Daniel Wu

Movie Actor

Daniel Wu was born in Berkeley, California, United States on September 30th, 1974 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 50, Daniel Wu biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Daniel N. Wu, Daniel Ng, Yin-Cho Ng, Yin-Jo Ng, Daniel N. Wu, Yan-zu Wu, Yanzu Wu, Daniel Wu Yanzu, Ng Yin-Jo, Dan
Date of Birth
September 30, 1974
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Berkeley, California, United States
Age
50 years old
Zodiac Sign
Libra
Networth
$20 Million
Profession
Actor, Film Actor, Film Director, Film Producer, Model
Social Media
Daniel Wu Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 50 years old, Daniel Wu has this physical status:

Height
182cm
Weight
78kg
Hair Color
Black
Eye Color
Dark Brown
Build
Slim
Measurements
Not Available
Daniel Wu Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Head-Royce School, University of Oregon
Daniel Wu Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Lisa Selesner
Children
1
Dating / Affair
Maggie Q, Lisa Selesner
Parents
George Wu, Diana Wu
Siblings
Greta Wu (Older Sister), Gloria Wu (Older Sister)
Daniel Wu Career

Despite his inability at the time to speak Cantonese or read Chinese, Wu successfully completed his first film, Yonfan's Bishonen in 1998. As of this day, 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) 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 and was quickly signed to Chan's JC Group with agent Willie Chan.

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.

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. Though Night Corridor dealt with "risky" themes, Wu felt he had less reliance on image than many of his pop-star actor peers, and he was nominated for best actor at Taiwan's 40th Golden Horse Film Awards for his effort. During 2003, Wu took part as producer and creative director on MTV's Whatever Things!, a Jackass-styled program aired in Asia, also featuring Sam Lee, Josie Ho, Terence Yin, and other celebrities. During 2003, Wu took part in a stage production of The Happy Prince at the Edward Lam Dance Theater as part of the Hong Kong Arts Festival, during which he recited a 16-minute monologue in Cantonese, learned entirely from pinyin. 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, and as best supporting actor for New Police Story. At the 41st Golden Horse Film Awards, Wu won the award for best supporting actor for New Police Story. The win came as a surprise to him, because he "didn't think that much" of his performance in the film.

In 2005, Chinese media began to report that Wu had formed a boy band, Alive, with Terence Yin, Andrew Lin and Conroy Chan. Wu and his bandmates posted information, updates, personal thoughts (including slamming Hong Kong Disneyland, for which they were spokespersons), and the band's music, at their official website. In 2006, Wu made his writing and directorial debut with The Heavenly Kings, which chronicles Alive's formation and exploits. 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 and much of the footage blurred the line between fiction and reality. 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". Despite some backlash from the media over being intentionally fed false information in the film about illegal downloads of the band's music, Wu won the best new director award at the 26th Hong Kong Film Awards, an achievement he called "a group effort."

In 2011, Wu starred alongside Kevin Spacey in director Dayyan Eng's bilingual film Inseparable. 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.

Source

SHARK WEEK has too many white male experts on screen, according to the Washington Post

www.dailymail.co.uk, December 9, 2022
This week, the Washington Post published an article citing sources, arguing that The Discovery Channel's annual Shark Week magazine featured white men as shark experts "overwhelmingly" featuring white men as shark experts in comparison to other demographics. According to the essay, the fan-favorite predator-centric week lacks diversity and overrepresents guys named Mike. According to the study, there have been more shark experts named Mike on all Shark Weeks combined than women.

"Westworld" by HBO after four seasons, apparently cancels

www.popsugar.co.uk, November 7, 2022
HBO has pulled the plug on its long-running sci-fi series "Westworld." The announcement comes just three months after its season four finale aired on August 14th. Longtime viewers of the dystopian drama were transported to a future in which consciousness, both human and artificial, can be harnessed and moved to other planes of existence where reality is more vivid, more realistic, and deadlier than ever imagined. For several people, HBO's decision to end the series abruptly, particularly after cliffhangers in season four left the plot line open for a final season. "I'm gonna miss all the badass women of Westworld." "Westworld deserved a good ending to this show," one Twitter user wrote, while another Twitter user said, "westworld deserved a fifth and final season."
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