Keanu Reeves
About Keanu Reeves
Few moviegoers would have guessed from his laconic and occasionally blissed-out performances in films like “River’s Edge” (1986) and “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure” (1989) that in less than a decade, Keanu Reeves would be one of Hollywood’s most popular and bankable leading men. He had to first endure a long, awkward period, during which he struggled to find his footing in big-budget features like “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992) and independent fare like “Little Buddha” (1993); in the eyes of most critics and pundits, he was ill-equipped for both. But his turn as a determined and resourceful police officer in 1994’s “Speed” proved him to be a capable action hero, which he underscored by playing Neo, the reluctant Messiah figure in the science fiction blockbuster “The Matrix” (1999) and its two sequels, as well as “Constantine” (2003). Perhaps sensing that his acting abilities remained in the crosshairs of many pundits, he strove to maintain a presence in quieter dramas and the occasional comedy, which received mixed results.
Born Keanu Charles Reeves in Beirut, Lebanon on Sept. 2, 1964, his early life was marked by turmoil and change. His parents, costume designer Patricia Taylor, and Samuel Nowlin Reeves – whose Hawaiian-Chinese-European heritage contributed to his son’s exotic looks and unusual first name, which translated as “cool breeze over the mountains” in Hawaiian – divorced two years after he was born. In fact, Reeves would not enjoy a close relationship with his father, as the elder Reeves worked as an unskilled laborer and earned his GED while imprisoned in Hawaii for selling cocaine at the Hilo airport. Reeves’ mother relocated her son and daughter Kim several times over the next few years; first to Australia and later to New York City and Toronto. She also married and divorced several times, which brought Reeves a half-sister from her mother’s marriage to rock promoter Robert Miller in 1976.
Reeves struggled with academics due to dyslexia, which contributed to a rambunctious attitude that frequently earned him expulsion from various schools. Ice hockey captured his attention during his school years, and for a time, he considered making it his profession. But his interest soon wandered towards acting, and by his mid-teens, he was appearing in local stage productions. By 17, he had dropped out of school for the last time, and made his television debut as a regular at a youth center in the teen-oriented sitcom “Hangin’ In” (CBC, 1981-87). Reeves bounced between odd jobs, television commercials and theater gigs – including Brad Fraser’s “Wolfboy,” a gay-themed drama with werewolf overtones – before finding regular work on Canadian TV and in features during the late 1980s. He covered all the angles of teen roles during this period, from youth in trouble in “One Step Away” (1985) to nice-guy boyfriends in “Dream to Believe” (1986). That same year, he had a small role as a hockey goalie opposite Rob Lowe and Patrick Swayze in the sodden sports drama “Youngblood” (1986). The experience persuaded Reeves to pack up and move to Hollywood, which he did with just $3,000 in his pocket.
Once in Los Angeles, Reeves contacted his former stepfather, director Paul Aaron, who introduced him to agent Erwin Stoff. The latter took Reeves under his wing and helped to guide and mold his subsequent career, as well as co-produce many of his feature films. Stoff also persuaded Reeves to consider a professional name change, fearing that “Keanu” would read as too exotic to casting directors. For the TV-movie fantasy “Young Again” (1986), in which Reeves plays Robert Urich as a 17-year-old, he was billed as K.C. Reeves. The new moniker would disappear shortly thereafter.
Reeves’ first positive notices in Hollywood came with the grim crime drama “River’s Edge” (1986), in which he played the conflicted best friend of a young man (Daniel Roebuck) who has casually and brutally murdered his girlfriend. Though he was outshined by the film’s showier performances of Dennis Hopper and Crispin Glover, he did fine work in a scene opposite a hysterical and gun-toting Joshua Miller that assured him more work as decent but occasionally troubled young men. Most of his projects for the next few years were forgettable TV movies and unseen features, though he was quite moving as a young man struggling to come to terms with his friend’s suicide in “Permanent Record” (1988). He was, however, woefully miscast as the Chevalier Dancey, youthful love interest to Uma Thurman and pawn in the games of John Malkovich and Glenn Close in the period romance-drama “Dangerous Liasons” (1988). Critics who had offered praise for the actor in “River’s Edge” were now noting a wooden side to his performances. This label would plague him for decades to come.
