Actor, director, producer. Born on January 3, 1956, in
Peekskill, New York. Gibson was the sixth of 11 children born to
Hutton and Ann Gibson, who were Roman Catholics of Irish
descent. Shortly after the onset of the Vietnam War, Hutton
Gibson relocated his family to Australia for fear that his sons
would be drafted into battle. Mel spent the remainder of his
childhood in Sydney, where he attended an all-boys Catholic high
school.
After Gibson’s high school graduation, he considered becoming a
chef or journalist. However, when his sister submitted an
application on his behalf to The National Institute of Dramatic
Art in Sydney, he decided to audition. Without any prior acting
experience, he was accepted and enrolled in the drama school.
While there, he made his stage debut in a production of Romeo
and Juliet, and his screen debut in the low-budget film Summer
City (1977). Upon his graduation that year, Gibson joined the
Southern Australian Theater Company, where he appeared in the
title roles of classical productions, such as Oedipus and Henry
IV.
After conquering the stage, Gibson tried his hand at television,
landing his first role on the Australian series The Sullivans.
In 1979, Gibson graduated to mainstream cinema with his role as
a futuristic warrior in Mad Max, and as a mentally retarded man
in love with Piper Laurie in Tim, for which he earned his first
Australian Film Institute (AFI) Award for Best Actor.
Furthermore, Mad Max became the biggest commercial success of
any Australian film, grossing over $100 million worldwide.
Gibson received his second AFI Award for Best Actor for his
performance as a patriotic idealist in Peter Weir’s World War I
drama Gallipoli (1981). Later that year, he reprised his role as
the leather-clad hero in Mad Max 2 (1981). The film was released
in the U.S. as The Road Warrior in 1982, and it’s success
established Gibson as an international star. His second
collaboration with Weir, The Year of Living Dangerously (1982),
featured the actor in his first romantic lead alongside
Sigourney Weaver.
Gibson’s American film debut in The River (1984) was considered
a success. The film earned four Oscar nominations, including a
Best Actress nod for Sissy Spacek. In 1985, he returned to
Australia to complete the Mad Max trilogy in the less impressive
Mad Max: Beyond the Thunderdome, which co-starred singer Tina
Turner. Later that year, Gibson’s popularity was confirmed when
he was featured on the cover of People magazine as the first
ever “Sexiest Man Alive.”
After a brief hiatus, Gibson returned to the screen with the
blockbuster hit Lethal Weapon (1987), playing volatile cop,
Martin Riggs, opposite Danny Glover’s by-the-book character,
Roger Murtaugh. The success of Lethal Weapon inspired three
sequels - Lethal Weapon 2 (1989), Lethal Weapon 3 (1992), and
Lethal Weapon 4 (1998), all of which featured Glover and Gibson
in their respective roles as good cop and bad cop.
In Franco Zeffirelli’s Hamlet (1990), Gibson gave a notable
performance as the tormented prince
In addition, Hamlet was the first film produced by Gibson’s
newly formed production company, Icon productions. Other
productions by Icon included the Beethoven biopic Immortal
Beloved (1994), and the 1997 remake of Leo Tolstoy’s Anna
Karenia.
In the early ‘90s, Gibson appeared in a few poorly received
films, including Air America (1990) and the sappy Forever Young
(1992). He made his feature directorial debut with the 1993
tearjerker The Man Without a Face, in which he also played a
severely disfigured burn victim.
In 1995, Gibson released his most passionate project to date,
directing and starring as the 13th century Scottish nobleman,
Sir William Wallace, in the medieval epic Braveheart. The film
triumphed at the Oscars, winning top honors in five categories,
including Best Picture and Best Director. Gibson diversified his
range of characters later the same year, when he provided the
voice of John Smith in Disney’s Pocahontas (1995).
In the late ‘90’s, Gibson starred in a handful of crime
thrillers, including 1996’s Ransom (with Renee Russo and Gary
Sinise), 1997’s Conspiracy Theory (with Julia Roberts), and the
independent film Payback (1999). In 2000, he headlined the
highly anticipated war saga The Patriot, in which he played a
reluctant hero during the American Revolution. Also that year,
he starred in the romantic comedy What Women Want, costarring
Helen Hunt, Lauren Holly, and Bette Midler. In 2002, Gibson
headlined another box-office hit, M. Night Shyamalan's Signs,
where he plays a rural Pennsylvania farmer whose life takes a
drastic turn when 500-foot crop circles appear in his
cornfields.
Gibson's next project puts him back in the director's chair in
an ambitious film about the final 12 hours of Jesus' life
entitled The Passion of the Christ. He has also signed on for
the fourth installment of the Mad Max franchise, Fury Road.
In 1980, Gibson married Robyn Moore. They have seven children
and recently celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary.
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