Event: Martin Sheen & Emilio Estevez live at
book signing of Along the way
When: 11 May 2012 @ 7pm
Where: Barnes and Noble located at 189 The Grove Drive , Grove
shopping center, Los Angeles .
In this remarkable dual memoir,
film legend Martin Sheen and accomplished actor/filmmaker Emilio Estevez
recount their lives as father and son. In alternating chapters—and in voices
that are as eloquent as they are different—they tell stories spanning more than
fifty years of family history, and reflect on their journeys into two different
kinds of faith.
At twenty-one, still a struggling
actor living hand to mouth, Martin and his wife, Janet, welcomed their
firstborn, Emilio, an experience of profound joy for the young couple, who soon
had three more children: Ramon, Charlie, and RenĂ©e. As Martin’s career moved
from stage to screen, the family moved from New York City
to Malibu , while traveling together to film
locations around the world, from Mexico
for Catch-22 to Colorado for Badlands to the Philippines for
the legendary Apocalypse Now shoot. As the firstborn, Emilio had a special
relationship with Martin: They often mirrored each other’s passions and
sometimes clashed in their differences. After Martin and Emilio traveled
together to India for the
movie Gandhi, each felt the beginnings of a spiritual awakening that soon led
Martin back to his Catholic roots, and eventually led both men to Spain , from where Martin’s father had emigrated
to the United States .
Along the famed Camino de Santiago pilgrimage path, Emilio directed Martin in
their acclaimed film, The Way, bringing three generations of Estevez men
together in the region of Spain where Martin’s father was born, and near where
Emilio’s own son had moved to marry and live.
With vivid, behind-the-scenes
anecdotes of this multitalented father’s and son’s work with other notable
actors and directors, Along the Way is a striking, stirring, funny story—a
family saga that readers will recognize as universal in its rebellions and
regrets, aspirations and triumphs. Strikingly candid, searchingly honest, this
heartfelt portrait reveals two strong-minded, admirable men of many important
roles, perhaps the greatest of which are as fathers and sons.
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