Reeves bounced back with an unexpected hit in “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure,” a goofy time-travel comedy about two good-natured but clueless teens (Reeves and Alex Winter) who stumble through misadventures throughout history. A low-budget feature shot two years prior to its release (and held up due to the bankruptcy of distributor the De Laurentiis Group), the picture struck a chord with younger audiences and fans of broad comedy, who frequently singled out Reeves’ performance as one of the most authentic representations of empty-headed suburban teendom ever captured on film. Reeves became so inseparable from Ted in the minds of moviegoers that he essentially repeated the role for the next few years. He returned to the role for the inferior sequel, “Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey” (1991), which began production as “Bill and Ted Go to Hell” and lost much of its irreverent edge in post-production, and later, for a season of “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventures” (CBS/Fox Kids, 1990-93). He followed this with more dense young men in “Parenthood” (1989) and “I Love You to Death” (1990). Sensing that typecasting was setting in, he attempted to break free as a young radio dramatist in the comedy “Tune In Tomorrow” (1990), an inspired American adaptation of the Mario Vargas Llosa novel Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, and as a maverick FBI agent in the guilty pleasure that was the ludicrous “Point Break,” which co-starred his “Youngblood” castmate Patrick Swayze as a surfer-turned-bank robber. At the time of their releases, audiences stayed away from both projects, and critical vitriol regarding Reeves hit an all-time high with the latter project – though in later years, the picture achieved some degree of favor as high testosterone-fueled camp. And as far as scenery-chewing went, even Reeves took a backseat to his co-star and on-screen detective partner, Gary Busey, who took the role and ran with it – leaving even Reeves and Swayze in the dust when it came to turning in an unintentionally hilarious performance.
Undaunted, the confident Reeves pressed on with his attempt to redirect his career towards more respectable roles. He earned a moderate amount of critical acclaim as a privileged youth-turned-street hustler in “My Own Private Idaho” (1991), director Gus Van Sant’s acclaimed revision of Shakespeare’s “Henry IV.” Though Reeves was overshadowed by the complex performance of top-billed River Phoenix, the film did convince some producers that there was more to the actor than just the “totally awesome” Ted S. Logan. Detractors, however, continued to declare that he was out of his league in adult roles, and pointed to his performance as lawyer-turned-vampire hunter Jonathan Harker in Francis Ford Coppola’s overblown “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992). Critics hammered Reeves for his dreadful English accent and hapless performance, and doubled their efforts to discount him when he tackled the villainous Don John in Kenneth Branagh’s bright and charming film adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing” (1993). More even-handed writers noted that none of the “Dracula” cast – including Anthony Hopkins, Winona Ryder and Gary Oldman – could deliver a believable performance in this particular incarnation of the Bram Stoker story due to its execrable script, and that Reeves was, in fact, not bad at all in “Ado.” But the drums of dismissal had been beating a steady tattoo for Reeves for so long now, that for many reviewers, it seemed unfashionable to consider him in any other manner. He was roundly panned for his sensual turn as the Buddha in Bernardo Bertolucci’s “Little Buddha” (1993), and few moviegoers saw him in Van Sant’s ill-fated film version of Tom Robbins’ “Even Cowgirls Get the Blues” (1994). But public perception was about to change virtually overnight for the actor who had more than paid his dues as butts of jokes.
That same year, Reeves again shifted gears to play a no-nonsense police officer in “Speed.” The modestly budgeted thriller, which starred Dennis Hopper as a madman who hotwires a city bus to explode if it drops below a certain level of miles per hour, benefited hugely from former director of photography Jan De Bont’s energetic direction, as well as a star-making turn by Sandra Bullock as the young woman recruited by Reeves to pilot the bus while he attempts to disarm the bomb. The two leads shared enormous chemistry together, and the resulting mix of snappy dialogue and nail-biting suspense created a $300 million hit worldwide. Reeves in particular came off in a way he had not in past films, save perhaps “Point Break” – as the macho, believable leading man who saves the day and gets the girl. Female fans in particular fell for his newly buffed body and men flocked to get the “Speed” buzzed haircut.
Despite the astronomical success of the film which had singularly changed his image, the unpredictable Reeves refused to follow the regular patterns established by other actors who had found themselves suddenly thrust into superstardom. He turned down several high-profile action films, including “Speed 2: Cruise Control” (1997), which tanked due to his absence, and returned to Canada to tackle “Hamlet” on stage. Reviews were largely kind, but his subsequent movie efforts were stunningly lackluster and raised the specter of doubt about his recent box office potential. Reeves treaded water in dreadful action pictures like “Chain Reaction” (1996) and misbegotten “indie” efforts like “Feeling Minnesota” (1996) until 1997, when he was cast in “The Devil’s Advocate.” As an ambitious young lawyer whose entry into a top legal firm leads to the discovery that its chief (Al Pacino), is in fact Satan, Reeves acquitted himself well to a role that allowed him some moral ambiguity – to say nothing to standing up admirably to Pacino, who devoured whole scenes in the picture with relish. The picture was a sizable hit, and restored his leading man status.
