DON’T cross Bianca Van Damme.With her wide-set eyes and pouty lips, she looks like pin-up perfection — and then she leaps into a perfect roundhouse kick.
“I want to show little girls and little boys
that you can be physical and feminine. That you can cross your legs at the
dinner table and then kick ass in a nice, feminine way,” the 25-year-old. “Kind of like how my father brought
martial arts to the mainstream for my generation — I want to continue that
legacy.”
It’s a bold
statement for the actress and film producer. After all, she spent her childhood
telling her dad, Jean-Claude Van Damme, a k a “the Muscles from Brussels,” and
mum, bodybuilding champion Gladys Portugues, that she “hated” martial arts.
Talk about biting the hand that feeds you.
Jean-Claude
burned his way into pop-culture consciousness in martial-arts action movies
like Bloodsport, Kickboxer and Street Fighter, providing a comfortable life for Bianca and
her brother Kristopher, now 28.
“My parents let
us do our own thing. When I was young, my mum pushed me into martial arts for
self-discipline. I was seven and like, ‘I can’t stand it’,” Bianca recalls. “I
stuck with ballet and [ice] skating.”
Eventually, the
family moved from Los Angeles to Vancouver, British Columbia.
“As a teenager,”
says Bianca, “I was so focused on speed skating, I wanted to be in the
Olympics.”
Bianca
started acting — and eventually, doing martial arts — alongside her dad, in
2008’s The Shepherd: Border Patrol.
Though she enjoyed the experience, she didn’t take it too seriously. Admits
Bianca: “I didn’t like what I saw on-screen when I watched my first film. I
realised that if this was what I was going to do, I needed to do it right.”
So she buckled
down, determined to work harder the next time Dad gave her a break. She’s since
co-starred in six of Jean-Claude’s films and even co-produced a couple of them.
At first, she was credited as Bianca Van Varenberg — her dad’s given surname — and
then as Bianca Bree (a shortened version of her middle name, Brigitte). Even as
she acted alongside Jean-Claude, she felt compelled to distance herself.
“It’s
complicated,” she says. “I always have people coming up and telling me how much
they love my dad. It’s nice to hear, but it’s like … what does that have to do
with me?”
Adding to
the complications is the baggage that comes from growing up with her last name
regularly making headlines — and not all of them good.
In the 1990s,
Jean-Claude has admitted, the actor worked his way up to a drug habit of 10
grams of cocaine a day.
There were
fights with paparazzi, reportedly deep debt and a DUI arrest. He went through
several rounds of rehab and was diagnosed as bipolar before finally getting
clean.
After divorcing
Bianca’s mum in 1992 and a short-lived marriage to model Darcy LaPier (with
whom he has son Nicholas, now 20), Jean-Claude remarried Portugues in 1999.
Asked about her
relationship with her father back then, Bianca says, “It depends on what year.
Yeah, it was tough. It’s never been like I’m my father’s little girl or
princess.”
She adds, “Our
relationship definitely had its ups and downs, but now we’re cool. We talk and
we hang out, but it’s not like I’m calling him being like, ‘Hey Dad, let’s grab
a bite and talk about life.’ We’ll go to the gym and kick and stuff.”
Bianca’s
certainly inherited his skills. Just like Jean Claude, she can do crazy flying
kicks and spins and even a balancing split that mimics his infamous 2013 Volvo
commercial.
One big sign
that things are better between the two Van Dammes?
Bianca’s now
using her dad’s stage name professionally, even as she’s signed on to make some
films without him. And now that she’s finally embraced the family business of
martial arts, daughter and father bond through competitiveness.
“I’ll agree to
meet up with him and then I’ll be like, ‘Ugh, why am I here?’ I’m a
perfectionist, and so is he, so he’ll always give me little critiques on my
form,” she says. “He’ll be all like, ‘Look how high my kick is!’ And I’m like,
‘Dad, you can’t be serious — I’m obviously better than you!’”
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