Jean-Claude Camille François Van Varenberg (born 18 October 1960), professionally known as Jean-Claude Van Damme, is a Belgian martial artist, actor, and director best known for his martial arts action films. The most successful of these films include Bloodsport (1988), Kickboxer (1989), Universal Soldier (1992), Hard Target (1993), Street Fighter (1994), Timecop (1994), Sudden Death (1995), JCVD (2008) and The Expendables 2 (2012).
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. He emigrated to the United States in 1982 to pursue a career in film, and achieved success with Bloodsport (1988), based on a story written by Frank Dux. He attained subsequent box office success with Timecop (1994), which was his highest grossing film with over $100 million.
Early
life
Van Damme was born Jean-Claude
Camille François Van Varenberg, on 18 October 1960, in Berchem-Sainte-Agathe,
Brussels, Belgium, the son of Eliana and Eugène Van
Varenberg, who was an accountant.
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." He began martial arts at the age of ten, enrolled by his
father in a Shotokan karate school. His
styles consist of Shotokan Karate and Kickboxing. He eventually earned his black belt
in karate. He started lifting weights to
improve his physique, which eventually led to a Mr. Belgium bodybuilding title.
Martial
arts career
Semi-contact
karate career
At the age of 11, Van Damme joined
the Centre National De Karaté (National Center of Karate) under the
guidance of Claude Goetz in Belgium. Van Damme trained for four years and he
earned a spot on the Belgian Karate Team; later training in full-contact karate
and kickboxing by Dominique Valera.
In 1976, Jean-Claude is reported to
have started his competitive career in Ingelmunster, Belgium, in a semi-contact
match which was sanctioned by the European Karate Union. He defeated fellow
Belgian Roland Vedani. The following year, Van Damme remained undefeated with
victories over Maurice Devos, Andre LeMaire and fellow team-mate Patrick Teugels in non-tournament matches
sanctioned by the World All-Styles Karate Organization. In his first tournament
competition, Van Damme placed second at the Challenge Coupe des Espoirs Karate
Tournament (1st Trials). Jean-Claude defeated 25 opponents in the three day
tournament before losing in the finals to fellow team-mate Angelo Spataro.
Jean-Claude was a member of the
Belgium Team that won the European Championship on 26 December 1979 at La Coupe
Francois Persoons Karate Tournament in Brussels, Belgium.
1980
Forest National match
On 8 March 1980, in Brussels,
Belgium, Van Damme competed against his one-time stablemate Patrick Teugels at
the Forest National arena on the amateur undercard of the Dan
Macaruso-Dominique Valera PKA
Light-Heavyweight World Championship bout.[ Prior to this match, Teugels had defeated Van
Damme at least twice by decision, including a match for the Belgium Lightweight
Championship. Van Damme had a 1977 win over Teugels. Teugels was coming off
this latter impressive showing at the WAKO
World Championships four months earlier, and was favored by some to win this
match. According to reports, and Patrick Teugels' own interview (with photos),
Teugels lost by TKO in the
1st round. Teugels was kicked in the nose and was unable to continue because of
that injury.
Kickboxing
and full-contact karate career
Van Damme's martial arts record
consists mostly of light and semi-contact matches. However, from 1976 to 1982,
Van Damme fought in 19 full-contact matches, and compiled a record of 18 wins,
18 knockouts and 1 defeat.
Van Damme had his first full-contact
match against Toon Van Oostrum in Brussels, Belgium in 1976. The 16 year old
Van Damme knocked out Oostrum in 46 seconds of the first round.
Jean-Claude's biggest victories were
over the United Kingdom's Michael J. Heming-British and European
Middleweight Karate Champion, the United States of America's Sherman Bergman, Turkey's Ajom Mahmud
Uddin, and Belgium's Lenny Leikman.
Van Damme's only defeat was early in
his career, when he lost to France's Etienne "Tuf" Aubry by 1st round
disqualification. Van Damme accidentally kicked and knocked out Aubry when he
was down. Aubry was unable to continue and was awarded a victory.
Jean-Claude was only knocked down
once in his entire 8-year career. Facing Sherman Bergman, Van Damme was knocked to
the canvas after absorbing a powerful left hook, and it was the only knock-down
suffered by Van Damme in his fighting career. However, Van Damme got up, and
with an axe-kick, knocked Bergman out in 56 seconds of the first round. This
match was fought in Tampa, Florida.
Following a knockout victory over
France's Georges Verlugels on a Professional
Karate Association promotion in 1980(source:FightingArts.com), Van
Damme caught the attention of Professional Karate Magazine publisher and
editor Mike Anderson,
and multiple European champion Geet Lemmens. Both men tabbed Van Damme as an
upcoming prospect.
