitcairn PA-8 biplane, flown in the US Mail Service by famed World War I flying ace Eddie Rickenbacker. They were hangared at Santa Paula Airport an hour northwest of Hollywood, where he lived his final days.[14]

Personal life

Relationships and friendships

While still attending Stella Adler's school in New York, McQueen dated Gia Scala.[28]

 
McQueen and then-wife Neile Adams in the "Man from the South" episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1960), also starring Peter Lorre

On November 2, 1956, he married Filipino actress and dancer Neile Adams,[86] with whom he had a daughter, Terry Leslie (June 5, 1959 – March 19, 1998[87][88]), and a son, Chad (born December 28, 1960).[89] McQueen and Adams divorced in 1972.[87] In her autobiography, My Husband, My Friend, Adams stated that she had an abortion in 1971, when their marriage was on the rocks.[32] One of McQueen's four grandchildren is actor Steven R. McQueen (who is best known for playing Jeremy Gilbert in The Vampire Diaries and Jimmy Borelli in Chicago Fire).[90]

Mamie Van Doren claimed to have had an affair with McQueen and tried hallucinogens with him around 1959.[91] Actress-model Lauren Hutton also said that she had an affair with McQueen in the early 1960s.[92][93] In 1971–1972, while separated from Adams, McQueen had a relationship with Junior Bonner co-star Barbara Leigh,[87][94] which included her pregnancy and an abortion.[95]

In Cheyenne, Wyoming in 1973, McQueen married actress Ali MacGraw, his co-star in The Getaway, but this marriage ended in a divorce in 1978.[96] MacGraw suffered a miscarriage during their marriage.[97] Some friends later claimed that MacGraw was the one true love of McQueen's life: "He was madly in love with her until the day he died."

In 1973, McQueen was one of the pallbearers at Bruce Lee's funeral along with James Coburn, Bruce's brother Robert Lee, Peter Chin, Dan Inosanto, and Taky Kimura.[98]

After discovering a mutual interest in racing, McQueen and Great Escape co-star James Garner became good friends and lived near each other. McQueen recalled:

I could see that Jim was neat around his place. Flowers trimmed, no papers in the yard... grass always cut. So to piss him off, I'd start lobbing empty beer cans down the hill into his driveway. He'd have his drive all spick 'n' span when he left the house, then get home to find all these empty cans. Took him a long time to figure out it was me.[14]

On January 16, 1980, less than a year before his death, McQueen married model Barbara Minty.[99] Barbara Minty, in her book Steve McQueen: The Last Mile, wrote of McQueen becoming an Evangelical Christian toward the end of his life.[100] This was due in part to the influences of his flying instructor, Sammy Mason, Mason's son Pete, and Barbara herself.[101] McQueen attended his local church, Ventura Missionary Church, and was visited by evangelist Billy Graham shortly before his death.[101][102]

Lifestyle

 
McQueen's mug shot booking photographs for DWI in Alaska (1972)

McQueen followed a daily two-hour exercise regimen, involving weightlifting and, at one point, running 5 miles (8 km), seven days a week.[103] McQueen learned the martial art Tang Soo Do from ninth-degree black belt Pat E. Johnson.[7]

According to photographer William Claxton, McQueen smoked marijuana almost every day; biographer Marc Eliot stated that McQueen used a large amount of cocaine in the early 1970s. He was also a heavy cigarette smoker. McQueen sometimes drank to excess; he was arrested for driving while intoxicated in Anchorage, Alaska, in 1972.[104]

Manson connection

Two months after Charles Manson incited the murder of five people, including McQueen's friends Sharon Tate and Jay Sebring, the media reported police had found a hit list with McQueen's name on it. According to his first wife, McQueen began carrying a handgun at all times in public, including at Sebring's funeral.[105]

Charitable causes

McQueen had an unusual reputation for demanding free items in bulk from studios when agreeing to do a film, such as electric razors, jeans, and other items. It was later discovered McQueen donated these things to the Boys Republic reformatory school,[106] where he had spent time during his teen years. McQueen made occasional visits to the school to spend time with the students, often to play pool and speak about his experiences.[citation needed]

Politics

McQueen supported Lyndon B. Johnson in the 1964 United States presidential election and Richard Nixon in the 1968 United States presidential election.[107][108]

Illness and death

McQueen developed a persistent cough in 1978. He gave up cigarettes and underwent antibiotic treatments without improvement. His shortness of breath grew more pronounced, and on December 22, 1979, after filming The Hunter, a biopsy revealed pleural mesothelioma,[109] a cancer associated with asbestos exposure for which there is no known cure.

A few months later, McQueen gave a medical interview in which he blamed his condition on asbestos exposure.[110] McQueen believed that asbestos used in movie sound stage insulation and race-drivers protective suits and helmets could have been involved but he thought it more likely that his illness was a direct result of massive exposure while removing asbestos lagging (insulation) from pipes aboard a troop ship while he served in the Marines.[111][112]

By February 1980, evidence of widespread metastasis was found. He tried to keep the condition a secret but on March 11, 1980, the National Enquirer disclosed that he had "terminal cancer."[113][114] In July 1980, McQueen traveled to Rosarito Beach, Mexico, for unconventional treatment after U.S. doctors told him they could do nothing to prolong his life.[115] Controversy arose over the trip because McQueen sought treatment from William Donald Kelley, who was promoting a variation of the Gerson therapy that used coffee enemas, frequent washing with shampoos, daily injections of fluid containing live cells from cattle and sheep, massages, and laetrile, a reputed anti-cancer drug available in Mexico, but long known to be both toxic and ineffective at treating cancer.[116][117][118] McQueen paid for Kelley's treatments by himself in cash payments which were said to have been upwards of $40,000 per month (equivalent to $132,000 in 2021) during his three-month stay in Mexico. Kelley's dental license, his only medically related license (until revoked in 1976) had been for orthodontics, a field of dentistry, not medicine.[119] Kelley's methods caused a sensation in the traditional and tabloid press when it became known that McQueen was a patient.[120][121]

McQueen returned to the U.S. in early October. Despite metastasis of the cancer throughout McQueen's body, Kelley publicly announced that McQueen would be completely cured and return to normal life. McQueen's condition soon worsened and huge tumors developed in his abdomen.[119]

In late October 1980, McQueen flew to Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico to have an abdominal tumor on his liver (weighing around 5 lbs) removed, despite warnings from his U.S. doctors that the tumor was inoperable and his heart could not withstand the surgery.[14]: 212–13 [119] Using the name "Samuel Sheppard," McQueen checked into a small Juárez clinic where the doctors and staff were unaware of his actual identity.[122]

On November 7, 1980, McQueen died of a heart attack at 3:45 a.m. at a Juárez hospital, 12 hours after surgery to remove or reduce numerous metastatic tumors in his neck and abdomen.[14] He was 50 years old.[123] According to the El Paso Times, McQueen died in his sleep.[124]

Leonard DeWitt of the Ventura Missionary Church presided over McQueen's memorial service.[100][101] McQueen was cremated, and his ashes were spread in the Pacific Ocean.

Legacy

 
The photo on McQueen's international driver's license

In 2007, 27 years after his death, Forbes said McQueen remained a popular star and still the "king of cool" and was one of the highest-earning dead celebrities. A rights-management agency head credited Branded Entertainment Network (called Corbis at the time) with maximizing the profitability of his estate by limiting the licensing of McQueen's image, avoiding the commercial saturation of other dead celebrities' estates. As of 2007, McQueen's estate entered the top 10 of highest-earning dead celebrities.[125]

McQueen was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers in April 2007 in a ceremony at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.[126]

In November 1999, McQueen was inducted into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame. He was credited with contributions including financing the film On Any Sunday, supporting a team of off-road riders, and enhancing the public image of motorcycling overall.[127]

A film based on unfinished storyboards and notes developed by McQueen before his death was slated for production by McG's production company Wonderland Sound and Vision. Yucatán is described as an "epic adventure heist" film, scheduled for release in 2013 but still unreleased in February 2016.[128] Team Downey, the production company of Robert Downey, Jr. and his wife Susan Downey, expressed an interest in developing Yucatán for the screen.[129]

The Beech Grove, Indiana, Public Library formally dedicated the Steve McQueen Birthplace Collection on March 16, 2010, to commemorate the 80th anniversary of McQueen's birth on March 24, 1930.[130]

In 2012, McQueen was posthumously honored with the Warren Zevon Tribute Award by the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO).

