Steve Railsback

About Steve Railsback

Who is it?: Actor, Producer, Director
Birth Day: November 16, 1945
Birth Place:  Dallas, Texas, United States
Birth Sign: Sagittarius
Occupation: Actor
Years active: 1967-present
Spouse(s): Marcy Sobel (1990 - present) (2 children) Jacqueline Giroux (1980 - 1988) (divorced) (1 child)
Website: www.steverailsbackactor.com

Steve Railsback Net Worth

Steve Railsback was born on November 16, 1945 in  Dallas, Texas, United States, is Actor, Producer, Director. Noted for his dangerous, chameleon-like portrayals while possessing the scariest-looking pair of eyes in the business, leathery-looking Steve Railsback has mesmerized us over the years with a number of weird, often warped roles both on film and television. While never achieving the degree of stardom deserved, he, like the equally infamous and unpredictable Dennis Hopper, always commands interest whether the material is good or inferior. Born on Nevember 16, 1945 in Dallas, Texas, he was raised in Wichita Falls. Participation in a local college production of "Cinderella" at the age of 7 spurred his interest in acting. After graduating from high school, he took a job as a shoe salesman and eventually made enough money to leave his native Texas and relocate to New York in order to pursue acting in 1967.As a student of Lee Strasberg and the Actors Studio, Railsback was forced to work menial jobs in order to initially survive, but he eventually became a regular fixture in the New York theatre scene in the late 1960s/early 1970s, appearing in such stage productions as "The Bluebird", "Orpheus Descending" and "This Property Is Condemned". While working out at the Studio, he caught the attention of renowned director Elia Kazan, who noticed his strong potential, and offered the fledgling actor a showy role in the low-budget film The Visitors (1972). However, he returned to the theatre with roles in "The Petrified Forest", "One Sunday Afternoon" and "The Cherry Orchard" before making his Broadway debut in the short-lived José Quintero-directed production of "The Skin of Our Teeth" starring Elizabeth Ashley in 1975.Following a second film role with James Woods in Cockfighter (1974) and the title role in the PBS piece Charlie Siringo (1976), Steve delivered one of the most shockingly vivid lead roles ever present in a miniseries with his all-consuming reincarnation of cult leader and mass murderer Charles Manson in Helter Skelter (1976). While the new guy on the block was unjustly ignored at Emmy time, Hollywood could not help but pay attention to this electrifying performer. Thanks primarily to Railsback, the miniseries was the highest-rated television movie at the time until Roots (1977) came along the following year.Eager to avoid the threat of being typecast in "psycho" parts, Steve complemented this infamous role with a much more humane performance in the miniseries From Here to Eternity (1979), tackling the role of Pvt. Robert E. Lee Pruitt (made memorable on screen by the late Montgomery Clift) and making it completely his own. His next big movie role, as a fugitive who happens upon a film set in the bizarre and brilliant black comedy The Stunt Man (1980) with the equally compelling Peter O'Toole, assured Hollywood that his stunning Charlie Manson portrayal was no fluke. More cutting-edge parts in a variety of genres came his way throughout the 1980s, but without the quality of production to back them up. Such films as the mystery Deadly Games (1982); the Australian sci-fi thriller Turkey Shoot (1982); the horror film Trick or Treats (1982); the animal adventure The Golden Seal (1983); the cocaine abuse drama Torchlight (1985); the bizarre British sci-fi horror film Lifeforce (1985); the John Candy/Eugene Levy action comedy Armed and Dangerous (1986); the rock-and-roll drama Scenes from the Goldmine (1987); and the ho-hum thriller dramas Distortions (1987), The Survivalist (1987) and Nukie (1987) more often than not wasted his unique gifts.While falling into quirky low-budget or direct-to-video fare for some time, Railsback has also dabbled in writing, producing and directing on occasion, such as the Vietnam POW story The Forgotten (1989). At the turn of the century, Steve came to attention once again with a showy role as he delved inside the complex mind of another schizophrenic madman. In the Light of the Moon (2000), about infamous serial killer/cannibal Ed Gein (in which he also served as executive producer) once again showed Hollywood that the actor was a master at the game of weird.Into the millennium, Railsback has appeared in mostly minor films, with roles in Zigs (2001), Slash (2002), Neo Ned (2005), King of the Lost World (2005), Plaguers (2008), Ready or Not (2009) and Follow the Prophet (2009). On television, he has had occasional roles tailored to his off-beat talents, guesting on such series as The Practice (1997), The District (2000), Family Law (1999) and Sieu Nhien (2005).
Steve Railsback is a member of Actor

💰Steve Railsback Net worth: $700,000

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Biography/Timeline

1960

Railsback was a student of Lee Strasberg and the Actors Studio and in the late 1960s and early 1970s spent 10 years working in theatre in New York City. He once said that he found Strasberg extremely difficult to work with.

1976

He made his film debut in The Visitors, directed by Elia Kazan. He played the parts of two notorious Murderers, appearing as Charles Manson in the 1976 television miniseries Helter Skelter and as Ed Gein in the 2000 film In the Light of the Moon. He also served as executive Producer of the latter film.

2008

In 2008, he appeared in the science fiction/horror movie film Plaguers.

2019

Other notable roles include the part of Cameron in The Stunt Man with Peter O'Toole, the Astronaut in Tobe Hooper’s Lifeforce, Duane Barry in two episodes of The X-Files, and Joseph Welch in the pilot episode of Supernatural.