Kevin Costner

Kevin Costner

Born Kevin Michael Costner
(1955-01-18) January 18, 1955
Lynwood, California, U.S.
Alma mater California State University, Fullerton, B.A. 1978
Occupation Actor, producer, director, singer
Years active 1974–present
Spouse(s)
  • Cindy Silva (m. 1978–94)
    Christine Baumgartner (m. 2004)
Children 7

Kevin Michael Costner (born January 18, 1955) is an American actor, film director, producer, musician, and singer. He has won two Academy Awards, three Golden Globe Awards, and one Emmy Award, and has been nominated for three BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) Awards. In 2013, he was awarded the Honorary César.

Costner's notable roles include Eliot Ness in The Untouchables, Crash Davis in Bull Durham, Ray Kinsella in Field of Dreams, Lt. John J. Dunbar in Dances with Wolves, Jim Garrison in JFK, Robin Hood in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Frank Farmer in The Bodyguard, Roy McAvoy in Tin Cup, Jonathan Kent in the DC Extended Universe. Less well-liked were the science fiction-post-apocalyptic epics Waterworld (1995) and The Postman (1997), the latter with Costner starring, directing and producing.

He won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie, the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film, and the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie for his role as Devil Anse Hatfield in Hatfields & McCoys (2012) and starred in and produced Black or White (2014).

Early life

Costner was born January 18, 1955 in Lynwood, California, and grew up in Compton, California. He is the youngest of three boys (the middle of whom died at birth). His mother, Sharon Rae (née Tedrick), was a welfare worker, and his father, William Costner, was an electrician and later utilities executive at Southern California Edison.[1][2] Costner's patrilineal heritage originates with German immigrants to North Carolina in the 1700s;[3] he also has English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and other German, ancestry.[4][5][6] Costner was raised Baptist.[7][8] He attended Buena High School and Villa Park High School. Costner was not academically inclined. Rather, he enjoyed sports, took piano lessons, wrote poetry, and sang in the First Baptist Choir.[1][9] He has stated that a viewing of the 1962 film How the West Was Won at the age of seven had "formed" his childhood.[3]

Spending his teenage years in various parts of California as his father's career progressed,[3] Costner has described this as a period when he "lost a lot of confidence", having to make new friends often.[3] Costner lived in Orange County, then in Visalia (Tulare County), attending Mt. Whitney High School, and then Ventura, graduating from Villa Park High School in 1973. He went on to earn a BA in marketing and finance from California State University, Fullerton (CSUF) in 1978.[3] While at CSUF, he was a fraternity brother in Delta Chi.

Post-graduation

Costner became interested in acting while in his last year of college,[3] and on graduation married Cindy Silva. The couple honeymooned in Puerto Vallarta and on the return plane journey had a chance encounter with actor and fellow passenger Richard Burton, who had purchased all the seats around him for solitude. Burton agreed to speak to Costner after he finished his book. Costner, who had been taking acting classes, but had not told his wife about his desire to be an actor, watched Burton closely and approached when Burton gestured. Costner told Burton that he would prefer that his life was not filled with the type of drama that had followed Burton and asked if he would have to tolerate that if he became an actor. Burton replied, "You have green eyes. I have green eyes. I think you'll be fine." After landing, Burton's limousine pulled up to the curb where Costner and Cindy were waiting for a taxi, where Burton wished Costner luck. Costner would never see Burton again, but credits Burton with partially contributing to his career.[1][10]

Having agreed to undertake a job as a marketing executive on return, Costner began taking acting lessons five nights a week, with the support of his wife.[3] His marketing job lasted 30 days. He took work which allowed him to develop his acting skills via tuition, including working on fishing boats, as a truck driver, and giving tours of stars' Hollywood homes to support the couple while he also made the audition rounds.[1]

Career

Acting

Costner allegedly made his film debut in the film Sizzle Beach, U.S.A.. Although a biography claims it was actually filmed in the winter of 1978–79, the film was not released until 1986. Costner made a very brief appearance in the Ron Howard film Night Shift (1982). He is listed in the credits as 'Frat Boy No. 1' and appears at the climax of a frat-style, blow-out party in the New York City morgue, when the music is suddenly stopped by a frantic Henry Winkler. Costner can be seen holding a beer and looking surprised at the sudden halt of celebration.