Van Damme ended his full-contact
career in 1982 following a knockout victory over India's Nedjad Gharbi. Van
Damme was scheduled to fight former boxing Olympic gold-medalist Somluck Kamsing in November 2011. Early
reports have named Las Vegas,
USA, Moscow, Russia and Macau,
China, Thailand as locations for the bout but it
now fight will take place in Dubai, Moscow or Grozny. At the prospect of being the first man over the
age of 50 to kickbox professionally, Van Damme stated that "it's kind of
dangerous, but life is short."
Film
career
Jean-Claude Van Damme at the Cannes Festival
In 1982, Van Damme and childhood
friend, Michel Qissi, moved to America in the hope
of becoming action stars. They both were cast as extras in the film, Breakin'. Van Damme also had a
non-speaking part as a Secret Service
agent who carries a polio-crippled President Franklin Roosevelt (Ralph Bellamy) out of a pool in the 1988 TV
miniseries War and Remembrance.
After a small part in Missing In
Action, Van Damme was next cast in the film No Retreat, No
Surrender, as the role of the villain, Ivan the Russian. Van
Damme worked for director John McTiernan
for the 1987 film Predator
as an early (eventually abandoned) version of the titular alien, before being
removed and replaced by Kevin Peter Hall.[24] 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 smaller budgeted film Cyborg. His last role for 1989 was Kurt
Sloane in the successful Kickboxer.
In this film, his character fights to avenge his brother who has been paralyzed
by a Thai kickboxing champion (Qissi).[25]
Double Impact featured Van Damme in the dual role of Alex and Chad Wagner,
estranged twin brothers fighting to avenge the deaths of their parents. This
film reunited him with his former Bloodsport
co-star, Bolo Yeung. He then starred opposite Dolph Lundgren in the action film 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 $23
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 film in a lead role to date.
After his role in the poorly
received Street Fighter,
his projects started to fail at the box office. Sudden Death
(1995); The Quest
(1996), which he directed; Maximum Risk (1996), Double Team
(1997) and Knock Off
(1998) were box-office flops.
The 1999 film Universal
Soldier: The Return, also a box-office flop, was Van Damme's
last theatrically released film until 2008. In 2003, Van Damme employed his
dancing training in the music video for Bob Sinclar's "Kiss My Eyes."
Van Damme returned to the mainstream
with the limited theatrical release of the 2008 film JCVD,
which received positive reviews. Time Magazine named Van Damme's
performance in the film the second best of the year (after Heath Ledger's The Joker in The Dark Knight),[26] having previously stated that
Van Damme "deserves not a black belt, but an Oscar."[27] Van Damme indicated while
promoting the film, he experienced a period of homelessness "sleeping on the street
and starving in L.A."[28]
Van Damme reprised his role as Luc Deveraux in the 2009 film Universal
Soldier: Regeneration. Subsequently he voiced "Master
Croc" in the 2011 animated film Kung Fu Panda 2. Also in 2011, Van
Damme participated in various commercials for Coors Light beer, in which he is located on
a snow-covered mountain wearing a sleeveless denim jacket, and for washing
powder "Dash".
He was offered a lead role in Sylvester Stallone's
film The
Expendables (2010). Stallone called Van Damme personally to
offer him the role, but Van Damme turned it down. He scheduled a series of film
projects for 2011, including another Universal
Soldier movie. On 30 June 2011, Van Damme confirmed his
participation in The Expendables 2,
which was released on 17 August 2012.[29]
One of Van Damme's latest projects
is an upcoming (2013) comedy Welcome
To The Jungle directed by Rob Meltzer, in a role as a workplace
team building trainer opposite Adam Brody, Rob
Huebel, Kristen Schaal, Megan Boone, and Dennis Haysbert.[30] He is also preparing to star in
the thriller Enemies
Closer which would re-unite him with Timecop and Sudden
Death director Peter Hyams.
In August 2012 Van Damme confirmed
that Universal
Soldier: Day of Reckoning would be released on 30 November 2012
to theaters. The film would also again co-star Dolph Lundgren. Van Damme also
said that he would love to make a sequel to what he considers his best film, Double
Impact, and that a script, which he co-wrote for the sequel, has been
written, and that he is hoping to find a producer that will get behind the
project.[31]
Van Damme indicated that Stallone
might include him in The Expendables 3, in which Van Damme would play
Claude Villain, the brother to his Expendables 2 character Jean Villain.[32]
Controversies
Fight
record
In an interview on his website, Van
Damme rival, Patrick Teugels states that Van Damme never fought at the 1979
WAKO World Championships in Tampa, Florida, and posts a Dutch-language Samurai
magazine report on the tournament in which Van Damme (Van Varenberg) is not
mentioned. On Van Damme's imdb page, as well as his official webpage, Van Damme
makes no claims of having fought at the 1979 or 1980 WAKO World Championships.
