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Daniel Wu

Hong Kong actor, filmmaker , martial artist and racing driver From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daniel Wu

Daniel Wu Neh-Tsu (Chinese: 吳彥祖; born September 30, 1974) is a American actor and filmmaker.[2] He is known as a "flexible and distinctive" leading actor in the Chinese language film industry.[3] Since his film debut in 1998, he has been featured in over 60 films.[4] A three-time Golden Horse Award winner, he also starred in the AMC martial arts drama series Into the Badlands and the Disney+ wuxia action comedy American Born Chinese.

Quick Facts Born, Citizenship ...
Daniel Wu
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Wu at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con
Born
Daniel N Wu[1]

(1974-09-30) September 30, 1974 (age 50)
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materUniversity of Oregon
Occupation(s)Actor, director, producer, screenwriter
Years active1998–present
Spouse
(m. 2010)
Children1
AwardsHong Kong Film AwardsBest New Director
2007 The Heavenly Kings

Golden Horse AwardsBest Supporting Actor
2004 New Police Story

Chinese name
Traditional Chinese吳彥祖
Simplified Chinese吴彦祖
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWú Yànzǔ
IPA[ǔ ̂n.tsù]
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingNg4 Jin6-zou2
IPA jin˨ tsɔw˧˥]
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Early life

Summarize
Perspective

Daniel N Wu was born in Berkeley, California,[1] and raised in Orinda, California. His parents, Diana (née Liu),[1] a college professor, and George Wu, a retired engineer,[5] are natives of Shanghai, China. His father immigrated to the United States from China and met his mother in New York, where she was a student. After marrying, they settled in California.[6] Wu has two older sisters, Greta and Gloria, and an older brother who died when he was two.[5][7]

Wu developed an interest in martial arts when he saw Jet Li in The Shaolin Temple and Donnie Yen in Iron Monkey,[3] and consequently began studying wushu at age 11.[8] His childhood role model was Jackie Chan,[6] who now considers Wu "like a son".[9] Wu attended the Head-Royce School in Oakland, California[10] and later majored in architecture at the University of Oregon. Wu also attended SCI-Arc for a summer program in architecture and worked for architect Michael Rotondi. While in Oregon, he founded the University of Oregon Wushu Club in 1994 and served as the team's first coach.[11] During this time, Wu took film classes and frequented local theaters, and came to enjoy the works of filmmakers like Akira Kurosawa and Luc Besson, whom he describes as "men of vision".[12]

Following graduation, Wu traveled in 1997 to Hong Kong to witness the handover of Hong Kong, with no intention of taking on a film career. At the suggestion by his sister, Wu began modeling.[6][13] Four months later, film director Yonfan, after seeing Wu featured in a clothing ad, approached Wu about starring in an upcoming film.[3][14]

Career

Summarize
Perspective

Despite his inability at the time to speak Cantonese[15] or read Chinese,[16] Wu successfully completed his first film, Yonfan's Bishonen in 1998. As of this day,[when?] when Wu receives a Cantonese script, his assistant reads the entire piece, while he makes notes on the pronunciation. The day after Bishonen wrapped, Wu was offered the leading role in Mabel Cheung's City of Glass (for which Wu was nominated as best new actor at the 18th Hong Kong Film Awards)[17] and later, a supporting part in Young and Dangerous: The Prequel, from Andrew Lau's gangster film series. Around this time, Wu met Jackie Chan at a restaurant opening[18] and was quickly signed to Chan's JC Group with agent Willie Chan.[14]

Wu's breakthrough performance came in 1999 with his role in Benny Chan's Gen-X Cops. He followed this success with roles in a variety of films including big-budget thriller Purple Storm, arthouse production Peony Pavilion and the successful Love Undercover. In 2001, Wu received criticism from the Hong Kong media for sexual scenes with Suki Kwan in Cop on a Mission, but Wu says that same criticism attracted the attention of directors and the film represented a turning point in the types of roles he chose in the future.[19]