He appeared in a commercial for the Apple Lisa and Table for Five in 1983, and, the same year, had a small role in the nuclear holocaust film Testament. Later, he was cast in The Big Chill and filmed several scenes that were planned as flashbacks, but they were removed from the final cut.[3] His role was that of Alex, the friend who committed suicide, the event that brings the rest of the cast together. All that is seen of him are his hair and his slashed wrists as the mortician dresses his corpse in the movie's opening scenes.[11] Costner was a friend of director Lawrence Kasdan, who promised the actor a role in a future project.[3] That became Silverado (1985) and a breakout role for Costner.[3] He also starred that year in the smaller films Fandango and American Flyers and appeared alongside Kiefer Sutherland in a one-hour long special episode of Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories.[12]

Full-blown movie star status for Costner arrived in 1987, when he starred as federal agent Eliot Ness in The Untouchables and in the leading role of the thriller No Way Out.[3] He solidified his A-list status in the baseball-themed films Bull Durham (1988) and Field of Dreams (1989).[3] Costner's next success came with the epic Dances with Wolves (1990).[3] He directed and starred in the film and served as one of its producers.[3] The film was nominated for 12 Academy Awards and won seven, including two for him personally (Best Picture and Best Director).[3] The same year saw the release of Revenge, in which he starred along with Anthony Quinn and Madeleine Stowe, directed by Tony Scott (Costner had wanted to direct it himself).

He followed this with Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991), the Oliver Stone-directed JFK (1991), The Bodyguard (1992), and Clint Eastwood's A Perfect World (1993), all of which provided box office or critical acclaim.[3] He then took the title role in the biopic Wyatt Earp (1994), directed by Kasdan. It received mixed reviews and flopped at the box office. The War, also made in 1994, seemed to gain little attention. The science fiction-post-apocalyptic epics Waterworld (1995) and The Postman (1997), the latter of which Costner also directed, were both commercial disappointments and both largely regarded by critics as artistic failures.[3] However, The Postman results were worse than Waterworld and ended up "winning" five Golden Raspberry Awards, including Worst Picture, Worst Actor and Worst Director for Costner.[13] Costner then starred in the golf comedy Tin Cup (1996) for Ron Shelton, who had previously directed him in Bull Durham.[3] He developed the film Air Force One and was set to play the lead role of the President, but ultimately decided to concentrate on finishing The Postman instead. He personally offered the project to Harrison Ford. In 1999, he starred in Message in a Bottle with Robin Wright-Penn. This was based on a novel of the same name By Nicholas Sparks.

Costner visiting Andrews Air Force Base in July 2003.
Kevin Costner's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

His career revived somewhat in 2000 with Thirteen Days, in which he portrayed Kenneth O'Donnell, a top adviser to John F. Kennedy. The western Open Range, which he directed and starred in, received critical acclaim in 2003, and was a surprise success commercially. He received some of his best reviews for his supporting role as retired professional baseball player Denny Davies in The Upside of Anger, for which he received a nomination from the Broadcast Film Critics Association and won the San Francisco Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor. After that, Costner starred in The Guardian and in Mr. Brooks, in which he portrayed a serial killer. In 2008, Costner starred in Swing Vote. Costner was honored on September 6, 2006 when his hand and foot prints were set in concrete in front of Grauman's Chinese Theatre alongside those of other celebrated actors and entertainers. In 2010, he appeared in The Company Men alongside Ben Affleck, Tommy Lee Jones and Chris Cooper. It debuted at the Sundance Film Festival, and received good reviews. It was released in cinemas worldwide in January 2011. The film was considered to be an Oscar contender, but did not get a nomination.

Costner announced that he would be returning to the director's chair for the first time in seven years in 2011 with A Little War of Our Own. The film is about a local sheriff who must keep his town from erupting into violence during World War II. The other lead role is that of a German U-boat captain. The screenplay is by Dan Gordon, who co-wrote another sheriff movie for Costner, Wyatt Earp (1994). In January 2012, Costner had to admit funding did not come through, and that he still hopes to make it in 2013. He was also about to team up again with director Kevin Reynolds in Learning Italian. Costner would play a CIA agent stationed in a coastal Italian town in order to keep an eye on a KGB operative. However, the movie did not get past pre-production phase because Costner and Reynolds could not raise the money required.

