Celebrities » Jackie Chan » Biography
Birthday:
Apr 7, 1954
Birthplace:
Hong Kong

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Jackie Chan Biography

One of the most popular film personalities in the world, Jackie Chan came from a poverty-stricken Hong Kong family -- so poor, claims Chan, that he was almost sold in infancy to a wealthy British couple. As it turned out, Chan became his family's sole support. Enrolled in the Chinese Opera Research Institute at the age of seven, he spent the next decade in rigorous training for a career with the Peking Opera, excelling in martial arts and acrobatics. Billed as Cheng Lung, Chan entered films in his mid-teens, appearing in 25 productions before his 20th birthday. Starting out as a stunt man, Chan was promoted to stardom as the potential successor to the late Bruce Lee. In his earliest starring films, he was cast as a stone-cold serious type, determined to avenge Lee's death. Only when he began playing for laughs did Chan truly attain full celebrity status. Frequently referred to as the Buster Keaton of kung-fu, Chan's outlook on life is a lot more optimistic than Keaton's, but in his tireless devotion to the most elaborate of sight gags and the most awe-inspiring of stunts (many of which have nearly cost him his life), Chan is Keaton incarnate. From 1978's The Young Master onward, Chan has usually been his own director and screenwriter. His best Hong Kong-produced films include the nonstop action-fests Project A (1983), Police Story (1985), Armour of God (1986), and the Golden Horse Award-winning Crime Story (1993) -- not to mention the multiple sequels of each of the aforementioned titles. Despite his popularity in Europe and Asia, Chan was for many years unable to make a dent in the American market. He tried hard in such films as The Big Brawl (1980) and the first two Cannonball Run flicks, but American filmgoers just weren't buying.At long last, Chan mined U.S. box-office gold with 1996's Rumble in the Bronx, a film so exhilarating that audiences never noticed those distinctly Canadian mountain ranges looming behind the "Bronx" skyline. Chan remained the most popular Asian actor with the greatest potential to cross over into the profitable English-speaking markets, something he again demonstrated when he co-starred with Chris Tucker in the 1998 box-office hit Rush Hour. In 2000 Chan had another success on his hands with Shanghai Noon, a comedy Western in which he starred as an Imperial Guard dispatched to the American West to rescue the kidnapped daughter (Lucy Liu) of the Chinese Emperor.He maintained his status as one of the biggest movie stars in the world throughout the next decades in a series of films that include Rush Hour 2, The Tuxedo, Shankghai Knights, The Myth, Rush Hour 3. He enjoyed his biggest U.S. hit in quite some time starring in the 2010 remake of The Karate Kid opposite Jaden Smith. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Jackie Chan Trivia

Worked as a stunt actor in the Bruce Lee film "Enter the Dragon" and had his back broken by accident during filming of the climactic fight scene.
- submitted by Scott C (18 months ago)
Jackie Chan was scheduled to be atop the Twin Towers in New York City at 7:00 am, September 11, 2001. They were going to start filming a movie where he played a window washer who saw a crime. The 9-11 attacks hit at 6:00 that morning, effectively cancelling the entire project.
- submitted by Sevenwhulfe S (18 months ago)

Quotes from Jackie Chan's Characters

    1. Inspector Lee: Do you understand the words that are coming out of my mouth?
    2. James Carter: Man no one understands the words coming out of yo mouth!
    From Rush Hour 2. Submitted by Pete G (11 days ago)
    1. Cook: [Shaolin Kids shouting to to Cook while he's taking on Cao Man's crooked soldiers] Stir fry them like vegetables. Knead them like noodle dough!
    From Shaolin. Submitted by Fascade F (4 months ago)
    1. Crane: Hey! Maybe you can't watch me be killed?
    2. Tigress: Stop being a wimp.
    3. Monkey: And... she's back.
    From Kung Fu Panda 2. Submitted by Derek K (5 months ago)
    1. Mr. Han: Take it off. Drop it down. Pick it up. Put it on. Take it off. Hang it up. Take it down. Put it on. Take it off. Drop it down...
    From The Karate Kid. Submitted by Diego T (6 months ago)
    1. Monkey: At the first sign of trouble, I'll give you the signal: 'ka ka, ki ki!'
    2. Po: You mean like Crane does?
    3. Monkey: Yeah!
    4. Crane: Excuse me, when have I ever made that noise?
    From Kung Fu Panda 2. Submitted by Tyler R (6 months ago)
    1. Monkey: Po! Get up!
    2. Tigress: You'll be late for work!
    3. Po: Huh?
    From Kung Fu Panda. Submitted by Anthony A (8 months ago)
    1. Chon Wang: Uno mosh?
    2. Roy O'Bannon: No uno mosh John.
    From Shanghai Noon. Submitted by Cori J (9 months ago)
    1. Mr. Han: That's not Kun-Fu! That's bad man teaching very bad things!
    From The Karate Kid. Submitted by Keith L (10 months ago)
    1. Chon Wang: [shaking his hand] My name is Chon Wang.
    2. Roy O'Bannon: John Wayne?
    3. Chon Wang: Chon Wang.
    4. Roy O'Bannon: That's a terrible cowboy name!
    From Shanghai Noon. Submitted by Sam B (10 months ago)
    1. Tigress: If he's smart he won't come back up those stairs.
    2. Monkey: But he will.
    3. Viper: He's not going to quit, is he?
    4. Mantis: I'll tell you what, he's not gonna quit bouncing.
    From Kung Fu Panda. Submitted by Shichao C (11 months ago)
    1. Jimmy Tong: The name's Tong, James Tong.
    From The Tuxedo. Submitted by Lea L (12 months ago)
    1. Mr. Han: What happened to eye?
    2. Dre Parker: I ran into a pole.
    3. Mr. Han: Interesting pole.
    From The Karate Kid. Submitted by Henrique T (12 months ago)
    1. Dre Parker: You don't know the rules?
    2. Mr. Han: Of course I know the rules. Simple. You hit him, don't let him hit you.
    From The Karate Kid. Submitted by Henrique T (12 months ago)
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