As a GoFundMe campaign launched Sunday explains, “force of nature” actor Mickey Rourke has fallen on such hard times that he owes $59,000 in back rent on his three-bedroom, Spanish-style bungalow in Los Angeles and he needs fans to donate a total of $100,000 so he can avoid eviction and “get back on his feet.”
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The campaign, which was launched with his permission by Liya-Joelle Jones, a friend and member of Rourke’s management team, said that the actor’s “life never followed a safe or protected path.” At the height of his success — following star turns in such landmark ’80s films as “Diner,” “The Pope of Greenwich Village,” “9½ Weeks” and “Angel Heart” — Rourke “stepped away from Hollywood in search of truth and authenticity, choosing risk over comfort,” the GoFundMe said.
That is, Rourke took up the “real and punishing” sport of boxing, which “left lasting physical and emotional scars, and the industry that once celebrated him moved on quickly,” the GoFundMe continued. “What followed were years of struggle not defined by spectacle, but by survival: health challenges, financial strain, and the quiet toll of being left behind.”
Indeed, according to the Hollywood Reporter, boxing left Rourke with serious facial injuries that required extensive reconstructive surgery. Likewise, Vulture quoted top Hollywood agents in 2011 who lamented that Rourke had “ruined his looks” with boxing and so much surgery.
circa 1989: Actor Mickey Rourke. (photo by Newsmakers)But these same agents also talked about the actor’s reputation for being eccentric and difficult to work with. “He is like the Phil Spector of actors,” one agent told Vulture, “in that he has no sense of his appearance, or how he comes off. And so now, he’s become almost a fetish, rather than someone who transforms once he’s in your film.” Vulture also noted that he has a history of poor judgement in the projects he takes on. For example, he turned down a role in Quentin Tarantino’s “Pulp Fiction,” while gaining a reputation for taking parts based on money rather than material. The conclusion of these agents is that “Rourke’s biggest problem has been, and continues to be, Rourke.”
On the other hand, Rourke’s appearance and reputation didn’t stop directors from giving him multiple chances to make a serious comeback in the first decade of the 2000s.
In 2008, he earned an Academy Award nomination for best actor by playing a washed-up professional wrestler in Darren Aronofsky’s “The Wrestler.”
Rourke’s success in “The Wrestler” led to him being cast in a Marvel Studios movie, the 2010 box-office hit “Ironman 2,” playing the villain Ivan Vanko, opposite Robert Downey Jr. For the movie, producer Kevin Feige and director Jon Favreau reportedly gave into Rourke’s demands for his character to wear his hair in a samurai bun, speak in a Russian accent and always have a bird on his shoulder, according to another Vulture report. Downey also reportedly pitched in a portion of his $10 million payday to add an unspecified amount to “the mere $250,000” that Marvel Studios initially offered Rourke.
Rourke then starred “The Expendables” and “Immortals,” each of which made more than $200 million at the box office, according to a new report by Fandomwire. That same report also quoted a recent estimate of Rourke’s net worth, putting it at $5 million. That amount certainly doesn’t square with someone who is not able to pay his rent.
Indeed, despite the outward success of Rourke’s movies over the years, “the numbers” still haven’t added up for him, and his personal and financial issues may be decades-old, according to Fandomwire.
Back in 2012, Rourke was telling The Standard that he wasn’t just “a little bit bad,” He said: “I was horrible for 15, 16 years. I was out of control, I was out of my mind. I had to lose my house, my wife, my money, my career, everything, for me to fall all the way down to the bottom.”
Rourke similarly told the Los Angeles Times that he had “all this anger from my childhood … used it as armor and machismo to cover up my wounds.” He acknowledged that “the way I acted really frightened people, although it was really just me who was scared.” He apparently came to such a realization through years of therapy, for which he ran up a debt of $60,000, he also told The Standard.
Rourke’s IMDB shows that he’s continued to steadily as an actor, even with some new projects currently in pre- or post-production. Then again, both Fandomwire and The Hollywood Reporter characterize his more recent projects as “genre films” or “direct-to-DVD” movies.
In 2025, Rourke also agreed to appear on the British reality TV show “Celebrity Big Brother UK.” To promote his appearance on the show he gave an interview in which he said his career was “in the toilet,” according to Metro. He added that two years of COVID-19, followed by the actors’ strike left him having “to borrow half a million dollars from the bank to get by and pay bills.”
‘I’ve made mistakes, many,” Rourke said, according to Metro. “I have nobody to blame for my ship sinking except myself. My career is in the toilet and I’m not getting A-list movies.”
Rourke’s exit from “Celebrity Big Brother UK” also turned out to be controversial, according to the Los Angeles Times and People. He agreed to leave the show after producers warned him over the use of “inappropriate language and instances of unacceptable behavior,” according to a statement a spokesperson for the show released at the time.
Rourke’s remarks allegedly included comments about his housemate JoJo Siwa’s sexuality. Following his departure, Rourke’s manager announced that he was pursuing legal action over a pay dispute, claiming that the show had disrespected her client by “publicly embarrassing him” and declined to pay him, according to People.
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