He also appears, as a special cameo, in Funny or Die's "Field of Dreams 2: Lockout". Costner portrayed Jonathan Kent in the rebooted Superman film, Man of Steel, directed by Zack Snyder.[14] Costner was going to have a role in Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained,[15] but had to drop out due to scheduling conflicts.

Costner starred in the three-part miniseries Hatfields and McCoys, which premiered on May 28, 2012 on the History Channel. It immediately broke a record by pulling 13.9 million viewers. The miniseries tells the true American story of a legendary family feud – one that spanned decades and nearly launched a war between Kentucky and West Virginia. The role earned Costner a 2012 Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie.[16] He also won the Golden Globe for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie.

In 2014, Costner appeared in the spy movie Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, as Thomas Harper, a mentor for the series' title character. The same year, he starred in the thriller 3 Days to Kill and the drama Draft Day and produced and starred in Black or White.[17] Black or White premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and opened in the United States in 2015. In 2015, Costner played coach Jim White in the drama film McFarland, USA, about cross country running.

Country music

Costner on stage in July 2010

Costner is the singer in Kevin Costner & Modern West, a country rock band which he founded with the encouragement of his wife Christine. They began a worldwide tour in October 2007, which included shows in Istanbul and Rome. The group also performed at NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Daytona International Speedway and Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, NC.

The band released a country album, Untold Truths, on November 11, 2008 on Universal South Records. The album peaked at No. 61 on the Billboard Top Country Albums and No. 35 on the Top Heatseekers chart. Three singles ("Superman 14", "Long Hot Night" and "Backyard") have been released to radio, although none have charted. The single "Superman 14" has been made into a live music video.

In 2009, they went on tour with opening act The Alternate Routes. In August, at the Big Valley Jamboree in Camrose, Alberta, Costner and the band were scheduled next on stage when a severe thunderstorm struck, collapsing the stage and stands on the main stage. One person was reported dead and forty injured.[18] Later, an auction was held to raise money for the two young sons of the woman killed. A dinner with Costner was auctioned off for $41,000. Two guitars, one autographed by Costner, helped raise another $10,000 each.[19]

A second Kevin Costner and Modern West album, Turn It On, was released in February 2010 in Europe[20] and was supported by a European tour.[21] In July 2012, the band performed in Halifax, Nova Scotia at the 20th annual Telus World Skins Game in support of the IWK Health Centre Foundation, donating a guitar personally autographed by Costner.[22]

Other ventures

Baseball

Several of Costner's films have included a baseball theme. They include Chasing Dreams, Bull Durham, Field of Dreams, For Love of the Game and The Upside of Anger, of which in the majority of those films his character is a former pro baseball player.

He has a home in Austin and sometimes appears at Texas Longhorns baseball practices and games. Costner is a close friend of Longhorns baseball coach Augie Garrido from Garrido's days coaching at Cal State Fullerton, the actor's alma mater. He cast Garrido to play the role of the Yankee manager in For Love of the Game. He tries to attend every College World Series game that CSUF Titans plays in Omaha, Nebraska. Costner walked-on for a try-out, but did not make the team early in his time at the university.

Costner was a partial owner of the Zion, Illinois-based Lake County Fielders independent baseball team in the North American League. The Fielders name was an homage to Field of Dreams, with the logo showing a ballplayer standing amid a field of corn.[23][24]

Business interests

In July 2004, Costner fired Francis and Carla Caneva, who managed the Midnight Star casino in Deadwood, South Dakota. A judge subsequently ordered Costner to pay a percentage of $6.1 million to buy out the Canevas as his business partners. In October 2006, Costner asked the South Dakota Supreme Court to re-examine the ruling, as an accountant hired by the actor had determined the market value of the casino to be $3.1 million.[25]

