~ Steve McQueen
Tough-guy actor Terrence Steve McQueen (1930–1980) became one of Hollywood’s most magnetic screen presences. A cool loner with piercing blue eyes and quiet intensity, he carried an independence audiences instantly recognized.
Born in Beech Grove, Indiana, McQueen later reflected on his upbringing: “I'm out of the Midwest. It was a good place to come from. It gives you a sense of right or wrong and fairness, something our society often forgets.”
Before acting, McQueen’s path was anything but smooth. He spent time in reform school and worked as a Marine, lumberjack, encyclopedia salesman, and bartender before discovering the stage.
In 1958 he landed the lead role in the cult science-fiction film The Blob, soon followed by the television series Wanted: Dead or Alive, which helped launch his career.
By the 1960s he had become the highest-paid actor in Hollywood. His role as a San Francisco detective in Bullitt (1968) unleashed one of cinema’s most legendary car chases.
On screen he carried a dangerous edge and effortless charisma. He was unforgettable in Baby, the Rain Must Fall and The Cincinnati Kid, and received an Academy Award nomination for The Sand Pebbles (1966).
An uncompromising antihero with a clipped voice and controlled movements, McQueen trained in martial arts with Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris.
A motorcycle-racing enthusiast who performed many of his own stunts, he once explained, “Acting is like racing. You need the same concentration. You have to reach inside yourself and bring forth broken glass.”
A chain smoker, McQueen later developed lung cancer and mesothelioma. He died too young while seeking treatment in Juárez, Mexico.
Asked once about his career, McQueen admitted with characteristic honesty, “I'm not sure that acting is something for a grown man to be doing.”
Yet on screen, his fearless passion burned across the filmmaking universe like the trail of a shooting star.
Live for yourself.