A two-year hiatus, during which Reeves performed frequently with his alt-rock outfit Dogstar, preceded his role as Neo, a computer programmer who discovers that he is the chosen savior in a future struggle between humans and machines. An overwhelming blend of science fiction, Japanese anime, computer gaming, and action movie tropes, “The Matrix” (1999) was a worldwide blockbuster and eventual pop culture juggernaut thanks to its eye-popping visual effects and dense, interpretation-heavy script. And Reeves, who himself always seemed a little otherworldly, was the perfect choice to play the slightly befuddled everyman who finds himself at the center of a titanic war for the fate of mankind. He would return to the franchise several more times, including its two inferior sequels, “The Matrix Reloaded” (2003) and “The Matrix Revolutions” (2003), both of which were shot back-to-back, and several animated spin-offs and story permutations. Always one to march to the tune of his own drum, the extremely generous actor – who seemed to have little use for fame or money – gave up $50 million of his take from the “Matrix” sequels to the costume and special effects teams – whom he considered the real stars of the film – as well as buying each member of the Australian stuntmen crew a Harley Davidson motorcycle. Even in a town famous for giving, Reeves’ many financial overtures just made him an even more enigmatic figure.
The success of “The Matrix” was overshadowed in 1999 by the stillborn death of his daughter, Ava Archer Reeves, with actress Jennifer Syme. Tragedy would strike again two years later when Syme – who had never really recovered from the miscarriage of her nearly full-term baby, was killed in a car accident, in which she was sent through the windshield. Reeves remained largely silent about the incident, a precedent he set in the early 1990s when his sister Kim was diagnosed with leukemia. Because he was so hard to read in the first place, only close friends knew the level of grief Reeves must have gone through, losing both his daughter and girlfriend in such a short time, as well as dealing with his sister’s ongoing illness. Instead, Reeves remained exceptionally busy during this period in a wide variety of roles. Perhaps sensing that he could again be typecast, he bounced from breezy comedies like “The Replacements” (1999) and “Hardball” (2001) to sudsy romances like “Sweet November” (2001), which cast him as a self-obsessed businessman who discovers his capacity for love after meeting the terminally ill Charlize Theron. Reeves also stepped far afield from his screen persona on two occasions; first as an abusive husband who meets a grisly fate in Sam Raimi’s underrated supernatural thriller “The Gift” (2000), and later as a serial killer stalking Marisa Tomei in “The Watcher” (2000). Unfortunately, both of these films failed to find a substantial audience in theaters. It seemed audiences wanted the ass-kicking, yet Zen-like Reeves or nothing.
Reeves finally struck gold with a non-genre picture in “Something’s Gotta Give” (2005), a good-natured comedy in which he played a younger doctor who becomes smitten with Diane Keaton, much to the consternation of Jack Nicholson. The film performed admirably at the box office, and preceded his next big screen adventure in “Constantine” (2005), an adaptation of the popular graphic novel which cast him as a world-weary private investigator who deals with occult-related cases. Though quite different in appearance to Constantine in the comic book (who is portrayed as a blond Englishman), Reeves appeased fans of the series enough to make it another blockbuster. That same year, Reeves announced that he had left his band Dogstar for good, and was permanently hanging up his musical ambitions.
Due to over a decade of popular demand, Reeves reunited with Bullock for “The Lake House” (2006), a thoughtful science fiction romance based on the South Korean film “Il Mare” (2000), about correspondents who discover that they are living in the same house, though decades apart. Though the plot left many critics befuddled, audiences enjoyed the revived chemistry between the two actors and made it a substantial hit. He then returned to science fiction for “A Scanner Darkly” (2006), Richard Linklater’s adaptation of the Philip K. Dick novel about a dystopian future riddled with intense police surveillance and an epidemic of drug addiction. Linklater originally balked at casting Reeves, thinking that he would resist doing another science fiction film, but the actor joined the project on the basis of the Dick source material and Linklater’s decision to shoot the film using rotoscope animation. Though a non-entity on the box office charts, “Darkly” had its critical supporters.
