Gary Daniels

British actor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gary Edward Daniels (born 9 May 1963) is an English actor and martial artist. Originally a kickboxer fighting out of London and Tampa Bay, Daniels earned his first acting credits with Philippine companies. He gained wider recognition in the manga adaptations City Hunter, opposite Jackie Chan, and Fist of the North Star, in a starring role. During the 1990s, he toplined many independent action pictures, most notably those of PM Entertainment. In later years, Daniels has been featured in more mainstream American fare, such as the two Tekken live action movies and the all-star vehicle The Expendables.

Quick Facts Born, Height ...
Gary Daniels
BornGary Edward Daniels
(1963-05-09) 9 May 1963 (age 61)
Woking, Surrey, England
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight180 lb (82 kg)
DivisionMiddleweight
Light Heavyweight
Reach77.5 in (197 cm)
StyleKickboxing, Muay Thai, taekwondo[1]
StanceSouthpaw
TeamThe Jet Center
Piston Kickboxing Gym
TrainerMickey Byrne
Yukio Horiuchi
Benny Urquidez[1]
Rank2nd degree black belt in taekwondo[2]
Years active1979–2008[3]
Other information
OccupationActor, martial artist
Children3
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Early life

Gary Daniels was born on May 9, 1963, in Woking, Surrey, England.[4][5] He grew up in the west London town of Hayes.[6] He played football from the age of 5,[7] and was on nearby Watford F.C.'s scouting list until the age of 14.[6] After seeing a preview of Enter the Dragon on television at age 8, Daniels asked his father to take him to a martial arts club, and the elder Daniels took on the sport on the same day to encourage his son.[8] Before breaking through as an actor, he supported himself as a nightclub bouncer and dancer.[6]

Martial arts

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Perspective

Daniels started at the local Hayes Kung-fu Club, working under trainers Jim Russell and Lajos Jakab.[2][9][10] They taught a style called "Mongolian kung-fu", which in practice turned out to be a mix of karate, judo and aikido geared towards self defense.[10][3][11] Finding his kicking abilities underused in this style, Daniels moved to taekwondo under trainer Raymond Choi at around 12 or 13, and received his black belt within three years.[10][12][3] However, his aggressive style caused him to get disqualified from several ITF tournaments.[10][13][14] At 14, he sought a second trainer in Mickey Byrne, a striking specialist and military instructor working out of a gym at Brunel University, with the goal of entering the then nascent sport of kickboxing with the PKA.[10][15] Daniels started fighting on British PKA shows at 17[16] and spent two to three years on that circuit. Among the seven fights he had there,[12] he claims a draw against the organization's world middleweight champion.[4] However, fights paid poorly and were hard to come by.[17]

Just after his 20th birthday in 1983,[18] he emigrated to the U.S. with only a few hundred pounds in his pockets, settling in Tampa, Florida, on the advice of British PKA promoter George Stefas, who considered it the best compromise between talent pool and cost of living.[19] There he started training under karate instructors John and Jim Graden, as well as teaching at St. Petersburg Junior College.[4][12][18][20][21] He also trained under their mentor Joe Lewis, who lived in the area at the time, but was not a longtime student of his.[10][18][1] However, U.S. purses were not what Daniels had hoped for and he found it difficult to pay for travel expenses. As a result, he mostly stuck to the Florida scene. However points karate, which he disliked, was much more prevalent than full contact at the time, and he quit after a couple unsuccessful tournaments.[12][22] Despite early misgivings, he also trained in Ninjutsu for about a year, first under a trainer named Mark Russo, and then his mentor Steven Hayes.[23]

Around 1986, Daniels flew down to the Philippines to explore acting opportunities, and remained there for two years.[10] He returned to the U.S. in 1988 and moved to California the following year to further his film career.[12] Shortly after, he was introduced to Winston "Omega" Wong, a Malaysian of Chinese descent.[3][10][24] He also got back into Muay Thai and kickboxing, joining Benny Urquidez's Jet Center for about a year, and training with various fighters including Pete Cunningham and Stan Longinidis.[1][25][10] Daniels also had a stint at Yukio "Little Piston" Horiuchi's Piston Gym in Fountain Valley.[3] He briefly returned to competition for Horiuchi's World Kick Boxing Association (California), a regional offshoot of the Japan-based WKBA,[26] winning the Californian light heavyweight title in November 1990 against Bob Smith.[4][18][16] This led to further opportunities in Hollywood, and he stepped away from prizefighting due to scheduling conflicts.[10][27] Thereafter, Daniels trained exclusively with Omega.[1]

