Celebrities » Sean Penn » Biography
Birthday:
Aug 17, 1960
Birthplace:
Santa Monica, California, USA

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Sean Penn Biography

Long the bad boy of Hollywood, Sean Penn is also among the most fiercely talented actors of his generation. He was born August 17, 1960, in Burbank, CA, the second son of actress Eileen Ryan and director Leo Penn. He grew up in Santa Monica, in a neighborhood populated by future celebrities Charlie Sheen and Emilio Estevez, the sons of actor Martin Sheen. Penn's older brother, Michael, is a singer/songwriter-turned- director, while younger sibling Chris is a noted character actor. The children spent much of their free time together, making a number of amateur films shot with Super-8 cameras. Still, Penn's original intention was to attend law school, although he ultimately skipped college to join the Los Angeles Repertory Theater. After making his professional debut on an episode of television's Barnaby Jones, he relocated to New York, where he soon appeared in the play Heartland. A TV-movie, The Killing of Randy Webster, followed in 1981 before he made his feature debut later that same year in Taps.Penn shot to stardom with 1982's Fast Times at Ridgemont High; as the stoned surfer dude Jeff Spicoli, he stole every scene in which he appeared, helping to elevate the picture into a classic of the teen comedy genre; however, the quirkiness which would define his career quickly surfaced as he turned down any number of Spicoli-like roles to star in the 1983 drama Bad Boys, followed a year later by the Louis Malle caper comedy Crackers and the period romance Racing With the Moon. While none of the pictures performed well at the box office, critics consistently praised Penn's depth as an actor. A turn as a drug addict turned government spy in John Schlesinger's 1985 political thriller The Falcon and the Snowman earned some of his best notices to date, but Penn's performance was quickly lost in the glare of the media attention surrounding his very public romance with pop singer Madonna, which culminated in the couple's 1985 media-circus wedding.While Madonna actively courted press attention, the private Penn made his loathing for the media quite clear; his run-ins with the paparazzi quickly became the stuff of legend, and the notoriety of his temper began to eclipse even his immense acting ability. His penchant for fisticuffs, combined with other civil infractions, ultimately resulted in a 30-day jail sentence; more seriously, his marriage to Madonna began to buckle under the weight of media scrutiny, and, as the couple's star collaboration in the 1987 movie Shanghai Surprise met with box-office disaster, their private relationship was also over. Soured by the Hollywood experience, Penn did not resurface prior to 1988's Colors, which proved to be his biggest hit in some time. He next appeared in Brian DePalma's Vietnam tale Casualties of War, followed by a turn opposite his idol, Robert De Niro, in the 1989 comedy We're No Angels.After starring in the gangster melodrama State of Grace, Penn wrote and directed 1991's The Indian Runner, a film inspired by a Bruce Springsteen song and shaped in the image of the films of John Cassavetes. After an almost unrecognizable turn as a troubled attorney in the 1993 DePalma thriller Carlito's Way, Penn announced his intention to retire from acting in order to focus his full attentions on directing; however, after helming 1995's The Crossing Guard with Jack Nicholson and Anjelica Huston, he was back onscreen, winning an Academy Award nomination for his gut-wrenching portrayal of a death-row inmate in Tim Robbins' Dead Man Walking. By 1997, Penn's wishes for retirement were but a memory as he enjoyed his busiest year yet: In addition to starring opposite second wife Robin Wright in Nick Cassavetes' She's So Lovely -- roles which won both spouses acting honors at the Cannes Film Festival -- he also appeared in the David Fincher thriller The Game and in Oliver Stone's U-Turn. He found further acclaim the following year for his roles in the adaptation of David Rabe's Hurlyburly and Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line. In 1999, he had a cameo appearance in Spike Jonze's Being John Malkovich and earned his second Oscar nomination as a callous '30s jazz guitarist in Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown, while 2000s adaptation of Anita Shreve's novel, The Weight of Water, starred Penn as a poet embroiled in a small town murder mystery. In 2001, Penn would play a fame-craving impressionist in The Beaver Trilogy, serve as narrator in director Stacy Peralta's skateboarding documentary Dogtown and Z-Boys, and direct the psychological drama The Pledge, which marked Penn's second collaboration with Jack Nicholson. In 2002, Penn would once again win critical praise with his Oscar-nominated portrayal of a developmentally disabled man struggling to retain custody of his daughter in I Am Sam.After the 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, the left-leaning actor's outspoken political views garnered a great deal of attention from right-wing pundits, including the much aggrieved Bill O'Reilly, who found himself on the receiving end of Penn's animosity in a controversial interview with Talk magazine. Though O'Reilly demanded his viewers boycott any of Penn's future films, it appears his career has remained relatively unscathed. In 2002, Penn directed a segment for the French-produced 9'11"01, which was met with mixed reviews, while his participation in Burkowski: Born Into This (2002) helped the film win a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival. The year 2003 was, in fact, an eventful year for Penn; he participated in two small but nonetheless critically acclaimed films -- Michael Almereyda's documentary This So-Called Disaster and Alejandro González Iñárritu's low-key urban drama 21 Grams -- while managing to claim yet another Hollywood success in actor/director Clint Eastwood's highly lauded Mystic River. In 2004, it was this third film that garnered Penn his fourth Academy Award nomination and, ultimately, his first win. The Oscar, coupled with a standing ovation by the audience, showed once and for all that Penn's unorthodox approach to his acting career hadn't had an adverse effect on his popularity.The following year Penn would return to the screen to document one man's chilling descent into madness in the fact-based psychological drama The Assassination of Richard Nixon, but despite generally favorable reaction from critics the grim feature failed to make much of an impression at the box office. Subsequently sticking to politics with Sydney Pollock's 2005 thriller The Interpreter, Penn would this time find his character attempting to prevent the assassination of a high profile political leader rather than personally carry one out. By the time Penn essayed the role of a populist Southern politician modeled loosely on Depression-era Louisiana governer Huey Long, it seemed as if the serious-minded actor's career had finally become as political as the boat-rocking rhetoric that often found him sailing into the headlines. The third screen adaptation of Robert Penn Warren's influential novel, All the King's Men featured an impressive list of top-name Hollywood talent including Jude Law, Kate Winslett, Anthony Hopkins, Patricia Clarkson, James Gandolfini, and Mark Ruffalo. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi

Sean Penn Trivia

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Quotes from Sean Penn's Characters

    1. Mickey Cohen: When I came here I was nothing,back home I was a gangster, now I'm GOD.
    From Gangster Squad. Submitted by Caomh M (18 days ago)
    1. Mickey Cohen: A cop that's not for sale is like a dog that's got rabies.
    From Gangster Squad. Submitted by Chris G (21 days ago)
    1. Mickey Cohen: No glory in this assignment, when we succeed, nobody will ever know what we've done.
    From Gangster Squad. Submitted by Chris G (21 days ago)
    1. Mickey Cohen: We're standing in the middle of a money makin' machine.
    From Gangster Squad. Submitted by Chris G (21 days ago)
    1. Mickey Cohen: This isn't a crime wave, it's enemy occupation.
    2. John O'Mara: I'll need men.
    From Gangster Squad. Submitted by Chris G (21 days ago)
    1. Mickey Cohen: I'm not an educated man, but I have wits in history. Every kingdom comes of blood, every castle's built on a pile of bones. When I came out here, L.A. was nothin'. Back east I was a gangster...out here, I'm god.
    From Gangster Squad. Submitted by Chris G (21 days ago)
    1. Brad Hamilton: Hey, you guys had shirts on when you came in here.
    2. Jeff Spicoli: Well, somethin' happened to 'em, man.
    From Fast Times At Ridgemont High. Submitted by Mark H (24 days ago)
    1. Joe Wilson: If I yell louder, does that make what I'm saying right!?
    From Fair Game. Submitted by Alonso A (35 days ago)
    1. Terry Noonan: So we're like Robin Hood in this instance?
    2. Jackie Flannery: Yea and I'm Friar Fuck.
    From State of Grace. Submitted by Lisa-Marie D (2 months ago)
    1. Mathew Poncelet: I never had no real love myself. I never loved a woman or anybody else or myself, just never could. Might figure I'd have to die to find love. Thank you for loving me.
    From Dead Man Walking. Submitted by Chad E (6 months ago)
    1. Harvey Milk: Forty years old and I haven't done a thing that I'm proud of.
    From Milk. Submitted by Alejandro O (6 months ago)
    1. Jack: I wanted to be loved because I was great. A big man. I'm nothing. Look--the glory all around us, trees, birds. I dishonored it all and didn't notice the glory. A foolish man.
    From The Tree of Life. Submitted by Ben H (6 months ago)
    1. Mr. O'Brien: Jack! Jack! Hit me! [pushes him over]
    2. Jack: [falls over]
    3. Mr. O'Brien: What are you doing? What're you doing?
    From The Tree of Life. Submitted by Sean W (6 months ago)
    1. Jack: Mother, father, always you wrestle inside me, always you will.
    From The Tree of Life. Submitted by Mars F (7 months ago)
    1. David Kleinfeld: Loyalty to your friends is going to get you killed one day.
    From Carlito's Way. Submitted by Lars P (8 months ago)
    1. David Kleinfeld: Fuck you and your self-righteous code of the goddamn streets. Did it pull you out of a 30 year stint in only 5 years? No, it didn't, I did. Did it get you acquitted 4 fucking times? No, it didn't, I did, so fuck you, fuck the streets, your whole goddamn world is this big, and there's only one rule, you save your own ass.
    From Carlito's Way. Submitted by Gavin S (9 months ago)
    1. Dan White: Society can't exist without the family.
    2. Harvey Milk: We're not against that.
    3. Dan White: Can two men reproduce?
    4. Harvey Milk: No, but God knows we keep trying.
    From Milk. Submitted by Sarah B (9 months ago)
    1. Paul: How many lives do we live? How many times do we die? They say we all lose 21 grams... at the exact moment of our death. Everyone. And how much fits into 21 grams? How much is lost? When do we lose 21 grams? How much goes with them? How much is gained? How much is gained? Twenty-one grams. The weight of a stack of five nickels. The weight of a hummingbird. A chocolate bar. How much did 21 grams weigh?
    From 21 Grams. Submitted by Alejandro O (11 months ago)
    1. Pvt. Witt: Do you ever feel lonely?
    2. First Sgt. Edward Welsh: Only around people.
    From The Thin Red Line. Submitted by Alexandar T (11 months ago)
    1. First Sgt. Edward Welsh: Everything a lie. Everything you hear, everything you see. So much to spew out. They just keep coming, one after another. You're in a box. A moving box. They want you dead, or in their lie... There's only one thing a man can do - find something that's his, and make an island for himself. If I never meet you in this life, let me feel the lack; a glance from your eyes, and my life will be yours.
    From The Thin Red Line. Submitted by Anastasia B (12 months ago)
    1. Jack: Mother, Father. Always you wrestle inside me.
    From The Tree of Life. Submitted by Asif K (12 months ago)
    1. Paul: Did you know that eating alone could cause kidney damage? And that's BAD.
    From 21 Grams. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Jimmy Markum: I remember, I was more afraid of my little daughter than I ever was of being in prison.
    From Mystic River. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Jimmy Markum: We bury our sins here, Dave. We wash them clean.
    From Mystic River. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. First Sgt. Edward Welsh: In this world, a man, himself, is nothing. And there ain't no world but this one.
    From The Thin Red Line. Submitted by rob g (13 months ago)
    1. First Sgt. Edward Welsh: I might be your best friend, and you don't even know it.
    From The Thin Red Line. Submitted by rob g (13 months ago)
    1. Harvey Milk: All men are created equal. No matter how hard you try, you can never erase those words.
    From Milk. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Harvey Milk: Without hope, life's not worth living.
    From Milk. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Joe Wilson: The responsibility of a country is not in the hands of a privileged few. We are strong, and we are free from tyranny as long as each one of us remembers his or her duty as a citizen. Whether it's to report a pothole at the top of your street or lies in a State of the Union address, speak out! Ask those questions. Demand that truth. Democracy is not a free ride, man. I'm here to tell you. But, this is where we live. And if we do our job, this is where our children will live. God bless America.
    From Fair Game. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
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