Sam Shepard

@Directors, Family and Facts

Sam Shepard was an actor and filmmaker famous for his work in ‘The Right Stuff.’

Nov 5, 1943

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 5, 1943
  • Died on: July 27, 2017
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Film & Theater Personalities, Actors, Directors, Playwrights
  • City/State: Illinois
  • Spouses: O-Lan Jones
  • Siblings: Roxanne Rogers, Sandy Rogers

Sam Shepard born at

Fort Sheridan, Illinois, United States

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Birth Place

In his early days in New York, Sam Shepard lived with his fellow aspiring artist and high school friend Charlie Mingus Jr. He also lived together with actress Joyce Aaron for a while.

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Personal Life

In 1969, he married actress O-Lan Jones. The union produced a son, Jesse Mojo Shepard (born 1970). From 1970 to 1971, he was involved in a passionate affair with poet, artist, and musician Patti Smith, with whom he collaborated on several projects. After that relationship came to an end, Shepard took his family to London in the early 1970s.

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Personal Life

Shepard returned to America in 1975. He and the Academy Award-winning actress Jessica Lange met in 1981 on the set of their film ‘Frances’. They moved together in 1983 and Shepard legally divorced Jones in 1984. With Lange, he had a daughter, Hannah Jane (1985) and a son, Samuel Walker (1987). They eventually separated in 2009.

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Personal Life

Born on November 5, 1943, in Fort Sheridan, Illinois, Samuel Shepard Rogers III was the only son of Jane Elaine (née Schook) and Samuel Shepard Rogers, Jr. While growing up, he was often referred to as Steve Rogers.

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Childhood & Early Life

His father was a teacher, farmer, and a US Air Force officer who was active during the World War II as a bomber pilot; Shepard often described him as a “drinking man, a dedicated alcoholic.” His mother was also a teacher and a Chicago native. He had two sisters, Roxanne and Sandy Rogers.

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Childhood & Early Life

He attended Duarte High School in Duarte, California, graduating in 1961. As a teenager, he had found work on a ranch. He enrolled at the Mt. San Antonio College, in Walnut, California to study animal husbandry for a brief period.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1962, the Bishop's Company Repertory Players, a mobile theatre company, came touring into his town. Already an ardent follower of modern-theatre movement, Shepard left home with the group, spending the next two years with them before settling in New York.

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Childhood & Early Life

In New York, Samuel Shepard Rogers III worked as a busboy at the Village Gate nightclub where he met Ralph Cook, the club’s head waiter, who introduced him to the world of professional theatre. During this period, he decided to adopt “Sam Shepard” as his professional name and was primarily associated with Cook’s Theatre Genesis, although his plays were staged at numerous Off-Off-Broadway venues.

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Career as a Playwright and Screenwriter

He co-wrote the 1971 play ‘Cowboy Mouth’ with his then-lover Patti Smith. Inspired by their real-life relationship, Smith and Shepard played the lead protagonists, Cavale and Slim respectively, in the inaugural production of the play at The American Place Theatre in New York. After opening night, he left the production as he never felt comfortable performing before a live audience.

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Career as a Playwright and Screenwriter

He also collaborated with Bob Dylan on the screenplay of latter’s directorial venture ‘Renaldo and Clara’, released in 1975.

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Career as a Playwright and Screenwriter

He joined Magic Theatre as the Playwright-in-residence in 1975, and wrote some of his best plays for them, including ‘Curse of the Starving Class’ (1976), ‘Buried Child’ (1978), and ‘True West’ (1980), together known as the ‘Family Trilogy.

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Career as a Playwright and Screenwriter

In response to the tragic events of September 11, 2001, Sam Shepard wrote ‘The God of Hell’, which premiered in 2004. His final work, ‘A Particle of Dread’, premiered in 2014; it was a modern adaptation of Sophocles’ ‘Oedipus Rex’.

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Career as a Playwright and Screenwriter

Sam Shepard’s first major appearance as an actor on screen was in Terrence Malick's ‘Days of Heaven’ (1978). He received an Academy Award nomination for playing Chuck Yeager, Colonel, USAF, in the 1983 American epic historical drama ‘The Right Stuff’. In 1985, he starred opposite Kim Basinger in the film adaptation of his own play, ‘Fool for Love’

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Acting Career

On the small screen, he mainly acted in television films. He made his TV debut as Snort Yarnell in 1995 in TNT’s western adventure telefilm ‘The Good Old Boys’. He starred as Sheriff Forrest and Wild Bill Hickok in the western fantasy ‘Purgatory’ in 1999 and as racehorse trainer Frank Whiteley in the ABC’s ‘Ruffian’ in 2007.

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Acting Career

From 2015 to 2017, in a rare appearance in a television show, he was part of the main cast of Netflix original thriller–drama ‘Bloodline’.

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Acting Career