Steve McQueen: The Man & Le Mans, a 2015 documentary, examines the actor's quest to create and star in the 1971 auto-racing film Le Mans. His son Chad McQueen and former wife Neile Adams are among those interviewed.

On September 28, 2017, there was a selected showing in some theaters of his life story and spiritual quest, Steve McQueen – American Icon.[131] There was an encore presentation on October 10, 2017.[132] The film received mostly positive reviews.[133] Kenneth R. Morefield of Christianity Today said it "offers a timeless reminder that even those among us living the most celebrated lives often long for the peace and sense of purpose that only God can provide".[134] Michael Foust of Wordslingers called it "one of the most powerful and inspiring documentaries I've ever seen."[135]

In the 2019 Quentin Tarantino film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, McQueen is portrayed by Damian Lewis. McQueen also appears as a character in Tarantino's novel of the same name.

Archive

The Academy Film Archive houses the Steve McQueen-Neile Adams Collection, which consists of personal prints and home movies.[136] The archive has preserved several of McQueen's home movies.[137]

Ford commercials

In 1998, director Paul Street created a commercial for the Ford Puma. Footage was shot in modern-day San Francisco, set to the theme music from Bullitt. Archive footage of McQueen was used to digitally superimpose him driving and exiting the car in settings reminiscent of the film. The Puma shares the same number plate of the classic fastback Mustang used in Bullitt, and as he parks in the garage (next to the Mustang), he pauses and looks meaningfully at a motorcycle tucked in the corner, similar to that used in The Great Escape.[138]

In 2005, Ford used his likeness again, in a commercial for the 2005 Mustang. In the commercial, a farmer builds a winding racetrack, which he circles in the 2005 Mustang. Out of the cornfield comes McQueen. The farmer tosses his keys to McQueen, who drives off in the new Mustang. McQueen's likeness was created using a body double (Dan Holsten) and digital editing. Ford secured the rights to McQueen's likeness from the actor's estate licensing agent for an undisclosed sum.[citation needed]

At the Detroit Auto Show in January 2018, Ford unveiled the new 2019 Mustang Bullitt. The company called on McQueen's granddaughter, actress Molly McQueen, to make the announcement. After a brief rundown of the tribute car's particulars, a short film was shown in which Molly was introduced to the actual Bullitt Mustang, a 1968 Mustang Fastback with a 390 cubic-inch engine and a four-speed manual gearbox. That car has been in possession of the same family since 1974 and hidden away from the public until then, when it was driven out from under the press stand and up the center aisle of Ford's booth to much fanfare.[139]

Memorabilia

Motorcycles and cars

One of his motorcycles, a 1937 Crocker, sold for a world-record price of $276,500 at the same auction. McQueen's 1963 metallic-brown Ferrari 250 GT Lusso Berlinetta sold for US$2.31 million at auction on August 16, 2007.[68] Except for three motorcycles sold with other memorabilia in 2006,[140] most of McQueen's collection of 130 motorcycles was sold four years after his death.[141][142] The 1970 Porsche 911S purchased while making the film Le Mans and appearing in the opening sequence was sold at auction in August 2011 for $1.375 million. From 1995 to 2011, McQueen's red 1957 fuel-injected Chevrolet convertible was displayed at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles in a special Cars of Steve McQueen exhibit. It is now in the collection of actress Ruth Buzzi and her husband Kent Perkins. McQueen's British racing green 1956 Jaguar XKSS is located in the Petersen Automotive Museum and is in drivable condition, having been driven by Jay Leno in an episode of Jay Leno's Garage. In August 2019, Mecum Auctions announced it would auction the Bullitt Mustang Hero Car at its Kissimmee auction, held January 2–12, 2020.[143] The car sold without reserve for $3.4 million ($3.74 million after commissions and fees).

Watches

McQueen was a sponsored ambassador for Heuer watches. In the 1971 film Le Mans, he famously wore a blue-faced Monaco Ref. 1133, which led to its cult status among watch collectors, purchasing six watches of the same model for the shoot of the film. On December 12, 2020, one of the last six models sold and one of two held in private hands was sold for a record US$2.208 million at a Phillips auction in New York City, becoming the most expensive Heuer watch sold at auction.[144] Tag Heuer continues to promote its Monaco range with McQueen's image.[145]

The Rolex Explorer II, Reference 1655, known as Rolex Steve McQueen in the horology collectors' world, the Rolex Submariner, Reference 5512, which McQueen was often photographed wearing in private moments, sold for $234,000 at auction on June 11, 2009, a world-record price for the type.[146] [147][148]

In June 2018, Phillips announced McQueen's Rolex Submariner[149][150] to hit the auction block in September that year. However, there was controversy whether or not the watch was his personal watch worn by McQueen himself or if the watch was bought, engraved, then gifted.[151] Phillips later removed the watch from the auction block.

Among McQueen's other watches was a Hanhart 417 chronograph.[152]

Sunglasses

The blue-tinted sunglasses (Persol 714) worn by McQueen in the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair sold at a Bonhams & Butterfields auction in Los Angeles for $70,200 in 2006.[153]

Filmography

Awards and honors

Academy Awards
Golden Globe Awards
Moscow International Film Festival

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Bibliography

Further reading

  • Beaver, Jim. Steve McQueen. Films in Review, August–September 1981.
  • Satchell, Tim. McQueen. (Sidgwick and Jackson Limited, 1981) ISBN 0-283-98778-2
  • Siegel, Mike. Steve McQueen: The Actor and his Films (Dalton Watson, 2011)
  • Nolan, William F. McQueen (Congdon & Weed, 1984)
  • McQueen, Steve (November 1966). "Motorcycles: What I like in a bike—and why". Popular Science. Vol. 189, no. 5. pp. 76–81. ISSN 0161-7370.
  • Terrill, Marshall. Steve McQueen: Portrait of an American Rebel, (Donald I. Fine, 1993)
  • Terrill, Marshall. Steve McQueen: The Last Mile', (Dalton Watson, 2006)
  • Terrill, Marshall. Steve McQueen: A Tribute to the King of Cool, (Dalton Watson, 2010)
  • Terrill, Marshall. Steve McQueen: The Life and Legacy of a Hollywood Icon, (Triumph Books, 2010)
  • Terrill, Marshall. Steve McQueen: In His Own Words, (Dalton Watson, 2020)

