Martin Sheen: Difference between revisions
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===Career=== |
===Career=== |
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Sheen was drawn to acting at a young age, but his father disapproved of his interest in the field. Despite his father's opposition, Sheen borrowed money from a priest and headed to [[New York City]]. It was there that he met [[Catholic]] activist [[Dorothy Day]] |
Sheen was drawn to acting at a young age, but his father disapproved of his interest in the field. Despite his father's opposition, Sheen borrowed money from a [[Catholic]] priest and headed to [[New York City]]. It was there that he met the legendary [[Catholic]] activist [[Dorothy Day]]. It was working with her [[Catholic Worker]] movement that began his commitment to [[social justice]].<ref>A Prairie Home Companion, September 29, 2007.</ref><ref name="actors"/> While Sheen claims he deliberately failed the entrance exam for the [[University of Dayton]] so that he could pursue his acting career, he still has an affinity for UD, and is seen drinking from a "Dayton Flyers" coffee mug during several episodes of ''The West Wing''. He also has a great affinity for the [[University of Notre Dame]] and was<ref>[http://www.catholicstarherald.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1107&Itemid=1 Catholic Star Herald - Hole in the ground becomes the actor’s studio<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> awarded the [[Laetare Medal]], the highest honor bestowed on American Catholics, in May 2008 at the school's commencement. Sheen has said that he was greatly influenced by the actor [[James Dean]].<ref name="actors"/> He developed a theater company with other actors in hopes that a production would earn him recognition. In 1963, he made an appearance in [[Nightmare (1963 The Outer Limits)|''Nightmare'']], an episode of the television science fiction series ''[[The Outer Limits]]''. The following year, he starred in the [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] play ''[[The Subject Was Roses]]'', which he recreated in the 1968 film of the same name. Sheen was a co-star in the controversial, [[Emmy]]-winning 1972 [[television movie]] ''[[That Certain Summer]]'', said to be the first television movie to portray homosexuality in a sympathetic, non-judgmental light. His next important feature film role was in 1973, when he starred with [[Sissy Spacek]] in the crime drama ''[[Badlands (film)|Badlands]]'' - which he has said in many interviews is his best film.<ref name="actors"/><ref>http://progressive.org/mag_intvsheen progressive.org</ref> |
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In 1974, Sheen portrayed a [[hot rod]] driver in the TV movie ''[[The California Kid]]'', and that same year received an [[Emmy Award]] nomination for Best Actor in a television drama for his portrayal of [[Eddie Slovik|Pvt. Eddie Slovik]] in the made-for-television film, ''[[The Execution of Private Slovik]]''.<ref name="actors"/> Based on an incident that occurred during [[World War II]], the film told the story of the only U.S. soldier to be executed for desertion since the [[American Civil War]]. It was Sheen's performance in this film that ultimately led to [[Francis Ford Coppola]] choosing him for a starring role in 1979's ''[[Apocalypse Now]]'', a film that gained him wide recognition. Sheen admitted that during filming, he was not in the greatest shape and was drinking heavily.<ref name="actors"/> On location, he had a heart attack and crawled out to a road for help.<ref name="actors"/> |
In 1974, Sheen portrayed a [[hot rod]] driver in the TV movie ''[[The California Kid]]'', and that same year received an [[Emmy Award]] nomination for Best Actor in a television drama for his portrayal of [[Eddie Slovik|Pvt. Eddie Slovik]] in the made-for-television film, ''[[The Execution of Private Slovik]]''.<ref name="actors"/> Based on an incident that occurred during [[World War II]], the film told the story of the only U.S. soldier to be executed for desertion since the [[American Civil War]]. It was Sheen's performance in this film that ultimately led to [[Francis Ford Coppola]] choosing him for a starring role in 1979's ''[[Apocalypse Now]]'', a film that gained him wide recognition. Sheen admitted that during filming, he was not in the greatest shape and was drinking heavily.<ref name="actors"/> On location, he had a heart attack and crawled out to a road for help.<ref name="actors"/> |
Revision as of 00:01, 21 September 2008
Martin Sheen | |
---|---|
