Friday, October 17, 2014

Steve McQueen (1930-1980)

Birth name: Terence Steven McQueen
Birthdate: Monday, March 24th, 1930
Location: Beech Grove, Indiana, USA

Died: Friday, November 7th, 1980
Location: Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico
Cause of death: Malignant pleural mesolethioma

Best known for: American actor who became known for his tough, action roles and anti-hero persona, and often referred to as the King of Cool. His most successful films included The Great Escape (1963), The Cincinnati Kid (1965), The Thomas Crown Affair (1968) and Bullitt (1968). He was nominated for an Oscar as Best Lead Actor for The Sand Pebbles (1966), but lost out to Paul Scofield. He was also nominated for six Golden Globes, winning two of them for World Film Favourite Male.

The mid to late 1960s were Steve McQueen's heyday, but following the huge success of The Sand Pebbles, The Thomas Crown Affair and Bullitt, he began to make fewer films as he became increasingly disillusioned with the Hollywood studio system. 1971's Le Mans was poorly received, but despite this, his role as Doc McCoy in 1972's The Getaway made him the world's highest paid actor.

Steve pictured with the beard he sported
in An Enemy of the People in 1977,
when he was aged 47
The last film Steve made which truly had an impact was 1974's all-star The Towering Inferno, after which he took on very few projects, preferring to pursue his real passion for motor racing and travelling around in his motorhome and motorcycles. In 1978 he returned to the screen in an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's An Enemy of the People as Dr Thomas Stockmann, this time his ruggedly handsome features obscured by a bushy beard.

It was in 1978 that Steve began to develop a persistent cough, so Steve gave up his "King of Cool" cigarettes and began taking antibiotics, while also becoming an Evangelical Christian. However, the ailment did not go away and he began to suffer shortness of breath. It was during the filming of his final movie The Hunter, in December 1979, that he was diagnosed with pleural mesolethioma, a cancer associated with asbestos for which there was no known cure. Steve suspected it was down to him removing asbestos pipe lagging during his time in the Marines in the 1940s, although he also believed asbestos was present in movie sound stage insulation.

Steve looking gaunt on set
for Tom Horn in 1979
In January 1980 Steve married his third wife, model Barbara Minty, but by the following month he was suffering widespread metastasis. In March the National Enquirer revealed he had "terminal cancer". In July 1980, despite being told his life could not be saved, Steve travelled to Mexico for the controversial Gerson Therapy treatment, which consisted of coffee enemas, frequent washing with shampoo, injections of live cow and sheep cells, and massage. For this unconventional type of treatment - which was banned in the USA - Steve paid $120,000 in cash.

Steve returned to the US in October 1980, when his Gerson therapist William Donald Kelley (who was merely a dentist until his licence was revoked in 1976) declared to the media that his patient would be completely cured and return to everyday life. It wasn't long until Steve's illness worsened considerably and he developed large tumours in his abdomen. In late October Steve flew to Chihuahua in Mexico to have a 5lb tumour removed from his liver, despite US doctors warning his heart would not survive the operation.

Steve with third wife Barbara Minty
in Mexico in 1980, the year he died
Steve died of multiple cardiac arrest on November 7th at 3.45am, 12 hours after the failed operation to remove tumours from his abdomen and neck. Reports from the time say he woke first and asked a nurse for some iced water before passing away. Steve's body was cremated and his ashes spread over the Pacific Ocean. In 2012 Steve's widow Barbara joined the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organisation to campaign in her husband's memory.

A bit of fun in memory of the King of Cool: What could be cooler than one Hollywood legend talking about how cool another Hollywood legend is? Here's a brief snippet of Steve's friend and martial arts mentor Bruce Lee talking about that "son of a gun" on the Pierre Berton Show in December 1971...

1 comment:

  1. I heard Steve tell a story on a talk show that at one time he was neighbors with James Garner who was very analysis about having a nice yard. When Steve drove by his house headed home at night he'd sometimes toss a beer can in his yard. Funny charachter. Ca me from a humbling beginning and cared abouts kids all his life. I hate he had a difficult end to life. I was Wanted: Dead or Alive nearly every day on TV.

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