Charlie Sheen

American actor
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Also known as: Carlos Irwin Estévez
Quick Facts
Byname of:
Carlos Irwin Estévez
Born:
September 3, 1965, New York City, New York, U.S. (age 59)
Awards And Honors:
Golden Globe Award (2002)
Golden Globe Award (2002): Best Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy
Notable Family Members:
father Martin Sheen
On the Web:
Hollywood Walk of Fame - Charlie Sheen (Oct. 21, 2024)

Charlie Sheen (born September 3, 1965, New York City, New York, U.S.) is an American actor who became equally famous for his work in such films as Platoon (1986) and Major League (1989) and the television series Two and a Half Men (2003–11) and Anger Management (2012–14) as for various controversies involving his personal life and public statements.

Early life

Sheen was born Carlos Irwin Estévez. He is the third child of actor Martin Sheen (real name Ramón Estévez) and actress and producer Janet (née Templeton) Sheen. He has two elder brothers, Emilio and Ramon Estévez, and a younger sister, Renée Estévez, all of whom also are involved in the entertainment industry. In 1970 the family moved from New York City to Malibu, California. Carlos Estévez made his screen debut in 1973 with a brief, uncredited appearance in Terrence Malick’s directorial film debut, Badlands, followed by another small role, in 1974, in the television movie The Execution of Private Slovik. Both projects starred his father.

Estévez attended Santa Monica High School, where he played baseball and began making homemade Super-8 films with his brother Emilio and fellow classmates Sean Penn (whose parents were also in the film business) and Rob Lowe.

Acting stardom in the 1980s and ’90s

In 1983 Estévez, George Clooney, and Laura Dern had parts in the horror film Grizzly II: The Predator, though the movie was not released until 2021, as Grizzly II: Revenge. For his film credit, Estévez used the name Charlie Sheen, taking the last name of his father’s stage name as his own. In Sheen’s next film, the action thriller Red Dawn (1984), he joined a cast of other young actors on the brink of stardom, including Patrick Swayze, C. Thomas Howell, Lea Thompson, and Jennifer Grey. During this time Sheen came to be associated with the Brat Pack, the name given to his generational cohort of actors who often appeared in coming-of-age movies together. He acted in two of the essential Brat Pack films of the era, the classic teen movies Lucas and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (both 1986).

Sheen’s breakthrough role was that of Chris Taylor, the newly arrived recruit in Oliver Stone’s searing Vietnam War drama Platoon. Originally, Sheen’s brother Emilio was cast in the role, but scheduling conflicts prevented him from making the film. Sheen had auditioned for the part, but Stone told him that he was “too mannered” and needed more experience. Eventually, Stone cast him but only after Sheen auditioned again and Willem Dafoe, whose character has several crucial scenes with Chris, approved of hiring Sheen. The film won four Academy Awards, including for best director and best picture, and Sheen received positive reviews from critics. Of the film and his character’s impact, Sheen told The Guardian in 2022, “Veterans thank me for finally telling their story and a lot of them have tears in their eyes. It’s their life.”

Sheen worked with Stone again on the film Wall Street (1987), playing Bud Fox, an ambitious young stockbroker, opposite Michael Douglas’s ruthless corporate raider Gordon Gekko. In 1988 Sheen starred in the western Young Guns with his brother Emilio and with Kiefer Sutherland, Dermot Mulroney, and Lou Diamond Phillips. That same year he appeared in Eight Men Out, a film about the Black Sox Scandal, in which members of the Chicago White Sox baseball team were indicted on charges, but later acquitted, of accepting bribes to throw the 1919 World Series. In 1989 Sheen had another baseball-themed film hit with the comedy Major League, in which he played Ricky Vaughn, a young pitcher nicknamed “Wild Thing” for his incredibly fast but out-of-control pitches and rebellious demeanor.

By 1990 Sheen was a hot commodity in Hollywood. That year he had roles in well-received films such as the action thriller Navy Seals, the comedy Men at Work (costarring Emilio, who wrote and directed the film), and the crime drama The Rookie (opposite Clint Eastwood, the film’s director). Sheen showed his gift for comedy in the popular Top Gun parody film Hot Shots! (1991) and its Rambo-inspired sequel, Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993). Yet he continued to do action films, such as Beyond the Law (1993), and adventure movies, such as The Three Musketeers (1993), a screen adaptation of the classic Alexandre Dumas novel. Sheen played Aramis alongside Sutherland (Athos), Chris O’Donnell (D’Artagnan), Oliver Platt (Porthos), and Tim Curry (Cardinal Richelieu). In 1994 Sheen reprised his role as Vaughn in Major League II.