Born | Ramón Gerardo Antonio Estévez |
Years active | 1961-present |
Spouse | Janet Templeton (1961-) |
Awards | Saturn Award for Best Actor (film) 1978 The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane Hollywood Walk of Fame 1500 Vine Street |
Martin Sheen (born Ramón Gerardo Antonio Estévez on August 3, 1940) is a Golden Globe and Emmy Award winning American actor who earned recognition for his performances as Captain Willard in the film Apocalypse Now and President Josiah Bartlet on the long-running NBC political drama series The West Wing. Apart from the recognition he earned as an actor, he has gained visibility as an activist whose political views are closely intertwined with his personal religious convictions.[1][2]
Biography
Early life
Sheen was born Ramón Gerardo Antonio Estévez in Dayton, Ohio, the son of Mary Ann (née Phelan), an immigrant from County Tipperary, Ireland, and Francisco Estévez, a Spanish (more concretely, Galician) factory worker/machinery inspector from Parderrubias, Galicia, Spain.[2] Sheen's mother had fled from Ireland during the Irish War of Independence due to her family's connections to the Irish Republican Army. Sheen adopted his stage name in honor of the Catholic archbishop and theologian, Fulton J. Sheen.[2] Sheen lived on Brown Street in the South Park neighborhood, and was one of 10 siblings (nine boys and one girl).[2] One of his brothers is actor Joe Estévez. He attended Chaminade High School (now Chaminade-Julienne High School) and was raised as a Roman Catholic.[2]
During the 1930s, his family lived in Bermuda, where Sheen's father was a representative of IBM. Among others, the elder Estevez sold cash registers and early computing and copying equipment to businesses and to the U.S. Air Force.[3] The family lived on St. John's Road, Pembroke, just outside Hamilton and attended the Mount Saint Agnes school, an institution operated by the Sisters Of Charity, a religious order of the Roman Catholic Church. Sheen was the first of the ten Estevez children who was not born in Bermuda.[4]
Career
Sheen was drawn to acting at a young age, but his father disapproved of his interest in the field. Despite his father's opposition, Sheen borrowed money from a Catholic priest and headed to New York City. It was there that he met the legendary Catholic activist Dorothy Day. It was working with her Catholic Worker movement that began his commitment to social justice.[5][2] While Sheen claims he deliberately failed the entrance exam for the University of Dayton so that he could pursue his acting career, he still has an affinity for UD, and is seen drinking from a "Dayton Flyers" coffee mug during several episodes of The West Wing. He also has a great affinity for the University of Notre Dame and was[6] awarded the Laetare Medal, the highest honor bestowed on American Catholics, in May 2008 at the school's commencement. Sheen has said that he was greatly influenced by the actor James Dean.[2] He developed a theater company with other actors in hopes that a production would earn him recognition. In 1963, he made an appearance in Nightmare, an episode of the television science fiction series The Outer Limits. The following year, he starred in the Broadway play The Subject Was Roses, which he recreated in the 1968 film of the same name. Sheen was a co-star in the controversial, Emmy-winning 1972 television movie That Certain Summer, said to be the first television movie to portray homosexuality in a sympathetic, non-judgmental light. His next important feature film role was in 1973, when he starred with Sissy Spacek in the crime drama Badlands - which he has said in many interviews is his best film.[2][7]
In 1974, Sheen portrayed a hot rod driver in the TV movie The California Kid, and that same year received an Emmy Award nomination for Best Actor in a television drama for his portrayal of Pvt. Eddie Slovik in the made-for-television film, The Execution of Private Slovik.[2] Based on an incident that occurred during World War II, the film told the story of the only U.S. soldier to be executed for desertion since the American Civil War. It was Sheen's performance in this film that ultimately led to Francis Ford Coppola choosing him for a starring role in 1979's Apocalypse Now, a film that gained him wide recognition. Sheen admitted that during filming, he was not in the greatest shape and was drinking heavily.[2] On location, he had a heart attack and crawled out to a road for help.[2] After his heart attack, his younger brother Joe Estevez stood in for him in a number of long shots and in some of the voice-overs.