On June 6, 2004 Costner opened "Tatanka: The Story of the Bison" one mile south of Deadwood, South Dakota on U.S. Route 85, for what Kevin Costner hopes will be an educational and emotional place for people to learn about America's westward expansion. Promoters stated in a news release that the $5 million attraction has a new, 3,800-square-foot interactive interpretive center featuring exhibit, retail, and food and beverage areas, as well as offices and a small orientation theater. The visitor center features graphics, photographs and text describing how bison came to North America and how American Indian tribes used the animals for food, clothing, shelter and many other needs. Other displays show how the American westward expansion threatened the buffalo populations and how the bison herds have since recovered under managed care to number about 400,000. The centerpiece is a bronze sculpture depicting a buffalo jump commonly used by Plains Indians to kill and process large numbers of animals on which they depended for survival. Hill City artist Peggy Detmers created 14 bronze bison in the act of running from their pursuers and three bronze Lakota riders on horseback. Three of the massive bison are posed in midair, cascading over the face of a cliff. Costner commissioned the work in 1994 from Detmers. The five-fourths-scale bronzes, each weighing between 2,500 and 8,000 pounds, were cast at Eagle Bronze Foundry in Lander, Wyo. Another aspect is an 1845 Lakota encampment. The encampment will feature living Lakota interpreters of history, dressed in period attire and settled among their teepees.[26]

In 1995, Costner began developing oil separation machines based on a patent he purchased from the US government. The machines developed by the company were of little commercial interest until the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, when BP took six of the machines from a company in which Costner owned an interest, Ocean Therapy Solutions, for testing in late May 2010.[27] On June 16, 2010 BP entered into a lease with Ocean Therapy Solutions for 32 of the oil-water separation devices.[28] Although Spyron Contoguris and Stephen Baldwin previously sold their interests in Ocean Therapy Solutions in mid-June to another investor in the company, they filed a lawsuit in Louisiana District Court claiming $10.64 million for securities fraud and misrepresentation. The suit claimed that Costner kept a meeting with BP secret from them, and the secret meeting resulted in an $18 million down payment on a $52 million purchase and that after the down payment but before any announcement another investor used part of the downpayment to buy out their shares, thus excluding them from their share of the profits from the total sale.[29] The suit claimed that, despite public statements by Costner, Ocean Therapy Solutions, BP and others to the contrary, Baldwin and Contogouris were told that BP was still testing the machines and had not yet committed to lease the machines from Ocean Therapy Solutions and that the other investor in Ocean Therapy Solutions purchased their shares for $1.4 million to Baldwin and $500,000, to Contogouris.[30] In June 2012, a federal jury in Louisiana deliberated for less than 2 hours before completely rejecting Baldwin's and Contogouris' claims in the multi-million dollar oil clean-up case, and the court ordered Baldwin and Contogouris to reimburse Costner and the other defendants in the case for their costs.[31]

Philanthropy

Costner serves on an honorary board for The National World War I Museum in Kansas City. In spring 2011, he recorded two radio spots for the museum that were aired on Kansas City Royals Radio Network.[32]

NASCAR

Costner was named ceremonial Grand Marshal of the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series' Auto Club 500 which took place on February 25, 2007, at the California Speedway.[33] In 2008, he worked with the NASCAR Media Group and CMT Films to help produce the NASCAR Documentary, The Ride of Their Lives which would be released in 2009. Costner would be the narrator for that documentary. Also in 2009, he was named the spokesman for NASCAR Day which took place on 15 May. The next day, 16 May, he and his country music band would perform in the infield of Lowe's Motor Speedway as well as participate as a judge in the 2nd annual Pennzoil Victory Challenge before the 25th Running of the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.

Personal life

Relationships

Costner in 2013 with Christine Baumgartner.

