Jean-Claude Van Damme: Difference between revisions
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|birthname = Jean-Claude Camille Francois Van Varenberg |
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|birthdate = {{birth date and age|df=yes| |
|birthdate = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1909|10|18}} |
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|birthplace = [[Sint-Agatha-Berchem]], [[Brussels]], [[Belgium]] |
|birthplace = [[Sint-Agatha-Berchem]], [[Brussels]], [[Belgium]] |
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|yearsactive = 1984–present <small>(acting)</small> |
|yearsactive = 1984–present <small>(acting)</small> |
Revision as of 22:35, 5 May 2010
Jean-Claude Van Damme | |
---|---|
Born | Jean-Claude Camille Francois Van Varenberg |
Occupation | Actor/Martial artist/director |
Years active | 1984–present (acting) |
Spouse(s) | Maria Rodriguez (1980–1984) Cynthia Derderian (1985–1986) Darcy LaPier (1994–1997; 1 child) Gladys Portugues (1987–1992, 1999–present; 2 children) |
Jean-Claude Van Damme (born 18 October 1960) is a Belgian martial artist and actor, best known for his martial arts action movies. His most successful films include Bloodsport (1988), Universal Soldier (1992), Hard Target (1993), and Timecop (1994). Due to his physique and his Belgian background, he is known as "The Muscles from Brussels."[1]
After studying martial arts intensively from the age of ten, Van Damme achieved national success in Belgium as a martial artist and bodybuilder, earning the "Mr. Belgium" bodybuilding title.[2] He emigrated to the United States in 1982 to pursue a career in film, and achieved breakout success with Bloodsport (1988), based on a story written by Frank Dux. He attained subsequent box office success with Timecop (1994), which grossed over $100 million worldwide[3] and became his most financially successful film.
Personal life
Van Damme was born Jean-Claude Camille François Van Varenberg in Berchem-Sainte-Agathe (Brussels), Belgium, the son of Eliana and Eugène Van Varenberg, who was an accountant and owned a flower shop.[4][5] He began martial arts at the age of ten, enrolled by his father in a Shotokan karate school. His styles consist of kickboxing, Shotokan karate, Muay Thai, and Taekwondo.[6] He eventually earned his black belt in karate.[7] He started lifting weights to improve his physique, which eventually led to a Mr. Belgium bodybuilding title.[2]
At the age of 16 he took up ballet, which he studied for five years. According to Van Damme, ballet "is an art, but it's also one of the most difficult sports. If you can survive a ballet workout, you can survive a workout in any other sport."[8] In the French-speaking world, Van Damme is well known for the picaresque aphorisms that he delivers on a wide range of topics (personal well-being, the environment, etc.) in a sort of Zen franglais.[9] Most iconic and often quoted was his repeated use of the English word aware during an interview for a French channel, to convey the notion of self-awareness as a key to success.
In a 2009 interview in the British newspaper The Sun, promoting his film JCVD (of which Time magazine said "He deserves not a black belt, but an Oscar"), Van Damme indicated he experienced a period of homelessness "sleeping on the street and starving in L.A."[10]
Van Damme has been married five times, including two marriages with bodybuilder and fitness competitor Gladys Portugues. Van Damme is the father of three children: Kristopher (born 1987), Bianca (born 1990), and Nicholas (born 1995).
Health and addiction
Van Damme had troubles with cocaine during 1995, entering a month-long rehab program in 1996 but leaving it only after a week.[11] He is also reported to have experienced bipolar disorder.[11] A turning point in his health issues came in late 1997, after having signed divorce papers charging him with spousal abuse, and drug addiction.
After the filming of the 1998 movie Knock Off, Van Damme was diagnosed with rapid cycling bipolar disorder after becoming suicidal and started treatment on the bi-polar medication sodium valproate to stabilize his mood.[11]
Fight career
At the age of 12, Van Damme joined the Centre National De Karate (National Center of Karate) under the guidance of Claude Goetz in France. Van Damme trained for four years and he earned a spot in the Belgian Karate Team.[3]
Jean-Claude made his debut in 1976, at the age of 16.[12] Competing under his birth name of Jean Claude Van Varenberg, Jean-Claude was staggered by a round-house kick thrown by Toon Van Oostrum in Brussels, Belgium.[13] Van Damme was badly stunned, but came back to knockout Van Oostrum moments later.