External links

  • Official website  
  • Steve McQueen: In His Own Words by Marshall Terrill
  • Steve McQueen at IMDb
  • Steve McQueen at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Steve McQueen at Virtual History
  • Bell System Film "A Family Affair", McQueen's debut, at The AT&T Tech Channel
  • The Great Escape – New publication with private photos of the shooting & documents of 2nd unit cameraman Walter Riml
  • Photos and commentary on Steve McQueen shooting an episode of Wanted: Dead or Alive on the Iverson Movie Ranch

steve, mcqueen, british, film, director, director, other, people, named, disambiguation, terrence, stephen, mcqueen, march, 1930, november, 1980, american, actor, antihero, persona, emphasized, during, height, counterculture, 1960s, made, office, draw, films, . For the British film director see Steve McQueen director For other people named Steve McQueen see Steve McQueen disambiguation Terrence Stephen McQueen March 24 1930 November 7 1980 4 was an American actor His antihero persona emphasized during the height of the counterculture of the 1960s made him a top box office draw for his films of the late 1950s 1960s and 1970s He was nicknamed the King of Cool and used the alias Harvey Mushman in motor races Steve McQueenMcQueen in The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 BornTerrence Stephen McQueen 1 292 2 233 1930 03 24 March 24 1930Beech Grove Indiana U S DiedNovember 7 1980 1980 11 07 aged 50 Ciudad Juarez MexicoOccupationActorYears active1952 1980SpousesNeile Adams m 1956 div 1972 wbr Ali MacGraw m 1973 div 1978 wbr Barbara Minty m 1980 wbr Children2 including Chad McQueen 3 RelativesSteven R McQueen grandson Military careerAllegiance United StatesService wbr branch United States Marine CorpsUnited States Merchant MarineYears of service1946 Merchant Marine 1947 1950 USMC RankPrivate first classWebsitestevemcqueen wbr comMcQueen received an Academy Award nomination for his role in The Sand Pebbles 1966 His other popular films include Love With the Proper Stranger 1963 The Cincinnati Kid 1965 Nevada Smith 1966 The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 Bullitt 1968 Le Mans 1971 The Getaway 1972 and Papillon 1973 In addition he starred in the all star ensemble films The Magnificent Seven 1960 The Great Escape 1963 and The Towering Inferno 1974 In 1974 McQueen became the highest paid movie star in the world although he did not act in film for another four years He was combative with directors and producers but his popularity placed him in high demand and enabled him to command the largest salaries 5 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Military service 2 Acting 2 1 1950s and 1960s 2 2 1970s 2 3 Missed roles 3 Stunts motor racing and flying 4 Personal life 4 1 Relationships and friendships 4 2 Lifestyle 4 3 Manson connection 4 4 Charitable causes 4 5 Politics 5 Illness and death 6 Legacy 6 1 Archive 6 2 Ford commercials 6 3 Memorabilia 6 3 1 Motorcycles and cars 6 3 2 Watches 6 3 3 Sunglasses 7 Filmography 8 Awards and honors 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life EditTerrence Stephen McQueen was born to a single mother on March 24 1930 at St Francis Hospital in Beech Grove Indiana a suburb of Indianapolis 6 7 8 McQueen of Scottish descent was raised a Roman Catholic 9 10 His parents never married McQueen s father William McQueen a stunt pilot for a barnstorming flying circus left his mother Julia Ann or Julianne Crawford 6 11 9 six months after meeting her 7 12 Several biographers have stated that Julia Ann was an alcoholic 11 72 13 14 7 8 15 Unable to cope with caring for a small child she left the boy with her parents Victor and Lillian in Slater Missouri in 1933 As the Great Depression worsened McQueen and his grandparents moved in with Lillian s brother Claude and his family at their farm in Slater 7 McQueen later said that he had good memories of living on the farm noting that his great uncle Claude was a very good man very strong very fair I learned a lot from him 7 Claude gave McQueen a red tricycle on his fourth birthday a gift that McQueen subsequently credited with sparking his early interest in car racing 7 McQueen s mother married and when the boy was eight she brought him from the farm to live with her and her new husband in Indianapolis His great uncle Claude gave McQueen a special gift at his departure The day I left the farm he recalled Uncle Claude gave me a personal going away present a gold pocket watch with an inscription inside the case The inscription read To Steve who has been a son to me 14 Dyslexic and partially deaf due to a childhood ear infection 7 McQueen did not adjust well to school or his new life His stepfather beat him to such an extent that at the age of nine he left home to live on the streets 13 He later recalled When a kid doesn t have any love when he s small he begins to wonder if he s good enough My mother didn t love me and I didn t have a father I thought Well I must not be very good 16 Soon he was running with a street gang and committing acts of petty crime 7 Unable to control his behavior his mother sent him back to her grandparents and great uncle in Slater When McQueen was 12 Julia wrote to her uncle Claude asking that her son be returned to her again to live in Los Angeles California where she lived with her second husband By McQueen s own account he and his new stepfather locked horns immediately 7 McQueen recalls him being a prime son of a bitch who was not averse to using his fists on McQueen and his mother 7 As McQueen began to rebel again he was sent back to live with Claude for a final time 7 At age 14 he left Claude s farm without saying goodbye and joined a circus for a short time 7 He drifted back to his mother and stepfather in Los Angeles resuming his life as a gang member and petty criminal 17 McQueen was caught stealing hubcaps by the police and handed over to his stepfather who beat him severely He threw the youth down a flight of stairs McQueen looked up at his stepfather and said You lay your stinking hands on me again and I swear I ll kill you 7 After this incident McQueen s stepfather persuaded his mother to sign a court order stating that McQueen was incorrigible remanding him to the California Junior Boys Republic in Chino 7 Here McQueen began to change and mature He was not popular with the other boys at first Say the boys had a chance once a month to load into a bus and go into town to see a movie And they lost out because one guy in the bungalow didn t get his work done right Well you can pretty well guess they re gonna have something to say about that I paid my dues with the other fellows quite a few times I got my lumps no doubt about it The other guys in the bungalow had ways of paying you back for interfering with their well being 18 McQueen gradually became a role model and was elected to the Boys Council a group who set the rules and regulations governing the boys lives 7 He left the Boys Republic at age 16 When he later became famous as an actor he regularly returned to talk to resident boys and retained a lifelong association with the center 19 At age 16 McQueen returned to live with his mother who had moved to Greenwich Village in New York City There he met two sailors from the Merchant Marine and decided to sign on to a ship bound for the Dominican Republic 7 Once there he abandoned his new post eventually being employed in a brothel 13 Later McQueen made his way to Texas and drifted from job to job including selling pens at a traveling carnival and working as a lumberjack in Canada He was arrested for vagrancy in the Deep South and served a 30 day assignment on a chain gang 20 Military service Edit In 1947 after receiving permission from his mother since he was not yet 18 years old McQueen enlisted in the United States Marine Corps He was sent to Parris Island for boot camp 2 106 21 22 He was promoted to private first class and assigned to an armored unit 7 He initially struggled with conforming to the discipline of the service and was demoted to private seven times He took an unauthorized absence failing to return after a weekend pass expired He was caught by the shore patrol while staying with a girlfriend Barbara Ross for two weeks After resisting arrest he was sentenced to 41 days in the brig 7 After this McQueen resolved to focus his energies on self improvement and embraced the Marines discipline He saved the lives of five other Marines during an Arctic exercise pulling them from a tank before it broke through ice into the sea 7 23 He was assigned to the honor guard responsible for guarding the presidential yacht of US President Harry S Truman 7 McQueen served until 1950 when he was honorably discharged 2 106 21 22 He later said he had enjoyed his time in the Marines 24 He remembered this period with the Marines as a formative time in his life saying The Marines made a man out of me I learned how to get along with others and I had a platform to jump off of 25 Acting Edit1950s and 1960s Edit In 1952 with financial assistance under the G I Bill McQueen began studying acting in New York at Sanford Meisner s Neighborhood Playhouse and at HB Studio 26 under Uta Hagen 7 He reportedly delivered his first dialogue on a theatre stage in a 1952 play