Sheen has performed voice-over work as the narrator for the Eyewitness Movie series.
NUI Galway
After the end of filming of The West Wing, Sheen announced plans to further his education: "My plan is to read English literature, philosophy and theology in Galway, Republic of Ireland, where my late mother came from and where I'm also a citizen".[8] Speaking after an honorary arts doctorate was conferred on him by the National University of Ireland, Sheen joked that he would be the "oldest undergraduate" at the National University of Ireland (NUI), Galway when he started his full-time studies there in the autumn of 2006. Although expressing concern that he might be a "distraction" to other students at NUIG, he attended lectures like everyone else. Speaking the week after filming his last episode of The West Wing, he said, "I'm very serious about it." He once said, "I never went to college when I was young and am looking forward to giving it a try... at age 65!"[9] On 1 September 2006, Sheen was among the first to register as a student at NUI Galway.[10] He left the University after completing a semester.
Political activism
Martin Sheen is no stranger to politics, both as an actor and in real life. He has played U.S. President John F. Kennedy (in the miniseries Kennedy — The Presidential Years), Attorney General Robert Kennedy in the television special The Missiles of October, White House Chief of Staff A.J. McInnerney in The American President, sinister future president Greg Stillson in The Dead Zone, and fictional Democratic president Josiah Bartlet in the acclaimed television drama The West Wing.[2]
Although he did not attend college, Sheen credited the Marianists at University of Dayton as a major influence on his public activism. Sheen is known for his robust support of liberal political causes, such as opposition to United States military actions and a toxic-waste incinerator in East Liverpool, Ohio. Sheen has resisted calls to run for office, saying: "There's no way that I could be the president. You can't have a pacifist in the White House … I'm an actor. This is what I do for a living."[11] Sheen is an honorary trustee of the Dayton International Peace Museum.
He supported the 1965 farm worker movement with Cesar Chavez in Delano, California. He has also supported causes for PETA and is a proponent of the Consistent Life ethic, which advocates against abortion, capital punishment and war.[12] He also supports the Democrats for Life of America's Pregnant Women Support Act.[13] In 2004, along with fellow actor Rob Reiner, Sheen campaigned for Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean. He later campaigned for nominee John Kerry.
In 1992, Sheen and several others were unsuccessful in their attempt to convince a judge to impose no jail or prison time for those who were convicted of pulling innocent motorists from their vehicles and beating them during the 1992 Los Angeles Riots, including the four young men seen on video footage around the world tossing a brick at truck driver Reginald Denny's head, crushing his skull and causing him permanent damage.
On May 16, 1995, Martin Sheen and Paul Watson from the non-profit environmental organization, Sea Shepherd, were attacked in a hotel on Magdalen Islands by a number of Canadian sealers, who were upset that they had come there to protest against the annual seal hunt and promote non-lethal alternatives. Sheen was trying to negotiate with the angry mob while Watson was escorted to the airport by police and had to spend the night in the hospital.[14] On August 28, 2005, he visited anti-Iraq War activist Cindy Sheehan at Camp Casey. He prayed with her and spoke to her supporters. He began his remarks by stating, "At least you've got the acting President of the United States," referring to his role as fictional President Josiah Bartlet on The West Wing.[15] Cindy Sheehan had been demanding to speak with the actual President, George W. Bush, again.
Sheen endorsed marches and walkouts called by the civil rights group, By Any Means Necessary (BAMN), to force the state of California to honor the Cesar Chavez holiday. On March 30, the day of the protests, thousands of students, primarily Latino from California and elsewhere, walked out of school in support of the demand. Sheen also stated that he participated in the massive immigration marches in Los Angeles in 2006 and 2007.[16][17]
On April 10, 2006, the New York Times reported that members of the Democratic Party in Ohio had contacted Sheen, attempting to persuade him to run for the U.S. Senate in Ohio. Sheen declined the offer, stating that "I'm just not qualified," he said. "You're mistaking celebrity for credibility."[18] On November 26, 2006, the Sunday Times in the Republic of Ireland, where Sheen was then living due to his enrolment in NUI Galway, reported on him speaking out against mushroom farmers exploiting foreign workers by paying them as little as €2.50 an hour in a country where the minimum wage was €7.65.
