Channing Tatum
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| Channing Tatum | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Channing Matthew Tatum |
| Born | April 26 1980 Cullman, Alabama, U.S. |
Channing Tatum (born Channing Matthew Tatum [1] on April 26, 1980 in Cullman, Alabama) is an American actor and former model. After beginning his career as a fashion model, he has branched out into acting roles, appearing in the films Havoc (2005), Coach Carter (2005), Supercross (2005), She's the Man, then Step Up, and A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, all of which were released in 2006. Channing Tatum's official website is Channing Tatum Unwrapped.
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[edit] Early life
Born in Cullman, a small city in Alabama, Tatum has at least one sister. He has French, Irish and Native American ancestry. His family moved to Mississippi when he was six, although he visits Alabama, where his mother's family still lives, every summer. Tatum grew up in the bayous near the Mississippi River, where he enjoyed a rural existence, including "All the rattlesnakes and alligators a boy could possibly chase, fishing every day, Pop Warner football league, stuff like that".[2]
Tatum was athletic while growing up, playing football, soccer, track, baseball, and performing martial arts, although he says that "girls were always [his] biggest distraction in school."[2] During the ninth grade, he "had an option either [to attend] a military school or a private school". He chose the private school, Tampa Catholic High School. He graduated in 1998 and was voted most athletic. Afterward, Tatum won a football scholarship to Glenville State College in West Virginia, although he soon lost interest in the sport and turned down the scholarship, citing his dislike of the demands of playing football.
[edit] Career
Channing Tatum's first experience was in the fashion industry as a model. He was then cast as a dancer in Ricky Martin's "She Bangs" music video, after an audition in Orlando, Florida; he was paid $400 for the job. He subsequently signed with a modelling agency in Miami, Page 305 (Page Parkes Modeling Agency), and appeared in Vogue magazine. He soon appeared in campaigns for Abercrombie & Fitch, Nautica, Dolce & Gabbana, American Eagle Outfitters, and Emporio Armani. Tatum has also starred in a few television commercials for American Eagle Outfitters, Pepsi and Mountain Dew, and was picked as one of Tear Sheet magazine's "50 Most Beautiful Faces" of October 2001.[2]
Tatum has said that his modeling career has helped him with his life, specifying that "It's made my life, and my family's life, a lot easier, because I never knew what I wanted to do and now they don't really have to worry about me anymore. I've been able to explore life, and through exploring it I've found that I love art, I love writing, I love acting, I love all the things that make sense to me. And I've been given the chance to go out and see the world, and to see all the things out there. Not everyone gets that chance".[2]
Tatum began his acting career in 2004, appearing in an episode of the television series CSI: Miami. His first feature film role was in 2005's high school drama, Coach Carter, playing Jason Lyle, a street smart basketball player opposite Samuel L. Jackson; Tatum also appeared in Twista's "Hope" music video, which accompanied the film. In the same year, Tatum had an uncredited bit role in War of the Worlds when posing as a boy in a church, a factory endorsed top motocross racer in Supercross, and part of the supporting cast in Havoc. Although Tatum has said that he loves modeling, he has taken a break from the profession to concentrate on his acting career, saying that he prefers making more mature movies.
Tatum was originally scheduled to play Genghis Khan in the film Mongol, but was replaced by actor Tadanobu Asano. He also auditioned for the role of Gambit in X-Men: The Last Stand, but was not cast as the character was eventually removed from the film.[3] The film's producer, Lauren Shuler Donner, noticed Tatum and cast him in the film She's the Man, where he plays the love interest of Amanda Bynes's character. The film opened on March 17, 2006.
Tatum's most recent roles are in Step Up, a dance-themed romance which opened on August 11, 2006 and the 1980s-set drama A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, in which he plays Antonio, a street youth in Astoria, Queens. Tatum has described the latter film as his "first dramatic role"; his performance received positive notices at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival, where the film premiered.[4] The acclaim continued when he received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Male.[5]
Tatum's next film roles will be in director Kimberly Peirce's highly-anticipated movie Stop-Loss, about a soldier returning home from the Iraq War and director Stuart Townsend's movie Battle in Seattle, about the huge 1999 protest of the World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle.
