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Eric Roberts

Eric Roberts

Born in Biloxi, MS Eric Anthony Roberts was the son of famed character actor Walter Roberts and his wife, acting teacher Betty Lou Motes. The oldest of three children, Roberts began his acting career at the tender age of five, working at the Actors and Writers Workshop, a local theater company founded by his father. Following his parents' divorce in 1972, Roberts went to live with his father in Atlanta, GA, while his two younger sisters, Julia and Lisa, went to live with their mother. After graduating from Grady High School in 1974, Roberts went to London where he studied drama at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. Returning to the U.S. two years later, Roberts continued his studies at the American Academy in New York. In 1976, at the age of 20, Roberts made his New York stage debut in playwright Thomas Babe's, "Rebel Women."After a brief stint on the daytime soap "Another World" (NBC, 1964-1999), Roberts made his auspicious feature debut in director Frank Pierson's "King of the Gypsies" (1978) - a star-studded tale about a splintering gypsy dynasty for which Roberts received a Golden Globe nomination. Roberts' burgeoning film career was temporarily sidelined after a serious 1980 car accident, but the actor made a full recovery a year later and rebounded with a gripping performance opposite Sissy Spacek in "Raggedy Man" (1981), a period romance directed by Michael Dinner. It was his next performance, however, as Paul Snider, the pathetic two-bit hustler turned cast-off boyfriend of Playmate-turned-movie starlet Dorothy Stratten in "Star 80" that really put him on Hollywood's radar. In addition to solidifying his rep as a young actor to watch, the role also earned Roberts his second Golden Globe nod.Not afraid to go over the top when the role called for it, Roberts gave an explosive performance in "The Pope of Greenwich Village" (1984), a gritty urban drama co-starring Mickey Rourke and Daryl Hannah. Roberts approach to acting was not universally adored, however. In 1985, for instance, Roberts received starkly opposite receptions for two different movies he starred in that year. The first was the underappreciated "Coca-Cola Kid," an offbeat comedy filmed in Australia. Cast as a wonky marketing genius named Becker, Roberts gave a broad performance that some critics found off-putting. On the other hand, when given the right vehicle, Roberts could be electrifying, as in the case of "Runaway Train" (1985), a low-budget action drama released the same year. Cast as the accomplice-sidekick of a notorious escaped con (Jon Voight), Roberts struck a locomotivated chord with audiences and reviewers alike. For his efforts, Roberts would go on to receive his first Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination.As the 1980s drew to a close, however, Roberts suffered the consequences of some questionable acting choices. Never one to turn his nose up at a project simply on the grounds of its budget - as "Runaway Train" demonstrated - Roberts signed on to a handful of cheap pix which he probably would have been better off ignoring. Among the worst of the worst was the ironically titled martial-arts themed drama "Best of the Best" (1989). Roberts would later candidly admit in a 1996 interview with Details, that his motive for signing on to such films was strictly financial in nature: "Up until the late '80s, I'd been so careful with my career that I only made a movie a year; sometimes every other year. But because of some bad investments, I was not a millionaire anymore. I decided the hell with it. So I started doing everything that was offered to me. I made a slew of B-movies, like 12 or 14, and some of them are pretty terrible."Roberts' downward career slide continued well into the 1990s - at precisely the same time that his younger sister, Julia Roberts, was ascending in Hollywood. Already estranged since their youth - primarily as a result of being split by their parents' divorce - sister Julia's stellar rise only served to increase the rift between the talented siblings. Ironically enough, two more members of the Roberts clan subsequently entered the family business - Eric's other younger sister, Lisa Roberts, and his own daughter, Emma Roberts - who was, ironically very close to Aunt Julia, despite her father's estrangement to his younger sister. Due to Roberts' willingness to appear in just about anything during this period, the actor's reputation continued to take further unfortunate blows. Apart from starring in a "Best of the Best" sequel in 1992, Roberts' most notable work that decade was probably in television. In 1996, Roberts starred in the expensive Fox reboot of the venerable BBC sci-fi serial "Doctor Who," before turning in a spectacular performance as Perry Smith in the TV remake of "In Cold Blood" (1996). In the late 1990s, Roberts even headlined his own crime drama series, the short-lived "C-16" (ABC, 1998-1999). With the dawn of the 2000's, Roberts' financial pinch seemed to have ended, leaving him free to take on more substantive material. Appreciating the relatively more stable environment of television, Roberts continued his efforts in that medium. In 2002, Roberts landed a three-year gig as a regular on the popular sitcom "Less Than Perfect" (ABC, 2002-06). The following year, Roberts appeared in a five-episode arc of the wildly successful live-action comic book series, "Heroes" (NBC, 2006-10). That same year, Roberts returned to the big screen, taking a supporting role in "D.O.A.: Dead or Alive" - the movie adaptation of the best selling video game series of the same name. Released in Australia in 2006, "Dead or Alive" had its stateside release in summer 2007.
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