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Sheen’s next few films were largely forgettable action movies, though he had memorable cameos in an episode (1996) of the sitcom Friends and in the acclaimed film Being John Malkovich (1999), in which he played himself. In 2000 he portrayed Artie Mitchell, a real-life pornographic filmmaker who rose to fame in the 1970s, in the television biopic Rated X (directed by Emilio, who costarred as Mitchell’s brother Jim).

Starring roles on TV: Spin City, Two and a Half Men, and Anger Management

In 2000 Sheen was cast in the television series Spin City after Michael J. Fox left the show to focus on his health, having been diagnosed in 1991 with Parkinson disease. The series ran until 2002, and that same year Sheen won a Golden Globe Award for best actor in a comedy series.

The following year Sheen began starring in a new sitcom, Two and a Half Men, with Jon Cryer. For eight seasons Sheen played Charlie Harper, a bad-boy advertising jingle writer who refuses to settle down, a role that earned him four Emmy Award nominations and two Golden Globe nominations. By 2008 he was the highest-paid scripted actor on TV, earning more than $800,000 per episode. Two years later he was making $1.8 million per episode.

In January 2011 Two and Half Men went on hiatus while Sheen entered a rehabilitation program for substance use. The following month Sheen called into The Alex Jones Show and referred to Chuck Lorre, cocreator of Two and a Half Men, as “a clown” and ranted against women and Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). He followed this up with an interview with TMZ, in which he denounced Lorre as “a stupid, stupid little man” and said “I own him.” In both interviews he made anti-Semitic remarks about Lorre. As a result of his statements, the rest of the season of Two and a Half Men was canceled. Sheen was fired from the show and replaced by Ashton Kutcher.

In the meantime, Sheen appeared in the films Scary Movie 3 (2003), Scary Movie 4 (2006), and Scary Movie V (2013) and reprised his role as Bud Fox in a brief scene in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010). In 2012 he returned to sitcoms with Anger Management. His other TV work has included episodes of #Cybriety (2015) and Typical Rick (2017), and his later films include Mad Families and 9/11 (both 2017).

In 2023 Lorre said that he had mended his relationship with Sheen. That year Sheen appeared in two episodes of Lorre’s show Bookie, starring comedian Sebastian Maniscalco.

Health and legal issues

Sheen has had many public struggles with drug and alcohol use, having first entered a rehab program for alcohol addiction in 1990. In 1998 he was hospitalized after overdosing on cocaine and suffering a stroke; he was in and out of rehab throughout the year.

In 2011, after the eighth season of Two and a Half Men was canceled, Sheen gave a series of erratic interviews in which he further criticized AA, claimed to have cured himself of his addictions, and defended his past drug binges. In one interview he said that the AA manual was “written for normal people, people that aren’t special, people that don’t have tiger blood, you know, Adonis DNA.” When asked by a reporter if he was “bipolar,” he responded that he was “bi-winning” and repeatedly used the term winning to describe his life.

Sheen’s struggles with addiction often were accompanied by legal issues and controversies regarding his relationships with women, including reports by several women that he had been abusive to them. In 1995 he testified at the tax evasion trial of Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss, admitting to having been one of her clients to the tune of some $50,000.

In 2015 Sheen announced that he was HIV-positive, stating that he had been diagnosed four years earlier. He explained that he was coming forward after having been threatened with blackmail by acquaintances planning to expose his diagnosis. Immediately, Sheen’s announcement led to a significant spike in Google searches for terms such as HIV, condom, HIV symptoms, and HIV testing and in sales of HIV test kits in the United States, a phenomenon that was dubbed “the Charlie Sheen effect.”

In December 2023 Sheen told People magazine that he had quit drinking in 2017 and had quit using drugs before he stopped drinking. He marked six years of sobriety in January 2024.

Other ventures and personal life

Sheen has three daughters and twin sons. His marriages to model Donna Peele in 1995, actress Denise Richards in 2002, and real estate investor Brooke Mueller in 2008 all ended in divorce (1996, 2006, and 2011, respectively). He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1994. He has self-published a book of poetry, A Peace of My Mind (1990), and in 2006 he launched a short-lived clothing line for children called Sheen Kidz. In 2011 he did a “comedy” tour of the United States called “My Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat Is Not an Option.” Reportedly, audiences greeted him with standing ovations as well as boos and heckles throughout the run.

In 2021 Sheen told Yahoo! Entertainment that his behavior back in 2011, surrounding his Two and Half Men exit, had been “desperately juvenile.” He also noted the “ocean of stress” he was under at the time, saying, “I had four children and went through two divorces in and around trying to navigate the landscape of being on the most popular show in the known universe, so it was a lot.”

René Ostberg