Rourke, Mickey

views updated May 29 2018

ROURKE, Mickey



Nationality: American. Born: Philip Andre Rourke Jr., in Schenectady, New York, 16 September 1956; at age seven, moved to Miami. Education: Studied acting with Sandra Seacat in New York. Family: 1) Married the actress Debra Feuer, 1980 (divorced); 2) Married the actress and model Carre Otis, 1992 (divorced, 1994). Career: Late 1970s—stage debut in A View from the Bridge; 1979—moved to Los Angeles, film debut in 1941; 1991—took up professional boxing.


Films as Actor:

1979

1941 (Spielberg) (as Reese)

1980

City in Fear ("Allan Smithee," i.e. Jud Taylor—for TV); Act of Love (Jud Taylor—for TV) (as Joseph Cybulkowski); Heaven's Gate (Cimino) (as Nick Ray); Fade to Black (Zimmerman) (as Richie); Rape and Marriage: The Rideout Case (Levin—for TV)

1981

Body Heat (Kasdan) (as Teddy Lewis)

1982

Diner (Levinson) (as Boogie)

1983

Rumble Fish (Francis Ford Coppola) (as Motorcycle Boy)

1984

The Pope of Greenwich Village (Rosenberg) (as Charlie); Eureka (Roeg—produced in 1982) (as Aurelio D'Amato)

1985

Year of the Dragon (Cimino) (as Stanley White)

1986

9½ Weeks (Lyne) (as John)

1987

Angel Heart (Alan Parker) (as Harry Angel); Barfly (Schroeder) (as Henry Chinaski); A Prayer for the Dying (Hodges) (as Martin Fallon)

1989

Johnny Handsome (Walter Hill) (as John Sedley); Homeboy (Seresin) (as Johnny Walker, + story); Francesco (Cavani) (title role)

1990

Wild Orchid (Zalman King) (as James Wheeler); Desperate Hours (Cimino) (as Michael Bosworth)

1991

Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man (Wincer) (as Harley Davidson)

1992

White Sands (Donaldson) (as Gorman Lennox)

1993

The Last Outlaw (Geoff Murphy—for TV) (as Graff)

1994

The Last Ride (F. T. W.) (as Frank T. Wells)

1995

Fall Time (Paul Warner) (as Florence)

1996

Exit in Red (Bogayevicz) (as Ed Altman); Bullet (Temple) (as Butch "Bullet" Stein)

1997

Point Blank (Matt Earl Beesley) (as Rudy Ray); Double Team (Tsui) (as Stavros); Love in Paris (Another 9 ½ Weeks) (as John); The Rainmaker (Coppola) (as Bruiser Stone)

1998

Thursday (Woods) (as Det. Kasarov); Buffalo '66 (Gallo) (as Bookie); Thicker Than Blood (Pearce—for TV) (as Father Frank Larkin)

1999

Shergar (Lewiston); Shades (Van Looy) (as Paul Sullivan); Out in Fifty (Christopher and Leet)

2000

The Animal Factory (Buscemi) (as Jan the Actress)



Publications


By ROURKE: articles—

Interview in Interview (New York), no. 3, 1985.

Hutchinson, C., "Year of the Rourke," in Films and Filming (London), January 1986.

"Acting Out," interview with Margy Rochlin, in American Film (New York), November 1987.

"Mickey Mouth," interview with Gisela Martine Getty, in Interview (New York), January 1988.

Interview in Films and Filming (London), March 1990.

On ROURKE: book—

Mills, Bart, Mickey Rourke: An Illustrated Biography, London, 1988.

On ROURKE: articles—

Allen, Jennifer, "Bad Boy: Actor Mickey Rourke Is a Hard Case with a Heart," in New York, 14 November 1983.

McGillivray, David, "Mickey Rourke," in Films and Filming (London), July 1985.

Ostria, V., "S'il continue à pleuvoir," in Cahiers du Cinéma (Paris), November 1985.

McDonough, Tom, "Down and (Far) Out," in American Film, November 1987.

Smith, Gavin, "Actors Face the Truth," in Film Comment (New York), January/February 1989.

Crawley, T., "The Man behind the Mask," in Film Monthly (Berkhamsted, England), September 1990.

Stanley, Alessandra, "Can 50 Million Frenchmen Be Wrong? The Nouvellest Vague: Mickey Rourke," in New York Times Magazine, 21 October 1990.

Current Biography 1991, New York, 1991.

Stars (Mariembourg, Belgium), Winter 1993.

Kennedy, Dana, "Knock-Knock Knockin' on Hollywood's Door," in Entertainment Weekly (New York), 9 December 1994.

Baumgold, Julie, "Tough Guys Don't Wear Underwear," in Esquire (New York), February 1995.