In 2008, Reeves returned after another brief hiatus to again play against type as a corrupt L.A. cop whose investigative methods put him in the line of fire from his superiors and other double-dealing cops. The film, penned by noted crime novelist James Ellroy, failed to impress critics, but it enjoyed a solid opening weekend at the box office. That same year, Reeves announced another return to science fiction: he was cast as Klaatu, the alien visitor who attempts to bring peace to mankind in a remake of Robert Wise’s classic “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (1951).
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Ava Archer Reeves | daughter | Born stillborn in 2000; mother, Jennifer Syme |
| Jack Bond | step-father | Divorced Reeves' mother in 1994 |
| Paul Aaron | step-father | Divorced Reeves' mother after six months of marriage |
| Robert Miller | step-father | Married to Reeves' mother from 1976-1980; had a daughter together |
| Patricia Taylor | mother | English |
| Samuel Nowlin Reeves | father | Of Hawaiian and Chinese descent; abandoned his wife and family when Reeves was two; sentenced to 10 years in prison for cocaine and heroin possession in 1994; served time in a Hawaiian jail; was paroled in 1996 |
| Kim Reeves | sister | Born in 1966 in Australia; diagnosed with leukemia in the early 1990s |
| Emma Reeves | half-sister | Born in 1980 in Hawaii; father is Samuel Nowlin Reeves |
| Karina Miller | half-sister | Born in 1976 in Toronto; daughter of Patricia Taylor and Robert Miller |
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Diane Keaton | companion | Met on the set of "Something's Gotta Give" (2003); although rumored to have dated in 2005, both their reps denied the romance |
| Lynn Collins | companion | Dated for three months after meeting on the set of "The Lake House" (2006); no longer together |
| Jennifer Syme | companion | Former assistant to David Lynch; appeared in Lynch's "Lost Highway" (1997); gave birth to Reeves' stillborn daughter in 2000, who was named Ava Archer Reeves; killed in a car accident April 2, 2001 |
| Amanda DeCadenet | companion | Briefly engaged in 1996; no longer together |
| Autumn MacIntosh | companion | Rumored to have dated in 2004; no longer together |
| Carrie-Anne Moss | companion | Reportedly became involved during the filming of "The Matrix" (1999); no longer together |
| Moved from NYC to Toronto with family when he was six | |
| 1979 | TV acting debut, "Hanging In" (CBC) |
| 1980 | At age 16, danced in a Coca-Cola commercial |
| 1984 | Played a street tough in the short film "The Prodigal" |
| 1984 | Professional stage debut in Toronto production of the homoerotic drama "Wolfboy" |
| 1985 | Debut in a Shakespearean play, cast as Mercutio in "Romeo and Juliet" in Toronto |
| 1985 | US TV debut, "Letting Go" (ABC) |
| 1986 | Appeared as Jack Be Nimble in the ABC small screen remake of "Babes in Toyland" starring Drew Barrymore |
| 1986 | Film acting debut in "Youngblood"; cast alongside Rob Lowe as a hockey player |
| 1986 | First Canadian-produced feature, "Flying/Dream to Believe" |
| 1986 | Moved to Los Angeles to pursue career |
| 1987 | First starring role, "River's Edge" playing a burned out dope-smoking teen |
| 1988 | Played Chevalier Danceny, a music teacher infatuated with Uma Thurman's Cecile de Volange in "Dangerous Liaisons" |
| 1989 | Breakthrough screen role, as Ted, half of the dim-witted, time-travelling pair in "Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure" |
| 1989 | Offered memorable turn as a teenage hippie in Ron Howard's "Parenthood" |
| 1990 | Had featured role, alongside Ullman and Kevin Kline in the black comedy "I Love You to Death" |
| 1990 | Last major TV acting appearance to date, in the "Two Lost Souls" segment of "The Tracey Ullman Show" (Fox) |
| 1991 | Reprised the time-travelling Ted for the inferior sequel "Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey" |
| 1991 | Starred as a politician's son who becomes a street hustler in Gus Van Sant's "My Own Private Idaho" |
| 1992 | Portrayed Jonathan Harker in Francis Ford Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula" |
| 1994 | Portrayed Siddhartha in Bernardo Bertolucci's "Little Buddha" |
| 1994 | Re-teamed with Van Sant for a supporting role in "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" |
| 1994 | Shot to superstardom as an explosives expert attempting to diffuse a bomb-rigged bus in "Speed" |
| 1995 | Appeared as the title character in a Winnipeg production of "Hamlet" |
| 1995 | Played a WWII veteran who pretends to be married in "A Walk in the Clouds" |
| 1997 | Cast as a lawyer tempted by success and Satan in "The Devil's Advocate" |