produced by Yiddish theatre star Molly Picon McQueen s character spoke one brief line Alts iz farloyrn All is lost 27 During this time he also studied acting with Stella Adler in whose class he met Gia Scala 28 Long enamored of cars and motorcycles McQueen began to earn money by competing in weekend motorcycle races at Long Island City Raceway He purchased the first two of many motorcycles a Harley Davidson and a Triumph 12 He soon became an excellent racer winning about 100 each weekend equivalent to 1 000 in 2021 7 29 He appeared as a musical judge in an episode of ABC s Jukebox Jury which aired in the 1953 1954 season 30 McQueen had minor roles in stage productions including Peg o My Heart The Member of the Wedding and Two Fingers of Pride He made his Broadway debut in 1955 in the play A Hatful of Rain starring Ben Gazzara 7 In late 1955 at the age of 25 McQueen left New York and headed for Los Angeles He moved into a house on Vestal Avenue in the Echo Park area and sought acting jobs in Hollywood 31 McQueen in The Great St Louis Bank Robbery 1959 When McQueen appeared in a two part Westinghouse Studio One television presentation entitled The Defenders Hollywood manager Hilly Elkins took note of him 32 and decided that B movies would be a good place for the young actor to make his mark McQueen s first role was a bit part in Somebody Up There Likes Me 1956 directed by Robert Wise and starring Paul Newman McQueen was subsequently hired for the films Never Love a Stranger The Blob his first leading role science fiction and The Great St Louis Bank Robbery 1959 McQueen s first breakout role came on television He appeared on Dale Robertson s NBC western series Tales of Wells Fargo as Bill Longley Elkins then McQueen s manager successfully lobbied Vincent M Fennelly producer of the western series Trackdown to have McQueen read for the part of bounty hunter Josh Randall He first appeared in Season 1 Episode 21 of Trackdown in 1958 He appeared as Randall in that episode cast opposite series lead Robert Culp a former New York motorcycle racing buddy McQueen appeared again on Trackdown in Episode 31 of the first season in which he played twin brothers one of whom was an outlaw sought by Culp s character Hoby Gilman Virginia Gregg with McQueen in Wanted Dead or Alive 1959 McQueen next filmed a pilot episode for what became the series titled Wanted Dead or Alive which aired on CBS in September 1958 This became his breakout role In interviews associated with the DVD release of Wanted Robert Culp of Trackdown claims credit for bringing McQueen to Hollywood and landing him the part of Randall He said he taught McQueen the art of the fast draw He said that by the second day of filming McQueen beat him at it McQueen became a household name as a result of this series 7 Randall s special holster held a sawed off 44 40 Winchester rifle nicknamed the Mare s Leg instead of the six gun carried by the typical Western character although the cartridges in the gunbelt were dummy 45 70 chosen because they looked tougher Coupled with the generally negative image of the bounty hunter noted in the three part DVD special on the background of the series this added to the antihero image infused with mystery and detachment that made this show stand out from the typical TV Western The 94 episodes that ran from 1958 until early 1961 kept McQueen steadily employed and he became a fixture at the renowned Iverson Movie Ranch in Chatsworth where much of the outdoor action for Wanted Dead or Alive was shot At 29 McQueen got a significant break when Frank Sinatra removed Sammy Davis Jr from the film Never So Few after Davis supposedly made some mildly negative remarks about Sinatra in a radio interview and Davis s role went to McQueen Sinatra saw something special in McQueen and ensured that the young actor got plenty of closeups in a role that earned McQueen favorable reviews McQueen s character Bill Ringa was never more comfortable than when driving at high speed in this case in a jeep or handling a switchblade or a tommy gun Yul Brynner McQueen Horst Buchholz Charles Bronson Robert Vaughn Brad Dexter and James Coburn in The Magnificent Seven 1960 After Never So Few the film s director John Sturges cast McQueen in his next movie promising to give him the camera The Magnificent Seven 1960 in which he played Vin Tanner and starred with Yul Brynner Eli Wallach Robert Vaughn Charles Bronson Horst Buchholz and James Coburn became McQueen s first major hit and led to his withdrawal from Wanted Dead or Alive McQueen s focused portrayal of the taciturn second lead catapulted his career His added touches in many of the shots such as shaking a shotgun round before loading it repeatedly checking his gun while in the background of a shot and wiping his hat rim annoyed top billed Brynner who protested that McQueen was stealing scenes 7 in his autobiography 33 Eli Wallach reports struggling to conceal his amusement while watching the filming of the funeral procession scene where Brynner s and McQueen s characters first meet Brynner was furious at McQueen s shotgun round shake which effectively diverted the viewer s attention to McQueen Brynner refused to draw his gun in the same scene with McQueen not wanting his character outdrawn 7 McQueen played the top billed lead role in the next big Sturges film 1963 s The Great Escape Hollywood s fictional depiction of the true story of a historic mass escape from a World War II POW camp Stalag Luft III Insurance concerns prevented McQueen from performing the film s notable motorcycle leap which was done by his friend and fellow cycle enthusiast Bud Ekins who resembled McQueen from a distance 34 When Johnny Carson later tried to congratulate McQueen for the jump during a broadcast of The Tonight Show McQueen said It wasn t me That was Bud Ekins This film established McQueen s box office clout and secured his status as a superstar 35 Also in 1963 McQueen starred in Love with the Proper Stranger with Natalie Wood He later appeared as the titular Nevada Smith a character from Harold Robbins s novel The Carpetbaggers portrayed by Alan Ladd two years earlier in a movie version of that novel Nevada Smith was an enormously successful Western action adventure prequel that also featured Karl Malden and Suzanne Pleshette After starring in 1965 s The Cincinnati Kid as a poker player McQueen earned his only Academy Award nomination in 1966 for his role as an engine room sailor in The Sand Pebbles in which he starred opposite Candice Bergen and Richard Attenborough whom he had previously worked with in The Great Escape 14 He followed his Oscar nomination with 1968 s Bullitt one of his best known films and his personal favorite which co starred Jacqueline Bisset Robert Vaughn and Don Gordon It featured an unprecedented and endlessly imitated car chase through San Francisco Although McQueen did the driving that appeared in closeup this was about 10 of what is seen in the film s car chase The rest of the driving by McQueen s character was done by stunt drivers Bud Ekins and Loren Janes 36 The antagonist s black Dodge Charger was driven by veteran stunt driver Bill Hickman McQueen his stunt drivers and Hickman spent several days before the scene was shot practicing high speed close quarters driving 37 Bullitt went so far over budget that Warner Brothers cancelled the contract on the rest of his films seven in all When Bullitt became a huge box office success Warner Brothers tried to woo him back but he refused and his next film was made with an independent studio and released by United Artists For this film McQueen went for a change of image playing a debonair role as a wealthy executive in The Thomas Crown Affair with Faye Dunaway in 1968 The following year he made the southern period piece The Reivers 1970s Edit In 1971 McQueen starred in the poorly received auto racing drama Le Mans followed by Junior Bonner in 1972 a story of an aging rodeo rider He worked for director Sam Peckinpah again with the leading role in The Getaway where he met future wife Ali MacGraw He followed this with a physically demanding role as a Devil s Island prisoner in 1973 s Papillon featuring Dustin Hoffman as his character s tragic sidekick In 1973 The Rolling Stones referred to McQueen in the song Star Star from the album Goats Head Soup for which an amused McQueen reportedly gave personal permission 38 The lines were Star fucker star fucker star fucker star fucker star Yes you are yes you are yes you are Yeah Ali MacGraw got mad with you For givin head to Steve McQueen By the time of The Getaway McQueen was the world s highest paid actor 39 but after 1974 s The Towering Inferno starring with his long time professional rival Paul Newman and reuniting him with Dunaway became a tremendous box office success McQueen all but disappeared from the public eye to focus on motorcycle racing and traveling around the country in a motor home and on his vintage Indian motorcycles He did not return to acting until 1978 with An Enemy of the People playing against type as a bearded bespectacled 19th century doctor in this adaptation of a Henrik Ibsen play The film was never properly released theatrically but has appeared occasionally on PBS His last two films were loosely based on true