Raab, Scott, "Mickey Rourke Doesn't Smell," in GQ (New York), July 1995.


* * *

Mickey Rourke's career is one of unfulfilled potential. He might have developed into his generation's John Garfield, Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, James Dean: a foremost on-screen interpreter of the sexually attractive but disillusioned and world-weary rebel hero/loner, and a modern-era practitioner of the Method. Unfortunately, he has been restricted by poor judgment in choosing his screen roles and, even more haplessly, an inability to coexist with his fellow actors and film makers. Indeed, stories of Rourke playing out the role of off-camera spoiled brat/bad boy are legion—and, after a while, they grow tiresome.

He began his career in promising fashion, with a starring role in the made-for-television movie Rape and Marriage: The Rideout Case, playing a husband who is accused by his wife of rape, and he impressed as the quiet, intense explosives expert in Body Heat. He had a nice showcase as a member of the ensemble cast of Diner (playing the womanizing Boogie), and emerged unscathed from Francis Coppola's disappointing Rumble Fish (in the role of the Motorcycle Boy).

Diner and Rumble Fish feature casts laden with up-and-coming talent. In Diner, Rourke appears with Steve Guttenberg, Daniel Stern, Kevin Bacon, Ellen Barkin, and Paul Reiser; in Rumble Fish, his fellow actors include Matt Dillon, Diane Lane, Nicolas Cage, Christopher Penn, and Laurence Fishburne. Some of these actors have gone on to enjoy thriving celluloid careers. In particular, Bacon, Barkin, Dillon, Lane, Cage, Penn, and Fishburne have done arresting work on screen; in the mid-1990s, several—especially Bacon, Cage, and Fishburne—are entering their prime as major movie stars. But, while Rourke is not without several commendable credits on his filmography, as he nears his 40th birthday the sense about him is that his future movies will more than likely be of the direct-to-video variety.

Easily Rourke's best screen role came in Barfly, based on the autobiographical musings of cult writer Charles Bukowski. Rourke plays Henry Chinaski, a self-destructive fall-down drunk, and his bravura performance predates that of Cage's award-winning work almost a decade later in Leaving Las Vegas. Barfly, however, was to be the exception to, rather than the rule of, Rourke's career. His casting in Johnny Handsome, Desperate Hours, and Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man is obscured by the fact that he turned down the leads in Beverly Hills Cop and Top Gun. After taking sixth billing in Nicolas Roeg's Eureka, he may have declared, "I'd rather do a small part on a Roeg film than a big one in a Hollywood meatball movie." But his attempts at "serious" filmmaking have been seriously misguided. A prime example: Year of the Dragon, a sloppily directed (by Michael Cimino) genre exercise in which he plays a Vietnam veteran/New York City cop. The scenario may have serious pretensions—Rourke's character is named White; his main life-skill is killing; and he has brought the war home to the extent that he is involved in Chinatown hostilities. But in Year of the Dragon, the bottom line is that Rourke plays yet another boring, stereotypically violent Vietnam vet.

Rourke has, at the same time, chosen to work abroad, but with little impact. In the British-made A Prayer for the Dying, he sports a laughable accent playing an IRA hit man. In the Italian-German Francesco he plays Francis of Assisi, but the result is practically unwatchable. If his early performances were calm and cerebral, in Francesco Rourke embodies the worst stereotype of Method acting as he mumbles his way through the film.

Rourke also has specialized in erotically-charged roles. The best of these came in the ambitious but ultimately unsuccessful Angel Heart, playing a private eye; his erotic love scene (with Lisa Bonet) had to be cut to avoid an X-rating. In 9½ Weeks, he is cast as a bondage-hooked banker, and the result is a mess of a movie that earned headlines for Rourke's lack of rapport with his co-star, Kim Basinger. The actor may have married his Wild Orchid co-star, Carre Otis; the film won notoriety for an infamous, supposedly unsimulated sex scene between the two. But Wild Orchid is a typical concoction of its director, Zalman King: dramatically inept soft-core pornography. At least Rourke did not appear in the sequel, Wild Orchid 2: Two Shades of Blue.

In 1991, Rourke became a professional boxer. As a youngster growing up on the mean streets of New York and Miami, his aspiration was to become a boxer. Nevertheless, his decision to turn pro at an age—35—when most career fighters are way beyond their primes was ill-advised. It was as if playing a pugilist on screen (as he had in Homeboy) was insufficient proof of his machismo. He had to one-up John Garfield, Robert Ryan, Kirk Douglas, and Sylvester Stallone—actors who appeared in classic boxing movies—by becoming the real McCoy.

