Schwarzenegger
Arnold Schwarzennegger was born on July 30, 1947 in a little town called
Graz,
in the Styria province, of Austria. During his early childhood in Graz,
Austria,
Schwarzenegger was encouraged by his father to become involved
in athletics.
Schwarzenegger means black plowman in Deutsch. At age 15 he
discovered
weightlifting, which led to the title of Mr. Universe at age 20,
followed by an
unprecedented 13-world bodybuilding titles. His motion picture
career began in
1977 with his role in the critically acclaimed Pumping
Iron, a feature-length
documentary about the Mr. Universe competition, which
revealed his engaging
natural presence before the camera. Director Bob
Rafaelson immediately cast him
in a key role opposite Sally Field and Jeff
Bridges in Stay Hungry. His
performance garnered winning reviews and a Golden
Globe Award as "Best
Newcomer in Films." In 1978, Arnold put aside his
mantle as Mr. Universe to
pursue acting full-time. He starred with Kirk
Douglas and Ann-Margret in the
romantic action-comedy Western, The Villain,
and took the part of Mickey
Hargitay in the television movie The Jayne
Mansfield Story. Schwarzenegger made
his breakthrough role in director John
Milius' Conan the Barbarian, the
comic-book super hero of the mystical Dark
Ages. The film grossed over $100
million worldwide, spawned a popular sequel,
Conan the Destroyer, and earned
Schwarzenegger a devoted following. In
1983, soon after becoming a naturalized
citizen, Schwarzenegger took a chance
on a low-budget independent film by an
unknown director. James Cameron's
futuristic thriller The Terminator was a
runaway hit at the box office and
was cited by Time Magazine as "one of the
year's Ten Best Films." The success
of The Terminator placed Schwarzenegger
at the front rank of Hollywood stars.
Over the next few years, he became
virtually synonymous with the phrase
"action hero," largely due to the
phenomenal success of a series of
crowd-pleasing action adventure films:
Commando, Raw Deal, Predator, The
Running Man and Red Heat. In 1988,
Schwarzenegger realized yet another of
his goals as a film star when he
approached Ivan Reitman to showcase Arnold's
previously untapped talents as a
comic actor. The result was Twins, in which
Schwarzenegger starred with Danny
DeVito. The film's triumphant success
paved the way for the trio's reunion with
Junior. In 1990, Schwarzenegger
delivered a "one-two punch" with the
futuristic action-thriller Total Recall,
followed that Christmas by Ivan
Reitman's heartwarming comedy
Kindergarten Cop. His greatest commercial success
to date has been Terminator
2: Judgment Day, the big-budget sequel to his
sleeper hit, which earned more
than $506 million worldwide. The National
Association of Theater Owners
invented a new award to present him at the ShoWest
convention in February of
1993: "International Star of the Decade."
The following summer came Last
Action Hero, which grossed $168 million
worldwide. Arnold Schwarzenegger has
been active behind-the scenes of
movie-making since 1990, when he made his
directorial debut on The Switch, an
episode of the popular HBO Tales from the
Crypt. He also directed a remake of
the holiday classic Christmas in
Connecticut for Turner Network Television
(TNT), starring Dyan Cannon, Kris
Kristofferson and Tony Curtis. During
President George Bush's
administration he served as Chairman of the President's
Council on
Physical Fitness and Sports, and is the author of numerous books on
health
and fitness. Since 1979, he has served as the International
Weight
Training Coach for the Special Olympics. Beginning in 1991 he
became involved in
the Executive Commission of the Los Angeles inner city
Games, a mini Olympics
designed to help kids say "no" to drugs and violence
and
"yes" to fitness as a way of life. He sees athletics as a
positive
alternative to drugs for urban youth, a way to build self-esteem, a
way to learn
goal setting and build camaraderie in a clean lifestyle.
Schwarzenegger now
chairs the Governor's Council of Physical Fitness in the
state of California.
And is also chairman of the inner city Games
Foundation, a program that has
expanded to 10 cities and is continuing to
grow. In 1991 he received the Simon
Wiesenthal Center's National
Leadership Award for his support of the
organization's Holocaust studies. He
has produced bodybuilding competitions in
Columbus, Ohio for two decades
and began the Annual Arnold Schwarzenegger
Classic there in 1989.
Continuous growth and popularity of the Schwarzenegger
Classic led to the
addition of a Fitness EXPO in 1993, the Ms. Fitness (R) World
competition in
1994 and the Arnold Martial Arts Festival in 1996.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger's keen determination and pursuit of excellence have
brought him a
broad range of career successes in athletic competition, film
acting and
direction and business ventures. A patron of the arts, he is a
respected art
collector. Schwarzenegger resides in Los Angeles with his wife,
broadcast
journalist Maria Shriver, and their three children, Katherine,
Christina and
Patrick. In 1997 Arnold underwent surgery for his defective
aortic heart valve
which he was born with, the surgery had no complications
and Arnold made a
full
recovery.