Rob Lowe

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Rob Lowe

Rob Lowe, 2003
Birth name Robert Hepler Lowe
Born March 17, 1964 (age 43)
Charlottesville, Virginia, Flag of United States United States
Spouse(s) Sheryl Berkoff (22 July 1991 - present) 2 children
Notable roles About Last Night... (1986)
Sam Seaborn in The West Wing

Robert Hepler Lowe born March 17, 1964) is an American actor. He became famous after appearing in a string of popular 1980s movies that included other members of the Brat Pack, especially St. Elmo's Fire. Lowe is also known for his role as Sam Seaborn on The West Wing.

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Lowe was born in Charlottesville, Virginia to Charles Lowe, a lawyer, and Barbara Hepler, a teacher; the two divorced when Lowe was young and have since re-married to others. He has a brother, actor Chad Lowe, and two step-siblings. Lowe was baptized into the Episcopalian religion, though his maternal grandparents were Methodists.[1] He was raised in a "traditional midwestern setting"[1] in Dayton, Ohio and on the Westside of Los Angeles, attending Santa Monica High School, where one of his classmates was fellow Brat-Packer Emilio Estevez. He was voted "most spirited" in high school.

Lowe's early roles included such hit films as The Outsiders, St. Elmo's Fire, and About Last Night. Lowe was one of the most popular members of the Brat Pack, partially because of his good looks, which made him a popular actor with many.

Lowe is perhaps best known for playing Sam Seaborn in the television series The West Wing from 1999-2003. When the show premiered, Seaborn was considered the lead, and the pilot centered on the character. But the acclaimed cast — including Allison Janney, Richard Schiff, John Spencer, Bradley Whitford, Martin Sheen (whose President Bartlet was initially scripted as a small role) and Stockard Channing (whose First Lady was initially scripted as a guest role) — soon made the show into the hottest ensemble drama on TV, and Sam Seaborn could no longer be considered the lead character.

While he reluctantly accepted his demotion, Lowe and series creator Aaron Sorkin soon found themselves at odds over the network's meddling with the show, most notably the network demanding changes in the Sam Seaborn character. Eventually, Lowe left the series, not long before Sorkin and director/executive producer Thomas Schlamme unceremoniously quit over a dispute with NBC - a move which saw the show's style change greatly, resulting in decreased ratings and mostly negative reactions from critics and fans. During the final season of The West Wing, Lowe returned to his role of Sam Seaborn, appearing in two of the final four episodes.

After leaving the show, Lowe was star and executive producer of a failed NBC drama, The Lyon's Den (2003). In 2004, he tried again in a series entitled Dr. Vegas, but it also was quickly cancelled. Also during 2004, Lowe participated in a photo shoot by the renown fashion photagrapher Ben Fink Shapiro. In 2005, he starred as Lieutenant Daniel Kaffee in a London West End production of Sorkin's play A Few Good Men, the first time the two had worked together since The West Wing. Although Lowe had expressed unhappiness about his decreased role on that show at the time of his departure, he has now repeatedly said that any animosity between them is over and that he was pleased to be working once more with Sorkin, whose talents as a writer Lowe highly regards. Lowe passed on the role of Dr. Derek Shepard of Grey's Anatomy, which eventually went to Patrick Dempsey.[2]

In 2006, it was announced that Lowe would join the cast of Brothers & Sisters for a guest run of several episodes.

In June, 2006 he was the guest host for an episode in the third series of The Friday Night Project for the United Kingdom's Channel 4.

Lowe's career in Hollywood was on the fast track until 1988, when Lowe was caught in a sex scandal involving him videotaping himself having sex with two women, one of whom was only sixteen,[3] in Atlanta while attending the 1988 Democratic National Convention. Lowe has asserted that he did not know that the second girl was underaged (a fact later confirmed, as the two had met at a bar, which the girl entered by lying about her age).

Further complicating the issue was another part of the same tape that leaked at the time, starring Lowe, a young American model called "Jennifer", and a young friend called "Justin Morris" having a three-way in a hotel room in Paris. This part of the original tape was made commercially available and it was sold as one of the first commercially available "celebrity sex tape", lending a black eye towards Rob Lowe's public image.

Rob Lowe's career was damaged by the scandal, as the actor entered a rehabilitation clinic for alcohol and sex addiction. As the scandal faded from the public's memory, Lowe's career rebounded and Lowe himself has mocked his own irresponsible behavior during two post-scandal appearances as host of Saturday Night Live. In one appearance, Rob appeared in a "Church Lady" sketch, where in exchange for the Church Lady not mentioning the sex tape scandal during their interview, Lowe would allow the Church Lady to spank him on live TV. At the end of the sketch, when it comes time for Rob's spanking, Rob takes a great deal of sexual pleasure from being spanked, much to the Church Lady's horror as she starts screaming for Satan to leave Rob Lowe's butt. "I love to be spanked!" Rob Lowe says to reporters. "I like the feeling of having a warm butt".

Lowe's former sister-in-law is two time Academy Award winning actress Hilary Swank, who was married to his brother. Lowe makes his home with his wife Sheryl Berkoff and two children, Edward Matthew Lowe (b. 1993) and John Owen Lowe (b. 1995), in Montecito, California.

Lowe was the first male spokesperson for the 2000 Lee National Denim Day fundraiser which raises millions of dollars for breast cancer research and education. His grandmother and great-grandmother both suffered from breast cancer, and his mother succumbed to the disease in late 2003.

Lowe is a founder of the Homeowner's Defense Fund, a Santa Barbara County non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to local control of land use planning and transparency in government.[4] The average price of tract homes in Santa Barbara in early 2006 is $1,500,000, which has motivated some to propose denser housing on existing lots. At the same time Lowe opposes new housing for others, he has sought to build a very large mansion for himself at 700 Picacho Lane in Montecito.[5] Lowe's protest over the appearance of the address in the Santa Barbara News-Press precipitated a mass resignation of senior employees at that newspaper on July 6, 2006.[6]

Lowe is a registered Democrat. [1]

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