Every actor is entitled to an occasional turkey, but Rourke's career, once past its early, promising stages, is the equivalent of a Thanksgiving feast. "I've watched actors I've admired over the years sell out. That's the worst crime of all," he has said. While a noble thought, Rourke's proclivity for misguided decision making (not to mention his oversized ego) is the dominating factor of his career.

—Rob Edelman

Rourke, Mickey 1956(?)–

views updated Jun 11 2018

Rourke, Mickey 1956(?)–

("Sir" Eddie Cook)

PERSONAL

Original name, Philip Andre Rourke, Jr.; born September 16, 1956 (some sources say 1953), in Schenectady, NY; son of Philip Andre, Sr. (a country club caretaker) and Ann Rourke; married Debra Feuer (a dancer and actress), 1981 (divorced, 1989); married Carrie Otis (a model and actress), 1992 (divorced, December 1998). Education: Studied acting at City College of the State University of New York, Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute, Actors Studio, and with Sandra Seacat. Avocational Interests: Motorcycles.

Addresses: Agent—International Creative Management, 8942 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90211.

Career: Actor and writer. Appeared in television commercial for Toyota. Worked as an amateur boxer in Miami, FL; became professional boxer under name "El Marielito," 1991, retiring in 1995. Beverly Hot Springs (spa), Beverly Hills, CA, owner; Shapiro (gymnasium), West Hollywood, CA, former owner; Mickey & Joey's (a soda fountain/ice cream/magazine stand), former co-owner. Also worked as a dishwasher, pretzel vendor, parking lot attendant, massage parlor bouncer, and warehouse worker.

Member: Screen Actors Guild.

Awards, Honors: National Society of Film Critics Award, best supporting actor, Boston Society of Film Critics Award, best supporting actor,1983, both for Diner; Independent Spirit Award nomination, best male lead, 1988, for Barfly; Satellite Award nomination, outstanding actor in a supporting role—drama, Audience Award, best international actor, IFTA Awards, 2005, Chicago Film Critics Association Award, best supporting actor, Online Film Critics Society Award, best supporting actor, Saturn Award, best supporting actor, Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, 2006, all for Sin City.

CREDITS

Film Appearances:

Private Reese, 1941, Universal, 1979.

Nick Ray, Heaven's Gate (also known as Johnson County Wars), United Artists, 1980.

Richie, Fade to Black, American Cinema, 1980.

Teddy Lewis, Body Heat, Warner Bros., 1981.

Robert "Boogie" Sheftell, Diner, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1982.

Motorcycle boy, Rumblefish, Universal, 1983.

Charlie Moran, The Pope of Greenwich Village (also known as Village Dreams), Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1984.

Aurelio D'Amato, Eureka, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1985.

Stanley White, Year of the Dragon, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1985.

John, 9 1/2 Weeks, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1986.

Harry Angel, Angel Heart (also known as Aux portes de l'enfer), TriStar, 1987.

Henry Chinaski, Barfly, Cannon, 1987.

Martin Fallon, A Prayer for the Dying, Goldwyn, 1987.

Title role, Francesco (also known as St. Francis of Assisi and Franziskus), Istituto Luce-Italneggio, 1989.

Johnny Walker, Homeboy, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1989.

John Sedley, also known as Johnny Handsome/Johnny Mitchell (title role), Johnny Handsome, TriStar, 1989.

James Wheeler, Wild Orchid, Vision, 1990.

Michael Bosworth, Desperate Hours, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/United Artists, 1990.

Harley Davidson, Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1991.

Gorman Lennox, White Sands, Warner Bros., 1992.

Frank T. Wells, The Last Ride (also known as FT. W.), Nu Image, 1994.

Butch "Bullet" Stein, Bullet, New Line Cinema, 1995.

Florence, Fall Time, Capitol Films/Live Entertainment/Bates Entertainment, 1995.

John, Another 9 1/2 Weeks (also known as Love in Paris, Another Nine & a Half Weeks, and 9 1/2 Weeks II), Trimark Pictures, 1997.

Stavros, Double Team (also known as The Colony), Trimark Pictures, 1997.

Bruiser Stone, John Grisham's "The Rainmaker" (also known as The Rainmaker), Paramount, 1997.

Rudy Ray, Point Blank, Sterling Home Entertainment, 1997.

(Uncredited) Himself, Champions Forever: The Latin Legends, 1997.

Detective Kasarov, Thursday, Legacy Releasing, 1998.

Bookie, Buffalo '66, Lions Gate Films, 1998.

(Scenes deleted) Soldier, The Thin Red Line (also known as La mince ligne rouge), 1998.

Paul Sullivan, Shades, United International Pictures, 1999.

Gavin O'Rourke, Shergar, 1999.

Jack Bracken, Out in Fifty, Avalanche Home Entertainment, 1999.

Cousin Joey, 1999.