Wu's first experience in film production came with his starring role in Julian Lee's 2003 film Night Corridor. Due to budgetary constraints, Wu participated in the search for funding for and distribution of, the film and recruited Jun Kung to create the soundtrack.[20] Though Night Corridor dealt with "risky" themes,[13] Wu felt he had less reliance on image than many of his pop-star actor peers,[20] and he was nominated for best actor at Taiwan's 40th Golden Horse Film Awards for his effort.[21] During 2003, Wu took part as producer and creative director on MTV's Whatever Things!, a Jackass-styled program aired in Asia,[22] also featuring Sam Lee, Josie Ho, Terence Yin, and other celebrities.[23] During 2003, Wu took part in a stage production of The Happy Prince at the Edward Lam Dance Theater[24] as part of the Hong Kong Arts Festival, during which he recited a 16-minute monologue in Cantonese, learned entirely from pinyin.[25] In 2005, Wu was nominated as best actor at the 24th Hong Kong Film Awards for his role in Derek Yee's One Nite in Mongkok,[26] and as best supporting actor for New Police Story.[27] At the 41st Golden Horse Film Awards, Wu won the award for best supporting actor for New Police Story.[28] The win came as a surprise to him, because he "didn't think that much" of his performance in the film.[19]

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Daniel Wu in 2006

In 2005, Chinese media began to report that Wu had formed a boy band, Alive, with Terence Yin, Andrew Lin, and Conroy Chan.[29] Wu and his bandmates posted information, updates, personal thoughts (including slamming Hong Kong Disneyland, for which they were spokespersons[30]), and the band's music, at their official website.[29][31][32] In 2006, Wu made his writing and directorial debut with The Heavenly Kings, which chronicles Alive's formation and exploits.[33] After the film's release, however, it was revealed that The Heavenly Kings was actually a mockumentary of the Hong Kong pop music industry, and Alive was constructed purely as a vehicle to make the film; the film's characters represented only 10–15% of their real-life counterparts[34] and much of the footage blurred the line between fiction and reality.[33] Wu admitted his own singing voice "sucked really bad", and the band had their voices digitally enhanced for its music, to prove that "it's easy to fake it".[32] Despite some backlash from the media over being intentionally fed false information in the film[35] about illegal downloads of the band's music,[34] Wu won the best new director award at the 26th Hong Kong Film Awards, an achievement he called "a group effort".[35]

In 2011, Wu starred alongside Kevin Spacey in director Dayyan Eng's bilingual film Inseparable.[36] It premiered at the Busan International Film Festival and was released in cinemas in China and other territories worldwide, making it Wu's first English-language film performance.

From 2015 to 2019, he starred as Sunny on the AMC action series Into the Badlands, for which he also served as executive producer.

In 2016, he portrayed via motion capture and voiced Gul'dan, the central antagonist of the action fantasy film Warcraft, based upon the Warcraft video game series by Blizzard Entertainment. In 2018, he appeared in Tomb Raider, based upon the video game series of the same name, as Lara Croft's sidekick, Captain Lu Ren. In 2021, he appeared in Reminiscence, director Lisa Joy's feature film debut.

Other ventures

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Daniel Wu preparing to race at the 2023 Prototype Celebration at Sonoma Raceway.

In April 2007, Wu re-launched his band's old website, AliveNotDead.com, with Terence Yin and RottenTomatoes.com founders Patrick Lee and Stephen Wang, as a place for filmmakers, musicians, and other artists to collaborate, receive exposure, network, and interact with fans.[37][38] He was a spokesperson for Seiko[39] and L'Oréal.[40] Wu posed for the charity photography album SuperStars by Leslie Kee,[41] and performed on rapper Jin's song "HK Superstar."[42] Wu is an investor in Racks MDB Shanghai, which opened in 2008.[43]

Personal life

Wu maintains residences in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Beijing, and Oakland, California. He continues to train in wushu as well as other martial arts.[32]

On April 6, 2010, Wu married Lisa S. in South Africa.[44] Their daughter was born in May 2013.[45]