On April 1, 2007, Sheen was arrested, with 38 other activists, for trespassing at the Nevada Test Site at a Nevada Desert Experience event protesting the Nevada Test Site.[19]
On October 27, 2007, Martin Sheen echoed his son Charlie Sheen's doubts about the public account of the September 11, 2001 attacks. He stated: "Up until last year, I was very dubious, I did not want to believe that my government could possibly be involved in such a thing, I could not live in a country that I thought could do that - that would be the ultimate betrayal. However, there have been so many revelations that now I have my doubts, and chief among them is Building 7 - how did they rig that building so that it came down on the evening of the day?"[20]
His latest activism includes several attendances at meetings of the environmentalist group Earth First!. [21] Sheen has also endorsed and supported Help Darfur Now, a student run organization to help aid the victims of the genocide in Darfur, the western region in Sudan.
Sheen initially endorsed New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson in the 2008 US Presidential Election, and helped raise funds for his campaign.[22] After Richardson had dropped out of the campaign, Sheen stated in a BBC Two interview that he was supporting Barack Obama.[18]
Personal life
Sheen married art student Janet Templeton on December 23, 1961, and they have four children, three sons and a daughter, all of whom are actors: Emilio, Ramón, Carlos (better known as Charlie Sheen) and Renée.[2]Sheen become a grandfather at age 43 when his son, Emilio, had a son named Taylor Levi with his girlfriend, Carey Salley. Other than Taylor Levi, Sheen has four other grandchildren
Sheen starred in the Vietnam war film Apocalypse Now, and his son, Charlie Sheen, also starred in a film about Vietnam: Platoon. Charlie Sheen once stated that he wanted to star in a film similar to one his father was in because he wanted to know what it feels like. They jointly parodied their respective previous roles in the 1993 movie Hot Shots Part Deux: their river patrol boats passed each other, at which point they both shouted, "I loved you in Wall Street!", a film they both starred in as father and son in 1987.
In the Spring of 1989, Sheen was named Honorary Mayor of Malibu, California. He promptly marked his appointment with a decree proclaiming the area "a nuclear-free zone, a sanctuary for aliens and the homeless, and a protected environment for all life, wild and tame".[23] Some local citizens were angered by the decree, and the Malibu Chamber of Commerce met in June of that year to consider revoking his title, but voted unanimously to retain him.[24]
Sheen has limited lateral movement of his left arm, which is three inches shorter than his right, due to its being crushed by forceps during his birth.[25] This restricts him from putting on a coat in the typical manner; instead, he flips it up and over his head from the front, as clearly demonstrated throughout the run of The West Wing.
Over the years, he has played the father of sons Emilio Estevez and Charlie Sheen in various projects: he played Emilio's father in The War at Home and In the Custody of Strangers, and Charlie's father in Wall Street, No Code of Conduct, and two episodes of Spin City. He also appeared as a guest star in one episode of Two and a Half Men playing the father of Charlie's neighbor Rose (Melanie Lynskey), and another as guest star Denise Richards' father; at the time that episode aired, Richards was still married to Charlie. Martin also played a "future" version of Charlie in a VISA TV commercial. Martin has played other characters with his sons and his daughter.
Awards
Sheen received six Emmy nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for his performance on The West Wing, for which he won a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actor in TV-Drama, as well as two SAG Awards for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series, and was part of the cast that received two SAG Awards for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series.
