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Monday, October 21, 2013
As Body Ages, Jackie Chan Longs forHollywood's Full Embrace
"Six more months and I'm going to be 60," Chan
said. "And I (will) see how far I can go until my
body tells me, 'Stop.'"
The Hong Kong martial arts film star, who
declared last year at France's Cannes film festival
that he was retiring from action films, now says
that after more than a decade of contemplating
quitting, he is going to let his body decide.
"When I was 40-something the media would ask
me and then I said another five years, and then
five years and five years until now," the Kung Fu
actor said in an interview promoting his 2012
Chinese action film "Chinese Zodiac," which will
be released in U.S. cinemas on Friday.
"Six more months and I'm going to be 60," Chan
said. "And I (will) see how far I can go until my
body tells me, 'Stop.'"
Chan, famous for performing all of his high-flying
and physically punishing stunts, has appeared in
more than 100 films and now writes, produces
and directs his own films in Asia.
"I get hurt," the actor said after 50 years of flips,
kicks and punches. "It gets really tiring, not like it
used to be."
The only real outward sign of aging in Chan are
some crow's feet around the eyes. He is obviously
in great shape still, but won't reveal his secrets
for staying that way.
But as Chan starts to enter his twilight years he
laments how Hollywood typecasting may force
him to begin using a stunt double for his
acrobatic scenes as he believes Hollywood studios
would never cast him in dramatic roles.
"I hope the audience, after they say, 'Jackie,
that's a double!,' they forgive me," Chan said in
his trademark broad-grinned and animated style.
"Then I can continue (my career) because poor
me, nobody in Hollywood hires me to make a
'Kramer vs. Kramer' (or) like 'Sound of Music' -
actually I'm a pretty good singer - and nobody
hires me to do this kind of film," Chan said,
referring to the 1979 family drama and 1965
musical, both Oscar winners.
"All we think about Jackie Chan: Chris Tucker,
'Rush Hour' one, two, and three ... always action-
comedy, action-comedy," he said about the
"Rush Hour" buddy-cop film series with comedian
Chris Tucker that helped Chan cement his place
in Hollywood 15 years ago.
TURNED DOWN 'INTERPRETER'
Chan has already added "dramatic actor" to his
resume with the 2011 Chinese historical drama
"1911" about the revolution that overthrew
China's final imperial dynasty.
"I really hope someday in Hollywood, some
producer or director will hire me only to do
drama," Chan said. "I (would) really appreciate
it."
But that is never going to happen, Chan believes.
"Why?" he asks rhetorically with a sigh. "Because
the audience is just not used to seeing Jackie
Chan doing drama."
Chan's ideal roles would be in films such as 1988
Oscar-winner "Rain Man," which starred Dustin
Hoffman as a savant and Tom Cruise as his yuppie
brother together on a road trip, or 1982's
"Tootsie," also starring Hoffman as an actor who
dresses as a woman to land acting roles.
"It's just ... my English is not that good," Chan
explains.
That also held him back from pursuing a role in
"The Interpreter," a 2005 thriller starring Nicole
Kidman and Sean Penn. Chan said his manager
thought the role would be good but told him the
amount of dialogue was too tough.
Chan said that although the part would have
been difficult, he does regret turning it down
because he lost an opportunity to work with
Kidman and a chance to burnish his legacy.
"I see so many action stars all those years come
and go, and come and go," Chan said. "Action
stars cannot live too long, unlike drama, true
actors, like Robert De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, they
live forever."
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