Jan the actress, The Animal Factory, New City Releasing, 2000.

Cyrus Paice, Get Carter, Warner Bros., 2000.

Jim Olstad, The Pledge, Warner Bros., 2000.

Tiny Frakes, They Crawl (also known as Crawlers), Lions Gate Films Home Entertainment, 2001.

Eddie, Picture Claire, DEJ Productions, 2001.

The cook, Spun, Silver Nitrate Films, 2002.

Edmund, Masked and Anonymous, Sony Pictures Classics, 2003.

Billy, Once Upon a Time in Mexico, Sony Pictures Entertainment, 2003.

Jordan, Man on Fire, Twentieth Century-Fox, 2004.

Marv, Sin City (also known as Frank Miller's "Sin City"), Dimension Films, 2005.

Ed Mosbey, Domino, New Line Cinema, 2005.

(In archive footage) Himself, On Location in Tulsa: The Making of "Rumble Fish" (documentary), Universal Studios Home Video, 2005.

Himself, Vengeance Is Mine: Reinventing "Man on Fire" (documentary), Twentieth Century-Fox Home Entertainment, 2005.

Darrius Sayle, Stormbreaker, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 2006.

Armand "The Blackbird" Degas, Killshot, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 2006.

Also appeared as husband in the short film/commercial, The Follow (also known as The Hire: The Follow) for BMW Films, 2001.

Film Work:

Music supervisor, Bullet, New Line Cinema, 1995.

Film consultant, Tupac: Resurrection, Paramount, 2003.

Television Appearances; Movies:

Joseph Cybulkowski, Act of Love, NBC, 1980.

Tony Pate, City in Fear, ABC, 1980.

John Rideout, Rape and Marriage: The Rideout Case, CBS, 1980.

Colonel Graff, The Last Outlaw, 1994.

Ed Altman, Exit in Red, Showtime, 1996.

Father Frank Larkin, Thicker Than Blood (also known as Stand Up Tragedy), TNT, 1998.

Television Appearances; Pilots:

Perk Dawson, Hardcase, NBC, 1981.

Television Appearances; Specials:

Himself, The Theory of Obstacles, 1996.

Himself, Mickey Rourke, Actor or Boxer?, 1996.

Harley Mania, E! Entertainment Television, 1998.

Mickey Rourke: The E! True Hollywood Story, E! Entertainment Television, 1999.

(In archive footage) Himself, Carrie Otis: The E! True Hollywood Story, E! Entertainment Television, 2002.

(In archive footage) Celebrity Naked Ambition, Channel 5, 2003.

(In archive footage) Himself, E! 101 Most Starlicious Makeovers, E! Entertainment Television, 2004.

Himself, Sin City: The Premiere, ITV2, 2005.

Himself, 3rd Irish Film and Television Awards, 2005.

Television Appearances; Episodic:

Himself, "Wetten, dass …? aus Duisburg," Wetten, dass …?, 1990.

Himself, The Word, Channel 4, 1994.

The Rodman World Tour, 1996.

Himself, V Graham Norton, Channel 4, 2003.

(In archive footage) John, "Fantasies," Sexes, Televisio de Catalunya, 2005.

(In archive footage) Himself, Cinema mil, 2005.

(In archive footage) Corazon de …, 2005.

(In archive footage) John, 80s, TV3, 2005.

Himself, The O'Reilly Factor, Fox News, 2005.

Himself, Late Show with David Letterman (also known as The Late Show), CBS, 2005.

Himself, On a tout essaye (also known as Les douze coups d'on a tout essaye, On a tout essaye et on garde le meilleur, and On a tout essaye, meme le prime), 2005.

Himself, Le grand journal de Canal+, 2005.

Himself, Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, BBC, 2005.

Himself, Tout le monde en parle, 2005.

Himself, Jimmy Kimmel Live, ABC, 2005.

Himself, Magacine, 2005.

RECORDINGS

Video Games:

Voice of Jericho, Driv3r, Infogames Entertainment, 2004.

Voice of Terrence Higgins, True Crime: New York City, Activision, 2005.

Music Videos:

Appeared in Enrique Iglesisas's "Hero."

WRITINGS

Film Stories; as "Sir" Eddie Cook:

Homeboy, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1989.

F. T. W. (also known as Last Ride), 1994.

Screenplays; as "Sir" Eddie Cook:

Bullet, 1996.

OTHER SOURCES

Books:

International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, Volume 3: Actors and Actresses, 4th ed., St. James Press, 2000.

Periodicals:

Daily News (Los Angeles), February 5, 1989, p. 5.

Entertainment Weekly, December 18, 1998; April 8, 2005, p. 9.

Interview, October, 2003, p. 172; November, 2005, p. 122.

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