In his acting career, Sheen has been nominated for ten Emmy Awards, winning one. He has also earned eight nominations for Golden Globe Awards. Sheen has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1500 Vine Street.[26]
Sheen was the 2008 recipient of the Laetare Medal, an annual award given by the University of Notre Dame for outstanding service to the Roman Catholic Church and society.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Director(s) |
---|---|---|---|
1967 | The Incident | Artie Connors | Larry Peerce |
1968 | The Subject Was Roses | Timmy Cleary | Ulu Grosbard |
1970 | Catch-22 | 1st Lt. Dobbs | Mike Nichols |
1972 | No Drums, No Bugles | Ashby Gatrell | Clyde Ware |
Pickup on 101 | Les | John Florea | |
Rage | Maj. Holliford | George C. Scott | |
1973 | When the Line Goes Through | Bluff Jackson | Clyde Ware |
Badlands | Kit Carruthers | Terrence Malick | |
Catholics | Father Kinsella | Jack Gold | |
1974 | The Legend of Earl Durand | Luther Sykes | John Patterson |
The California Kid | Michael McCord | Richard T. Heffron | |
1976 | The Cassandra Crossing | Robby Navarro | George P. Cosmatos |
The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane | Frank Hallet | Nicolas Gessner | |
1977 | The Execution of Private Slovik | Eddie Slovik | Lamont Johnson |
1979 | Apocalypse Now | Captain Benjamin L. Willard | Francis Ford Coppola |
Eagle's Wing | Pike | Anthony Harvey | |
1980 | The Final Countdown | Warren Lasky | Don Taylor |
1981 | Loophole | Stephen Booker | John Quested |
1982 | Gandhi | Vince Walker | Richard Attenborough |
That Championship Season | Tom Daley | Jason Miller | |
1983 | Enigma | Alex Holbeck | Jeannot Szwarc |
In the King of Prussia | Judge Samuel Salus II | Emile de Antonio | |
Man, Woman and Child | Robert Beckwith | Dick Richards | |
The Dead Zone | Greg Stillson | David Cronenberg | |
1984 | Firestarter | Captain Hollister | Mark L. Lester |
1985 | The Fourth Wise Man | Artaban | Michael Ray Rhodes |
1986 | A State of Emergency | Dr. Alex Carmody | Richard C. Bennett |
1987 | The Believers | Cal Jamison | John Schlesinger |
Siesta | Del | Mary Lambert | |
Wall Street | Carl Fox | Oliver Stone | |
1988 | Da | Charlie | Matt Clark |
Judgment in Berlin | Herbert J. Stern | Leo Penn | |
1989 | Marked for Murder | Man in park | Rick Sloane |
Cold Front | John Hyde | Allan A. Goldstein | |
Beverly Hills Brats | Dr. Jeffrey Miller | Jim Sotos | |
Nightbreaker | Dr. Alexander Brown | Peter Markle | |
Beyond the Stars | Paul Andrews | David Saperstein | |
1990 | Cadence | MSgt. Otis V. McKinney | Martin Sheen |
1991 | Touch and Die | Frank | Piernico Solinas |
The Maid | Anthony Wayne | Ian Toynton | |
JFK | Narrator | Oliver Stone | |
1992 | Running Wild | Dan Walker | Duncan McLachlan |
Original Intent | Joe | Robert Marcarelli | |
1993 | When the Bough Breaks | Captain Swaggert | Michael Cohn |
My Home, My Prison | Narrator | Susana Blaustein Muñoz | |
Ghost Brigade (aka The Killing Box) | Gen. Haworth | George Hickenlooper | |
Fortunes of War | Francis Labeck | Thierry Notz | |
Hear No Evil | Lt. Brock | Robert Greenwald | |
Hot Shots! Part Deux | Capt. Benjamin L. Willard | Jim Abrahams | |
Gettysburg | Robert E. Lee | Ronald F. Maxwell | |
1994 | Guns of Honor | Jackson Baines Hardin | David Lister |
Hits! | Kelly | William R. Greenblatt | |
Boca | Jesse James Montgomery | Walter Avancini, Zalman King | |
The American President | Chief of Staff A.J. McInnerney | Rob Reiner | |
1995 | Sacred Cargo | Father Andrew Kanvesky | Aleksandr Buravsky |