| 1999 | Starred as Neo, a computer expert who joins forces with a rebel underground to pursue "The Matrix" |
| 2000 | Portrayed a wife-beating accused murderer in "The Gift" |
| 2000 | Starred in the sports comedy "The Replacements" |
| 2001 | Cast as advertising executive opposite Charlize Theron in the remake of "Sweet November" |
| 2003 | Again portrayed Neo in the third installment of the trilogy "The Matrix: Revelations" |
| 2003 | Co-starred with Diane Keaton in the Nancy Meyers directed comedy "Something's Gotta Give" |
| 2003 | Reprised role of Neo in "The Matrix Reloaded" |
| 2005 | Played the title role in "Constantine" based on the DC/Vertigo comic book Hellblazer |
| 2005 | Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (Jan. 31) |
| 2006 | Re-teamed with Bullock in the romantic drama, "The Lake House"; a remake of the Korean film "IL Mare" |
| 2006 | Starred in the Richard Linklater directed, "A Scanner Darkly"; adapted from the novel by Philip K. Dick |
| 2008 | Played a veteran LAPD officer who is framed for murder in "Street Kings"; written and directed by David Ayer |
Notes
"He has only three possessions of any consequence. A bass guitar, so he can play with his folk-rock band, Dogstar, and two Norton motorcycles, British-made in the 1970s." - Michael Shnayerson on Keanu in Vanity Fair magazine, August 1995
"I'm Mickey Mouse. They don't know who's inside the suit." - Reeves on fame in Vanity Fair magazine, August 1995
"I'm trying not to be alone so much," says Reeves. "And man, it's a struggle. I want to get married. I want to have kids. That's at the top of the mountain. I've got to climb the mountain first. I'll do it. Just give me some time." - Reeves to Parade magazine, June 2006
"I've always considered that there's the role, and there's the actor. These two entities come together, and in the process I learn about the role, and the role learns about me. So you’re holding the mirror up to nature, but that nature is your own." - Reeves to Premiere magazine, February 2005
"Listen, I'm an actor, not a movie star. The worry for me is that you never know where your next gig is coming from. To me the nature of the beast is that you finish working and then wonder if you'll ever work again. That feeling never goes away. Hopefully I'll be successful enough that people will be able to hire me. But I give my thanks for my life so far. It's been incredible. Do I want it to continue? Yeah, I really love it." - Reeves to the Chicago Sun-Times, March 28, 1999
"Playing live is fun. It is completely different to acting, but they are both imaginative, creative and emotional acts. Sometimes I think of playing full time, but it's a passing phase. Acting is home for me, that is where I live." - Reeves to the London Times, Jan. 11, 1998
He performs with his band Dogstar, formed in 1993 with Bret Domrose and actor Robert Mailhouse.
His first name, Keanu, means 'cool breeze over the mountains.'
In the June 2006 issue of Parade magazine, Reeves talks about his late girlfriend Jennifer Syme, whom he met in 1998 and who later gave birth to their stillborn baby daughter. Reeves and Syme remained best friends until April 2001, when Syme died in a car crash.
Reeves has an abdominal scar which is the result of a motorcyle accident.
Reeves was diagnosed with dyslexia as a child.
The Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, began a class called "The Films of Keanu Reeves" as of January 1994.
Various sources list either September 2 or September 4 as his date of birth (one lists August 2); since the majority indicate September 2, that is the date this database is listing.
“He's so fuckin' hard on himself, that it's to the point of depression. It's beyond art or work for him. If he feels he's bad in a scene, he'll go home pissed off, wake up pissed off, come back to the set pissed off, and then he'll try to focus. As soon as his take is done, you can see his whole body rest." - Shia LaBeouf on Keanu quoted to Premiere magazine, February 2005
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Quick Facts
Also known as
Birth Name : Keanu Charles Reeves
Born
September, 02 1964 in Beirut, Lebanon
Education
- De La Salle College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Attended for one year; voted Most Valuable Player as goalie on the hockey team
- Etobicoke School of the Arts, Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada Expelled
- Hedgerow Theatre, Moylan, PA Studied acting with Jasper Deeter
- High School for the Performing Arts, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Failed acting class and left after one year
- Jessie Ketchum Public School, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Attended from kindergarten through eighth grade
Professions
actor, pasta chef, skate sharpener, tree cutter