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Sean Astin
Sean Astin: Biography
 Sean
Patrick Astin was born on February 25, 1971 to actors John Astin and Patty
Duke. He was their first child, and in 1973 a second addition to the family
came along when Mackenzie, Sean's only full brother, was born. Sean also
has three older half brothers, David, Allen and Tom, from his father's
previous marriage. From a very young age Sean was exposed to the world
of acting, which he loved. Sean Astin had starred in ten movies, directed
a short film, and formed his own production company all before his 21st
birthday. The elder son of actress Patty Duke and actor/director John
Astin, he knew the hazards of Hollywood life: As a popular child star,
Astin refrained from drinking, drugs, and narcissism. He juggled acting
with attending classes at Crossroads High School for the Arts and Los
Angeles Valley College, eventually graduating cum laude from the University
of California at Los Angeles with dual degrees in History and American
Literature and Culture. When his younger brother, fellow kid actor Mackenzie
Astin, temporarily fled Los Angeles to pursue journalism, Astin doggedly
remained in town -- he once half-heartedly considered a law career, but
could never part with being an entertainer.
Sean Astin: Career
 His
famous parents actively supported his childhood ambition to become an
actor, and Astin was cast in TV specials, movies, and even series until
1983. Barely a year later, screenwriter Steven Spielberg handpicked the
13-year-old Astin to star as Michael "Mikey" Walsh in Richard Donner's
children's adventure film The Goonies (1985). Astin earned his first Young
Artist Award for his work on the film and went on to act in a host of
teen pictures. He headlined the Disney Channel television movie The B.R.A.T.
Patrol (1986), joined Kevin Bacon for the wilderness adventure White Water
Summer (1987), and appeared with Dudley Moore and Kirk Cameron in the
comedy Like Father, Like Son (1987). In 1988, Astin directed his first
short film, a Vietnam picture about the unexpected relationship between
an American GI and a Viet Cong soldier titled On My Honor. Astin's own
production company, Lava Entertainment, financed the film. While continuing
to develop projects through Lava Entertainment, Astin starred with Dermot
Mulroney in 1989's Staying Together. He won his second Young Artist Award
for his performance in the picture. Also in 1989, Astin portrayed the
teenage son of feuding couple Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas in Danny
DeVito's The War of the Roses. He finished off the '80s by enlisting in
the all-star cast of Michael Caton-Jones' World War II drama Memphis Belle
(1990). The film -- which also features Matthew Modine, Harry Connick
Jr., Billy Zane, and Eric Stoltz -- followed the crew of the Memphis Belle
bomber on their harrowing final run over Germany. Astin's stocky build
and comic timing lent well to his incarnation as the group's tail gunner,
Sergeant Richard "Rascal" Moore. When Astin initially lost the lead role
in his next picture, Toy Soldiers (1991), to Wil Wheaton, he treated the
film's director, Dan Petrie Jr., to a screening of Memphis Belle. Petrie
was so impressed by his work that he relegated Wheaton to a supporting
part and cast Astin as Toy Soldiers' hero, a rebellious student who saves
his prep school from South American terrorists. In the spring of 1992,
Astin starred with Pauly Shore and Brendan Fraser in Encino Man, a comedy
about two California high school students who discover a caveman. He then
reunited with Dermot Mulroney in the drama Where the Day Takes You (1992),
which also stars Will Smith, Christian Slater, Lara Flynn Boyle, and Ricki
Lake. 1993 saw Astin play the title character in Rudy, the memorable film
about a tenacious boy determined to play football for Notre Dame despite
the fact that he is too small. Football coaches around the United States
still show the film before games to inspire their players, and, to this
day, strangers still chant "Rudy! Rudy!" when they spot Astin on the street.
After filming Safe Passage (1994) with Susan Sarandon and Sam Shepard,
Astin appeared in the independent film The Low Life (1995), for which
he won the Best Actor Award at the 1995 Fort Lauderdale Film Festival.
That same year, he wrote, directed, and produced his second short film,
Kangaroo Court. The picture tells the story of a police officer who is
put on trial by an inner-city gang and stars Gregory Hines and Michael
O'Keefe. It earned Astin an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Film
(coincidently, John Astin was nominated in the same category for his film
Prelude in 1969). Astin continued to work steadily throughout the '90s.
In 1995, he starred in Showtime's adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut Jr.'s futuristic
short story Harrison Bergeron. In 1996, he made a cameo as a doomed soldier
in the first feature film to depict Desert Storm, Edward Zwick's Courage
Under Fire. In 1997, he directed and starred in an episode of HBO's Perversions
of Science called "Snap Ending" and was one of several narrators in the
Academy Award-winning Holocaust documentary The Long Way Home. In 1998,
Astin took a small role in Warren Beatty's Bulworth and began work on
a string of independent films -- including Boy Meets Girl (1998), Dish
Dogs (1998), Kimberly (1999), Deterrence (1999), and Icebreaker (1999).
The decade also brought changes to Astin's personal life. On July 11,
1992, he married Christine Astin (born Harrell) at Patty Duke's Idaho
farm. The couple met when she worked at Astin's talent agency and they
co-founded Lava Entertainment together. Then, in 1994, Astin underwent
DNA testing that revealed rock promoter Michael Tell to be his biological
father (Patty Duke and Tell had been briefly married before her engagement
to John Astin). Though the actor is friendly with Tell, he still considers
those who raised him to be his parents. Two years later, Astin and his
wife had their first child, Alexandra Louise, in November of 1996. In
the summer of 1999, Astin landed the coveted part of portly hobbit Samwise
"Sam" Gamgee in Peter Jackson's highly anticipated three-film adaptation
of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Auditions for the role
were held over several months in every English-speaking country in the
world. Astin's father had appeared in Jackson's horror film The Frighteners,
and the veteran actor's fondness for the director made Astin determined
to get the part. When he found that his only competition was an overweight
English thespian, Astin gained 30 pounds to secure the role. All three
installments of the trilogy -- The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), The
Two Towers (2002), and The Return of the King (2003) -- were filmed simultaneously
over an 18-month period in New Zealand.
Sean Astin: Films
 Click (2006),
Daddy Who? (2005), Elvis Has Left the Building (2005), Hercules (2005),
Slipstream (2005), Smile (2005), Bigger Than the Sky (2005), Balto 3:
Wings Of Change (2004), 50 First Dates (2004), Icebreaker (2003) ,The
Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003), The Final Hit (2002),
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002), The Lord of the Rings: The
Fellowship of the Ring (2001), Deterrence (2000), Dish Dogs (1998), Bulworth
(1998), Courage Under Fire (1996), The Low Life (1996), Kurt Vonnegut's
Harrison Bergeron (1995), Safe Passage (1994), Rudy (1993), Where the
Day Takes You (1992), Encino Man (1992), Toy Soldiers (1991), The Willies
(1990), Memphis Belle (1990), The War of the Roses (1989), Staying Together
(1989), Like Father, Like Son (1987), White Water Summer (1987), The Goonies
(1985), Please Don't Hit Me, Mom
Sean Astin's Photo Gallery
Sean Astin
 Sean Astin
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 Sean Astin
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 Sean Astin
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