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Danny Trejo: Original Gangster

Mexican actor overcomes the streets to find a new life in Hollywood.
By Navani Otero

Whoever said, "crime doesn't pay" must not know Danny Trejo. The Mexican-American actor has made a career out of playing bad guys. A former child drug addict and criminal, Trejo was in and out of jail for 11 years. While serving time in San Quentin for armed robbery and drug offenses, he won boxing titles and completed a 12-step rehabilitation program that changed his life. After proving himself a force to be reckoned with in jail, he took to the big screen. With a résumé that spans more than 20 years, he has worked with some of Hollywood's best, including Antonio Banderas, Robert Rodriguez, and Quentin Tarantino. Here, Trejo speaks to Bridgez about working on the Tarantino/Rodriguez collaborative thriller, Grindhouse, and his upcoming lead role in Machete.    

BRIDGEZ: How did you get into acting?
Danny Trejo
: I was a drug counselor and one of the kids I was working with called me up late at night and asked me to please come to his job and support him ‘cause there were a lot of drugs on the set. This was in 1985, so there was a lot of coke around. I went down there just to hang out with him to help him stay clean, and one of the PAs asked me if I wanted to be in a movie as an extra. I said, "I can give it a shot."  That was on the set of Runaway Train.

BRIDGEZ: How many tattoos do you have? And what are the meanings of them?
DT
: I got about nine of them. The big one on my chest I got when Chicanismo was coming into play. It's kind of Chicano [with] the big Mexican lady with a hat.

BRIDGEZ: In reality, are you really like the bad guys you play or are you the opposite?
DT
: I'm tough, but my daughter turns me into butter. I'm a dad and I have a 26-year-old son named Danny, I have a 19-year-old son, so they keep me pretty grounded.

BRIDGEZ: Why do you like playing the bad guy?
DT
: Well, the bad guy can do and say anything he wants; the good guy can't say the bad words. There is a certain responsibility that goes with being the good guy; you are carrying the movie. So if the movie flops, it's your fault.

BRIDGEZ: What was your favorite role as a villain?
DT
: I would have to say Desperado, you know, I was just bad. It was a lot of fun working with Robert Rodriguez and Antonio Banderas. I was teasing Antonio the whole time, like "You know you wanna be Mexican, you're from Spain." 

BRIDGEZ: How was it working with Rodriguez and Tarantino together on Grindhouse?
DT
: If Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino are having a conversation and you get near them, you'll probably get electrocuted. They have so much energy that you can even feel it around them when the idea sets in.

BRIDGEZ: What other future projects are you working on?
DT
: I'm working on a movie called Machete with Robert Rodriguez. It's about a federal agent that gets hunted by the mob and then he seeks revenge with machetes. Machete is the name of the movie and the name my character. I'm also trying to do a movie called My Father's Flag, which is about a Chicano war veteran that comes back with post-traumatic stress disorder, and we see his life through the eyes of his kids.

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Average: 5 (2 votes)
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I Love Danny! He is one of the funniest and nicest guys I've ever had the privilege to work with. Couldn't wish him more success!

A

Phenomenal interview... Danny is definitely a pioneering Latino actor and he seems very down to earth in this interview... One Love, Ivan Sanchez

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