Duncan Airlie James
Duncan Airlie James | |
---|---|
Born | Duncan Campbell 23 May 1961 Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, UK |
Height | 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) |
Weight | 15 st 6 lb (98 kg) |
Division | Heavyweight |
Style | Kickboxing, Muay Thai |
Fighting out of | Glasgow, Scotland |
Team | Strikeforce
Glasgow Domino’s Kirkintilloch |
Years active | 1993–2006 |
Kickboxing record | |
Total | 48 |
Wins | 32 |
Losses | 14 |
Draws | 2 |
No contests | 0 |
Other information | |
Occupation | Actor / Former Kickboxer |
Website | http://www.duncanairliejames.com/ |
Duncan Airlie James (born Duncan Campbell; 23 May 1961) is Scottish retired kickboxer and actor best known for his roles in Tomb Raider and ID2: Shadwell Army. He was the first Scottish fighter to win a world Muay Thai title and fight in K-1.
Early life
[edit]James was born Duncan Campbell and was educated at the fee-paying Keil School where he was a competitive rugby player. His martial arts background began when he took up Shotokan karate. He was also a drummer and played with a number of bands including Nazareth. He moved to Boston, Massachusetts in the US to pursue new musical avenues.[1]
He is the older brother of Scottish composer Ross Campbell.
Kickboxing career
[edit]When he returned to Scotland, he took up Muay Thai kickboxing in the late 1980s. In 1993, he won his first title, the World Kickboxing Association Commonwealth Light Heavyweight Championship. After successfully defending that title, he vacated it and moved up to the Cruiserweight division and later the Heavyweight division where he won a number of other titles. In February 1999, he made his K-1 debut against Japanese legend Musashi at K-1 Rising Sun '99 and lost via technical knockout after being knocked down three times in the third round. He went on to fight twice more in Japan that year, drawing with Yoji Anjo and losing to karate master Nobuaki Kakuda.
He retired in 2006 with a record of 32 wins, 14 losses and 2 draws.
Titles and honours
[edit]- WKA Commonwealth Super Light Heavyweight Champion (1993)
- ISKA World Super Cruiserweight Champion (1998)
- WKN World Heavyweight Champion (2001)
- WAKO World Heavyweight Champion (2003)
- WKF World Heavyweight Champion (2005)
- WPKA World Heavyweight Champion
- WKO World Cruiserweight Champion (1995)
- WKA World Heavyweight Champion (2001)
Kickboxing record
[edit]Date | Result | Opponent | Event | Method | Round | Time | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Loss | Daniel Waciakowski | TKO (shoulder injury) | For WPKL and KL World Heavyweight Championships. | ||||
15 April 2006 | Loss | Giuseppe DiNatale | Colosseum 2 | TKO (punches) | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | For IKF World Heavyweight Muay Thai Championship. | ||
May, 2005 | Win | Tibor Nagy | WPKA/WKF | Decision (Unanimous) | - | - | Glasgow, Scotland | Wins WPKA and WKF World Heavyweight Muay Thai Championships. |
22 February 2004 | Loss | Chris Batcheldor | K-1 Battle of Britain 2004 | Decision | 3 | 3:00 | Wolverhampton, England | |
November, 2003 | Win | Angelo Grenata | WAKO | TKO | 2 | - | Palermo, Italy | Wins WAKO World Heavyweight Muay Thai Championship. |
13 April 2003 | Loss | Phil Williams | K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 Preliminary UK | Decision | 5 | 3:00 | Birmingham, England | |