In 2018, Daniel Wu denied rumors of supporting Hong Kong independence and has explicitly stated his opposition to it.[46]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, English title ...
Year English title Original title Role Notes
1998Bishonen美少年之恋Sam Fai
City of Glass玻璃之城DanielCredited as Daniel Ng
Young and Dangerous: The Prequel新古惑仔之少年激鬥篇Big Head
1999Gorgeous玻璃樽Photographer's assistant
Gen-X Cops特警新人類Daniel
Purple Storm紫雨風暴Todd Nguyen
20002000 AD公元2000Benny
Undercover Blues刑 「殺之法」Joe Wong
2001Headlines頭號人物Peter Wong
Hit Team重裝警察Inspector Chung Chai
Cop on a Mission知法犯法Mike
Born Wild野獸之瞳Tide Ho
Beijing Rocks北京樂與路Michael Wu
Peony Pavilion遊園驚夢Xing Zhi-gang
2002Beauty and the Breast豐胸秘CupHarper
Love Undercover新紮師妹Au Hoi-man
Princess D想飛Joker
Devil Face, Angel Heart變臉迷情Long
The Peeping偷窺無罪Calvin
Naked Weapon赤裸特工Jack Chen
2003Night Corridor妖夜迴廊Sam Yuen/HungAlso producer
Love Undercover 2: Love Mission新紮師妹2: 美麗任務Au Hoi-man
Hidden Track尋找周杰倫Police officer
Miss Du Shi NiangMiss 杜十娘Ken Li
2004Magic Kitchen魔幻厨房Kevin
Chiseen黐線DVD version of
some segments of MTV's Whatever Things
Enter the Phoenix大佬愛美麗Georgie Hung
One Nite in Mongkok旺角黑夜Lai Fu
Around the World in 80 DaysBak Mei
The Twins Effect II千機變II: 花都大戰Wei Liao
Beyond Our Ken公主復仇記Ken
New Police Story新警察故事Joe Kwan
2005DragonBlade: The Legend of Lang龍刀奇緣Hung LangVoiceover
House of Fury精武家庭Jason
Divergence三岔口Coke
Drink-Drank-Drunk千杯不醉Michael
Everlasting Regret長恨歌Kang Mingxun
2006Rob-B-Hood寶貝計劃Brokeback Security agent Daniel
McDull, the Alumni春田花花同學會Hostage-taker
The Banquet夜宴Prince Wu Luan
The Heavenly Kings四大天王Daniel WuAlso writer, director and producer
2007Protégé門徒Nick
Ming Ming明明A D
Blood Brothers天堂口Ah Fung
2009Shinjuku Incident新宿事件Jie/Joe
Overheard竊聽風雲Max Lam
Like a Dream如夢MaxAlso associate producer
Jump跳出去Doctor
2010Hot Summer Days全城熱戀Sushi master
Triple Tap鎗王之王Chong Tze-wai
2011Don't Go Breaking My Heart單身男女Kevin Fong
The Founding of a Party建黨偉業Hu Shih
Overheard 2竊聽風雲2Joe Szema
Inseparable形影不離Li
2012The Great Magician大魔術師Captain TsaiCameo
Tai Chi 0太极Mad MonkAlso producer
Tai Chi Hero太極2 英雄崛起Mad MonkAlso producer
The Man with the Iron FistsPoison Dagger
The Last Supper王的盛宴Xiang Yu
CZ12十二生肖Hospital DoctorCameo
2013Europa ReportWilliam Xu
Control控制MarkAlso producer
2014That Demon Within魔警Dave Wong
Overheard 3竊聽風雲3Joe
Don't Go Breaking My Heart 2單身男女2Kevin Fong
2015I Am Somebody我是路人甲Cameo
Go Away Mr. Tumor滾蛋吧!腫瘤君Dr. Liang
2016WarcraftGul'dan
Sky on Fire沖天火Zong Tianbao
2017GeostormCheng Long
Wished反轉人生Daniel LiCameo
2018Tomb RaiderLu Ren
2020Caught in Time除暴Zhang Sen
2021ReminiscenceSaint Joe
2024Decoded解密XiaoliliCompleted
2025Love HurtsKnuckles Gable
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes
2015–2019Into the BadlandsSunnyAlso executive producer
2016Skylanders AcademyKing PenVoice
2022 Westworld Jay Recurring role (season 4)
2023American Born ChineseSun Wukong "The Monkey King"Main role[47]
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[48] [49]

Awards and nominations

References

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