stories Tom Horn a Western adventure about a former Army scout turned professional gunman who worked for the big cattle ranchers hunting down rustlers and later hanged for murder in the shooting death of a sheepherder and The Hunter an urban action movie about a modern day bounty hunter both released in 1980 Missed roles Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Steve McQueen news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message McQueen was offered the lead male role in Breakfast at Tiffany s but was unable to accept due to his Wanted Dead or Alive contract the role went to George Peppard 7 40 He turned down parts in Ocean s 11 41 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid his attorneys and agents could not agree with Paul Newman s attorneys and agents on top billing 7 40 The Driver 42 43 Apocalypse Now 14 172 California Split 44 Dirty Harry A Bridge Too Far The French Connection he did not want to do another cop film 7 40 Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Sorcerer According to director John Frankenheimer and actor James Garner in bonus interviews for the DVD of the film Grand Prix McQueen was Frankenheimer s first choice for the lead role of American Formula One race car driver Pete Aron Frankenheimer was unable to meet with McQueen to offer him the role so he sent Edward Lewis his business partner and the producer of Grand Prix McQueen and Lewis instantly clashed the meeting was a disaster and the role went to Garner Garner later for the interview said this Oh McQueen Crazy McQueen McQueen and I get along pretty good McQueen looked to me kind of like an older brother and he didn t want to have much with me till he got into trouble then he d call and you know he knew I could tell him just what I thought A lot of people wouldn t do that And then we had a falling out It wasn t a falling out as I did Grand Prix Steve was originally slated to do that movie but he couldn t get along with Frank Frankenheimer So that lasted about 30 minutes and I was in and Steve was out And Steve went over to do Sand Pebbles which went about year longer than they wanted to go Big production spent a lot of money and stayed in China too long there in Taiwan So when I got the part in Grand Prix I called him In Taiwan And I started Steve I want to tell you before somebody else that I m going to do Grand Prix Well there was about a 20 dollars silence there laugh on the telephone He didn t know what to say and finally said Oh that s great that s great I m glad to hear that because he planned to do Le Mans which was another title at the time But we were about to release before he even got to that film But he said Great great well I m glad to hear it that s good You know if anybody s gonna do it I m glad you re going to do it He didn t talk to me for about year and half and we were next door neighbors laugh So it got to him a little bit finally by his son Chad took him to go see Grand Prix And from that time on we were talking again But Steve was a wild kid He didn t know where he wanted to be or what he wanted to do 45 Director Steven Spielberg said McQueen was his first choice for the character of Roy Neary in Close Encounters of the Third Kind According to Spielberg in a documentary on the Close Encounters DVD Spielberg met him at a bar where McQueen drank beer after beer Before leaving McQueen told Spielberg that he could not accept the role because he was unable to cry on cue 46 47 Spielberg offered to take the crying scene out of the story but McQueen demurred saying that it was the best scene in the script The role eventually went to Richard Dreyfuss William Friedkin wanted to cast McQueen as the lead in the action thriller film Sorcerer 1977 Sorcerer was to be filmed primarily on location in the Dominican Republic but McQueen did not want to be separated from Ali MacGraw for the duration of the shoot McQueen then asked Friedkin to let MacGraw act as a producer so she could be present during principal photography Friedkin would not agree to this condition and cast Roy Scheider instead of McQueen Friedkin later remarked that not casting McQueen hurt the film s performance at the box office Spy novelist Jeremy Duns revealed that McQueen was considered for the lead role in a film adaptation of The Diamond Smugglers written by James Bond creator Ian Fleming McQueen would play John Blaize a secret agent gone undercover to infiltrate a diamond smuggling ring in South Africa There were complications with the project which was eventually shelved although a 1964 screenplay does exist 48 McQueen and Barbra Streisand were tentatively cast in The Gauntlet but the two could not get along and both withdrew from the project The lead roles were filled by Clint Eastwood and Sondra Locke McQueen expressed interest in the Rambo character in First Blood when David Morrell s novel appeared in 1972 but the producers rejected him because of his age 49 50 He was offered the title role in The Bodyguard to star Diana Ross when it was proposed in 1976 but the film did not reach production until years after McQueen s death which eventually starred Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston in 1992 51 Quigley Down Under was in development as early as 1974 with McQueen in consideration for the lead but by the time production began in 1980 McQueen was ill and the project was scrapped until a decade later when Tom Selleck starred 52 McQueen was offered the lead in Raise the Titanic but felt that the script was flat He was under contract to Irwin Allen after appearing in The Towering Inferno and offered a part in a sequel in 1980 which he turned down The film was scrapped and Newman was brought in by Allen to make When Time Ran Out which was a box office bomb McQueen died shortly after passing on The Towering Inferno 2 citation needed Stunts motor racing and flying Edit McQueen with two forms of transportation his horse Doc and his Jaguar XKSS 1960 McQueen was an avid motorcycle and race car enthusiast When he had the opportunity to drive in a movie he performed many of his own stunts including some of the car chases in Bullitt and the motorcycle chase in The Great Escape 53 Although the jump over the fence in The Great Escape was done by Bud Ekins for insurance purposes McQueen did have considerable screen time riding his 650 cc Triumph TR6 Trophy motorcycle It was difficult to find riders as skilled as McQueen 54 At one point using editing McQueen is seen in a German uniform chasing himself on another bike Around half of the driving in Bullitt was performed by Loren Janes 36 McQueen and John Sturges planned to make Day of the Champion 55 a movie about Formula One racing but McQueen was busy with the delayed The Sand Pebbles They had a contract with the German Nurburgring and after John Frankenheimer shot scenes there for Grand Prix the reels were turned over to Sturges Frankenheimer was ahead in schedule and the McQueen Sturges project was called off McQueen considered being a professional race car driver He had a one off outing in the British Touring Car Championship in 1961 driving a BMC Mini at Brands Hatch finishing third 56 In the 1970 12 Hours of Sebring race Peter Revson and McQueen driving with a cast on his left foot from a motorcycle accident two weeks earlier won with a Porsche 908 02 in the three litre class and missed winning overall by 21 1 seconds to Mario Andretti Ignazio Giunti Nino Vaccarella in a five litre Ferrari 512S 57 This same Porsche 908 was entered by his production company Solar Productions as a camera car for Le Mans in the 1970 24 Hours of Le Mans later that year McQueen wanted to drive a Porsche 917 with Jackie Stewart in that race 58 but the film backers threatened to pull their support if he did Faced with the choice of driving for 24 hours in the race or driving for the entire summer making the film McQueen opted for the latter failed verification 59 McQueen competed in off road motorcycle racing frequently running a BSA Hornet and using alias Harvey Mushman 14 He was also set to co drive in a Triumph 2500 PI for the British Leyland team in the 1970 London Mexico rally but had to turn it down due to movie commitments 14 His first off road motorcycle was a Triumph 500 cc purchased from Ekins McQueen raced in many top off road races on the West Coast including the Baja 1000 the Mint 400 and the Elsinore Grand Prix In 1964 McQueen and Ekins were part of a four rider plus one reserve first ever official US team entry into the Silver Vase category of the International Six Days Trial 60 an Enduro type off road motorcycling event held that year in Erfurt East Germany 61 The A team arrived in England in late August to collect their mix of 649 cc and 490 cc twins from the Triumph factory before modifying them for off road use 60 Initially let down with transport arrangements by a long established English motorcycle dealer Triumph dealer H amp L Motors stepped in to provide a suitable vehicle 62 On arrival in Germany the team with their English temporary manager were surprised to find a Vase B team comprising expat Americans living in Europe had entered themselves privately to ride European sourced machinery 63 McQueen s ISDT competition number was 278 which was based on the trials starting