Rob Lowe has revealed that he has been developing a sequel to his 1985 film St. Elmo’s Fire with Columbia Pictures following the success of co-star Andrew McCarthy’s documentary Brats.
“The studio and I have been talking about doing it for about four months,” the 60-year-old Emmy nominee said. AND on Monday.
“Brats has only increased the excitement around the project, but it’s still very, very, very early stages, so we’ll see.”
Mare Winningham, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Demi Moore and Emilio Estevez also starred in Joel Schumacher’s film. reviewed with terrible reviews drama about seven Georgetown University graduates, which grossed $37.8 million against a $10 million budget at the worldwide box office.
Rob, who made his saxophone-playing impression famous, beat out Robert Downey Jr. for the role of womanizer Billy “The Kid” Hicks by showing up to his audition with a six-pack of Heineken beer.
Rob Lowe (TR) revealed that he has been developing a sequel to his 1985 film St. Elmo’s Fire with Columbia Pictures following the success of co-star Andrew McCarthy’s documentary Brats
The Emmy-nominated actor, 60, told ET on Monday: “The studio and I have been talking about doing it for about four months. Brats has only added to the excitement around it. But it’s very, very, very, very early stages, so we’ll see.” (Photo dated July 11)
It’s unclear how Lowe views his character 40 years after considering the mother’s (Jenny Wright) divorce from her son at the end of the film.
The song St. Elmo’s Fire (Man in Motion) reached number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for two weeks in 1985, and Love Theme from St. Elmo’s Fire (the instrumental theme) reached number 15.
On June 28, Demi aware a tribute to her cocaine-snorting party-goer character Jules Van Patten in honor of the 39th anniversary of the St. Elmo fire, and referenced Charli XCX’s new album Brat: “Jules would have loved Brat Girl Summer!”
On June 7, Moore reunited with her former co-stars Ally and Andrew at the premiere of their film at the Tribeca Film Festival. critically acclaimed Hulu documentary about the cast of ‘The Brat Pack,’ which quickly accumulated 244 million minutes watched.
In it, the 61-year-old Emmy nominee said director Joel Schumacher actually “took a risk for me” and made sure she stayed sober on set so he wouldn’t have to. He replaced her with Madonna.
“They could have easily found someone else,” Demi told McCarthy.
“Because it wasn’t like I had any box office appeal. You know, we were all just starting out. I didn’t have anything to justify him supporting me.”
Fans can see more of the Virginia-born, Malibu-raised silver fox producing and reprising his role as Dragon CEO Ellis Dragon alongside his real-life son John Owen Lowe in the second season of Unstable, premiering Thursday on Netflix.
Rob will also executive produce and reprise his role as Austin firefighter Owen Strand in the fifth season of 9-1-1: Lone Star, which premieres September 23 on Fox.
And in May, Fox renewed Lowe’s trivia show, The Floor, for a second and third season.
Mare Winningham, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Demi Moore and Emilio Estevez also starred in Joel Schumacher’s poorly reviewed drama about seven Georgetown University graduates, which grossed $37.8 million on a $10 million budget at the global box office.
Rob, who made his saxophone-playing impression famous, beat out Robert Downey Jr. for the role of womanizer Billy ‘The Kid’ Hicks by turning up to his audition with a six-pack of Heineken beer.
It’s unclear how Lowe views his character 40 years after considering the mother’s (Jenny Wright) divorce from her son at the end of the film.
On June 28, Demi posted a tribute to her cocaine-snorting party-goer character Jules Van Patten in honor of the 39th anniversary of the St. Elmo fire, and made a reference to Charli XCX’s new album Brat: “Jules would have loved Brat Girl Summer!”
On June 7, Moore reunited with her former castmates Ally (L) and Andrew (M) at the Tribeca Film Festival premiere of her critically acclaimed Hulu documentary about the cast of “The Brat Pack,” which quickly racked up 244 million minutes of viewing.
In it, the 61-year-old Emmy nominee said director Joel Schumacher actually “took a risk for me” and made sure she stayed sober on set so he wouldn’t have to replace her with Madonna.
Demi told McCarthy: “They could have easily gone with someone else, because it’s not like I had any box office appeal. You know, we were all just starting out. I didn’t have anything to justify him staying with me.”
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