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| Sal Mineo Biography and Filmography |
Sal Mineo
Birthday: January 10, 1939
Birth Place: The Bronx, New York, USA
Height: 5' 6"
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Below
is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in)
for Sal Mineo.
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We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have. |
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| Biography |
Actor Sal Mineo enjoyed great success as a teen idol during the late '50s, shooting to fame opposite James Dean in the perennial Rebel Without a Cause. Born January 10, 1939, in the Bronx, NY, Mineo was an incorrigible youth, tossed out of parochial school and by age eight a member of a street gang. In an attempt to reform her son, his mother enrolled him in dancing school; still, he persisted in running wild until he was arrested for robbery in 1949. Given the choice between juvenile confinement or professional acting school, Mineo chose the latter. Two years later, he appeared on Broadway in Tennessee Williams' The Rose Tattoo, followed by a prominent role in The King and I opposite Yul Brynner. He made his film debut in 1955's Six Bridges to Cross, followed by the Charlton Heston vehicle The Private War of Major Benson. Mineo closed out the year portraying the ill-fated Plato in the Nicholas Ray classic Rebel Without a Cause; diminutive and sad-eyed, his performance perfectly captured the film's themes of youthful desperation, and struck a chord with audiences as well as critics, earning him a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination. For the remainder of the decade, Mineo remained a high-profile screen presence, co-starring in films including 1956's Giant and Somebody up There Likes Me. In 1957, he also attempted to mount a career as a pop singer, scoring a pair of Top 40 hits with "Start Movin' (In My Direction)" and "Lasting Love." In 1959, Mineo starred as the titular jazz drummer in the film biography The Gene Krupa Story, and a year later earned a second Oscar nomination for his work in Exodus. In 1962, he co-starred in The Longest Day, but then the offers stopped coming in. Apart from 1965's The Greatest Story Ever Told, the majority of his subsequent projects were low-budget offerings, and eventually he turned almost exclusively to television. In an attempt to shed his youthful image, Mineo also returned to theater to direct the 1969 drama Fortune and Men's Eyes, which enjoyed successful runs on both coasts. He still continued acting, but by the time of 1971's Escape From the Planet of the Apes, he had literally been reduced to playing a monkey; it was his last major screen appearance. Mineo's life came to a tragic end on the night of February 12, 1976, when he was brutally stabbed on the streets of West Hollywood; he was only 37 years old, and virtually broke at the time of his death. His murderer received a sentence of life imprisonment three years later. |
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| Filmography |
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| Trivia |
- Brother of actor Michael Mineo.
- In 1957 he tried to start a career as a Rock 'N' Roll singer, he released two singles. The first was Start Movin' (In My Direction), it stayed in the USA top 40 for 13 weeks and reached the no. 9 position. The second was Lasting Love, that stayed in for 3 weeks and reached no. 27. The singles were followed up by an album on the Epic label. In the UK the records were released on the Philips label.
- Grew up on East 213th Street in the Olinville section of the Bronx.
- Once hung out with the Hell's Angels motorcycle group.
- In 1957, at the height of Mineo's fame, Bob Hope announced on a TV special that all public schools in Brooklyn would be closed the following day in honor of Sal Mineo's birthday. Hope meant this as a joke. Many youngsters in Brooklyn took it seriously, and there was record absenteeism in the borough's public schools the following day. Hope ultimately issued a public retraction and urged kids to stay in school.
- Donated the drum he used in "The Gene Krupa Story" to another teen idol, David Cassidy, the day after a dinner with him and his father, Jack Cassidy. David was only 13 when he received that great gift.
- In the mid-1960s, he was engaged to British actress Jill Haworth.
- Many bizarre rumors floated around about his violent murder, but when his killer, Lionel Ray Williams, was caught, he turned out to be a drug-addled 17 year old who had no idea who Sal Mineo was and was only interested in the money Mineo had on him.
- He was frequently cast as humorless, jittery youth whose loneliness turns violent when cornered, but in reality, he was known for his easy-going, extroverted ways and his ability to see the positive and the humor in almost any situation.
- John Lennon once put up the reward money to find Mineo's killer.
- Lionel Ray Williams was convicted of his murder in 1979 and paroled in 1990.
- Portrayed by Felix Quinonez in James Dean: Race with Destiny (1997) (TV) and by Paul Pantano in The Mystery of Natalie Wood (2004) (TV).
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