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{{Icons|p-move|real|Voice actor}}
 
{{Icons|p-move|real|Voice actor}}
   
{{Actor infobox
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{{Staff infobox
| nation =
 
 
| image = Dante Basco.png
 
| image = Dante Basco.png
| birthname = Dante Roman Titus Basco
+
| birthname = Danté Roman Titus Basco
| birth = August 29, 1975<br />Pittsburg, California
+
| birth = August 29, 1975 <br /> Pittsburg, California
| death =
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| death =
 
| firstcredit = [[IMDb:tt0086793|''Santa Barbara'']] (1988)
 
| firstcredit = [[IMDb:tt0086793|''Santa Barbara'']] (1988)
 
| links = * [[IMDb:nm0002364|IMDb]]
 
| links = * [[IMDb:nm0002364|IMDb]]
 
* [[Wikipedia:Dante Basco|Wikipedia]]
 
* [[Wikipedia:Dante Basco|Wikipedia]]
* [http://dantebasco.com/ dantebasco.com]
+
* [https://www.facebook.com/dante35 Facebook]
  +
* [https://plus.google.com/115117397239722054579/posts Google+]
}}'''Danté Basco''' (born August 29, 1975) is an American actor, voice actor, poet, and dancer. He is best known for playing Rufio in the 1991 live-action Peter Pan film ''Hook''. He is also well-known for voicing [[Zuko]] in the Nickelodeon series ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'', Jake Long from the Disney series ''American Dragon: Jake Long'', and [[Iroh (United Forces general)|General Iroh]] of the [[United Forces]] in ''[[The Legend of Korra]]''.
 
  +
* [http://instagram.com/rufiozuko# Instagram]
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* [http://dantebasco.com/ Official website]
  +
* [http://www.pinterest.com/dantebasco/ Pinterest]
  +
* [http://rufiozuko.tumblr.com/ Tumblr]
  +
* [https://twitter.com/dantebasco Twitter]
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* [http://www.youtube.com/user/thedantebasco YouTube]
 
}}'''Danté Roman Titus Basco''' is an American actor, voice actor, and dancer. He is best known for playing Rufio in the 1991 live-action Peter Pan film ''Hook'', in addition to his voice acting roles which include [[Zuko]] in ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'', Jake Long from the Disney series ''American Dragon: Jake Long'', and [[Military ranks in the World of Avatar#General 3|General]] [[Iroh (United Forces general)|Iroh]] of the [[United Forces]] in ''[[The Legend of Korra]]''.
   
 
== ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' credits ==
 
== ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' credits ==
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! style="text-align:left; font-weight:normal;" | 47 episodes
 
! style="text-align:left; font-weight:normal;" | 47 episodes
 
|-
 
|-
 
|{{Appear|1|101|102|103|104|107|108|109|112|113|115|118|119|120|201|202|204|205|207|208|209|211|212|213|214|215|216|217|218|219|220|301|302|305|306|309|310|311|312|313|314|315|316|317|318|319|320|321}}
|
 
{{Appear|1|101|102|103|104|107|108|109|112|113|115|118|119|120|201|202|204|205|207|208|209|211|212|213|214|215|216|217|218|219|220|301|302|305|306|309|310|311|312|313|314|315|316|317|318|319|320|321}}
 
 
|}
 
|}
   
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=== Iroh ===
 
=== Iroh ===
 
{{Character information|Iroh (United Forces general)|Iroh}}
 
{{Character information|Iroh (United Forces general)|Iroh}}
{{Appear|2|110|111|112}}
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{{Appear|2|110|111|112|205|214|411}}
   
 
== Selected other credits ==
 
== Selected other credits ==
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=== Filmography ===
 
=== Filmography ===
  +
* [[IMDb:tt3468260|''JLA Adventures: Trapped in Time'']] (2014)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1227182|''Subject: I Love You'']] (2011)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1227182|''Subject: I Love You'']] (2011)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1071872|''Blood River'']] (2010)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1071872|''Blood River'']] (2010)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1813679|''The Journey'']] (2010; video short)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1273229|''The Outside'']] (2009)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1273229|''The Outside'']] (2009)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0346631|''Blood and Bone'']] (2009)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0346631|''Blood and Bone'']] (2009)
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* [[IMDb:tt0337592|''Love Don't Cost a Thing'']] (2003)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0337592|''Love Don't Cost a Thing'']] (2003)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0326769|''Biker Boyz'']] (2003)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0326769|''Biker Boyz'']] (2003)
 
