Corey Ian Haim (born
December 23,
1971) is a
Canadian actor, known for a
1980s Hollywood career as a teen idol. He starred in a number of films such as
Lucas,
The Lost Boys,
License to Drive and
Dream a Little Dream, and in particular, collaborated numerous times with
Corey Feldman and the pair were dubbed "
the two Coreys". Haim and Feldman currently star in a television show titled
The Two Coreys, airing on the
A&E Network.

Biography
Early life
Haim was born in
Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, to Judy, an
Israeli-born computer operator, and Bernie Haim, who worked in sales.
[1] Haim is
Jewish.
[2] He was enlisted in acting lessons by his mother in an attempt to help him overcome his shyness.
[3] Haim, not particularly fascinated by acting, practiced other hobbies such as
ice hockey, playing music on his
keyboard and collecting
comic books.
[4]Early successes
Haim first broke into mainstream acting playing the role of Larry in the Canadian family oriented comedy television series,
The Edison Twins, which ran from
1982 through until
1986. Haim made his first cinematic appearance in the
1984 feature film,
Firstborn, which also starred now well-known actors
Sarah Jessica Parker and
Robert Downey Jr. In 1985, Haim appeared in minor roles in
Secret Admirer and
Murphy's Romance and starred in the leading role in a feature film version of
Stephen King's
novella,
Silver Bullet, playing a paralytic boy alongside
Gary Busey. Haim started to make a name for himself in the industry, notably by earning his first
Young Artist Award as an Exceptional Young Actor Starring in a Television Special or Movie of the Week for the television movie
A Time to Live.
Haim's major break was in 1986, billed as the main star alongside
Kerri Green,
Charlie Sheen, and
Winona Ryder in the popular movie
Lucas. Haim would receive a nomination for an Exceptional Performance by a Young Actor Starring in a Feature Film - Comedy or Drama at the Young Artist Awards for his role as the title character. Film critic
Roger Ebert gave Haim good reviews.
[5] Following the success of
Lucas, Haim starred in the
1987 television series,
Roomies.
Late 1980s
In 1987, Haim had a large role in
Joel Schumacher's vampire film,
The Lost Boys, alongside
Jason Patric and
Kiefer Sutherland. The film was well received by most reviewers.
[6] Besides gaining Haim more renown, the film began his famous partnership with fellow teenage actor
Corey Feldman. The performance also earned him another Young Artist Award nomination as Best Young Male Superstar in a Motion Picture. In 1988, Haim starred in two more widely released films:
License to Drive, a financially successful teen comedy which again co-starred Corey Feldman as well as a young
Heather Graham, and the horror film based on the
Dean R. Koontz novel
Watchers. Haim won his second Young Artist Award, tying Corey Feldman for the Best Young Actor in a Motion Picture Comedy or Fantasy award for
License to Drive.
The two Coreys had become a popular on screen collaboration, following two successful films the pair would meet again in
1989, when Haim appeared in the film
Dream a Little Dream. The film spawned the
Billboard Hot 100 number one single
Rock On for
Michael Damian.
The two Coreys appeared in the
Rock On video. That same year Haim released a self-promotional
video documentary entitled
Corey Haim: Me, Myself, and I. In the video, he is shown taking part in wholesome family activities and discussing his career and ambitions. His next film,
The Dream Machine was a
direct-to-video film released in 1990. His next film was the
Prayer of the Rollerboys, co-starring
Patricia Arquette.

1990
Haim continued making direct-to-video films, including
Blown Away (which also starred Feldman)
[7],
The Double 0 Kid and
Oh, What a Night. In
1993 he starred in a full motion
video game called
Double Switch, which was released for the
Sega CD and later for the
Sega Saturn, as well as for the home computer. Over the next two years, Haim would release sequels to two of his older films; in 1994,
Fast Getaway II was released along with
National Lampoon's Last Resort. The following year,
Life 101 and another sequel,
Dream a Little Dream 2 with Feldman were released.
In 1996, Haim starred in four more direct-to-video films:
Snowboard Academy,
Busted with
Corey Feldman (their last film collaboration),
Demolition High, and
Fever Lake. He had a minor role in a television version of
Merlin. After releasing both
Never Too Late and the sequel to
Demolition High,
Demolition University (which he also produced), he filed for
bankruptcy in
1997.
2000
Haim attempted to return to the industry in 2000 with another direct-to-video film,
Without Malice, with
Jennifer Beals and
Craig Sheffer. He spent time in rehab. Haim says, "I started on the downers which were a hell of a lot better than the uppers because I was a nervous wreck. But one led to two, two led to four, four led to eight, until at the end it was about 85 a day — the doctors could not believe I was taking that much. And that was just the Valium — I’m not talking about the other pills I went through".
[8]The next year, Haim appeared in
The Back Lot Murders alongside
Priscilla Barnes. He became the subject of an
E! True Hollywood Story in
2001. He made a
cameo role appearance in
Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star, a film about a former
child star who did not live a normal childhood; it featured a range of other former child stars, including Feldman. In 2002, he also guest starred as himself in an episode of the Canadian television series
Big Wolf on Campus.
Haim appeared to have finally overcome his drug habit by 2004, after resettling in Toronto. The Irish band,
The Thrills, released a single, "Whatever happened to Corey Haim?", in September 2004. In response to an investigation by
The Sun newspaper during the single's release into what exactly had happened to Haim, he responded saying that: "I'm clean, sober, humble and happy".
[9] In 2006, he was ranked #8 on
VH1's Greatest Teen Stars.
Comeback
On December 4, 2006, Haim began taping an improv/reality show with Corey Feldman titled
The Two Coreys. The show focuses on fictional versions of Haim and Feldman, with the comedy focusing on Feldman living with his wife, and Haim as a bachelor re-entering Feldman's life and shaking up his comfortable suburban lifestyle. The show premiered on the
A&E Network on July 29, 2007, at 10:00 p.m. For his role in
The Two Coreys, Haim is currently a nominee for the Viewer's Choice Awards at the 22nd Annual Gemini Awards in Canada.
Filmography