Charles Bronson
Charles Arthur Salvador, born Michael Gordon Peterson on December 6, 1952, is a British inmate infamous for his tumultuous and violent life behind bars. Initially apprehended for minor offenses, he was sentenced to seven years in prison for armed robbery in 1974. Bronson's time in prison was marked by a series of additional sentences resulting from assaults on both fellow inmates and prison staff.
Upon his release in 1987, Bronson ventured into bare-knuckle boxing in East London, where he adopted the ring name Charles Bronson, inspired by the Hollywood actor of the same name, as suggested by his promoter. However, his newfound career was short-lived; in 1988, he was re-incarcerated following another robbery conviction.
Bronson's prison life has been characterized by extreme violence, including multiple hostage situations involving prison guards, which led to further life sentences. His behavior has resulted in his transfer to all three of England's special psychiatric hospitals at various points throughout his incarceration. Over the years, Bronson has become a notorious figure, both feared and infamous, symbolizing a complex narrative of crime and punishment within the British criminal justice system.
Filmography
The Mechanic
Apache
You're in the Navy Now
Jubal
You Can't Win 'Em All
Machine-Gun Kelly
Kid Galahad (1962)
House of Wax
10 to Midnight
Cold Sweat
4 for Texas
A Thunder of Drums
The Sandpiper
Twinky
Drum Beat
Family of Cops
X-15
Red Skies of Montana
Chino
Showdown at Boot Hill
Master of the World
The Meanest Men in the West
Death Wish II
Love and Bullets
Big House, U.S.A
The Sea Wolf (1993)
St. Ives
Death Wish
Battle of the Bulge
Guns for San Sebastian
Vera Cruz
This Property Is Condemned
Run of the Arrow