In 1977, at the WAKO Open International in Belgium, Jean-Claude lost a decision to fellow team mate Patrick Teugels.[14] The experience left an impact on Claude Goetz and he felt that Jean-Claude needed more training before competing again.
After six months of intense training and sparring, Master Goetz decided to unleash his prized pupil on the European Full-Contact scene. Jean-Claude won his first tournament by scoring three knockout victories in one evening. However, in a 1978 match for the Belgium lightweight title, he again lost a decision to Patrick Teugels.[15][14] Once again, the loss left an impact on Claude Goetz and a few months later at Iseghem, Belgium, Van Damme came back and knocked out Emile Leibman in the first round. In 1979, Jean-Claude and the Belgium Team became European Team Champions.[16]
Next, Jean-Claude faced Sherman Bergman, a kick-boxer from Florida (USA) with a long string of knockout victories.[17] For the only time in his career, Jean-Claude was knocked to the canvas after absorbing a powerful left hook.[13] However, Jean-Claude climbed off the canvas and with a perfectly timed ax-kick, knocked Bergman out cold in 59 seconds of the first round. Van Damme ended 1979 with a stoppage of Gilberto (Gil) Diaz in one round[18].
In 1980, Jean-Claude Van Damme defeated former Great Britain karate champion Michael J. Heming. Next, Van Damme scored a knockout over France's Georges Verlugels in two rounds. After these victories, Jean-Claude caught the attention of the European martial arts community. Professional Karate Magazine publisher and editor Mike Anders, and multiple European champion Geet Lemmens tabbed Jean-Claude Van Damme as an upcoming prospect. However, Jean-Claude's ambitions now focused in the direction of movie acting.
Van Damme ended his fight career at the Forest Nationals in Brussels. He knocked Patrick Teugels down and scored a first round technical knockout victory. Teugels suffered a nose injury and was unable to continue.
Following the victory, Van Damme retired from martial arts competition. His final fight record was 18–1, with all wins being knockouts and the loss being a decisions after two rounds.[19][20][21]
Van Damme will make a return to fighting and is scheduled to fight former boxing Olympic gold-medalist Somluck Kamsing in October 2010, Las Vegas.[22] The winner of that match will face current world champion Jeffrey "The Squasher" Sun.[23] At the prospect of being the first man over the age of 50 to fight professionally in Macau, Jean-Claude Van Damme stated that It's kind of dangerous, but life is short."[24]
Date | Event | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1976 | European Karate Union | Toon Van Oostrum | Win, 1 round KO |
1977 | Netherlands Kick Boxing | Maurice Devos | Win, 1 round TKO |
1978 | European Karate Union | Eric Bruno Strauss | Win, 1 round KO[25] |
1978 | European Karate Union | Michel Juvillier | Win, 1 round KO |
1978 | European Karate Union | Orlando Lang | Win, 1 round TKO |
1978 | World All Style | Emile Leibman | Win, 1 round KO |
1978 | World All Style | Cyrille Nollet | Win, 1 round TKO |
1979 | World All Style | Andre Robaeys | Win, 1 round KO |
1979 | World All Style | Jacques Piniarski | Win, 1 round KO |
1979 | World All Style | Rolf Risberg | Win, 1 round KO |
1979 November | World Full Contact | Sherman Bergman | Win, 1 round KO[20][21] |
1979 November | World Full Contact | Gilberto (Gil) Diaz | Win, 1 round TKO |
1979 November | World Full Contact | Patrick Teugels | Loss, 2 round decision |
1980 March | European Professional | Mustapha-Ahmad Benamou | Win, 1 round KO |
1980 March | European Professional | Bekim-Moussa Muhammad | Win, 1 round TKO |
1980 March | European Professional | Michael J. Heming | Win, 2 round TKO [6] |
1980 March | Professional Karate Assoc. | Georges Verlugels | Win, 2 round KO |