5 April 2002 | Loss | Sergei Ivanovich | Decision | 3 | 1:53 | Motherwell, Scotland | For WAKO and ISKA World Heavyweight Muay Thai Championships. | |
30 June 2001 | Win | Stephane Reveillon | World Kickboxing Network | KO | 1 | - | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Wins World Kickboxing Network World Heavyweight Muay Thai Championship. |
April, 2001 | Win | KO | 1 | Worcester, England | Wins WKA International Super Heavyweight Championship. | |||
16 April 2000 | Loss | John Wyatt | K-1 UK Battle of Britain 2000 | TKO | 2 | 2:00 | Birmingham, England | |
6 June 1999 | Loss | Nobuaki Kakuda | K-1 Survival '99 | Decision (Unanimous) | 5 | 3:00 | Sapporo, Japan | |
15 May 1999 | Loss | Jerome Turcan | Strikeforce | Decision | 5 | 3:00 | San Jose, California, United States | |
22 March 1999 | Draw | Yoji Anjo | K-1 The Challenge '99 | Decision | 5 | 3:00 | Tokyo, Japan | |
3 February 1999 | Loss | Musashi | K-1 Rising Sun '99 | TKO (3 Knockdowns) | 2 | 2:52 | Tokyo, Japan | |
16 August 1998 | Loss | Chris Wright | KO | 2 | 2:04 | St. Helens, England | Loss I.K.F Pro Muay Thai Cruiserweight World Title. | |
June, 1998 | Win | Christophe de Tholomaise | Decision | Bangor, Northern Ireland | Wins ISKA World Super Cruiserweight Muay Thai Championship. | |||
1997 | Win | Paul Senior | WKA: Quest | KO | - | - | Birmingham, England | Wins WKA: Quest Cruiserweight tournament. |
September, 1995 | Win | Hassan Babchi | KO | 1 | - | Glasgow, Scotland | Wins WKO Cruiserweight World Championship. | |
9 October 1993 | Win | Lee Hasdell | WKA | TKO (cut) | - | - | England | Wins WKA Light Heavyweight Commonwealth Muay Thai Championship. |
Acting
[edit]When he retired from the world of kickboxing, Duncan retrained as an actor. After appearing in a number of short films and a small cameo appearance in the film Perfect Sense, Duncan landed his first leading role when he was asked to play the lead character of John Tavish in the Scottish feature film In Search of La Che. Whilst the film itself received mixed reviews on both sides of the Atlantic, critics were quick to applaud Duncan's performance.[2]
2012 saw Duncan star in many and varied short films including The Priest With Two Guns directed by Rodney Reynolds. The film centres around Father O'Reilly who is troubled when he discovers his brother is in debt to a local money lender.[3] The film went on to pick up a grand jury prize at the 2014 Amsterdam Film Festival.[4] The end of 2012 saw Duncan lend his voice to one of his most recognised roles to date in the short comedy film The Greyness of Autumn.[5] Duncan voiced the character of Danny McGuire, an ostrich living in Glasgow whose life is suddenly turned upside down when he loses his job and his girlfriend in the same day. The film enjoyed great success in the United States,[6] Ireland[7] and the United Kingdom where it featured in the 2014 edition of the Portobello Film Festival.[8] Duncan's performance was widely praised with John McArthur of MovieScramble writing "The hook at the start of the film is the voice of Danny. A deep, resonant and very individual vocal draws you in immediately."[9] In 2013 he played the role of Officer White opposite Jack O'Connell in Starred Up,[10][11] a feature film directed by David Mackenzie. The film went on to win 3 awards at the 2014 British Academy Scotland Awards including Best Feature Film.[12]
In 2015, James starred in the leading role of Major Doug Bormann in Fanatic. He will be reunited with Luke Aherne who directed the web series Frank.
Filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Director | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | Perfect Sense | David Mackenzie | Gym Fighter | |
2010 | Civilisation | Nicholas Vafio | Harry | |
Wrath of a Suffragette | Seth Ward / Kev Bagnall | Gerry | ||
Godforsaken | Sarah Harlow | Ed | ||
2011 | Lisa Deserves Better | Paul Allison | Daniel | |
The Juice | Phil Thompson | Frankie Boy | ||
Brathair | Eve Leonard | Steven | ||
In Search of La Che | Mark D. Ferguson | John Tavish | First Leading Role | |
Fate Waits | Ben Macgregor | Mark Syllka | ||
Got It | Dean Howard | Big Al | ||
Snagged | Mark Brown | Ziggy | ||
2012 | Iustitia | Dave Craig | Iustitia Omnibus | |
Violation | Peter Hardy / Charlie Parker | Commander Grier | ||
Dust | Paul MacAdam | Thommo | ||
Loan | Ruahdri Hunter | Gerry | ||
The Priest with Two Guns | Rodney Reynolds | Father O'Reilly | ||
The Greyness of Autumn | Chris Quick | Danny McGuire | Voice | |
2013 | Starred Up | David Mackenzie | Officer White | |
Jab, Cross, Hook | Shaun Sutton | Tam McLean | ||
Unsuitable | Naomi Phillips | Jimmy | ||
Fleshmarket Close | Eve Leonard | Duncan | ||
2014 | Glory Hunter | Craig Maclachlan | Jerry Gallagher | |
Mitchum | Jemma Sutherland | Detective Inspector Mitchum | TV pilot | |
K'Nibble | Andrew Dobbie | Gregg McLaren | ||
Frank | Luke Aherne | Jim | Web Series | |
Con | Laura Briggs | Tom | ||
Tanner Park | Ian Hendry | Iggy | ||
Two Smoking Barrels | Asib Akram | Frank Vincent | ||
A Quiet Day | Martin Heron | Joe | ||
2015 | Prescription R | Andrew Dobbie | Robert "Boab" Baxter | |
Fanatic | Luke Aherne | Major Doug Bormann | ||
2016 | Directions | Oliver Greenall | Robert | |
ID2: Shadwell Army | Joel Novoa | Hunt | ||
Flux | Anthony Scott | Boris | ||
Essex Spacebin | David Hollinshead | Gangster | ||
The Victorious | Chris Anstey | Captain Bernard Gregory | ||
Ground Below | Toby Saunders | Mitch | ||
2017 | Locked In | Pavel Shepan | Brian | |
2018 | Frank | Luke Aherne | Jim | |
Synced | Devon Avery | Skin Head Colin | ||
Outlaw King | David Mackenzie | Beaumont | ||
Tomb Raider | Roar Uthaug | Terry | ||
Wild is the North | Hayley McInline | Wadard | ||
2020 | Autumn Never Dies | Chris Quick | Danny McGuire / The Chief | |
Jingle Jangle | David E. Talbert | Constable Carruthers | ||
A Song Still Inside | James Hall, Edward Lovelace | Foreman Brown / Husband | ||
2021 | Web Crawler | Paul J. Lane | Alfie Trespass | |
Opal | Kirsty Mclean | Father | ||
Wild is the North | Hayley McInline | Wadard | ||
Go Home | Razan Madhoon | Guard | ||
2022 | Because We Are Too Many | Eve Leonard | Uncle John |
Awards
[edit]Year | Nominated Work | Awards | Category | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | The Victorious | I Am Film Festival[13] | Best Showreel Scene Actor | Nominated |
2020 | Autumn Never Dies | Top Indie Film Awards | Best Actor | Nominated |
US Hollywood International Golden Film Awards [14] | Best Outstanding Actor | Nominated | ||
2022 | Scotland International Festival of Cinema [15] | Best Actor in a Featurette | Nominated | |
Best Ensemble Cast in a Featurette (Shared with All Cast) |
Nominated |
References
[edit]- ^ "Local Hero: From musician to kick boxer to . . . Hollywood actor? The fascinating journey of Duncan Airlie James". Heraldscotland.com. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Reviews". Filmthreat.com. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Cargo". Burninghorseshoe.co.uk. Archived from the original on 12 November 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Amsterdam Film Festival - Amsterdam Screenplay Contest - 2014 Winners". Amsterdamfilmfestival.com. Archived from the original on 24 December 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "British Council Film: The Greyness of Autumn". Film.britishcouncil.org. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Puppet film's a festival hit". Evening Times. 13 September 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ DISFMF Official Selection Archived 26 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "PORTOBELLO FREE FESTIVAL 2014" (PDF). Portobellofilmdfestival.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 September 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ Noir, John McArthurEditor-in-Chief at Moviescramble A. Fan of all things cinematic with a love of Film; Sci-Fi; day, Julia Roberts in Notting Hill He hopes to grow up some (25 July 2013). "The Greyness of Autumn". Moviescramble. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Nerdly » 'Starred Up' Review". nerdly.co.uk. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ MSN Starred Up Cast Archived 12 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "British Academy Scotland Awards: Winners in 2014". Bafta.org. 20 October 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "I Am Film Festival 2019 Results". Archived from the original on 19 July 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
- ^ "US Hollywood International Golden Film Awards 2020 Nominations". Archived from the original on 16 November 2020. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
- ^ 8 Nominations for Autumn Never Dies at final Scottish festival appearance