New York Post

ABOUT FACE

Van Damme spoofs tough-guy image in new series

- By LAUREN SARNER

BELGIAN-born martial arts action star Jean-Claude Van Damme, aka “The Muscles from Brussels,” has done many wild things over the course of his career.

He’s battled men who can fly (in films like “Street Fighter”) and saved babies from tigers (in “Double Team.”) But his new Amazon show, “Jean-Claude Van Johnson,” is his most out-there venture yet.

The action-comedy series, premiering Dec. 15, is Van Damme’s first major TV role. He plays a version of himself who comes out of retirement to film a bad “Huckleberr­y Finn” martial arts reboot — which is just a cover for his real job: as an undercover private contractor code-named Jean-Claude Van John- son. And, if that’s not enough, he also plays more than one character, including a time-traveling lookalike and a foolhardy factory worker (think “Double Impact”). “The challenge was to play a few characters in a truthful way,” says Van Damme, 57. “It took a lot of energy.”

Van Damme says there are big difference­s between his real-life persona and the fictional version of himself in the show. “In real life, I’m a little more serious and I think a lot,” he says. If he had his own show, it would likely be more like the nature series “Planet

Earth.” “I love nature and ecology and animals. Without nature, we would be unable to survive,” he says. “But of course it’s hard to tell people to care, so I think it has to be about knowledge. It’s good to be informed ... Animals can bring people together; you never know about destiny.”

In “Jean-Claude Van Johnson,” Van Damme isn’t doing anything that hasn’t been done before (Matt Le Blanc in “Episodes,” James Van Der Beek in ABC’s “Don’t

Trust the B”). But Van Damme, who rose to fame kicking his way through martial arts action movies in the ’80s and ’90s, is perfectly suited to the concept, since it both overhauls and pays homage to his image — and that’s what he’s counting on. “People can have a different idea that Jean-Claude Van Damme is not only the guy who can only kick,” he says.

Van Damme does share one surprising commonalit­y with his on-screen persona: In the first episode of “Jean-Claude Van Johnson,” he’s shown riding a Segway. He also uses a Segway-like device in his everyday life. “I don’t want to say the name, because I’ll give you a free promotion, but I have one without a handle,” he says. “My house is one level, and from myy office to my bedroom is a two-minute walk. A real two-minute walk is a long time, and I’ve got a wood floor. [The device] is very y convenient, because I always ways forget my portable phonee or my training bags. So I go back and forth.

“I don’t think the [show’s w’s writers] knew about [howw hehe gets around],” he says. “So those two came at the same me time — reality and ideas. That’s cool.”

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