Dillinger and Capone | John Dillinger | Jon Purdy | |
Captain Nuke and the Bomber Boys | Jeff Snyder | Charles Gale | |
A Hundred and One Nights of Simon Cinema | Himself | Agnès Varda | |
The Break | Gil Robbins | Lee H. Katzin | |
Dead Presidents | The Judge | Albert Hughes, Allen Hughes | |
Gospa | father Jozo Zovko | Jakov Sedlar | |
1996 | The War at Home | Bob Collier | Emilio Estevez |
Entertaining Angels: The Dorothy Day Story | Peter Maurin | Michael Ray Rhodes | |
1997 | Truth or Consequences, N.M | Sir | Kiefer Sutherland |
An Act of Conscience | Narrator | Robbie Leppzer | |
Spawn | Jason Wynn | Mark A.Z. Dippé | |
1998 | Family Attraction | President | Brian Hecker |
Stranger in the Kingdom | Sigurd Moulton | Jay Craven | |
Gunfighter | The Stranger | Christopher Coppola | |
Monument Ave. (aka Snitch) | Hanlon | Ted Demme | |
Shadrach | Narrator | Susanna Styron | |
A Letter from Death Row | Michael´s Father | Marvin Baker, Bret Michaels | |
Free Money | New Warden | Yves Simoneau | |
No Code of Conduct | Bill Peterson | Bret Michaels | |
1999 | Ninth Street | Father Frank | Tim Rebman, Kevin Willmott |
Lost & Found | Millstone | Jeff Pollack | |
Storm | General James Roberts | Harris Done | |
A Texas Funeral | Grandpa Sparta | W. Blake Herron | |
2001 | O | Coach Duke Goulding | Tim Blake Nelson |
2002 | Catch Me if You Can | Roger Strong | Steven Spielberg |
2003 | Mercy of the Sea | Frederik | Dominik Sedlar, Jakov Sedlar |
The Commission | Dep. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach | Mark Sobel | |
2004 | Jerusalemski sindrom | Dominik Sedlar, Jakov Sedlar | |
2006 | The Departed | Capt. Oliver “Charlie” Queenan | Martin Scorsese |
Bobby | Jack Stevens | Emilio Estevez | |
2007 | Talk To Me | E.G. Sonderling | Kasi Lemmons |
Bordertown | George Morgan | Gregory Nava | |
Flatland: The Movie | Arthur Square | Dano Johnson, Jeffrey Travis | |
2008 | A Single Woman | voice | Kamala Lopez |
Traveling | TBA | Brandon Camp |
Documentaries
Year | Title | Role | Director(s) |
---|---|---|---|
1968 | Pat Neal Is Back | Himself | Edward Beyer |
1985 | Broken Rainbow | Narrator | Maria Florio, Victoria Mudd |
In the Name of the People | Narrator | Frank Christopher | |
Spaceflight | Narrator | Blaine Baggett | |
1988 | Walking After Midnight | Himself | Jonathon Kay |
1991 | Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse | Himself | Fax Bahr, George Hickenlooper |
1997 | 187: Documented | Narrator | Timothy Fong |
Tudjman | Narrator | Jakov Sedlar, Joe Tripician | |
1998 | Taylor's Campaign | Narrator | Richard Cohen |
Holes in Heaven | Narrator | Wendy Robbins | |
2001 | The Papp Project | Himself | Tracie Holder, Karen Thorsen |
SOA: Guns and Greed | Himself | Robert Richter | |
Stockpile | Narrator | Stephen Trombley | |
2002 | The Making of Bret Michaels | Himself | |
Tibet: Cry of the Snow Lion | Narrator | Tom Piozet | |
Straight Up: Helicopters in Action | Narrator | David Douglas | |
2003 | Hidden in Plain Sight | Narrator | John Smihula |
2004 | Learning to Sea | Narrator | Ziggy Livnat |
Winning New Hampshire | Himself | Aram Fischer, Mark Lynch, William Rabbe | |
Tell Them Who You Are | Narrator | Mark Wexler | |
2005 | On the Line: Dissent in an Age of Terrorism | Himself | Peter Glenn, Jason A. Schmidt |
James Dean: Forever Young | Narrator | Michael J. Sheridan | |
2006 | Who Killed the Electric Car? | Narrator | Chris Paine |
Between Iraq and a Hard Place | Narrator | Rex J. Pratt | |
2008 | Flower in the Gun Barrel | Narrator | Gabriel Cowan |
