From: LIFE
At his bungalow in Palm Springs, Steve McQueen practices his aim before heading out for a shooting session in the desert, 1963. |
In the spring of 1963, already popular from his big-screen breakout as one of The Magnificent Seven and just a couple months away from entering the Badass Hall of Fame with the release of The Great Escape, Steve McQueen was on the brink of superstardom.
Intrigued by his dramatic backstory and his off-screen exploits — McQueen was a reformed delinquent who got his thrills racing cars and motorcycles — LIFE sent photographer John Dominis to California to hang out with the 33-year-old actor and, in effect, see what he could get.
Steve McQueen driving on Sunset Strip, 1963 |
Three weeks and more than 40 rolls of film later, Dominis had captured some astonishing images — photos impossible to imagine in today’s utterly restricted-access celebrity universe. Here, LIFE.com presents a series of pictures — most of which never ran in LIFE — from what Dominis would look back on as one of his favorite assignments, along with insights about the time he spent with the man who would soon don the mantle, “the King of Cool.”
Steve McQueen and Neile Adams, his first wife, target-practice with their pistols in the California desert, 196 |
Trailing Steve McQueen was Dominis’ first Hollywood gig. “I liked the movies, but I didn't know who the stars were; I was not a movie buff,” Dominis told LIFE.com. But he got the assignment because he and McQueen shared one vital passion: car racing.
“When I was living in Hong Kong I had a sports car and I raced it,” Dominis says. “And I knew that Steve McQueen had a racing car. I rented one, anticipating that we might do something with them. He was in a motorcycle race out in the desert, so I went out there in my car and met him, and I ask him, ‘You wanna try my car?’”
Steve McQueen and Neile Adams, his first wife, in the California desert, 1963 |
Later the two of them would zip around Los Angeles together. “We went pretty fast — as fast as you can safely go without getting arrested — and we’d ride and then stop and trade cars. He liked that, and I knew he liked it. I guess that was the first thing that softened him.”
From early morning until late at night, Dominis followed McQueen through his action-packed days: camping with his buddies, racing his various vehicles, playing with his
McQueen works out at the gym at Paramount Pictures while making the movie Love With the Proper Stranger opposite Natalie Wood, 1963. |
family, tooling around Hollywood. Even back then, Dominis says, he had to be mindful that his constant presence did not become irritating. |
“Movie stars, they weren't used to giving up a lot of time,” he says. “But I sort of relaxed in the beginning and didn't bother them every time they turned around, and they began to get used to me being there."
In 1963 McQueen had been married to Neile Adams for seven years (they had two young children) but the spark between them was still very much alive. “They were always necking!” says Dominis, who also remarked upon their childlike way with each other in notes he filed for LIFE’s editors back in ’63: “They chase each other around,” he wrote, “as though it were going out of style."
“With strangers, I can’t breathe,” McQueen told LIFE. “But I dig my old lady.”
“I was very surprised” when Steve and Neile divorced in 1972, Dominis says. “But I lived in New York, and I never saw them [after the shoot was over]. We weren't real friends, but we were friendly. They liked me,
and they had a silver mug made: ‘To John Dominis, for work beyond the call of duty.’ I’ve still got it today.”
Steve McQueen lifts weights, 1963 |
At the beginning of the LIFE shoot, McQueen participated in a 500-mile, two-day dirt bike race across the Mojave Desert.
“These people are not the wild motorcycle bums who go roaring through town a la Brando [in The Wild One],” wrote Dominis in his notes. “Rather they comprise doctors, lawyers, businessmen, mechanics, and others who enjoy the competition and the open country.”
McQueen takes a call in the living room of his eclectic home in Hollywood, 1963. |
Not only was he one of the few competitors to complete the race, LIFE reported, but he also led his amateur class for most of the way, until his bike broke down three miles from the finish.
“He liked camping, he liked rugged things, he liked firing a gun,” says Dominis. (“I’d rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth,” he told LIFE.)
He also very much liked his cigarettes: Like many Hollywood stars of the time, McQueen was an unapologetically heavy smoker, and did not break the habit until he became sick in the late ’70s.
Steve McQueen and his wife Neile Adams lounge on the patio by the pool at their Palm Springs bungalow, 1963. |
Seventeen years after Dominis made these photos, the actor was dead at just 50 years old, suffering a heart attack following a risky operation to remove the cancerous tumors laying waste to his body. Though Dominis never saw or spoke with McQueen after 1963, he continued to follow his movies, and cherished those three weeks they got to know each other.
“He was very open and playful,” says Dominis, “and just doing the things that he loved to do.”
Steve McQueen, Palm Springs, 1963 |
At his Palm Springs bungalow, Steve McQueen puts on a record, with LPs by Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins and Frank Sinatra scattered at his feet, 1963. |
Steve McQueen dances with his wife, Neile, 1963 |
Steve McQueen with his wife, Neile, 1963. |
Steve McQueen takes a lunch break during a motorcycle race with Bud Ekins, his friend and stuntman for The Great Escape, 1963. |
Steve McQueen makes a stop at a grocery store in Pearblossom, Calif., to get some treatment for race-bloodied hands, 1963 |
McQueen takes a deep swig of a tall, cool drink, 1963 |
Steve McQueen on a camping trip, 1963 |
Steve McQueen in his sleeping bag on a camping trip, 1963. "This is it, man," he told LIFE. "I'd rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth." |
Steve McQueen, 1963 |
Steve McQueen, 1963 |
With his dog, a Malamute named Mike, by his side, Steve McQueen takes in the scenery, California, 1963 |
Steve McQueen and his wife, Neile, Palm Springs, 1963 |
It is reported that the photos below were also shot for LIFE magazine, but are not recorded with above photos on the LIFE website
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