
Jackie Chan was born in Hong Kong on April 7th, 1954. His parents, Charles and Lee-lee Chan named him Chan Kong-sang which means “born in Hong Kong.” Jackie weighed 12 pounds when he was born and his mother required surgery to deliver him. Jackie’s parents were so poor that they had to borrow money from friends to pay the doctor.
Although Jackie’s parents were poor, they had steady jobs at the French embassy in Hong Kong. Charles was a cook and Lee-lee was a housekeeper. Together, the Chan family lived on Victoria Peak in Hong Kong. When Jackie was young, his father would wake him early in the morning and together they would practice kung fu. Charles Chan believed that learning kung fu would help build Jackie’s character, teaching him patience, strength, and courage.
When Jackie was seven years old Charles took a job as the head cook at the American embassy in Australia. He felt that it would be best for Jackie to stay behind in Hong Kong to learn a skill and so enrolled him in the China Drama Academy where Jackie would live for the next 10 years of his life.
During Jackie’s time at the school, he learned martial arts, acrobatics, singing, and acting. The school was meant to prepare boys for a life in the Peking Opera. Chinese opera was very different from any other kind of opera. It included singing, tumbling, and acrobatics as well as martial arts skills and acting. Students at the school were severely disciplined and were beaten if they disobeyed or made mistakes. It was a very harsh and difficult life but Jackie had nowhere else to go, so he stayed. He rarely saw his parents for many years.
While at the China Academy, Jackie made his acting debut at age eight in the Cantonese movie “Seven Little Valiant Fighters: Big and Little Wong Tin Bar.” He later teamed with other opera students in a performance group called “The Seven Little Fortunes.” Fellow actors Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao were also members. Years later the three would work together and become known as The Three Brothers. As Jackie got older he worked as a stuntman and an extra in the Hong Kong film industry.
When Jackie was 17, he graduated from the China Drama Academy. Unfortunately the Chinese opera was no longer very popular, so Jackie and his classmates had to find other work. This was difficult because at the school they were never taught how to read or write. The only work available to them was unskilled labor or stunt work. Each year many movies were made in Hong Kong and there was always a need for young, strong stuntmen. Jackie was extraordinarily athletic and inventive, and soon gained a reputation for being fearless; Jackie Chan would try anything. Soon he was in demand.
Over the next few years, Jackie worked as a stuntman, but when the Hong Kong movie industry began to fail, he was forced to go to Australia to live with his parents. He worked in a restaurant and on a construction site. It was there that he got the name “Jackie.” A worker named Jack had trouble pronouncing “Kong-sang” and started calling Jackie “little Jack.” That soon became “Jackie” and the name stuck.
Jackie was very unhappy in Australia. The construction work was difficult and boring. His salvation came in the form of a telegram from a man named Willie Chan. Willie Chan worked in the Hong Kong movie industry and was looking for someone to star in a new movie being made by Lo Wei, a famous Hong Kong producer/director. Willie had seen Jackie at work as a stuntman and had been impressed. Jackie called Willie and they talked. Jackie didn’t know it but Willie would end up becoming his best friend and manager. Soon Jackie was on his way back to Hong Kong to star in “New Fist of Fury.” It was 1976 and Jackie Chan was 21 years old.