While in college, Costner was a member of Delta Chi fraternity at the Cal State Fullerton (CSUF).[1] He started dating fellow student Cindy Silva in March 1975, and their subsequent marriage three years later had three children: Anne "Annie" Clayton (born April 15, 1984), Lily McCall (born August 4, 1986) and Joseph "Joe" Tedrick Costner (born January 31, 1988). The couple divorced in 1994 after 16 years of marriage. He has a son, Liam Timothy Costner (born November 15, 1996), with Bridget Rooney, with whom he had a brief relationship following his divorce.[34]

In 1996, he lived with supermodel Elle Macpherson.[35]

On September 25, 2004, Costner married his girlfriend of four years, German-American model and handbag designer Christine Baumgartner,[36] at his ranch in Aspen, Colorado. Their first child, Cayden Wyatt Costner, was born on May 6, 2007 at a Los Angeles hospital.[37] Their second son, Hayes Logan Costner, was born on February 12, 2009,[38] and their third child, a daughter named Grace Avery Costner, was born on June 2, 2010.[39]

Sports

The actor plays regularly in celebrity golf tournaments, including the PGA Tour's annual pro-am at Pebble Beach, California and the BMW Pro-Am held each April in Greenville County, South Carolina. Costner is a member of Birnam Wood Golf Club in Montecito, California. Costner is also a member of the Coral Casino Beach and Cabana Club in Montecito, CA

Political activism

Since 1992, Costner has financially supported a variety of Democratic Party politicians, including Al Gore and Tom Daschle, but also made contributions to the Republican Party's Phil Gramm as late as 1995.[40] He said publicly in 2008 that he has no ambition to run for political office, adding "I've lived quite a colorful life."[41]

In the final days before the 2008 election, Costner campaigned for Barack Obama, visiting various places in Colorado—a state in which he has a home. In his speech, Costner stated the need for young voters to get to the polls, early and with enthusiasm. "We were going to change the world and we haven't," Costner said at a Colorado State University rally. "My generation didn't get it done, and we need you to help us."[42]

In October 2014, Costner sent a tribute to British troops serving around the world thanking them for their work.[43]

Selected filmography

Awards and nominations

Year Association Category Nominated work Result
1990 National Board of Review Best Director Dances with Wolves Won
1991 Academy Awards Best Actor Nominated
Best Director Won
Best Picture Won
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Actor Nominated
Best Director Nominated
David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Actor Nominated
Best Foreign Film Nominated
Directors Guild of America Best Director Won
Golden Globe Awards Best Actor – Drama Nominated
Best Director – Motion Picture Won
1992 BAFTA Awards Best Actor in a Leading Role Nominated
Best Direction Nominated
Cinema of France Best Foreign Film Nominated
Cinema of Germany Best Foreign Film Won
Cinema of Japan Best Foreign Language Film Won
Golden Globe Awards Best Actor – Drama JFK Nominated
MTV Movie Awards Most Desirable Male Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves Nominated
Best On-Screen Duo (with Morgan Freeman) Nominated
Best Male Performance Nominated
Razzie Awards Worst Actor Won
Saturn Awards Best Actor Nominated
1993 MTV Movie Awards Most Desirable Male The Bodyguard Nominated
Best On-Screen Duo (with Whitney Houston) Nominated
Best Male Performance Nominated
Razzie Award Worst Actor Nominated
1996 Waterworld Nominated
1997 Golden Globe Awards Best Actor – Musical or Comedy Tin Cup Nominated
1998 Saturn Awards Best Actor The Postman Nominated
Razzie Award Worst Picture Won
Worst Actor Won
Worst Director Won
2000 Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Favorite Actor – Drama or Romance Message in a Bottle Nominated
2005 San Francisco Film Critics Circle Best Supporting Actor The Upside of Anger Won
Satellite Awards Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Nominated
2006 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Nominated
2012 Critics' Choice Television Award Best Movie/Miniseries Actor Hatfields & McCoys Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie Won
Outstanding Miniseries or Movie Nominated
Satellite Awards Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film Nominated
2013 Golden Globe Awards Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film Won
Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie Won

