• Date of Birth: January 03, 1956
  • Place of Birth: Peekskill, New York
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Mel Gibson Biography

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Mel Gibson
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Mel Gibson mini-bio: Mel Columcille Gerard Gibson is an Academy Award-winning American-born, Australian-raised actor, director, and producer. After establishing himself as a household name with the Mad Max and Lethal Weapon series, Gibson went on to direct and star in 1993's The Man Without a Face and 1995's Academy Award-winning Braveheart. Gibson's direction of Braveheart made him only the sixth actor-turned-filmmaker to garner an Oscar for Best Director. In 2004, he directed and produced The Passion of the Christ, a blockbuster movie that sparked a great deal of controversy. He was also the first person ever awarded People magazine's "Sexiest Man Alive".



Though introduced to American audiences as Australian, the strikingly handsome, blue-eyed Mel Gibson actually hailed from Peekskill, New York. (He and his family had emigrated Down Under in 1968 at the height of the Vietnam War.) After a season onstage with Sydney's South Australian Theatre Company where he portrayed both Oedipus and Henry IV, he made his name as the leather-clad, post-apocalyptic action hero of George Miller's "Mad Max" and in the radically different "Tim" (both 1979), for which he picked up his first of two Australian Film Institute Awards as Best Actor, playing a retarded handyman in love with Piper Laurie. Peter Weir's World War I drama "Gallipoli" and "Mad Max 2" (both 1981), Miller's transcendent follow-up to "Mad Max" (released in the USA as "The Road Warrior" since American audiences knew nothing of the barely-released earlier movie), established Gibson as an international star. "The Year of Living Dangerously" (1982), Weir's film about the political upheavals of 1960s Indonesia, gave him his first romantic lead opposite Sigourney Weaver and launched him as a sex symbol.
After a turn as a reluctantly mutinous Fletcher Christian opposite Anthony Hopkins' Captain Bligh in "The Bounty", Gibson made an inauspicious American debut in "The River" (both 1984), playing a character so coldly stubborn that few could empathize. The well-made but gloomy "Mrs. Soffel" (also 1984) followed quickly before he returned to Australia to wrap up the "Mad Max" series with "Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome" (1985), a cumbersome satire with less action, a bigger budget, Tina Turner and Max, mostly on foot, looking like a wandering prophet. Gibson then took two years off to concentrate on his family, returning to the screen in "Lethal Weapon" (1987), for which he created perhaps his most popular character, Martin Riggs, an explosive homicide cop paired with the long-suffering Danny Glover. The film propelled Gibson to superstardom, spawned three sequels (to date) and allowed him to incorporate his innate playfulness as part of an unusually rich characterization for a modern action hero. Called at various times "practical joker", "eternal adolescent" and "fun-loving fourth Stooge", Gibson has remained a "regular guy" who doesn't take himself or his work too seriously and consistently comes across as relaxed and natural.
Gibson sandwiched the meandering "Tequila Sunrise" (1988) and even more disappointing "Bird on a Wire" (1990) around a blockbuster "Lethal Weapon 2" (1989), and his patented swagger could not save the alleged action-comedy "Air America" (1990) from the inadequacy of its script. Next, in a surprising career move, he opted to take his shot at Shakespeare's Melancholy Dane in Franco Zeffirelli's "Hamlet" (1990). While the film was problematic, Gibson turned in a finely rendered portrait of the famed prince in the first project produced by his Icon Productions. He continued in a more sentimental vein with the sudsy "Forever Young" (1992), scored another huge hit with "Lethal Weapon 3" (1993), then made his directorial debut with "The Man Without a Face" (1993), a drama in which he hid his good looks behind the heavy makeup of a burn victim. After this mildly popular effort, Gibson returned to rowdy commercial fare with "Maverick" (1994), teaming for a fourth time with "Lethal Weapon" director Richard Donner for a 90s adaptation of the 60s TV Western-comedy series, which shrewdly parlayed his dashing rogue qualities into more box-office bliss.Gibson returned to the director's chair for "Braveheart" (1995), a project far bigger than any with which he had been previously involved in any capacity. Clad in a kilt, sporting blue war paint and wielding a big sword, Gibson starred as Sir William Wallace, a 13th-century Scottish nobleman persecuted for his efforts to free Scotland from English rule. Wags dubbed the film "Mad Mac", but the Academy deemed it worthy, voting it five awards including Best Picture and honoring Gibson as Best Director. Later that same year, in addition to providing the speaking voice for John Smith in Disney's "Pocahontas, Gibson made his screen singing debut. His collaboration with Ron Howard, "Ransom" (1996), another box-office hit that earned $35 million its first week, preceded "Conspiracy Theory" (1997), his fifth film with Donner and a surprising commercial dud compared to their previous work, especially with Julia Roberts starring opposite Gibson. The actor-director pair rebounded with "Lethal Weapon 4" (1998), its healthy box office reaffirming Riggs-Murtaugh (in reportedly their last outing) as a bankable team.
Gibson next starred as a murderous thief bent on getting his "Payback" (1999), a loose reworking of the same Donald Westlake novel that had inspired John Boorman's 1967 classic thriller "Point Blank". Playing to Gibson's strengths, the urban Western veered problematically from dark and sinister to comic and whimsical but still managed a respectable box office. His star power could not make Wim Wenders' "The Million Dollar Hotel" (2000) a mainstream success, and though the director's visual skills were on display, the underdeveloped, not very interesting story made it a tough sell at the art-houses. Gibson then joined "popcorn" specialists Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich for Emmerich's Revolutionary War drama "The Patriot" (also 2000), scripted by Robert Rodat. Essentially a Western, "The Patriot" cast him as a retired "gunslinger, still spooked by his memories of the French and Indian War, who clings fast to his pacifism until his son falls into enemy hands, triggering his course of revenge. After voicing Rocky the Rooster in the animated "Chicken Run", a sort of feathered "Great Escape, he rounded out the busy year as star of Nancy Meyers' romantic comedy "What Women Want" (both 2000).
Aside from making Gibson vehicles, his Icon Productions has produced projects like the Beethoven biopic "Immortal Beloved" (1994, directed by Bernard Rose), the remake of "Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina" (1997, also helmed by Rose), the black comedy "Ordinary Decent Criminals" (a fictionalized version of the life of Irish thief Martin Cahill) and the above average ABC biopic "The Three Stooges" (both 2000). In 2002, Gibson appeared in the war film "We Were Soldiers," directed by Gibson's "Braveheart" scribe Randall Wallace and in "Signs," the much anticipated M. Night Shyamalan movie about crop circles. The actor was almost unrecognizable behind wig of thinning hair and bulbous prosthetics in the 2003 film adaptation of Dennis Potter's acclaimed "The Singing Detective," and while the film did not burn up the box office reports Gibson, who also produced, earned personal kudos for employing his old "Air America" co-star Robert Downey, Jr., to play the lead, despite Downey's prior difficulties with drug arrests.
Gibson next ignited a wildfire of controversy with his third directorial effort "The Passion of the Christ" (2004), a hard-hitting, highly bloody depiction of the Gospels in which Gibsona devout Catholic who was inspired to make the film after struggling with his own personal demonswanted to illustrate the severe suffering and selfless sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Studios were reluctant to back the project, not for its explicit religious views, but because he wanted to film Passion in the original Aramaic spoken at the time of Christ, forcing Gibson to pony up $20 million of his own money to finance the film. Long before it was released, Passion came under intense scrutiny from some religious groups and was criticized early on for intimations of anti-Semitism in the way Jews were shown to contribute to Jesus' persecutionan element that was not aided by some injudicious, intolerant-sounding comments made by Gibson's father, Hutton, who had said publicly that the Holocaust was logistically impossible. Critics were polarized by the film, many citing the violence and gore as excessive, while others praised Gibson's unflinching portrayal. With interest in the controversial film at a fever pitch when in opened, "The Passion of the Christ" debuted to box office blockbuster-sized grosses, thanks to the legions of true believers who boarded church busses and flocked to theaters in droves.The Passion of the Christ became a runaway sensationand perhaps the most profitable independent film of all timetaking in over $370 million in domestic box office and putting the director into the enviable position being able to make anything he wanted for his next project. Some hoped that he would return to Braveheart territory, but Gibson instead chose to direct Apocalypto (2006), a sprawling and rather bizarre-looking film set in the ancient Maya civilization that focused on a young mans perilous journey into a world ruled by fear and oppression where a harrowing end awaits him. Details about the story remained under tight wraps, though it became known that Gibson shot the entire film in the obscure Mayan language, again risking the alienation of American theatergoers impatient with reading subtitles. Gibson also shot the film with unknown actors, adding further complications to an already tricky release for Disney. But little did the distributor know what lay ahead.
On July 28, 2006, Gibson was pulled over in his Lexus on the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, CA for doing 87 mph in a 45 mph zone. The police conducted a roadside sobriety test, including a breathalyzer that indicated a blood-alcohol level of 0.12well over Californias 0.08 limit. Cuffed and stuffed for drunk driving, Gibson railed against the arresting officers, one of whom the actor believed was Jewish, spouting anti-Semitic slurs and blaming Jews for all the wars in the world. Back in jail, a belligerent Gibson continued his racist rants while trying to urinate in his cell and demeaning a female officer by calling her sugar tits. Released on $5000 bond, Gibson was assailed from all corners in the media once word spread of the incident on the Internet. Gibson blamed his outburst on a relapse into alcoholismhe had publicly admitted problems with booze and drugs in the past. He later released a statement through his publicist that began: I acted like a person completely out of control when I was arrested and said things that I do not believe to be true and which are despicable. Many, particularly in Hollywood, felt his words were disingenuous, though Disneys President of Production, Oren Aviv, himself Jewish, accepted Gibsons apology. Meanwhile, Gibson went straight into rehab and after nearly three months of sobriety, he gave his first interview with ABCs Diane Sawyer, who prodded a humbled Gibson about what happened that evening. Though he never claimed to be a racist, Gibson did confirm that his remarks were anti-Semitic. The ultimate judge of public disapproval over his outburst remained to be seen with the release of Apocalypto, which was released in early December 2006.