* [[IMDB:tt0163745|''The Debut'']] (2000)
  +
* [[IMDb:tt0210156|''The Lion's Den'']] (1998; short)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0102057|''Hook'']] (1991)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0102057|''Hook'']] (1991)
   
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* [[IMDb:tt0802988|''Final Fantasy XIII'']] (video game)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0802988|''Final Fantasy XIII'']] (video game)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1330058|''Terminator Salvation'']] (video game)
 
* [[IMDb:tt1330058|''Terminator Salvation'']] (video game)
* [[IMDb:tt1813679|''The Journey'']] (short)
 
* [[IMDb:tt0210156|''The Lion's Den'']] (short)
 
   
 
== Biographical information ==
 
== Biographical information ==
 
=== Personal life ===
 
=== Personal life ===
In his early years, he was part of the Streat Freaks [sic] breakdancing crew. When he got into acting, he started taking on minor roles in television. He later appeared in a substantial role in Steven Spielberg's 1991 film ''Hook'' with Robin Williams and Dustin Hoffman, as Rufio, the charismatic red-stripe-haired leader of the Lost Boys. The punk band Rufio is named after this character.
+
In his early years, Dante Basco was part of the Streat Freaks [''sic''] breakdancing crew. When he got into acting, he started taking on minor roles in television. He later appeared in a substantial role in Steven Spielberg's 1991 film ''Hook'' with Robin Williams and Dustin Hoffman as Rufio, the charismatic red-stripe-haired leader of the Lost Boys. The punk band ''Rufio'' is named after this character.
   
 
=== Career ===
 
=== Career ===
He had guest roles on television shows ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' and ''Hangin' with Mr. Cooper'', and had a recurring role on ''Moesha''. He has portrayed characters of different Asian ethnicities. He did however, star in the independent film ''The Debut'', in which he portrayed a Filipino-American alongside his three brothers and sister. He and all of his brothers starred in ''Naked Brown Men'', a sitcom stylized show. He starred as Ramos in the 2006 film ''Take the Lead'' alongside Antonio Banderas, where he break-danced as well as performed ballroom dance. This was not the only film in which he was required to dance. In many films he hip-hop dances, just as he did in a Verizon Wireless commercial as well as rapping and breaking in a Sprite commercial. He also produced and co-starred in a music video parody of the song "Rehab" that is called "Wiihab". He is occasionally "whacked" in the video. He played a gay teenager in the 1999 film ''But I'm A Cheerleader''.
+
Basco has had guest roles on television shows ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' and ''Hangin' with Mr. Cooper'' and a recurring role on ''Moesha''. He played a gay teenager in the 1999 film ''But I'm A Cheerleader'' and starred in the independent film ''The Debut'', in which he portrayed a Filipino-American alongside his three brothers and sister; he appeared with his brothers again in 2003 in the sitcom ''Naked Brown Men''. He appeared as Ramos in the 2006 film ''Take the Lead'' alongside Antonio Banderas, where he break-danced as well as performed ballroom dancing. Basco has performed in commercials as well, hip-hop dancing in a Verizon Wireless commercial and rapping and break-dancing in a Sprite commercial. He also produced and co-starred in a music video parody of the song "Rehab", called "Wiihab". Basco has portrayed characters of many different Asian ethnicities.
  +
  +
== Awards ==
  +
* 2012: Won a Special Jury Prize for ''Hang Loose'' (Best Actor)
  +
* 2012: Won a Special Jury Prize for ''Paradise Broken'' (Best Actor)
  +
* 1993: Won a Young Artist Award for ''Hook'' (Outstanding Young Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture)
   
