Andrew Stevens
Stevens in 1981
Born
Herman Andrew Stephens

(1955-06-10) June 10, 1955
Occupation(s)Executive, film producer, film director, actor
Years active1962–present
Spouses
(m. 1978; div. 1982)
    Robyn Suzanne Scott
    (m. 1995; div. 2010)
      Diana Phillips Hoogland
      (m. 2016; div. 2018)
      Children3
      ParentStella Stevens
      Websiteandrewstevens.info

      Andrew Stevens (born Herman Andrew Stephens; June 10, 1955) is an American executive, film producer, director and actor.[1]

      Early life

      Stevens was born in Memphis, Tennessee, the only child of actress Stella Stevens and her former husband Noble Herman Stephens. His mother was 16 when he was born. His parents divorced in 1957.[2][3]

      Career

      Prior to his producing career, Stevens was a writer, director, and actor. He made his uncredited film debut in Vincente Minnelli's The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1963) had a bit role in Shampoo (1975), and went on to appear in cult thrillers such as Massacre at Central High (1976), Vigilante Force (1976) and Day of the Animals (1977), as well as the cult horror film The Fury (1978) starring Kirk Douglas. He was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for his performance in The Boys in Company C (1978), and later starred with Charles Bronson in two films, Death Hunt (1981) and 10 to Midnight (1983).[4]

      In 1975 he auditioned for the role of Luke Skywalker in Star Wars (1977) which eventually went to Mark Hamill.[5]

      He appeared in the miniseries Once an Eagle (1976) and played 17-year-old Andrew Thorpe on the NBC Western series The Oregon Trail. The program filmed only thirteen episodes, seven of which never aired.[6] Also the Canadian television series The New Liars Club.

      Stevens starred in The Bastard (1978) and The Rebels (1979), based on the John Jakes novels. He appeared opposite Dennis Weaver and Susan Dey in the short-lived drama Emerald Point N.A.S., as a playboy/tennis bum in Columbo: Murder in Malibu, and as one of J.R. Ewing's stooges Casey Denault, on Dallas, for two seasons, beginning in 1987. He also played Ted Rorchek in the 1981-82 television series Code Red. He appeared in the miniseries Hollywood Wives (1985). During this time, he also starred in the erotic thriller Night Eyes (1990) and its sequels.[4]

      Producing

      In early 1990, Stevens left the public eye to become an independent entrepreneur writing, producing, directing and financing films for his own companies. He was President/CEO of Franchise Pictures, which produced films for Warner Bros. from 1999 through 2005, including The Whole Nine Yards and its sequel, The Whole Ten Yards, as well as The In-Laws.

      Franchise and its subsidiaries filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on August 19, 2004, after losing a multimillion-dollar fraud case in Los Angeles, and is now defunct.[7]

      Prior to Franchise, Stevens was an owner and president of Royal Oaks Entertainment, which produced and/or distributed seventy pictures over a three-year period including many HBO, Showtime and Sci-Fi Channel world premieres. Prior to Royal Oaks, Stevens' entrée into foreign sales and production company ownership was with Sunset Films International, which amassed a library of 19 titles (including seven in-house productions) during his first year as president of the company. He currently operates Andrew Stevens Entertainment and Stevens Entertainment Group.

      In 2017, he published a screenwriting manual, Screenwriting for Profit: Writing for the Global Marketplace. The book discusses how writers can use better understanding of the domestic and international film markets to assist their screenplays.[8]

      Personal life

      Prior to his marriages, he dated Pattie Sullivan from 1976 to 1978. Stevens was married to actress Kate Jackson from 1978 to 1982. He has three children by his second marriage to Robyn Suzanne Scott, which ended in divorce in 2010. Stevens married Diana Phillips Hoogland in 2016.

      Acting, directing, and producing credits

      YearTitleRoleNotes
      1963 The Courtship of Eddie's Father actor
      1973 Adam-12 Rod Foreman actor, one episode "Northwest Division"
      1975 Shampoo actor
      1975 Las Vegas Lady actor
      1976 Massacre at Central High actor
      1976 Vigilante Force actor
      1976 Once an Eagle actor
      1977 Day of the Animals actor
      1978 The Boys in Company C actor
      1978 The Fury actor
      1978 The Bastard actor
      1979 The Rebels actor
      1979 Beggarman, Thief actor
      1981 Death Hunt actor
      1982 The Seduction Derek Sanford actor
      1983 10 to Midnight actor
      1984 Terror in the Aisles archival footage
      1984 Murder, She Wrote Lovers and Other Killers, David Tolliver
      1985 Hollywood Wives actor
      1987-1989 Dallas Actor
      1988 Counterforce actor
      1989 The Terror Within actor
      1989 The Ranch actor
      1990 Night Eyes actor
      1991 The Terror Within II David actor and director
      1992 Night Eyes 2 actor
      1992 Munchie actor
      1993 Night Eyes 3 actor
      1994 Illicit Dreams
      1994 Scorned
      1996 Night Eyes 4: Fatal Passion
      1997 Steel Sharks
      1997 Inferno
      1997 Crash Dive
      1997 The Shooter
      1998 Billy Frankenstein
      1999 Fugitive Mind
      1999 If... Dog... Rabbit...
      1999 The Big Kahuna producer
      2000 Mercy
      2000 Animal Factory
      2002 Stranded actor
      2003 Final Examination
      2004 Method
      2004 Blessed
      2005 Glass Trap
      2005 7 Seconds
      2005 The Marksman also actor video
      2005; video Black Dawn also actor
      2006 The Detonator
      2007 Walking Tall: The Payback
      2007 Half Past Dead 2
      2007; video Walking Tall: Lone Justice also actor
      2007 Missionary Man also actor
      2009 Fire from Below also actor
      2010 Mongolian Death Worm TV – also actor
      2010 Mandrake TV
      2010 Breaking the Press
      2011 Rise
      2022 Pursuit Frank Diego

      References

      1. Willens, Michele (November 28, 1993). "'A Very Legitimate Form of Employment': The Stars of DTV". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-03-29.
      2. Contemporary Theatre, Film & Television (volume #7, ISBN 0-8103-2070-3 and ISSN 0749-064X)
      3. https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/actress-stella-stevens-the-nutty-professor-dies-age-84/
      4. 1 2 Andrew Stevens at IMDb
      5. "Star Wars Audition Tapes Feature a Very Different Original Trilogy Cast".
      6. Alex McNeil, Total Television, New York: Penguin Books, 1996, fourth ed., p. 629
      7. Elie's new chapter, Variety.com; accessed 19 April 2016.
      8. "Screenwriting for Profit: Writing for the Global Marketplace".
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