He was the “king of cool,” the highest-paid actor in the world, and the idol of moviegoers from coast to coast. Some even called him the next John Wayne
But for Steve McQueen—who starred in more than 30 films and 20 TV series during the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s—it wasn’t enough. Fame didn’t satisfy him. Neither did women, motorcycles or cars.
In fact, McQueen didn’t find inner peace until the final months of his life, when he accepted Christ and had plans to tell the world about his new-found faith. But that public testimony never came, as McQueen died in 1980 at age 50 following a bout with cancer, having told only a handful of people how Jesus had saved him.
A new documentary may change how we view McQueen. Called Steve McQueen: American Icon, it follows his journey from a troubled youth to Hollywood stardom and then tells us the rest of the story—that is, how McQueen converted to Christianity. It is hosted by Greg Laurie, a lifelong McQueen fan who serves as pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship in Riverside, Calif. Jon and Andrew Erwin (Woodlawn), along with Ben Smallbone (Priceless), directed it.
It is scheduled to show in theaters only two nights (Sept. 28 and Oct. 10), and is one of the most powerful and inspiring documentaries I’ve ever seen. It’s also one that churches easily can get behind. (There’s no language or sexuality.)
“The only time he was truly happy was when he became a born-again Christian,” Marshall Terrill, the author of Steve McQueen: The Salvation of an American Icon, tells Laurie in the film.
McQueen’s pastor agrees: “There was a peace. There was a calmness” in McQueen.
Laurie also interviews McQueen’s wife (model Barbara Minty McQueen), actor/director Mel Gibson, stuntman Stan Barrett, and even the pilot who taught McQueen how to fly.
McQueen had a difficult childhood. Both parents were alcoholics, and he bounced back and forth between family members before he was sent to a reform school for boys with behavioral problems. He took an interest in acting partially because of his desire to meet women. Acting was therapeutic, providing an escape from his past and allowing him to pretend to be someone else.
His first hit was the television show Wanted: Dead or Alive (1958-61), and his first big-time movie The Blob (1958). He earned his reputation as a tough guy with a series of western and action films, including The Magnificent Seven (1960), The Great Escape (1963) and Bullitt (1968). His final hit was The Towering Inferno, the top grossing film of 1974.
McQueen seemingly had everything. He was the highest-paid actor in the world and even dated a girl who—get this—dumped Elvis to date him. Yet toward the end of his life McQueen dropped out of Hollywood and turned down major acting roles, sensing something was missing from his life. He finally found it thanks to a series of providential encounters: one with a Christian on the set of a film (who gave him a copy of C.S. Lewis’ “Mere Christianity”) and the other with a pilot who was teaching him how to fly. McQueen was attracted to the inner peace he saw in Christians.
During the final hours of his life when he was awaiting a risky surgery he even met Billy Graham, who gave McQueen his personal Bible.
Steve McQueen: American Icon is Ecclesiastes on the big screen: A man obtains fame and fortune and then reaches the end of his life and proclaims: All is vanity.
McQueen’s discovery is one that all of us need to hear.
Steve McQueen: American Icon is unrated. It contains no language or sexuality, and only minor violence through McQueen’s movie clips.
Entertainment rating: 4 out of 5 stars. Family-friendly rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars.