A Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright (for 1979's Buried Child), an Oscar-nominated actor, and a director and screenwriter to boot, multi-talented Sam Shepard has made a career of plumbing the darker depths of middle-American rural sensibilities and Western myths. The son of a military man, he was born Samuel Shepard Rogers on November 3, 1943, in Fort Sheridan, IL. Following a peripatetic childhood, part of which was spent on a farm, Shepard left home in late adolescence to move to New York City, where by the age of 20, he already had two plays produced.
As a playwright, Shepard went on to win a number of Obies for such dramas as Curse of the Starving Class (1977), which he made into a film in 1994, and True West (aired on PBS in 1986). As an actor, the lanky and handsome Shepard made his feature film debut with a small role in
Bronco Bullfrog (1969) and didn't resurface again until
Bob Dylan's disastrous
Renaldo and Clara (1978). The film followed Shepard's residence in London during the early '70s, where he worked on-stage as an actor and director when not playing drums for his band, The Holy Modal Rounders, which had performed as part of Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue in 1975. Also in 1978, Shepard made a big impression playing a wealthy landowner in
Terrence Malick's
Days of Heaven, but it was not until he received a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for playing astronaut Chuck Yeager in
The Right Stuff (1983) that he became a well-known actor. Following this success, he went on to specialize in playing drifters, cowboys, con artists, and eccentric characters with only the occasional leading role. Some of his more notable work included
Paris, Texas (1984), which he also wrote;
Fool For Love (1985), which was adapted from his play of the same name;
Baby Boom (1987),
Steel Magnolias (1989), and
The Pelican Brief (1993). In addition to acting and writing, Shepard has also directed: in 1988, he made his debut with
Far North, a film he wrote especially for his off-screen leading lady,
Jessica Lange, with whom he has acted in
Frances (1982),
Country (1984), and
Crimes of the Heart (1986).
In 1999, Shepard could be seen on both the big and small screen. He appeared in
Snow Falling on Cedars and
Dash and Lilly, a made-for-TV movie for which he won an Emmy nomination in the role of the titular Dashiell Hammett. In addition, he also lent his writing skills to
Simpatico, a
Nick Nolte vehicle about friendship and loss adapted from Shepard's play of the same name.