On 23 November 1991, at the World Martial Arts Extravaganza in Birmingham, England, Daniels took part in a three-round, no-decision kickboxing exhibition with 11-time world champion Don "The Dragon" Wilson, to promote their film Ring of Fire.[6][28][29] Feeling that he had never retired from fighting, but rather been on leave from it due to the financial security afforded by film, Daniels made the best of an acting lull and started attending fight camps in Thailand in 2004, occasionally training with WMC figure Stephan Fox.[10] He has taken part in a few impromptu contests while there, the last on record being a five-round decision loss at the age of 45, against a substantially younger opponent. He has declared that he considered himself retired since then.[3][10][27]

Film

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Perspective

Daniels grew up a martial arts film enthusiast and accrued a large knowledge of the genre,[14] later contributing opinions to the filmography segment of John Corcoran's Martial Arts Sourcebook.[30] When he arrived in Tampa Bay at age 20, Daniels started taking acting lessons at Kathy Laughlin's Performers' Studio Workshop.[12][31] He found a few commercials and bit parts locally, including in a Miami Vice episode and the film Cocoon, the latter of which was cut.[32][21] In 1986, he asked a Filipino friend if he could pitch his demo tape to the film companies of his native country.[33] He accepted an invitation from a director who turned out to be a fraud, but stayed there and was later scouted by Solar Films, whose wealthy Chinese owner Wilson Tieng was looking for Caucasian actors to expand into the international market.[10][34][35] He was given six-picture contract[36] but after two, he was asked to do a softcore movie and walked out.[37][35]

Daniels returned to Florida in 1988. His fortunes changed in 1989 when he met Roy Horan. Horan put him in contact with agent "Hilly" Elkins, who had an affinity for English talent. Elkins signed him up to his Los Angeles-based firm and Daniels relocated to the area.[16][38][39] In 1990, he was signed to a four-picture deal with Cinema City of Hong Kong, but it went out of business soon after.[18] By that time, the success of Bloodsport had opened the door for real-life martial artists to appear in movies. He was offered $50,000 to star in Death Touch for Menahem Golan's new company 21st Century, but it was cancelled.[6][18] After he won a regional WKBA belt, Elkins sent him to an audition for the PM Entertainment film Ring of Fire.[10][40] This was his first featured role in the U.S., and earned him a SAG card.[12][41]

Daniels' first American starring roles came in a series of co-productions between the Philippines' Silver Star company and their American partners Cine Excel, starting with 1991's Capital Punishment.[11][42] Although they were of a very low standard, Daniels struck a friendship with Cine Excel boss David Huey and kept working with him over the years.[12][43] In 1992, Daniels traveled to Japan and Hong Kong for an adaptation of City Hunter starring Jackie Chan, an early breakthrough alongside one of his favorite action stars.[44] The Briton also took advantage of a break in filming to appear opposite Moon Lee in Mission of Justice.[14] In 1993, Daniels played the Malibu Comics character Hardcase in a promotional short by music video director Darren Doane.[45] Concurrently, he entered his first multi-picture deal with PM Entertainment,[10] graduating to co-starring and, soon after, leading roles for the company with 1994's Deadly Target.[46]

Meanwhile, Daniels started pitching a potential franchise character for himself called Union Jack, a former British Army sergeant with James Bond-like qualities, who became the bodyguard to a rich heiress.[46][47] He was signed to a three-picture deal with British-owned Overseas Filmgroup, of which Union Jack was meant to be the first.[48] That project did not pan out but Overseas, who frequently co-produced with Japan, was contacted by the Toei Company to help make a live action version of Fist of the North Star. Daniels, a fan of the anime, was offered for the role.[35] While the latter feels that a theatrical release, which was at one point considered, could have changed his career, the film's strong video performance, particularly in Asia, still established him as a bankable name.[49][50]

Daniels soldiered on with a new PM Entertainment contract, which saw him star in an informal trilogy known internally at PM as the "Three Rs": Rage (1995), Riot (1996) and Recoil (1998). They are often seen as the company's peak thanks to large scale stunts devised by Spiro Razatos.[51][52] Aspects of his dream character Union Jack resurfaced in other projects, especially the two Queen's Messenger movies made for Harry Alan Towers.[53] Daniels also reunited with Darren Doane, the director of his Hardcase short, for two features, Ides of March, which went unreleased due to legal issues, and Black Friday, which saw him debut as a main producer.[53][54]

The early 2000s marked an end to the lucrative cable and foreign sales that had cemented Daniels' leading man career.[55] Still working for producers Joseph Merhi and Avi Lerner, he found himself booked as the antagonist in more upmarket films headlined by former studio players, Retrograde with Dolph Lundgren and Submerged with Steven Seagal. However, those changed power dynamics resulted in both of his characters being altered for the worse.[5][27][35][56][57] After a few lean years, Daniels received high-profile roles in 2009's Tekken and 2010's The Expendables thanks to friends Mike Norris and Chad Stahelski. He had better luck this time around, as his characters gained in relevance during the making of the films.[27][58][59]