Channing Tatum will play in the indie film The Trap, which is directed by Tom Hanks' wife Rita Wilson. The actor was chosen to play a role in the Lindsay Lohan, Shirley MacLaine, Rosario Dawson, and Olympia Dukakis film 'Poor Things', but had to tun down the role because of scheduling conflicts. Channing will also be playing a soldier in another New Line Cinema film which is based on a popular Nicholas Sparks bestseller called Dear John. He will be starring in Christopher McQuarrie's upcoming feature project The Stanford Prison Experiment, will also star as a rogue psychic in David Bourla's movie Push and will star in Oliver Stone's next Vietnam war drama, Pinkville, with veteran actor Bruce Willis.
Channing is also slated to play a renegade New York City cop who must infiltrate the underground world of free running, known as le parkour, to bust a seemingly unstoppable gang of bank robbers in an untitled movie for New Line Cinema. Le parkour is an extraordinarily athletic discipline where a person utilizes their environment as a sort of jungle gym, traversing the landscape - urban or otherwise - in the most efficient method possible.
Channing Tatum and Dito Montiel, the star and director of last year’s acclaimed independent feature A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, have signed to reteam on an action drama for Rogue Pictures. Kevin Misher will produce the film called 'Fighting' through his Misher Films. Rogue co-presidents Andrew Karpen and Andrew Rona made the official announcement about the film. Channing Tatum will star as Sean Arthur, a young man who scrapes up a living scalping tickets in NYC.
Although little is known about the movie at this time, Channing Tatum will also be playing in an untitled buddy action film with fellow dance movie alum Columbus Short of 'Stomp the Yard'.
Fox Atomic (a division of Fox Searchlight that produces and acquires genre films for teen and young adult audiences) has also picked up a pitch from screenwriter Doug Jung. The role as a "fish-out-of-water" story where Channing Tatum will play an American cop in South Korea, a country that no other Hollywood production studio has ever filmed in. Channing is not only starring in the film, he's also going to be one of the film's executive producers along with two of his managers (Peter Kiernan and William Choi from Management 360).
[edit] Personal
Channing Tatum has been dating his Step Up co-star, Jenna Dewan, since the movie wrapped production in 2005. Based on a recent interview done by his official website, Channing and Jenna are still dating as of December 2007.
[edit] Awards
| Year | Group | Award | Film | Won? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Independent Spirit Award | Best Supporting Male | A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints | No | Awarded to Alan Arkin for Little Miss Sunshine |
| Sundance Film Festival | Special Jury Prize | Yes | Shared between Robert Downey Jr., Shia LaBeouf, Rosario Dawson, Chazz Palminteri, and Dianne Weist |
[edit] Films
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Coach Carter | Jason Lyle | |
| Havoc | Nick | Direct-to-video | |
| War of the Worlds | Boy in church scene | uncredited | |
| Supercross | Rowdy Sparks | ||
| 2006 | She's the Man | Duke Orsino | |
| Step Up | Tyler Gage | ||
| A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints | Antonio | limited release | |
| 2007 | The Trap | Greg | |
| 2008 | Stop-Loss | Steve Shriver | |
| Battle in Seattle | Johnson | ||
| Fighting | Sean Arthur | ||
| Step Up 2 | Tyler Gage | ||
| 2009 | Parkour | TBA |
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ ChanningTatumUnwrapped.com. NEWS FLASH: Channing Tatum's Real Name...We Were All Wrong!!!. Retrieved on June 22, 2007.
- ^ a b c d ModelLaunch.com. Channing Tatum: Relentless (Interview). Retrieved on March 13, 2006.
- ^ The X-Verse. Lauren Shuler Donner Q&A. Retrieved on June 19, 2006.
- ^ TeenPeople. Channing Tatum Takes a Dramatic Turn. Retrieved on September 30, 2006.
- ^ FilmIndependent.org. Spirit Award Nomination. Retrieved on February 1, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Channing Tatum Unwrapped: Official Website
- Channing Tatum at the Internet Movie Databaseaf:Channing Tatum
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