Chris Penn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Chris Penn | |
|---|---|
| Born | Christopher Shannon Penn October 10, 1965 Los Angeles, California |
| Died | January 24, 2006 (aged 40) Santa Monica, California |
| Other name(s) | Christopher Penn |
| Years active | 1979 - 2006 |
Christopher Shannon Penn (October 10, 1965 – January 24, 2006) was an American film actor. He was the son of noted director Leo Penn and actress Eileen Ryan (born Eileen Annucci), and the brother of actor Sean Penn and musician Michael Penn. Born in Los Angeles, California, he was the youngest of the three sons. He dated and lived with Steffiana de la Cruz from 1993 to 1999.
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[edit] Career
Penn started acting at the age of 11 at the Loft Studio and made his film debut in 1979’s Charlie and the Talking Buzzard starring Christopher Hanks.
In 1983, he was featured in Francis Ford Coppola’s youth drama Rumble Fish and appeared in the high school football drama All the Right Moves as the best friend of Tom Cruise and a soon-to-be father. He also appeared in the hit dance musical Footloose in 1984, played a villain in the Clint Eastwood western Pale Rider (1985), and co-starred with his brother, Sean Penn, and mother Eileen Ryan in At Close Range (1986).
Penn was typically cast as a tough character, featured as a villain or a working-class lug, or in a comic role. Two of his more memorable performances came in Reservoir Dogs as Nice Guy Eddie and True Romance as Nicky Dimes (both characters in scripts written by Quentin Tarantino). In 1996, he won the best supporting actor at the Venice Film Festival for The Funeral.
He appeared as the cocky fighter Travis Brickley in the films Best of the Best 1 & 2.
In Robert Altman’s ensemble film Short Cuts, Penn played a troubled pool cleaner who is disturbed by his wife’s profession; she is a telephone sex worker who takes calls from clients at home, to which Penn’s character is obliged to listen. The dramatic ending of the film features the climactic response of Penn’s character to this pent-up sexual frustration and feeling of powerlessness.
Penn also starred as the heavy-set, drug dealing Clive in Rush Hour alongside Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker.
Penn was meant to appear in American Pie 2 as Stifler's dad, but the scenes featuring him were eventually cut as there wasn't sufficient time to include him in the film's plot. However, they did appear on the deleted scene reel from the movie's DVD.
Penn was featured in an episode of the television crime drama Law & Order: Criminal Intent during the 2004–2005 season. He was also featured on the 2004 video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas as the voice of Officer Eddie Pulaski. Penn played himself on a 2005 episode of the HBO series Entourage.
He appeared in The Darwin Awards, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival one day after his death.
Penn also appeared on Jay-Z's "Can I Get A..." music video as the bartender mixing drinks and dancing.
[edit] Death
Penn was found dead in his Santa Monica condominium on January 24, 2006, at the age of 40.
Although Penn had used multiple drugs in the past, an autopsy performed by a Los Angeles County Medical Examiner revealed the primary cause of death was "nonspecific cardiomyopathy" (heart disease), with the prescription drug promethazine with codeine and an enlarged heart. Trace amounts of marijuana and cocaine were found in his body. Sean Penn has said that his brother's death was brought on primarily by his weight.[1]
There is conflicting information about Chris Penn’s age at the time of death, with some obituaries giving 1962 as his year of birth. His birthdate has been officially substantiated as October 1965, which would mean he was 40. His mother also gives his date of birth as October 10, 1965, in the book Sean Penn: His Life and Times by Richard T. Kelly (2004).
Chris Penn is interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
[edit] Selected filmography
- Charlie and the Talking Buzzard (1979)
- Rumble Fish (1983)
- All the Right Moves (1983)
- The Wild Life (1984)
- Footloose (1984)
- Pale Rider (1985)
- At Close Range (1986)
- Return from the River Kwai (1989)
- Best of the Best (1989)
- Mobsters (1991)
- Reservoir Dogs (1992)
- Best of the Best 2 (1993)
- Beethoven’s 2nd (1993)
- Josh and S.A.M. (1993)
- The Music of Chance (1993)
- True Romance (1993)
- Short Cuts (1993)
- Fist of the North Star (1995)
- Sacred Cargo (1995)
- To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar (1995)
- Mulholland Falls (1996)
- The Funeral (1996)
- Deceiver (1997)
- The Boys Club (1997)
- Rush Hour (1998)
- Cement (1999)
- Kiss Kiss (Bang Bang) (2000)
- Corky Romano (2001)
- Murder by Numbers (2002)
- Stealing Harvard (2002)
- Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas (voice of Eddie Pulaski) (2004)
- Starsky & Hutch (film) (2004)
- After the Sunset (2004)
- Pauly Shore is Dead (2004)
- The Darwin Awards (2006)
- King of Sorrow (2006)
- Holly (2006)
- Aftermath (2007)
[edit] External links
- Chris Penn at the Internet Movie Database
- “Reservoir Dogs’ Penn found dead”, article from BBC News
- “The price of fame: the final reel of Chris Penn”, biographical article from The Independent
- “Let us praise Chris Penn—in all his guises,” from SFGate.com