order 64 Both teams crashed repeatedly 63 65 McQueen retired due to irreparable crash damage 66 and Ekins withdrew with a broken leg both on day three Wednesday Only one member of the B team finished the six day event 65 UK monthly magazine Motorcycle Sport commented Riding Triumph twins the team rode everywhere with great dash if not in admirable style falling off frequently and obviously out for six days sport without too many worries about who was going to win they knew it would not be them 66 He was inducted in the Off road Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1978 In 1971 McQueen s Solar Productions funded the classic motorcycle documentary On Any Sunday in which McQueen is featured along with racing legends Mert Lawwill and Malcolm Smith The same year he also appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated magazine riding a Husqvarna dirt bike McQueen designed a motorsports bucket seat for which a patent was issued in 1971 59 93 67 In a segment filmed for The Ed Sullivan Show McQueen drove Sullivan around a desert area in a dune buggy at high speed Afterward Sullivan said That was a helluva ride By testimony of McQueen s son Chad Steve owned around 100 classic motorcycles as well as around 100 exotics and vintage cars including Porsche 917 Porsche 908 and Ferrari 512 race cars from the Le Mans film Porsche 911S used in the opening sequence of the Le Mans film 1963 Ferrari 250 GT Berlinetta Lusso 68 1967 Ferrari 275GTB 4 69 1956 Jaguar XKSS right hand drive now on exhibit at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles California 1958 Porsche 356 Speedster 1600 Super black exterior interior and top McQueen drove the car in numerous SCCA racing events now in property of his son Chad 70 71 1968 Ford GT40 Gulf liveried used in the Le Mans film 72 1953 Siata 208s McQueen replaced the Siata badges with Ferrari badges and called it his little Ferrari 73 1967 Mini Cooper S McQueen had the car customized by Lee Brown with changes including a single foglight a wood dash a recessed antenna and a custom brown paint job 74 1951 Chevrolet Styline De Lux Convertible used in The Hunter McQueen bought the car in 1979 after filming ended 75 1952 Chevrolet 3800 pickup camper conversion McQueen used the truck for cross country camping trips It was the last car he rode in before his death 76 1950 Hudson Commodore convertible 1952 Hudson Wasp 2 door sedan 77 1953 Hudson Hornet 4 door Sedan 78 1956 GMC Suburban 1958 GMC Pickup Truck Reportedly one of McQueen s favorite cars it is powered by a 336 Ci V8 which has been modified The tag MQ3188 is a reference to the ID number assigned to him when he was in reform school 79 1931 Lincoln Club Sedan 1963 Lincoln Continental Sedan 80 1935 Chrysler Airflow Imperial Sedan 81 1969 Chevrolet Baja Hickey race truck originally debuted at the 1968 Mexican 1000 Rally and was driven by Cliff Coleman Johnny Diaz Mickey Thompson and others during its racing career said to be the first truck specifically constructed by GM for use in the Mexican 1000 McQueen bought it from General Motors in 1970 82 In spite of numerous attempts McQueen was never able to purchase the Ford Mustang GT 390 he drove in Bullitt which featured a modified drivetrain that suited McQueen s driving style One of the two Mustangs used in the film was badly damaged judged beyond repair and believed to have been scrapped until it surfaced in Mexico in 2017 83 while the other one which McQueen attempted to purchase in 1977 84 is hidden from the public eye At the 2018 North American International Auto Show the GT 390 was displayed in its current non restored condition with the 2019 Ford Mustang Bullitt 85 McQueen also flew and owned among other aircraft a 1945 Stearman tail number N3188 his student number in reform school a 1946 Piper J 3 Cub and an award winning 1931 Pitcairn PA 8 biplane flown in the US Mail Service by famed World War I flying ace Eddie Rickenbacker They were hangared at Santa Paula Airport an hour northwest of Hollywood where he lived his final days 14 Personal life EditRelationships and friendships Edit While still attending Stella Adler s school in New York McQueen dated Gia Scala 28 McQueen and then wife Neile Adams in the Man from the South episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents 1960 also starring Peter Lorre On November 2 1956 he married Filipino actress and dancer Neile Adams 86 with whom he had a daughter Terry Leslie June 5 1959 March 19 1998 87 88 and a son Chad born December 28 1960 89 McQueen and Adams divorced in 1972 87 In her autobiography My Husband My Friend Adams stated that she had an abortion in 1971 when their marriage was on the rocks 32 One of McQueen s four grandchildren is actor Steven R McQueen who is best known for playing Jeremy Gilbert in The Vampire Diaries and Jimmy Borelli in Chicago Fire 90 Mamie Van Doren claimed to have had an affair with McQueen and tried hallucinogens with him around 1959 91 Actress model Lauren Hutton also said that she had an affair with McQueen in the early 1960s 92 93 In 1971 1972 while separated from Adams McQueen had a relationship with Junior Bonner co star Barbara Leigh 87 94 which included her pregnancy and an abortion 95 In Cheyenne Wyoming in 1973 McQueen married actress Ali MacGraw his co star in The Getaway but this marriage ended in a divorce in 1978 96 MacGraw suffered a miscarriage during their marriage 97 Some friends later claimed that MacGraw was the one true love of McQueen s life He was madly in love with her until the day he died In 1973 McQueen was one of the pallbearers at Bruce Lee s funeral along with James Coburn Bruce s brother Robert Lee Peter Chin Dan Inosanto and Taky Kimura 98 After discovering a mutual interest in racing McQueen and Great Escape co star James Garner became good friends and lived near each other McQueen recalled I could see that Jim was neat around his place Flowers trimmed no papers in the yard grass always cut So to piss him off I d start lobbing empty beer cans down the hill into his driveway He d have his drive all spick n span when he left the house then get home to find all these empty cans Took him a long time to figure out it was me 14 On January 16 1980 less than a year before his death McQueen married model Barbara Minty 99 Barbara Minty in her book Steve McQueen The Last Mile wrote of McQueen becoming an Evangelical Christian toward the end of his life 100 This was due in part to the influences of his flying instructor Sammy Mason Mason s son Pete and Barbara herself 101 McQueen attended his local church Ventura Missionary Church and was visited by evangelist Billy Graham shortly before his death 101 102 Lifestyle Edit McQueen s mug shot booking photographs for DWI in Alaska 1972 McQueen followed a daily two hour exercise regimen involving weightlifting and at one point running 5 miles 8 km seven days a week 103 McQueen learned the martial art Tang Soo Do from ninth degree black belt Pat E Johnson 7 According to photographer William Claxton McQueen smoked marijuana almost every day biographer Marc Eliot stated that McQueen used a large amount of cocaine in the early 1970s He was also a heavy cigarette smoker McQueen sometimes drank to excess he was arrested for driving while intoxicated in Anchorage Alaska in 1972 104 Manson connection Edit Two months after Charles Manson incited the murder of five people including McQueen s friends Sharon Tate and Jay Sebring the media reported police had found a hit list with McQueen s name on it According to his first wife McQueen began carrying a handgun at all times in public including at Sebring s funeral 105 Charitable causes Edit McQueen had an unusual reputation for demanding free items in bulk from studios when agreeing to do a film such as electric razors jeans and other items It was later discovered McQueen donated these things to the Boys Republic reformatory school 106 where he had spent time during his teen years McQueen made occasional visits to the school to spend time with the students often to play pool and speak about his experiences citation needed Politics Edit McQueen supported Lyndon B Johnson in the 1964 United States presidential election and Richard Nixon in the 1968 United States presidential election 107 108 Illness and death EditMcQueen developed a persistent cough in 1978 He gave up cigarettes and underwent antibiotic treatments without improvement His shortness of breath grew more pronounced and on December 22 1979 after filming The Hunter a biopsy revealed pleural mesothelioma 109 a cancer associated with asbestos exposure for which there is no known cure A few months later McQueen gave a medical interview in which he blamed his condition on asbestos exposure 110 McQueen believed that asbestos used in movie sound stage insulation and race drivers protective suits and helmets could have been involved but he thought it more likely that his illness was a direct result of massive exposure while removing asbestos lagging insulation from pipes aboard a troop ship while he served in the Marines 111 112 By February 1980 evidence of widespread metastasis was found He tried to keep the condition a secret but on March 11 1980 the National Enquirer disclosed that he had terminal cancer 113 114 In July 