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Todd Keith, Kevin Costner: The Unauthorized Biography, Ikonprint Publishers: Southwark, London (1991)
  2. "The religion of Kevin Costner, actor and film director". adherents.com.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Stated on Inside the Actors Studio, 2001
  4. Barnes, Harper (November 18, 1990). "Costner's Waltz with the West ... He takes the Indians' side in making his directing debut". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  5. "Pursuing The Dream", Time Magazine June 26, 1989
  6. Kevin Costner – Biography
  7. "KEVIN COSTNER PLOWS HIS OWN 'Field of Dreams'". The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution. May 6, 1989. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  8. Kempley, Rita (November 9, 1990). "Kevin Costner in the Land of 'Wolves'; The Director: Reclaiming Boyhood Dreams". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
  9. "Kevin Costner biography". bestmediareviews.org, The Pierian Press, 2003. videocassette. Traveling Light Media, 2003. Media Review Digest, MRD05052940. May 18, 1743. Retrieved September 5, 2010.
  10. Roger Ebert (July 3, 2008). "Kevin Costner: 'I'll never make a sequel.'". Sun-Times.
  11. "The Big Chill (1983)". IMDb.
  12. "Amazing Stories; The Mission". Retrieved May 17, 2013.
  13. Internet Movie Database. "18th Annual Golden Raspeberry Awards". Retrieved November 2, 2010.
  14. "Kevin Costner Confirmed for Superman!". SuperHeroHype.
  15. Kit, Borys (July 18, 2011). "Kevin Costner to Train Slaves in 'Django Unchained'". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  16. Pennington, Gail (September 24, 2012). "'Homeland' wins big; Hamm loses again at Emmys". St. Louis Post-Dispatch via website. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  17. Kevin Costner interview (1/2-hour), Tavis Smiley, PBS, February 3, 2015. Retrieved 2014-02-04.
  18. "1 Dead, 40 Injured in Canada Stage Collapse". AP via The New York Times. August 2, 2009. Retrieved August 2, 2009.
  19. Lees, Nick (August 12, 2009). "Katz likely culprit behind mystery $41,000 bid". Edmonton Journal.
  20. New Album – "Turn It On" – News – Kevin Costner & Modern West Archived August 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  21. New Tour Dates Announced / New Album In the Works – News – Kevin Costner & Modern West Archived September 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  22. Academy Award winner, actor, director and musician, Kevin Costner and Juno Award winner Canadian musician and humanitarian Tom Cochrane to play at 2012 TELUS World Skins Archived June 2, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
  23. Rotenbirk, Lori (April 5, 2009). "Major League Hopes Pinned on the Minors". The New York Times. p. A23.
  24. "Zion, IL 2010 Northern League Expansion Team Named the Lake County Fielders". Lake County Fielders web site. October 5, 2009. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  25. Costner appeals in casino wrangle, BBC
  26. Rapid City Journal, June 6, 2004
  27. Robbins, Liz (May 19, 2010). "If You Build It ...". The New York Times.
  28. "Examiner: Kevin Costner sells 32 oil spill machines to BP to recycle 6 million gallons of water a day (photos)".
  29. Kate Ward. "Stephen Baldwin spills lawsuit on Kevin Costner".
  30. Detroit Free Press, Friday, December 24, 2010, page 3C
  31. "Kevin Costner". Retrieved June 18, 2012.
  32. Costner Lends Voice to Museum Archived April 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
  33. Kevin Costner Named Grand Marshal Archived January 8, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  34. Perry, Simon (February 9, 2007). ""Kevin Costner, Wife Christine Are Expecting."]". People.
  35. Pringle, Gill. (June 3, 1996). "Kevin Costner Gets an Elle of a Girl.". Sunday Mirror.
  36. Kappes, Serena and Jason Bane "Kevin Costner Marries Girlfriend in Aspen." People. September 26, 2004.
  37. Nudd, Tim. "Kevin Costner, Wife Have a Baby Boy." People. May 7, 2007.
  38. Silverman, Stephen M. "It's Another Boy for Kevin Costner." People. February 13, 2009
  39. Michaud, Sarah (March 17, 2010). "Seventh Child on the Way for Kevin Costner". People. Retrieved May 27, 2010.
  40. "FreshMeat:Celebrity Donations". FreshMeat.com.
  41. "Comedy Central:Kevin Costner". August 6, 2008. Archived from the original on January 13, 2009. Retrieved August 24, 2009.
  42. Trevor Hughes (October 29, 2008). "Celebrities, officials push CSU student vote". Fort Collins Coloradoan. p. A1. Retrieved August 26, 2009.
  43. "Kevin Costner pays tribute to British soldiers". October 8, 2014.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kevin Costner.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, May 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.