Television and Video
Year | Title | Role | Director(s) |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | The Crystal Cave: Lessons from The Teachings of Merlin (Video) | King Arthur | (Created by Deepak Chopra) |
Alchemy: The Art of Spiritual Transformation (Video) | King Arthur | (Created by Deepak Chopra) | |
1998 | Babylon 5: The River of Souls (TV film) | A Soul Hunter | Janet Greek |
1999 | Total Recall 2070 (Episode 21 - Virtual Justice) | Praxis | Mark Sobel |
1999 - 2006 | The West Wing (Seasons 1–7) | President Josiah Bartlet | Aaron Sorkin |
References
- ^ Martin Sheen Biography (1940-)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stated in interview on Inside the Actors Studio
- ^ According to a report in the Royal Gazette newspaper
- ^ SMU Tate Lecture 2008-02-05
- ^ A Prairie Home Companion, September 29, 2007.
- ^ Catholic Star Herald - Hole in the ground becomes the actor’s studio
- ^ http://progressive.org/mag_intvsheen progressive.org
- ^ [1] Breaking News.ie
- ^ [2] Ireland.com
- ^ NUI Galway.ie
- ^ For a pacifist, Martin Sheen plays a pretty good president
- ^ Beyond Abortion
- ^ Rep. Lincoln Davis (2006). "DAVIS INTRODUCES COMPREHENSIVE PROPOSAL" (html). Retrieved 2007-01-24.
- ^ Sea Shepherd Conservation Society - Seals SSCS History
- ^ CTV.ca | Martin Sheen visits Sheehan's anti-war camp
- ^ YouTube - Martin Sheen - March to MacArthur Park - Part 1
- ^ YouTube - Martin Sheen - March to MacArthur Park - Part 2
- ^ a b "Martin Sheen tells Graham Norton who he backs as President". Unreality TV. 2008-04-24. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
- ^ 39 peace activists arrested at the Nevada Test Site : lvimc
- ^ YouTube - MARTIN SHEEN questions 9/11
- ^ [http://www.looktothestars.org/news/581-martin-sheen-to-receive-two-humanitarian-awards - Martin sheen support to Earth First
- ^ "Richardson release on Sheen endorsement". Time. 2007-12-27. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
{{cite news}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ The President of the Left: No, he's not president. Martin Sheen only plays one on TV. But | National Review | Find Articles at BNET.com
- ^ Malibu Keeping Sheen as Honorary Mayor - New York Times
- ^ Martin Sheen - Biography
- ^ Martin Sheen - Awards
External links
- Martin Sheen at IMDb
- Martin Sheen at the TCM Movie Database
- Martin Sheen at MartinSheen.Net Actor's Photo Gallery focusing on over 100 film and television roles and Library of articles and interviews.
- The Progressive magazine interview including Sheen's views on faith, civil disobedience, abortion and pacifism.
- Martin Sheen: Catholic President on Prime Time article at AmericanCatholic.org
- PBS interview with audio clips: Martin Sheen on Poverty, Faith and Social Activism
- 2001 NPR Interview about his experiences filming Apocalypse Now
- Video and audio of Sheen reading "My Country Awake" by Rabindranath Tagore
- QuickTime video of Sheen in the "confessional" on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, February 14 2005
- World Can't Wait website
- 39 peace activists arrested at the Nevada Test Site
- 1940 births
- American anti-war activists
- American film actors
- American Roman Catholics
- American television actors
- Spanish-Americans
- Hollywood Walk of Fame
- American liberal activists
- Living people
- Ohio actors
- Galician people
- People from Dayton, Ohio
- Roman Catholic activists
- American Christian pacifists
- American anti-nuclear weapons activists
- Irish-Americans