1980 McQueen traveled to Rosarito Beach Mexico for unconventional treatment after U S doctors told him they could do nothing to prolong his life 115 Controversy arose over the trip because McQueen sought treatment from William Donald Kelley who was promoting a variation of the Gerson therapy that used coffee enemas frequent washing with shampoos daily injections of fluid containing live cells from cattle and sheep massages and laetrile a reputed anti cancer drug available in Mexico but long known to be both toxic and ineffective at treating cancer 116 117 118 McQueen paid for Kelley s treatments by himself in cash payments which were said to have been upwards of 40 000 per month equivalent to 132 000 in 2021 during his three month stay in Mexico Kelley s dental license his only medically related license until revoked in 1976 had been for orthodontics a field of dentistry not medicine 119 Kelley s methods caused a sensation in the traditional and tabloid press when it became known that McQueen was a patient 120 121 McQueen returned to the U S in early October Despite metastasis of the cancer throughout McQueen s body Kelley publicly announced that McQueen would be completely cured and return to normal life McQueen s condition soon worsened and huge tumors developed in his abdomen 119 In late October 1980 McQueen flew to Ciudad Juarez Chihuahua Mexico to have an abdominal tumor on his liver weighing around 5 lbs removed despite warnings from his U S doctors that the tumor was inoperable and his heart could not withstand the surgery 14 212 13 119 Using the name Samuel Sheppard McQueen checked into a small Juarez clinic where the doctors and staff were unaware of his actual identity 122 On November 7 1980 McQueen died of a heart attack at 3 45 a m at a Juarez hospital 12 hours after surgery to remove or reduce numerous metastatic tumors in his neck and abdomen 14 He was 50 years old 123 According to the El Paso Times McQueen died in his sleep 124 Leonard DeWitt of the Ventura Missionary Church presided over McQueen s memorial service 100 101 McQueen was cremated and his ashes were spread in the Pacific Ocean Legacy Edit The photo on McQueen s international driver s license In 2007 27 years after his death Forbes said McQueen remained a popular star and still the king of cool and was one of the highest earning dead celebrities A rights management agency head credited Branded Entertainment Network called Corbis at the time with maximizing the profitability of his estate by limiting the licensing of McQueen s image avoiding the commercial saturation of other dead celebrities estates As of 2007 McQueen s estate entered the top 10 of highest earning dead celebrities 125 McQueen was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers in April 2007 in a ceremony at the National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum 126 In November 1999 McQueen was inducted into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame He was credited with contributions including financing the film On Any Sunday supporting a team of off road riders and enhancing the public image of motorcycling overall 127 A film based on unfinished storyboards and notes developed by McQueen before his death was slated for production by McG s production company Wonderland Sound and Vision Yucatan is described as an epic adventure heist film scheduled for release in 2013 but still unreleased in February 2016 128 Team Downey the production company of Robert Downey Jr and his wife Susan Downey expressed an interest in developing Yucatan for the screen 129 The Beech Grove Indiana Public Library formally dedicated the Steve McQueen Birthplace Collection on March 16 2010 to commemorate the 80th anniversary of McQueen s birth on March 24 1930 130 In 2012 McQueen was posthumously honored with the Warren Zevon Tribute Award by the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization ADAO Steve McQueen The Man amp Le Mans a 2015 documentary examines the actor s quest to create and star in the 1971 auto racing film Le Mans His son Chad McQueen and former wife Neile Adams are among those interviewed On September 28 2017 there was a selected showing in some theaters of his life story and spiritual quest Steve McQueen American Icon 131 There was an encore presentation on October 10 2017 132 The film received mostly positive reviews 133 Kenneth R Morefield of Christianity Today said it offers a timeless reminder that even those among us living the most celebrated lives often long for the peace and sense of purpose that only God can provide 134 Michael Foust of Wordslingers called it one of the most powerful and inspiring documentaries I ve ever seen 135 In the 2019 Quentin Tarantino film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood McQueen is portrayed by Damian Lewis McQueen also appears as a character in Tarantino s novel of the same name Archive Edit The Academy Film Archive houses the Steve McQueen Neile Adams Collection which consists of personal prints and home movies 136 The archive has preserved several of McQueen s home movies 137 Ford commercials Edit In 1998 director Paul Street created a commercial for the Ford Puma Footage was shot in modern day San Francisco set to the theme music from Bullitt Archive footage of McQueen was used to digitally superimpose him driving and exiting the car in settings reminiscent of the film The Puma shares the same number plate of the classic fastback Mustang used in Bullitt and as he parks in the garage next to the Mustang he pauses and looks meaningfully at a motorcycle tucked in the corner similar to that used in The Great Escape 138 In 2005 Ford used his likeness again in a commercial for the 2005 Mustang In the commercial a farmer builds a winding racetrack which he circles in the 2005 Mustang Out of the cornfield comes McQueen The farmer tosses his keys to McQueen who drives off in the new Mustang McQueen s likeness was created using a body double Dan Holsten and digital editing Ford secured the rights to McQueen s likeness from the actor s estate licensing agent for an undisclosed sum citation needed At the Detroit Auto Show in January 2018 Ford unveiled the new 2019 Mustang Bullitt The company called on McQueen s granddaughter actress Molly McQueen to make the announcement After a brief rundown of the tribute car s particulars a short film was shown in which Molly was introduced to the actual Bullitt Mustang a 1968 Mustang Fastback with a 390 cubic inch engine and a four speed manual gearbox That car has been in possession of the same family since 1974 and hidden away from the public until then when it was driven out from under the press stand and up the center aisle of Ford s booth to much fanfare 139 Memorabilia Edit Motorcycles and cars Edit One of his motorcycles a 1937 Crocker sold for a world record price of 276 500 at the same auction McQueen s 1963 metallic brown Ferrari 250 GT Lusso Berlinetta sold for US 2 31 million at auction on August 16 2007 68 Except for three motorcycles sold with other memorabilia in 2006 140 most of McQueen s collection of 130 motorcycles was sold four years after his death 141 142 The 1970 Porsche 911S purchased while making the film Le Mans and appearing in the opening sequence was sold at auction in August 2011 for 1 375 million From 1995 to 2011 McQueen s red 1957 fuel injected Chevrolet convertible was displayed at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles in a special Cars of Steve McQueen exhibit It is now in the collection of actress Ruth Buzzi and her husband Kent Perkins McQueen s British racing green 1956 Jaguar XKSS is located in the Petersen Automotive Museum and is in drivable condition having been driven by Jay Leno in an episode of Jay Leno s Garage In August 2019 Mecum Auctions announced it would auction the Bullitt Mustang Hero Car at its Kissimmee auction held January 2 12 2020 143 The car sold without reserve for 3 4 million 3 74 million after commissions and fees Watches Edit McQueen was a sponsored ambassador for Heuer watches In the 1971 film Le Mans he famously wore a blue faced Monaco Ref 1133 which led to its cult status among watch collectors purchasing six watches of the same model for the shoot of the film On December 12 2020 one of the last six models sold and one of two held in private hands was sold for a record US 2 208 million at a Phillips auction in New York City becoming the most expensive Heuer watch sold at auction 144 Tag Heuer continues to promote its Monaco range with McQueen s image 145 The Rolex Explorer II Reference 1655 known as Rolex Steve McQueen in the horology collectors world the Rolex Submariner Reference 5512 which McQueen was often photographed wearing in private moments sold for 234 000 at auction on June 11 2009 a world record price for the type 146 147 148 In June 2018 Phillips announced McQueen s Rolex Submariner 149 150 to hit the auction block in September that year However there was controversy whether or not the watch was his personal watch worn by McQueen himself or if the watch was bought engraved then gifted 151 Phillips later removed the watch from the auction block Among McQueen s other watches was a Hanhart 417 chronograph 152 Sunglasses Edit The blue tinted sunglasses Persol 714 