Anh Do
Anh Do | |
---|---|
Born | Anh Do 2 June 1977 |
Occupation(s) | Actor, stand-up comedian, author |
Spouse | Suzanne |
Children | 3, Leon Luc and Xavier |
Website | http://www.anhdo.com/ |
Anh Do (born 2 June 1977) is a Vietnamese-born Australian author, actor and comedian. He has appeared on many Australian TV shows such as Thank God You're Here and Good News Week, and was runner-up on Dancing With The Stars in 2007. He studied a combined Business Law degree at the University of Technology, Sydney.[1] He is the brother of film director Khoa Do and has acted in several of Khoa's films, including Footy Legends, which he co-wrote and produced. In 2012, his TV show Anh Does Vietnam began airing.
Biography
Refugee
Anh Do and his family fled to Australia as refugees in 1980.[2] In his 2010 autobiography, The Happiest Refugee, Do tells of how his family survived five days in a leaky fishing boat nine and a half metres long and two metres wide. During the trip his family and the rest of the passengers were attacked by two different bands of pirates. The first group stole one out of the two engines and the second group of pirates stole the second engine, which had been broken but repaired by Anh's father using a piece of rubber from a thong.
Career
Anh Do attended St Aloysius' College in Milsons Point for his secondary education.[3] When he was 13 he started a small business breeding tropical fish. While studying his first year of law at the University of Technology, Sydney, he owned a stall which sold American-Indian artefacts, which he later expanded to four franchised stores. A few months before finishing his combined Business Law degree, law firms offered him jobs which required 60 hours of work a week. He opted to take up stand-up comedy instead.[2] Since 2013 Do has cut back on comedy to focus on painting full-time again and was a finalist in the Archibald Prize in 2014.
He promotes Independent Grocers of Australia (IGA) Supermarkets. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ou9Iw2tOKOU)
Awards
- 2011 Independent Booksellers Book of the Year[4] (for The Happiest Refugee)
- 2011 Joint winner (with musician Paul Kelly) of the Biography of the Year[5] (for The Happiest Refugee)
- 2011 Best Newcomer (for The Happiest Refugee)
- 2011 Book of the Year (for The Happiest Refugee)
Acting filmography
- Double the Fist (2008) as Krakbot
- Crooked Business (2008) as Benny Wing
- Kick (2007) as Hoa Tran
- Footy Legends (2006) as Luc Vu
- Solo (2006) as Nguyen
- Pizza as Chong Fat (2005–2007)
- Blue Water High – (Episode: It's Hard to Be Normal) (2005) as Robbo
- Little Fish (2005) as Tran
- The Finished People (2003) as Factory Worker
- All Saints (2003) (Episode: The Devil to Pay) as Tim Salter
- Don't Blame Me (2002) as Vinnie
- SeaChange (2000) as Quan Tho
Filmography (as himself)
- Anh Does Brazil (2014) as Host
- Anh Does Iceland (2014) as Host
- Anh Does Scandinavia (2014) as Host
- Anh Does Britain (2013) as Host
- Anh Does Vietnam, (2012) as Host
- Talking Heads (2010, Series 6 Episode 33) Guest
- Top Gear Australia (2009) as Guest
- The Squiz (2009) as Host
- Made In China (2008) as Host
- Short and Curly as Host
- Deal or No Deal Special (2007) as Contestant (Won maximum prize of $200,000)
- Dancing with the Stars (2007) as Contestant
- Thank God You're Here (2006 & 2007) as Contestant
- The NRL Footy Show, comedian
- Matty Johns Show as Himself in segment Anh Can Do
- Pictures of You, as Guest
References
- ^ Celebrity Speakers Anh Do
- ^ a b "Profile: Anh Do". The Age. Melbourne. 2 February 2011.
- ^ McCowen, Sharyn. "Happiest refugee gives 'all credit to big fella upstairs'". The Catholic Weekly. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
- ^ Comedian Anh Do wins indie book prize | ABC Radio 26 July 2011. Retrieved 2 August 2013
- ^ Comedian wins top book prize | ABC News 15 March 2011. Retrieved 2 August 2013
External links
- Use dmy dates from April 2011
- 1977 births
- Australian people of Vietnamese descent
- Australian male film actors
- Australian male comedians
- Australian stand-up comedians
- Australian male television actors
- Australian television presenters
- Dancing with the Stars (Australian TV series) participants
- People educated at St Aloysius' College (Sydney)
- People from Sydney
- University of Technology, Sydney Law School alumni
- Living people
- Vietnamese refugees