Steve McQueen Biography

PHOTO: Steve McQueen

The American film star of the 1960s and 1970s who made the strong and silent loner role his own. That was when he wasn't performing his own stunts. One of the The Magnificent Seven, he made The Great Escape and did it again with Papillon

Steve's feature debut came in 1956 in ‘Somebody Up There Likes Me’, but he really began to develop his screen persona between 1958-60, in the TV series, ‘Wanted: Dead or Alive’.

Director John Sturges, impressed with Steve's TV work, tapped him to replace Sammy Davis Jr., as Frank Sinatra's driver in ‘Never So Few’. The collaboration proved fortuitous for both, as Steve played key roles in two of Sturges' finest films - ‘The Magnificent Seven’ and ‘The Great Escape’ - a role for which he may be best remembered.

Two films in 1968 advanced his career to new heights: ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’ and ‘Bullitt’. The crowning jewel of his film career was his performance in ‘Papillon’.

More than holding his own with heavyweight Dustin Hoffman, he gave a glimpse of the wonderful character actor he could have become, had his life not been tragically cut short.

In 1979, Steve was first diagnosed with cancer, and the following year managed to make his final two films – ‘Tom Horn’ and ‘The Hunter’, before he lost his battle with the disease.

 

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