Van Damme's fight with Bergman in Tampa, Florida was always billed as a
non-tournament match, and was not under the sanction of the WAKO World
Championships and was not recorded as a championship bout.
At the same time, while Teugels
takes credit for two victories over Van Damme (one for the Belgium
light-contact Championship), records show that Van Damme defeated Teugels in at
least two matches, including one at the Forest National arena in which Van Damme
broke Teugels's nose.[
At the STAR
System World Kickboxing Ratings website, event coverages and results
are posted from France's Karate Magazine and from the World
Association of Kickboxing Organizations (WAKO) that show Van Damme
was an active semi-contact fighter in Europe between 1978–1980, but that he
never placed at the 1979 WAKO World Championships. Newspaper clippings do
provide information that Van Damme fought in various tournaments from
1978–1980, but internet photos show that Van Damme competed from 1976–1982.
When Van Damme became an action film
star a controversy arose because leading martial arts magazines could not find
any fights listed for Jean-Claude Van Damme. Jean-Claude had competed under his
birth name of Jean-Claude Van Varenberg. Van Damme's office supplied a list of
four European karate trophies that he earned under his real name, Van
Varenberg, between 1978 and 1981: the Hope Cup; the Cup of Antwerp; World
Championship, WAKO; and the Gala International. Van Damme's lawyer, Martin
Singer, made a public statement defending his client: "There are records
to document his martial-arts acclaim. He's the one who does those splits on
chairs. He doesn't have a stunt man do that."
Paul Maslak of the STAR
System World Kickboxing Ratings, who was also the casting director
who helped cast Van Damme in his first theatrical role, No Retreat, No
Surrender, and who was therefore always aware of Van Damme's
legal name, researched Van Damme's competitive history and came up with
documentation that showed most fights were in tournament karate and that there
was no verifiable evidence Van Damme had ever competed as a professional
kickboxer.[14] The term
"professional" fighter is open to debate, because many WAKO fighters
in Europe were paid money to train.
Kadyrov
event
In October 2011, Van Damme, along
with other celebrities including Hilary Swank, Vanessa-Mae and Seal attracted criticism from human rights
groups for attending an event in Russian federal subject Chechnya's capital Grozny on the 35th birthday of Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov on 5 October. Human rights
groups, who had urged the celebrities to cancel their appearances because of
abuses carried out under Kadyrov, criticised the celebrities for attending the
event. Human Rights Watch
released a statement which said, "Ramzan Kadyrov is linked to a litany of
horrific human rights abuses. It's inappropriate for stars to get paid to party
with him. It bolsters his image and legitimizes a brutal leader and his regime.
And getting paid to be part of such a lavish show in Chechnya trivializes the
suffering of countless victims of human rights abuses there."
Public
image and influence
In the French-speaking world, Van
Damme is well known for the picturesque aphorisms that he delivers on a wide
range of topics (personal well-being, the environment, etc.) in a sort of Zen
franglais.
The original video game Mortal Kombat was conceived as a fighting game based on Van Damme. Creators Ed Boon and John Tobias originally had desired to
author the game starring Van Damme himself. That fell through as Van Damme had
a prior deal for another game under the auspices of the Sega Genesis platform. Ed Boon and John
Tobias eventually decided to create a different character for the game named Johnny Cage, who is modeled after
Jean-Claude Van Damme, primarily from Van Damme's appearance and outfit in the
martial arts film Bloodsport.
On 21 October 2012, Van Damme was
honored with a life-size statue of himself in his hometown of Brussels. He told reporters during the
unveiling, "Belgium is paying me back something, but really it's to pay
back to the dream. So when people come by here, it is Jean-Claude Van Damme but
it's a guy from the street who believed in something. I want the statue to
represent that".
Personal
life
Van Damme suffered from substance abuse beginning in 1995. He entered a month-long rehabilitation
program in 1996 but left it after only one week. In 1996, he spent up to
$10,000 a week on cocaine. After the filming of the 1998 film Knock Off,
Van Damme was diagnosed with rapid cycling bipolar disorder after becoming suicidal
and started treatment on the mood stabilizer, sodium valproate. A turning point toward
improvement of his health came from late 1997 onwards, after having finished
divorce procedures.
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