Stephen Lester Reeves was the handsome professional bodybuilder with an enviable Herculean physique and actor. At the peak of his career during the late 1950s and early 1960s, he was the highest-paid actor in Europe. Steve won his first fitness title as “Healthiest Baby of Valley County” at the age of six. He joined the army at the age of 18, where his job was loading boxcars and trucks. During the free time, he worked out at the gym, and soon he left the army and switched his career to bodybuilding. Steve won several titles and awards during his bodybuilding career, including, ‘Mr. Pacific Coast’, ‘Mr. Western America’ (1947), ‘Mr. America’ (1947), ‘Mr. World (1948)’ and ‘Mr. Universe’ in 1950.
Steve Reeves Acting Career
In the 1950s, Steve decided to pursue acting and initially, but there were not huge opportunities for a muscleman in Hollywood. Filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille offered him a lead role in Samson and Delilah (1949) on the condition that he would have to lose some of his musculatures, but Steve refused. Eventually, Italian film director Pietro Francisci made his superstar with the role of Hercules, and he became a superstar. He also appeared on a variety of TV shows and talent shows. In 1968, Reeves was appeared in “I Live For Your Death,” and this was his final film.
Steve Reeves wives
Steve Reeves married Sandra Smith in 1955, but the marriage lasted just one year and ended with a divorce. In 1963, he married Aline Czartjarwicz, and they remained married for 26 years until Aline, died from a stroke in 1989. Five years later, Steve married Deborah Ann Engelhorn in 1994 and remained married until his death.
Steve Reeves Death
In the 1970s, Steve Reeves decided to retire from acting and bodybuilding and returned to California to live on his ranch and bred horses. He loved horses and was a great rider himself. During his career, he also faced several body injuries, while filming The Last Days of Pompeii (1959) the chariot he was driving struck a tree, and he dislocated his shoulder. This injury limited his intense exercise and later forced him to retire from bodybuilding. Steve committed his life to promote drug-free bodybuilding and served a great inspiration to many renowned bodybuilders such as Sylvester Stallone and Lou Ferrigno, and millions of other followers worldwide. On May 1, 2000, Reeves died from a blood clot in California ate the age of 74, after having had surgery two days earlier. He was reportedly diagnosed with lymphoma only six weeks before this death. Steve Reeves’s body was cremated, and his ashes were scattered explicitly in Montana, the state where he was born.