1980 | European Professional | Andres Kovac | Win, 2 round KO [26] |
1980 | Forest Nationals (Brussels) | Patrick Teugels | Win, 1 round TKO |
Film career
In 1982, Van Damme and childhood friend, Michel Qissi, moved to America in the hope of becoming action stars.[27] They both were cast as extras in the film, Breakin'. After a small part in Missing In Action, Van Damme was next cast in the movie No Retreat, No Surrender, as the role of the villain, Ivan the Russian. His breakout film was Bloodsport, based on the alleged true story of Frank Dux. Shot on a 1.5 million dollar budget, it became a U.S. box-office hit in the spring of 1988. He then starred in the higher budgeted movie Cyborg. His last role for 1989 was Kurt Sloane in the successful Kickboxer. In this movie, his character fought to avenge his brother who had been paralyzed by a Thai kickboxing champion (Qissi).[3]
Double Impact featured Van Damme in the dual role of Alex and Chad Wagner, two brothers fighting to avenge the deaths of their parents. This movie reunited him with his former Bloodsport co-star, Bolo Yeung. He then starred opposite Dolph Lundgren in the action movie Universal Soldier. While it grossed $36,299,898 in the U.S., it was an even bigger success overseas, making over $65 million, well over its modest $20 million budget, making it Van Damme's highest grossing film at the time.
Van Damme followed Nowhere To Run and Hard Target with Timecop in 1994. The film was a huge success, grossing over $100 million worldwide. In the film, Van Damme played a time traveling cop, who tries to prevent the death of his wife. It remains his highest grossing movie to date.[3]
After his role in the poorly received Street Fighter, his projects started to fail at the box office. The Quest (1996), which he directed; Maximum Risk (1996) and Double Team (1997) were box-office flops.[3]
His last theatrical released movie was Universal Soldier: The Return. All his movies after this, up until 2008's JCVD, had been direct to video releases.
Van Damme had worked for director John McTiernan for the 1987 movie Predator as the titular alien, before being removed and replaced by Kevin Peter Hall.
In 2003, Van Damme employed his dancing training in the music video for Bob Sinclar's Kiss My Eyes.
Van Damme reprised his role as Luc Devereaux in the 2010 movie Universal Soldier: Regeneration.
Van Damme was offered a lead role in Sylvester Stallone's upcoming film The Expendables. Stallone called Van Damme personally to offer him the role, but Van Damme turned it down, citing that he "doesn't want his career going down that route."[28]
Filmography
TV
Year | Title | Episode | Role |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | Friends | "The One After the Superbowl" | Himself |
2006 | Las Vegas | "Die Fast, Die Furious" | Himself |
2009 | Robot Chicken | "Maurice Was Caught" | Rhett Butler/Count Dracula |
2010 | Ceska Miss 2010/Czech Miss 2010 | "TV Nova" | Head of Jury |
Dual roles
Van Damme has been cast in "dual roles" in a single film many times during his career. Most cases involve two distinct characters, but others (such as Timecop) involve the same character from different periods of time-travel. These scenes often necessitate special editing or blue-screen cinematography to have two versions of the actor interacting in the same scene.
Those "dual-role" movies to date are:
- Double Impact: Van Damme plays twin brothers separated at birth and raised in different countries.
- Timecop: Van Damme plays two versions of the same character overlapping in space-time continuum.
- Maximum Risk: Van Damme plays twin brothers separated at birth, one of which was murdered.
- The Order: Van Damme plays two different characters in different eras.
- Replicant: Van Damme plays a serial killer and his futuristic clone and mafioso rockstar Repli Gotti.
