Stephen Collins

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Stephen Collins Fan Reviews (6)

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  • My favorite actor.

    10
    "Perfect"
    I really like watching 7th Heaven because Stephen Collins is my favorite actor. He is so good looking and also an awesome actor. I have seen a couple of his movies and my favorite was "High Stakes" but, he played a bad guy in that one. I would really like to see a couple more of his movies and I am also in the process of watching every episode of 7th Heaven. I would also like to own the dvds when they come out in stores to buy. I would really like to see him in a new show also.
  • I think he has great talent

    9.1
    "Superb"
    Stephen Collins, in my opinion, is very talented. He did a great job in his role on 7th Heaven. He seems to be most known for his role as Reverend Eric Camden on 7th Heaven as far as I have seen.. He played his role very well in that show as far as I am concerned. I loved the speeches he made in 7th Heaven too, he was very good with how he spoke. He seems like a very smart and educated person and he seems to be very friendly.. or maybe its just because thats how his character on 7th Heaven was... But nonetheless, i think he has great talent and that he can play serious roles very well.
  • He's a great actor and the best father!

    10
    "Perfect"
    Stephen Collins is mostly known for his role as Reverend Eric Camden on 7th Heaven. He is also in movies like The First Wives Club and Because I Said So. He is also a talented musician, singing and playing the guitar. I think Stephen Collins is amazing and has been in some great shows and movies.



    The main role I know him is as Eric Camden. He is really great at playing a father to his seven children and a minister to tons of others. I love the way that he looks so intimidating and so nice at the same time. Stephen Collins is a wonderful actor and the best TV dad ever! He gets a 10!
  • Stephen Collins has portrayed Reverend Eric Camden so well for the past 10 years. He has made me wish that Eric was my dad!

    9.6
    "Superb"
    For the past 10 years, you have been tuning in at 7 to watch Stephen Collins play the nosy, good-intentioned, godly Reverend Eric Camden. He has been wonderful and he has warmed all our hearts as he helps his children, his nutty wife, and his church members through the miracle of what we call life.

    Stephen Collins I think is what drives the show. His interpretation of Eric Camden is one of perfection. I'm not sure I have ever seen such a performance from any actor so well done on television drama. His spectacular performance makes me wish that Eric Camden was my dad!

    While the show is now in it's 10th and last season, Eric Camden and Stephen Collins will always have a place in my heart.
  • Few people remember him as the captain of the Enterprise in the original Star Trek Movie. This gifted actor has traveled through many different roles on film, TV, and stage.

    10
    "Perfect"
    Classic WASP leading man material, and the prince consort of the TV miniseries, Stephen Collins has to some extent been limited by his looks and manner. Beginning in the mid-1970s, he has frequently been cast as the decorative male supporting dynamic and more established female stars; his roles designed to make them look good and not filch too much of their spotlight. He has, though, proved a durable and likable performer, especially on TV, managing to find some variety whenever possible in his established type.

    A tall, hearty, extremely handsome actor with dirty-blond hair, a cleft chin and firm, regular features, Collins began acting professionally while still in college. Joseph Papp saw him performing in a rock musical and engaged him for a small part in a New York summer Shakespeare production of "Twelfth Night". Before long, Collins had appeared on TV and on Broadway in "Moonchildren" (1971). Later Broadway success in "The Ritz" (1975) led to his feature debut in "All the President's Men" (1976). He was soon cast as clean-cut preppies in several films, but the old-fashioned, cliched romance "The Promise" (1979) and the smarmy sex farce "Loving Couples" (1980) failed to establish him as a feature lead. Collins did receive wide exposure in "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (1979), as the commander whose role is temporarily usurped by Capt. Kirk, but all the attention went to the old series' cast and the special effects.