VITAL STATS

Mel Gibson Information: One of Gibson's younger brother Donal is also an actor.
Mel Gibson is probablly most famous but Donal is brother is been in many films aswell.
Eye color: Blue eyes
Height: 5' 9" (1.75 m)
Nickname(s):
Notable feature(s):Has a big smile and has black hair
Education:
Gibson was educated by members of the Congregation of Christian Brothers at St Leo's Catholic College in Wahroonga, New South Wales, during his high-school years.

Mel studied at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, performing at the National Institute of Dramatic Arts
Family: Mel is the sixth of eleven children, and the second son of Hutton Gibson and Irish-born Anne Reilly Gibson. His paternal grandmother was the Australian Opera Soprano, Eva Mylott (1875–1920).

One of Gibson's younger brothers, Donal, is also an actor.

They have one daughter, six sons, and one grandchild. Their seven children are Hannah (born 1980), twins Edward and Christian (born 1982), William (born 1985), Louis (born 1988), Milo (born 1990), and Thomas (born 1999).
Resides in:malibu,sydney,fiji,costa rica
Religious affiliations:Traditionalist Catholic
Political affiliation: Gibson has been called everything from “ultraconservative” to “politically very liberal” by acquaintance William Fulco. Although he has denied that he is a Republican.
Personal interests/hobbies:is a big fan of the three stooges
Charities/Causes:he has donated to the restoration of renaissance artwork,giving money to Nida

he gave money to the rotary club in mexico to build houses for the poor

he assists member in the hollywood community for substance abuse

he donated $500.000 to the el mirador basin project to protect the last tract of virgin rain forest in central america

he donated to a local charity for children with chronic and terminal illnesses & to the Kidney Foundation of Fiji.
Other:Mel Gibson has eclectic tastes in music and is particularly fond of Italian Opera.

He is a lover of Italian Renaissance artwork and is a great admirer of the 17th century artist Michelangelo Merisi Da Caravaggio.



Comments

  • senge2002
    A true Braveheart with a Passion to succeed!
    posted 16 days ago
  • jacklyn1967
    love you mel .From cape breton island . east from canada .can you come down .everyone loves you and your movies. can't wait to see your new one in a few months.
    posted 17 days ago
  • cindylistenup
    hi mel, how are you doing? you are one of my favorite actors. I enjoy watching all your movies
    posted 26 days ago
  • sherysparaw
    he is simply a genious.. love all of his variting movies, and love his smile and his blue eyes.. god bless him!!
    posted 49 days ago
  • juskano
    hi just to say he is the best
    posted 59 days ago
  • jaafaruaumaru
    The most brave actor ever, you know what? but you are not a religious.
    posted 61 days ago
  • tinhth2006
    :)
    posted 69 days ago
  • mulunhe
    i like this man
    posted 88 days ago
  • jefir1962
    your are the best...baby.....
    posted 96 days ago
  • patriciacoffin
    hello mr gibson
    how is your weekend going s for me itz going all gud and gibson gud work on the movie there are awsome iight enjoy the rest of the week luv ya and gud wishes on more of your wk iight toodles
    posted 103 days ago

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Mel Gibson Trivia

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