worn by McQueen in the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair sold at a Bonhams amp Butterfields auction in Los Angeles for 70 200 in 2006 153 Filmography EditMain article Steve McQueen filmographyAwards and honors EditAcademy Awards 1967 Nominated Best Actor in a Leading Role in The Sand PebblesGolden Globe Awards 1964 Nominated Best Actor Motion Picture Drama in Love with the Proper Stranger 1967 Nominated Best Actor Motion Picture Drama in The Sand Pebbles 1970 Nominated Best Actor Motion Picture Musical or Comedy in The Reivers 1974 Nominated Best Actor Motion Picture Drama in PapillonMoscow International Film Festival 1963 Won Best Actor in The Great Escape 154 References Edit Aaker Everett 2017 Television Western Players 1960 1975 A Biographical Dictionary McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 6250 3 a b c Laurie Greg 2019 Steve McQueen The Salvation of an American Icon Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 35620 2 Terry Leslie McQueen dies at 38 Variety March 23 1998 Archived from the original on January 27 2018 Retrieved January 27 2018 Arnold Gary November 8 1980 Movie Hero Steve McQueen Dies of Heart Attack at Age of 50 The Washington Post Archived from the original on October 9 2018 Retrieved January 8 2019 Lehman Craig January 27 2015 Steve McQueen becomes highest paid actor in the world Buffalo Reflex Archived from the original on March 22 2019 Retrieved March 22 2019 a b Indiana State Board of Health Certificate of Birth cineartistes com Archived from the original on September 5 2017 Retrieved January 8 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Terrill Marshall 1993 Steve McQueen Portrait of an American Rebel Plexus Press ISBN 978 1 556 11380 2 Obituary Variety November 12 1980 Mackay Kathy October 20 1980 Steve McQueen Stricken with Cancer Seeks a Cure at a Controversial Mexican Clinic People Archived from the original on April 30 2010 Retrieved August 7 2010 Raised as a Catholic he now feels he has according to one friend made his peace with God Leith William November 26 2001 Easy rider New Statesman Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved August 7 2010 Steve knew what it was like to be dyslexic deaf illegitimate backward beaten abused deserted and raised Catholic in a Protestant heartland a b Spiegel Penina 1987 McQueen The Untold Story of a Bad Boy in Hollywood Berkley 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and Papillon Friend Suggested Acting Don t Cap Me Up The New York Times Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved May 26 2008 Long Trish April 25 2015 Steve McQueen s last hours in Juarez El Paso Times Retrieved February 29 2016 Top Earning Dead Celebrities Forbes October 29 2007 Archived from the original on October 27 2020 Retrieved August 19 2020 Steve McQueen honored at Western awards USA Today April 23 2007 Archived from the original on March 8 2014 Retrieved March 8 2014 Steve McQueen Motorcycle Hall of Fame Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum 2009 Archived from the original on February 16 2009 Cullum Paul May 14 2006 Steve McQueen s Dream Movie Wakes Up With a Vrooom The New York Times Archived from the original on April 7 2008 Retrieved May 26 2008 Downey Jr Launches Production Company Lines Up Steve McQueen s Yucatan The Film Stage June 14 2010 Archived from the original on August 31 2011 Retrieved June 14 2010 Steve McQueen Birthplace Collection Beech Grove Public Library Archived from the original on June 22 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 Steve McQueen American Icon Coming Soon To Digital HD Steve McQueen American Icon Archived from the original on January 26 2018 Retrieved January 27 2018 Encore showings for Steve McQueen American Icon wbfj fm October 9 2017 Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved February 9 2018 Steve McQueen American Icon archived from the original on November 30 2017 retrieved April 1 2018 The King of Cool s Conversion Story christianitytoday com Archived from the original on November 26 2017 Retrieved April 1 2018 REVIEW Steve McQueen s faith explored in powerful new documentary WordSlingers September 15 2017 Archived from the original on August 12 2018 Retrieved April 1 2018 Steve McQueen Neile Adams Collection Academy Film Archive October 14 2015 Archived from the original on July 3 2016 Retrieved July 14 2016 Preserved Projects Academy Film Archive Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved September 18 2020 Ford Puma Steve McQueen Directed by Paul Street YouTube Archived from the original on October 24 2018 Retrieved July 27 2017 2019 Ford Mustang Bullitt rocks Detroit with Molly McQueen cnet com January 14 2018 Archived from the original on February 23 2018 Retrieved February 23 2018 Sale 14037 The Steve McQueen Sale and Collectors Motorcycles amp Memorabilia The Petersen Automotive Museum Los Angeles California 11 Nov 2006 Bonhams amp Butterfields Auctioneers Archived from the original on June 26 2009 Macy Robert November 24 1984 Steve McQueen s possessions to be auctioned today The Evening Independent St Petersburg Florida Associated Press permanent dead link Edwards David The Steve McQueen Auction Cycle World Archived from the original on August 22 2007 Mecum Unveils Bullitt Mustang Hero Car to be Auctioned at Kissimmee 2020 News mecum com Archived from the original on August 15 2019 Retrieved August 15 2019 Steve McQueen s Monaco From Le Mans Brings Home 2 208 000 At Phillips Setting New Heuer Record Hodinkee Archived from the original on December 12 2020 Retrieved December 13 2020 Khan vs Crawford NationalJewelerNetwork com Archived January 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine Famous Left Handers he signed into what s my line with his right hand and his gun is on his right hip not sure he is left handed Indiana edu Archived from the original on February 8 2020 Retrieved March 8 2014 Steve McQueen wore a Sub No Date 5513 Forums watchuseek com Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved March 8 2014 Solomon Michael Exclusive The Secret History of Steve McQueen s Rolex Submariner Forbes Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 6 2019 Barrett Cara June 5 2018 Steve McQueen s Rolex Submariner Is Coming to Auction bloomberg com Archived from the original on November 17 2019 Retrieved February 6 2019 The McQueen Rolex Submariner Bob s Watches September 20 2018 Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 6 2019 Wind Eric November 28 2011 The Story Of The Hanhart 417 Chronograph Steve McQueen s Other Other Watch Hodinkee Archived from the original on December 27 2021 Retrieved January 3 2022 McQueen s shades sell for 36 000 BBC News November 12 2006 Archived from the original on April 25 2010 Retrieved May 24 2010 3rd Moscow International Film Festival 1963 MIFF Archived from the original on January 16 2013 Retrieved December 1 2012 Bibliography EditNiemi Robert October 17 2013 Inspired by True Events An Illustrated Guide to More Than 500 History Based Films 2nd Edition An Illustrated Guide to More Than 500 History Based Films Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 61069 198 7 Sanford Christopher February 19 2003 McQueen The Biography Lanham Maryland Taylor Trade Publications ISBN 978 0 87833 307 3 Terrill Marshall 1993 Steve McQueen Portrait of an American Rebel New York City Donald I Fine Inc ISBN 978 1 55611 414 4 Wright Kate 2004 Screenwriting is Storytelling Creating an A list Screenplay that Sells New York City Perigee Books ISBN 978 0 399 53024 1 Terrill Marshall 2020 Steve McQueen In His Own Words Deerfield IL Dalton Watson ISBN 978 1 85443 271 1 Further reading EditBeaver Jim Steve McQueen Films in Review August September 1981 Satchell Tim McQueen Sidgwick and Jackson Limited 1981 ISBN 0 283 98778 2 Siegel Mike Steve McQueen The Actor and his Films Dalton Watson 2011 Nolan William F McQueen Congdon amp Weed 1984 McQueen Steve November 1966 Motorcycles What I like in a bike and why Popular Science Vol 189 no 5 pp 76 81 ISSN 0161 7370 Terrill Marshall Steve McQueen Portrait of an American Rebel Donald I Fine 1993 Terrill Marshall Steve McQueen The Last Mile Dalton Watson 2006 Terrill Marshall Steve McQueen A Tribute to the King of Cool Dalton Watson 2010 Terrill Marshall Steve McQueen The Life and Legacy of a Hollywood Icon Triumph Books 2010 Terrill Marshall Steve McQueen In His Own Words Dalton Watson 2020 External links Edit Biography portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Steve McQueen Official website Steve McQueen In His Own Words by Marshall Terrill Steve McQueen at IMDb Steve McQueen at the Internet Broadway Database Steve McQueen at Virtual History Bell System Film A Family Affair McQueen s debut at The AT amp T Tech Channel The Great Escape New publication with private photos of the shooting amp documents of 2nd unit cameraman Walter Riml Photos of the filming The Great Escape Steve McQueen on the set Photos and commentary on Steve McQueen shooting an episode of Wanted Dead or Alive on the Iverson Movie Ranch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Steve McQueen amp oldid 1150726013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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