
Age: 85
male
Ramón Antonio Gerardo Estévez (born August 3, 1940), known professionally as Martin Sheen, is an American actor. He first became known for his roles in the films The Subject Was Roses (1968) and Badlands (1973), and later achieved wide recognition for his leading role as Captain Benjamin Willard in Apocalypse Now (1979), as U.S. President Josiah Bartlet in the television series The West Wing (1999–2006), and as Robert Hanson in the Netflix television series Grace and Frankie (2015–2022). In film, Sheen has won the Best Actor award at the San Sebastián International Film Festival for his performance as Kit Carruthers in Badlands. Sheen's portrayal of Capt. Willard in Apocalypse Now earned a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor. Sheen has worked with a wide variety of film directors, including Richard Attenborough, Francis Ford Coppola, Terrence Malick, David Cronenberg, Mike Nichols, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and Oliver Stone. Sheen received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1989. In television, Sheen has won a Golden Globe and two Screen Actors Guild awards for playing the role of President Josiah Bartlet in The West Wing, and an Emmy for guest starring in the sitcom Murphy Brown. In 2012, he portrayed Uncle Ben in The Amazing Spider-Man directed by Marc Webb. Born and raised in the United States by a Spanish father and an Irish mother, he adopted the stage name Martin Sheen to help him gain acting parts. He is the father of four children, all of whom are actors. Sheen has directed one film, Cadence (1990), in which he appears alongside his sons Charlie and Ramón. He has narrated, produced, and directed documentary television, earning two Daytime Emmy awards in the 1980s, and has been active in liberal politics.

Martin Sheen

President Lyndon B. Johnson
for President Lyndon B. Johnson in I’ve Seen The Promised Land
Suggested by peterjudge04

The real story of the Poor People's Campaign led by Rev. Martin Luther King and continued after his assassination by his wife Coretta. The movie follows a non-linear narrative as we see Coretta alongside NAACP executive and children rights activist Marion Wright, minister and civil rights leader Ralph Abernathy and Calypso singer Harry Belafonte keeping several protest marches for better working conditions for all Americans, with emphasis on the sanitation workers strike in Memphis to reach Washington D. C. where a tent camp is planted. Throughout the whole movie, we see flashbacks in which we see Martin leading the movement and also his very private life with Coretta.