In 2012, Daniels delivered a more subdued performance in the crime drama Angels, in a role written against type by his friend Wych Kaosayananda.[60] The film's lack of commercial appeal lead to action-oriented reshoots with Scott Adkins and a rebrand as Zero Tolerance, much to Daniels' disappointment.[35][61] However, the director's cut still saw release in Vietnam thanks to co-star Dustin Nguyen's presence, and Daniels was booked for another dramatic role in Farewell, Berlin Wall, a German-Vietnamese co-production which was selected for the 2015 Busan Film Festival.[62][63] In 2018, Daniels was cast by Ross Boyask, whom he had mentored during his days as an amateur filmmaker, as the main antagonist of his first mainstream feature I Am Vengeance, opposite wrestler Stu Bennett.[64]

Personal life

Daniels met his wife in the Philippines, and she later followed him to the U.S.[6] His first son Shane is a stuntman who has competed on the TV show American Ninja Warrior.[65] His second son, Kenshiro, named after his Fist of the North Star character, has played professional association football in the Philippines.[66] He also has a daughter.[6][21]

Titles

  • 1990 WKBA (California) Light Heavyweight Champion[16][18]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleRoleNotes
1988Final ReprisalDavid CallahanFirst lead role
The Secret of King Mahis IslandChuck
1991Ring of FireBud
In BetweenThe Guardian
Capital Punishment James Thayer
1992Jin san jiao qun ying huiMartial Artist in PrologueKnown in English as Mission of Justice
Final ImpactNick's Club Fighter
Deadly BetFletch
Bloodfist IV: Die TryingScarfaceAlso known as Die Trying
American StreetfighterJake TannerAlso fight choreographer
1993City HunterKim
Full ImpactJared TaskinAlso fight choreographer
HardcaseTom Hawke / HardcaseShort film
KnightsDavid
FirepowerNick Sledge
1994 Deadly TargetCharles Prince
1995Fist of the North StarKenshiro
HeatseekerXao
RageAlex GainerAlso associate producer
1996White TigerMike Ryan
Hawk's VengeanceEric "Hawk" KellyAlso fight choreographer
1997BloodmoonKen O'HaraAlso associate producer
Pocket NinjasThe White DragonFilmed in 1994
RiotMaj. Shane Alcott
1998RecoilDet. Ray MorganAlso associate producer
SpoilerRoger Mason
1999No TomorrowJason
Cold HarvestRoland Chaney / Oliver Chaney
Delta Force One: The Lost PatrolCapt. James Wellford
2000EpicenterNick Constantine
The Ides of MarchThomas CaneAlso known as Ultimate Target
Unreleased domestically
City of FearSteve Roberts
Fatal BladeRichard FoxAlso associate producer
2001Queen's MessengerCapt. Anthony Strong
Witness to a KillCapt. Anthony StrongAlso known as Queen's Messenger 2
2002Black FridayDean CampbellAlso producer
2004RetrogradeMarkus
2005SubmergedCol. John Sharpe
2006ReptilicantRyan Moore
2008Dark SecretsDarryl Van DykeAlso known as Cold Earth
2009Immortally YoursSebastian
La LineaMartin
TekkenBryan Fury
2010Game of DeathZander
The ExpendablesLawrence "The Brit" Sparks
Hunt to KillJensen
Across the LineMichaels
The Lazarus PapersSebastian Riker
2011Johnny's GoneRoy
Forced To FightShaneAlso fight choreographer
2012The MarkJoseph Pike
A Stranger in ParadiseDerek
The Encounter: Paradise LostCharlie Doles
The Mark: RedemptionJoseph Pike
The RogueKiefer
LibertyAgent Gunner
2013 Human FactorChad
2014Tekken 2: Kazuya's RevengeBryan Fury
QuyênHansKnown in English as Farewell, Berlin Wall
MisfireCole
2015Skin TraffikBradley
AngelsSammyPartially re-shot and released in most territories
as Zero Tolerance or 2 Guns: Zero Tolerance
Dancin': It's On!Jerry August
2016The Wrong ChildCharles
RumbleDavid Goran
2018I Am VengeanceHatcher
AstroJack Adams
2021 The GardenerVolker
2022 Bring Him Back DeadAlex
2022 RepeaterHenrik Botha
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleRoleNotes
1986Miami ViceMale stripperEpisode: "Walk-Alone"
Uncredited
1999Sons of ThunderLannarkEpisode: "Daddy's Girl"
2008The Legend of Bruce LeeElliott2 episodes
2013PaydayHectorWeb miniseries
Episode: "Hector"
2016Mortal Kombat X: GenerationsKanoAlso known as Mortal Kombat: Legacy season 3
Web miniseries
Episode: "Mission Fatigue"
Unreleased
2016The Wrong ChildCharlesTelevision film
2021Kung FuMaster Drake2 episodes
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References

Further reading

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