Pop culture influence
- The Mortal Kombat fighter character Johnny Cage was modeled after Van Damme.[30]
Awards and nominations
- Bloodsport (1988)
- 1989: Razzie Awards Award for Worst New Star
- Double Impact (1991)
- 1992: MTV Movie Awards nomination for Most Desirable Male
- Nowhere to Run (1993)
- 1993: MTV Movie Awards nomination for Most Desirable Male
- Hard Target (1993)
- 1994: MTV Movie Awards nomination for Most Desirable Male
- Double Team (1997)
- 1998: Razzie Awards nomination for Worst Screen Couple
- JCVD (2008)
- 2008: Toronto Film Critics Association Awards nomination for Best Actor
- 2009: Chlotrudis Awards nomination for Best Actor
References
- ^ "Jean-Claude Van Damme". imdb.com. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
- ^ a b 'Playboy interview', Lawrence Grobel, Playboy, 1 January 1995
- ^ a b c d e http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000241/bio
- ^ "Jean-Claude Van Damme Biography (1960-)". Filmreference.com. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ "Jean-Claude van Damme Biography — Yahoo! Movies". Movies.yahoo.com. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ a b Belgian Bruiser Muscles Into B-Movie Scene ', John Stanley, San Francisco Chronicle, 2 April 1989
- ^ Karate black belt)
- ^ 'Van Damme gets his kicks from acting now, not karate', Jae-Ha Kim, Chicago Sun-Times, 14 April 1989
- ^ "Abstract Thinker". Blog.eurnet.fr. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ Rollings, Grant (6 February 2009). "Jean-Claude Van Damme interview". Sun. London, England. Van Damme: "My eldest son doesn't know how to deal with society because I over-protect him because of my last life of being on the street and sleeping on the street and starving in L.A. I didn't want him to have that."
- ^ a b c Jean-Claude Van Damme - Actor Has Bipolar Disorder
- ^ "PhimAnh — Jean-Claude Van Damme". Phimanh.vnexpress.net. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ a b "Jean-Claude Van Damme fan site". 123allcelebs.com. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ a b "JC Van Damme VS Patrick Teugels (1980) - THE TRUE STORY". YouTube. 8 March 1980. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ http://www.flickr.com/photos/10814403@N06/3405201943/in/photostream/
- ^ "CNK — Centre National de Karaté". Jcvandamme.net. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1870022/bio
- ^ http://www.flickr.com/photos/10814403@N06/3405201561/
- ^ a b "Video available on [[YouTube]]".
{{cite web}}
: URL–wikilink conflict (help) - ^ a b "Jean-Claude Van Damme: [[IMDb]] Bio".
{{cite web}}
: URL–wikilink conflict (help) - ^ a b "Jean-Claude Van Damme at AllCelebs".
- ^ "Jean-Claude Van Damme vs Somluck Kamsing Fight Poster".
- ^ "http://www.fiveknuckles.com/mma-news/Jean-Claude-Van-Damme-to-fight-Somluck-Kamsing-in-K-1.html". FiveKnuckles.com. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
{{cite web}}
: External link in
(help)|title=
- ^ "Van Damme To fight again".
- ^ "Celebrities : Jean-Claude Van Damme". Movie-collection.com. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ http://www.flickr.com/photos/10814403@N06/3406013640/
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0702680/bio
- ^ Brunton, Richard (29 November 2008). "Van Damme turned down Stallone's The Expendables". Filmstalker.co.uk. Retrieved 8 April 2009.
- ^ "Jean-Claude Van Damme Official Website". Jeanclaudevandamme.be. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ "A New Battle For Mankind Begins in 'Mortal Kombat' Tourney, Redo in the Works". Bloody-disgusting.com. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
Further reading
- YouTube Video: JC Van Damme vs Patrick Teugels (1980)-The True Story
- WAKO: MARTIAL ARTS (Traditions, History, People, by John Corcoran & Emil Farkas. Gallery Books, W.H. Smith Publishers, Inc. 112 Madison, New York City 10016. 1988. Pages: 60, 265.
- PKA World Heavyweight Title: MARTIAL ARTS, by John Corcoran & Emil Farkas. 1988. Pages: 285–286.
- EKU: MARTIAL ARTS, by John Corcoran & Emil Farkas. 1988. Pages: 210, 393.
- Inside Kung-Fu Presents: Martial Artists One on One, March 1990: Jean-Claude Van Damme, pages 16–25, by John Steven Soet.
- Karate Kung-Fu Illustrated: April 1991, Gunning for Van Damme, by Tim Vandehey.
- Xuat Tinh Som (Tre Today News), 31 December 2007: Jean-Claude Van Damme.
External links
- Official International website Template:En icon
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- Interview with Patri(c)k Teugels