A Young Turk Named Estevez
Whenever Hollywood's newest young Turks talk about one another,
Emilio Estevez name comes up
"Emilio just wrote and starred in his own movie," someone might confide
in admiring tones. ("That Was Then, This Is Now,"
based on the S. E. Hinton novel). "He's re-e-e-a-a-l-ly hot."
Just what kind of cinematic Wunderkind is this 22-year-old actor, whose
most recent performance in "The Breakfast Club"
has drawn so much critical praise?
When meeting Estevez for the first time, it's easy to see that his
father is actor Martin Sheen (whose family name is Estevez).
The resemblance is startling. Both are compact, with the same
brownish-blond hair and -- most noticeably -- virtually the
same piercing blue eyes, which study the world with fierce
concentration.
On a typical weekday afternoon at the Santa Monica Pier, Estevez's eyes
were not so much fierce as full of amusement.
"I can't beli-e-e-e-ve this!" Estevez sat on a bench, convulsed with
laughter. In only 15 minutes, he had already watched an
elderly gent run through some soft-shoe routines (apparently to music
that only he could hear) and turned down an offer to
buy some marijuana. Now, as he talked about his role (as the handsome
star jock) in "The Breakfast Club," there was
another interruption.
"Hey, were you in that movie 'Repo Man'?" The question came from a
punker who, with a friend, planted himself squarely
in front of Estevez. The actor nodded yes. (He played Otto, the suburban
punk who gets involved with a group of
automobile repossessors.)
"Right on!" the punker grinned. "I work at a video place and we did all
the copies for that -- like, I seen that thing over and
over. Do many people recognize your face? We did 'Nightmares' (a
four-part horror anthology released in 1983) too. . . .
You were listening to Fear or somethin' on the headphones. . . .
Gr-r-r-r-eat!" Again Estevez nodded.
"I gotta get the bus back up to Malibu, do you have an extra 50 cents or
somethin'?"
Estevez, wearing jogging clothes (he had run from his apartment to the
pier), showed the contents of his pockets -- a house
key -- and, smiling, apologized.
"That's cool. . . . Take care, bro!" The two punkers strolled off.
It was surprising that he was recognized at all, given the dramatic
difference between his "Repo Man" punker look and his
current all-American "Breakfast Club" image.
Estevez indicated that he's experienced a little of both. Referring to
the five characters in "Breakfast Club" (the jock, the
flake, the hoodlum, the brain, the prom queen), Estevez explained: "I
was kind of like a chameleon in high school (he
attended Santa Monica High School). I ran track, so I was in with all
the black dudes, and they liked me and there was a
lot of mutual respect. I played soccer, so I knew the Hispanics and
Latinos, and because of my name I was in there with all
of them. I knew all the surfers, because I grew up in Malibu, and I got
along with all the brains because I got good grades."
He could even relate to co-star Molly Ringwald's prom queen role because
he was prom king his senior year.
"I'd forgotten all about that," he said, adding ruefully, "It was the
most embarrassing moment of my life."
Although primarily an actor, Estevez spent most of the visit discussing
his writing, an interest that long predates "That Was
Then, This Is Now."
"I wasn't content with being just an actor," he explained. "I'd been
writing since I was 7. In fact, in second grade I wrote a
short story on lined paper with a pencil and submitted it to 'Night
Gallery' (the Rod Serling series)."
He laughed. "It was a pretty cool science-fiction story . . . but they
sent it back to me."
Then there were the movies he made with brothers Charlie and Ramon and
neighbors Sean and Chris Penn and Rob and
Chad Lowe, long before any of them became so well known.
"Sean and Charlie and I did a movie -- we kind of wrote it as we went
along. Sean steals my dog and kills my brother . . .
then he kills his mother; then I kill him."
(One begins to wonder just how the neighborhood survived these
burgeoning talents.)
Much later, while Estevez was working on "Tex" in Oklahoma (he later
played Two-Bit Matthews in "The Outsiders"), he
met S. E. Hinton and read "That Was Then."
"I talked to Susie (Hinton) and she said, 'I think you'd be terrific as
one of the characters,' and I said, 'I think I should do it.'
I tried peddling it around the studios but they all said, 'Let's wait
and see how "Tex" and "The Outsiders" do.' "
The two films did little at the box office, but Estevez went the
independent route and found two Midwest producers
interested in making the movie. He was successful in keeping his
original script fairly intact, although it took a backbreaking
schedule to accomplish it.
"I worked on a rewrite during the filming of 'Breakfast Club,' " he
said, explaining that he had not been pleased with a
second draft that the producers helped write. "I'd go to work at 7 in
the morning, come back at 7 at night and then write --
sometimes until 5 in the morning -- then get two hours sleep and do it
all again. It was intense." "That Was Then," directed
by Chris Cain ("The Stone Boy") and starring Estevez, was shot last
summer in St. Paul, Minn. Estevez said he hoped the
movie will be released this spring, although a distributor hasn't yet
been named.
"St. Elmo's Fire," yet another movie in which he co-stars (with Ally
Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Rob Lowe, Andrew McCarthy,
Demi Moore and Mare Winningham), will be released later this year.
"St. Elmo's Fire" could be described as a more mature version of
"Breakfast Club," since it involves a friendly group of
recent college graduates. The prior film relationships among the actors
and actresses made "St. Elmo's" seem almost like a
family reunion, to hear Estevez tell it: "The associations are so
strong," he marveled. "Rob worked with Ally on 'Oxford
Blues,' he worked with me on 'The Outsiders' and with Andrew in 'Class.'
Plus, I worked with Ally and Judd on 'Breakfast
Club.' "
During the filming of "St. Elmo's Fire," Estevez wrote another
screenplay -- which he described as a "black comedy set in
Redondo Beach" -- that's currently making the studio rounds.
"I'm not a power-hungry human being, but I feel that I'm somewhat
creative and that I have something to say," he explained,
blue eyes blazing. "I want to bring that into the films that I choose to
make, so I think that if I'm able to write and act and --
someday -- direct, that it's the best way to get my message across."
Copyright 1985 The Times Mirror Company
Los Angeles Times
February 20, 1985, Wednesday, Home Edition
HEADLINE: "BREAKFAST CLUB": FOOD FOR THOUGHT ON A YOUTH FILM;
A YOUNG TURK NAMED ESTEVEZ
BYLINE: By DEBORAH CAULFIELD, Times Staff Writer
Article contributed by Elaine for PRESENTING...EMILIO!!!