Keanu Charles Reeves was born September 2, 1964 in Beirut, Lebanon,
to Samuel Nowlin Reeves (half-Hawaiian, half-Chinese) and Patric Taylor (English).
There was a move to Australia for a year where his first sister Kim was born in
1966. A second (half) sister, Karina, was born in 1976. Keanu (Key-ah-nu) means
"cool breeze over the mountains" in Hawaiian (For those who wish to get technical,
the translation is relative. Hawaiian is actually a picture language, and in many
cases deals with concepts or ideas more than just specific words. "Keanu" -- what
a concept!) After their divorce, Patric
and Samuel went their separate ways: Patric and the two kids to New York City,
and Samuel to Hawaii. Keanu visited his father in Hawaii on occasion until he
was thirteen. That was the last time Keanu saw him. Samuel was sentenced in 1994
to ten years in prison for drug possession. He was paroled in mid-1996. They do
not maintain contact with each other. In
New York, Patric met and married director Paul Aaron. They moved to Toronto, and
took up Canadian citizenship (which Keanu still retains), but split up less than
a year later. Keanu described himself
as a "middle-class white boy. A bourgeois, middle-class white boy with an absent
father, a strong-willed mother, and two beautiful younger sisters." Patric
switched partners a few times more and moved as often. Her third husband was rock
promoter Robert Miller (with whom she had Karina), and her fourth was Jack Bond,
whom she divorced in 1994. Keanu attended
Jesse Ketchum Public School in Toronto from kindergarten through the eighth grade,
and attended four high schools (including De La Salle College and the Toronto
School for the Performing Arts) before dropping out completely at age 17.
Keanu took on lots of different jobs, including
sharpening skates at an ice rink shop (he's an avid hockey player), landscaping,
and making pasta (and managing the place to boot!). Then came some stage work
(most notably - and notoriously - Wolfboy in 1984, his professional stage
debut) and some bit parts on TV. His motion picture debut was in Dream To Believe
in Canada but it [reportedly] was the 1986 TV movie Under the Influence
that earned him his SAG union card. Keanu's
first big feature film debut in a US film was in Youngblood in which he
had a small part. Keanu hit the road for
Hollywood in 1986 with $3,000, an old Volvo, and his stepfather Paul Aaron's address.
A few name changes followed as "Keanu" was considered by his manager to be too
exotic. They settled on K.C. Reeves, but it was short-lived. Keanu it was, and
Keanu it was going to be. Keanu soon landed
River's Edge, arguably one of his best roles ever. A string of movies followed
as the troubled (or misfit) teen. His parts continued to grow, and then he started
attracting the eye of more mainstream directors. He landed films like Dangerous
Liaisons, Bram Stoker's Dracula, Much Ado About Nothing, and Little Buddha.
But it was 1994's Speed that really made
everyone stand up and notice. Perhaps not so much for Keanu's acting, but the
fact that this was his first mega-hit, grossing nearly $300 million at the box
office (world-wide). Figures like that will catch the eye of any studio executive,
and Keanu was soon reportedly being offered sums up to $7 million for his services.
With Johnny Mnemonic and A Walk in
the Clouds already in the can, those offers were put on hold or turned down
so that Keanu could return to Canada and fulfill a dream of playing the title
role in Hamlet on stage. Reviews were mixed, but in general reviewers were
kind and some were enthusiastic. More
films followed: Feeling Minnesota, Chain Reaction and The Last Time
I Committed Suicide, which did moderately at the box office. Keanu
was then offered the lead in the sequel to Speed, entitled Speed II.
But he felt the script was not good and he turned it down. Everyone accused Keanu
of making a horrible mistake; and that he should have done the role. 20th Century
Fox, not wishing to disclose the real reason Keanu turned it down (bad script),
gave out a press release saying that Keanu turned it down so he could tour with
his band, Dogstar. In fact, that was not true. Keanu was offered a better script
(Devil's Advocate) and he filmed that at the same time as the disastrous
Speed II was filmed. Devil's Advocate was a big hit and Speed
II sunk at the box office. Suddenly critics were saying how smart Keanu was
for turning down Speed II. The
it was off to Australia to film The Matrix. No one knew what to expect
from this, and when it opened in the spring of 1999 it was a huge blockbuster,
and brought Keanu back front and center in the public eye and catapulted him into
the top ranks of money earners with an asking salary of $20 million per picture.
In the summer of 1999 Keanu filmed The Replacements, and finished out the
year with The Watcher. Both of those pictures were released in the year
2000. In 2000, Keanu went on to film three
more films, The Gift, Sweet November, and Hardball.
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