    Collins was keeping busier, though, on the small screen, if often in rather routine material. He made his TV-movie debut as an FBI agent in "Brink's: The Great Robbery" (1976) and followed up with his first miniseries, "The Rhinemann Exchange" (1977). Cast in roles which evoked American Everymen of yore, he reprised Lew Ayres' old role in a TV-movie remake of "The Dark Mirror" (1984); ventured into Harrison Ford territory with ABC's "Tales of the Gold Monkey" (1982-83), a modest adventure series imitating "Raiders of the Lost Ark"; and played Henry Fonda's character as a younger man in the moving "Summer Solstice" (1981). (He had done likewise in features, playing William Holden's character at age 25 in Billy Wilder's "Fedora" 1978). Later TV-movies ranged from "Weekend War" (1988) to "A Family Divided" (1995), and Collins again tried series TV with NBC's "Tattinger's" (1988-89; revamped as "Nick & Hillary" 1989), the saga of a family restaurant, and CBS's "Working It Out" (1990), a sitcom pairing him with Jane Curtin. Though neither series lasted long, they did suggest an untapped talent for comedy, which was not sufficiently exercised in Collins' returns to the big screen for a poor remake of "Brewster's Millions" (1985) or the unpopular Whoopi Goldberg vehicle "Jumpin' Jack Flash" (1986).



    Where Collins seemed to do best was in the TV miniseries. "The Two Mrs. Grenvilles" (1987), admittedly, showcased dueling divas Ann-Margret and Claudette Colbert, but Collins, suitably cast as the hapless bone of contention between them, won an Emmy nomination for his good work. "Scarlett" (1994) returned him to movie memories of yore, with Collins stepping into Leslie Howard's shoes as the pallid Ashley Wilkes, but the result was at least high profile. "A Woman Named Jackie" (1991), meanwhile, again focused on a strong woman, but Collins gave a very detailed and sincere performance in the difficult role of JFK. By now regularly trying to, as director John Erman put it, "create a character who wasn't just a sort of Arrow collar ad", Collins worked hard to add some edge to the well-to-do dullard who marries beneath his social class in Erman's feature remake "Stella" (1990), showcasing Bette Midler, but audiences didn't turn out for the result. Collins continued in similar vein with "The First Wives Club" (1996), contending with Midler, Goldie Hawn, and Diane Keaton. He also ventured back to series TV as a progressive minister in "7th Heaven" (The WB, 1996-).



    Family

    daughter:Kate Collins

    father:Cyrus S Collins

    mother:Madeleine Collins



    Education

    Amherst College Amherst, Massachusetts BA 1969



    Companion

    Faye Grant.wife,

    Marjorie Weinman.wife,



    Awards





    Milestones

    1999 Had cameo in "Drive Me Crazy" as Melissa Joan Hart's father; real-life wife Faye Grant played his estranged on screen spouse

    1998 Directorial debut with an episode of his series "7th Heaven"

    1996 Starred on The WB drama series, "7th Heaven"

    1994 Wrote first novel, "Eye Contact"

    1990 Played David Stuart on the NBC sitcom, "Working It Out"

    1985 Returned to feature films in "Brewster's Millions"

    1982 - 1983 First TV series: played Jake Cutter on the ABC adventures series, "Tales of the Gold Monkey"

    1980 Last film for five years, "Loving Couples"

    1979 Played first male lead in a feature film in "The Promise"

    1977 First TV miniseries, "The Rhinemann Exchange"

    1976 Made feature film debut in "All the President's Men"

    1976 First TV-movie, "Brinks: The Great Robbery", in which he played a leading role

    1975 Performed on Broadway in "The Ritz"; led to his being cast in his first film

    1971 Acted the role of Dick on Broadway in the play, "Moonchildren"

    1970 Made TV debut in a guest spot on the ABC detective drama, "Dan August"

    1969 Went to New York to play the small role of Valentine in a Joseph Papp production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night", staged at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park in New York

    1968 Made professional stage debut in the title role of "Baal", at the Island Repertory Theater in Edgartown, Massachusetts

    Raised in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York

    Performed onstage on tour with the First National Company in a production of "Forty Carats"

    Played Nick Tattinger on NBC's short-lived, hour-long comedy-drama series, "Tattinger's", and its even shorter-lived, half-hour sitcom revamp, "Nick & Hillary"
  • he is a great dad

    10
    "Perfect"
    I think Eric is the greatest dad on t.v. He Loves his kids even when they have done wrong. He has always helped every one of his kids get through hadr times. He is very close to his kids and supports them every step of the way. He is a great minister and i love how his daughter Lucy is following in his footsteps to becoming a minister at his church. Everybody in Glenoak knows Eric and the rest of his family. He is very helpful to his community and helps them the best that he can. You can always count on Eric to be there. Keep on doing what you do best!
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