Once Jackie got back to Hong Kong, Willie Chan took control over Jackie’s career. To this day Jackie is quick to point out that he owes his success to Willie. However, the movies that Jackie made for Lo Wei were not very successful. The problem was that Jackie’s talents were not being used properly. It was only when Jackie was able to contribute his own ideas that he became a star. He brought humor to martial arts movies; his first success was “Snake in Eagle’s Shadow.” This was followed by “Drunken Master” (another blockbuster) and Jackie’s first ever directing job, “Fearless Hyena.” All were big hits.
Jackie was becoming a huge success in Asia. Unfortunately, it would be many years before the same could be said of his popularity in America. After a series of lukewarm receptions in the U.S., mostly due to miscasting, Jackie left the States and focused his attention on making movies in Hong Kong. It would be 10 years before he returned to make Rumble in the Bronx, the movie that introduced Jackie to American audiences and secured him a place in their hearts (and their box office). Rumble was followed by the Rush Hour and Shanghai Noon series which put Jackie on the Hollywood A List.
Despite his Hollywood successes, Jackie became frustrated by the lack of varied roles for Asian actors and his own inability to control certain aspects of the filming in America. He continued to try, however, making The Tuxedo, The Medallion, and Around the World in 80 Days, none of which was the blockbuster that Rush Hour or Shanghai Noon had been.
Jackie’s lifelong devotion to fitness has served him well as he continues to do stunt work and action sequences in his films. In recent years, Jackie’s focus has shifted and he is trying new genres of film – fantasy, drama, romance – and is spending more and more time on his charity work. He takes his work as Ambassador for UNICEF/UNAIDS very seriously and spends all his spare time working tirelessly for children, the elderly, and those in need. He continues to make films in Hong Kong, including the blockbuster drama New Police Story in 2004.
Jackie has been married to Lin Feng-Jiao since 1982 and has a son, actor-singer Jaycee Chan. To learn more about Jackie you can read his biography, I Am Jackie Chan.
Jackie Chan-Filmography
Child & Stunt man only
Jackie starred in his first movie at the age of eight and has been making movies ever since. Here’s a list of Jackie’s films:
These are the films Jackie made as a child :
1970-1979
1980-1989
1990-1999
2000-present
Kung Fu Panda (2008) In production.
Jackie Chan-Awards and Achievements
| AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS 2007 |
|
- Most Influential Award for Chinese Kung Fu (China)
- Lifetime Achievement Award, NYU Tisch School (Asia)
- Honorary Sheriff’s Deputy, Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department (USA) (PDF FILE)
- DVD Data Special Award (Japan)
- Ambassador of Yan Tai, Shandong Province, China
- Red Cross National Celebrity Cabinet (Returning Member)
- Hong Kong Dance Alliance Lifetime Achievement Award in Body Movement Art
|
     |
|
AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS 2006
AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS 2004
AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS 2003
AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS 2002
AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS 2001
|
Jackie Chan-Charity Work

The heart of Jackie’s charity work lies in The Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation which was founded in 1988, and the Dragon’s Heart Foundation, founded in 2005.

The Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation offers scholarships and active help to Hong Kong’s young people through a variety of worthy causes. Over the years, the foundation has broadened its scope to include provision of medical services, aid to victims of natural disaster or illness, and projects where the major beneficiaries are Hong Kong people or organizations.
Major donation projects of The Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation:
- The Jackie Chan Gymnasium at Lingnan University
- The Jackie Chan Challenge Cup Intercollegiate Invitation Tournament
- The Jackie Chan Family Unit, Hong Kong Girl Guides Association Jockey Club Beas River Lodge
- The Jackie Chan Whole Person Development Center
- Renovation of the Bethanie Site, Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts
- Medical Funding in Mainland China (Operation Smile)
- Medical Donation in Hong Kong (Queen Mary Hospital, SARS Relief)
- Support for the Performing Arts
- Youth Development Programs
For more information on these projects, click here to read our Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation brochure.
The Dragon’s Heart Foundation was founded in 2005 to fulfill the desperate needs of children and the elderly in remote areas of China. Since 2005, the Dragon’s Heart Foundation has built over a dozen schools, provided books, fees, and uniforms, and has raised millions of dollars to give much-needed educational opportunities for the poor. In addition, the Dragon’s Heart Foundation provides for the elderly with donations of warm clothing, wheelchairs, and other items. Jackie often travels to the remote locations to attend groundbreakings or school openings, and to lend support and encouragement. 
Read about the Dragon’s Heart Build a School for a Dollar project here.
To make a donation online using a credit card, click here and choose either “Dragon’s Heart Foundation” or “Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation” from the drop down menu.
To send a donation by mail:
The Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation
145 Waterloo Road
Kowloon, Hong Kong
The Dragon’s Heart Foundation
145 Waterloo Road
Kowloon, Hong Kong
In addition to his work with the Jackie Chan Charitable Foundation and the Dragon’s Heart Foundation, Jackie has been involved in fund raising and support for hundreds of charities over the years, some of which are listed below:
JACKIE CHAN’S CHARITY WORK 2005
December
Giving Warmth to the Elderly, Hong Kong
Charity Auction, Fun Run, Shunde, China



November
UNICEF’s World Children’s Day Campaign with Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York
Dragon’s Heart Charity Mission: Jilin
Dragon’s Heart Charity Mission: Xinjiang


October
UNICEF’s Change for Good Program
Care for Elderly Charitable Ticket Fundraiser 2005
Fundraiser for Hong Kong’s San Kwong Theater to help support the classic art of Cantonese Opera
SGX Bull Run for Charity, Singapore



JACKIE CHAN’S CHARITY WORK 2004
Private charity dinner (proceeds to help recover the remains of the war dead)