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
* [[Zuko]] and Jake Long from ''American Dragon: Jake Long'' both have the ability to breathe fire. The characters also had adversarial-turned-friendly relations with a character on their respective shows voiced by [[Mae Whitman]], those characters being [[Katara]] and Rose/Huntsgirl, respectively. Basco voiced the villain turned friend on ''Avatar'', while Whitman voiced the villain turned friend on ''American Dragon''.
+
* Zuko and Jake Long from ''American Dragon: Jake Long'' both have the ability to breathe fire. The characters also had adversarial-turned-friendly relations with a character on their respective shows voiced by [[Mae Whitman]], those characters being [[Katara]] and Rose/Huntsgirl, respectively. Basco voiced the villain turned friend on ''Avatar'', while Whitman voiced the villain turned friend on ''American Dragon''.
* Dante Basco had already worked prior to ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' with [[Mako Iwamatsu]], [[Iroh]]'s original voice actor, namely in the film [[IMDb:tt0120021|''Riot'']] (1997), in which the two played father and son.
+
* Dante Basco had already worked with [[Mako Iwamatsu]], [[Iroh]]'s original voice actor, prior to ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' in the 1997 film [[IMDb:tt0120021|''Riot'']], in which the two played father and son.
  +
* Dante admitted to being a "Zutara" shipper.<ref name="Twitter">{{Cite web |url=https://twitter.com/dantebasco/status/111151161607852033|title=Dante Basco Zutara tweet |accessdate=2013-03-13 |date = September 6, 2011}}</ref>
* Dante admitted to be a "Zutara"-shipper.{{Source needed}}
 
  +
* Dante Basco, dressed as Zuko, made a cameo in Doug Walker's countdown of the best ''Avatar'' episodes, and yelled about his "honor" while in character.<ref name="YouTube">{{Cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vu-xhms0nXY |title=Top 11 Best ''Avatar'' Episodes w Dante Basco! - Nostalgia Critic |author=Nostalgia Critic |date=October 8, 2015 |accessdate=2018-10-11 |publisher=YouTube }}</ref>
  +
  +
== References ==
  +
{{reflist}}
   
 
{{Wikipedia}}
 
{{Wikipedia}}
  +
  +
[[de:Dante Basco]]
  +
[[es:Dante Basco]]
   
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Basco, Dante}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Basco, Dante}}

Revision as of 09:50, 29 November 2018

This page is move protected. This article is about the real world. Actor icon

Danté Roman Titus Basco is an American actor, voice actor, and dancer. He is best known for playing Rufio in the 1991 live-action Peter Pan film Hook, in addition to his voice acting roles which include Zuko in Avatar: The Last Airbender, Jake Long from the Disney series American Dragon: Jake Long, and General Iroh of the United Forces in The Legend of Korra.

Avatar: The Last Airbender credits

Zuko

Character information: Zuko

Additional voices

The Legend of Korra credits

Iroh

Character information: Iroh

Selected other credits

Television work

Filmography

Other credits

Biographical information

Personal life

In his early years, Dante Basco was part of the Streat Freaks [sic] breakdancing crew. When he got into acting, he started taking on minor roles in television. He later appeared in a substantial role in Steven Spielberg's 1991 film Hook with Robin Williams and Dustin Hoffman as Rufio, the charismatic red-stripe-haired leader of the Lost Boys. The punk band Rufio is named after this character.

Career

Basco has had guest roles on television shows The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and Hangin' with Mr. Cooper and a recurring role on Moesha. He played a gay teenager in the 1999 film But I'm A Cheerleader and starred in the independent film The Debut, in which he portrayed a Filipino-American alongside his three brothers and sister; he appeared with his brothers again in 2003 in the sitcom Naked Brown Men. He appeared as Ramos in the 2006 film Take the Lead alongside Antonio Banderas, where he break-danced as well as performed ballroom dancing. Basco has performed in commercials as well, hip-hop dancing in a Verizon Wireless commercial and rapping and break-dancing in a Sprite commercial. He also produced and co-starred in a music video parody of the song "Rehab", called "Wiihab". Basco has portrayed characters of many different Asian ethnicities.

Awards

  • 2012: Won a Special Jury Prize for Hang Loose (Best Actor)
  • 2012: Won a Special Jury Prize for Paradise Broken (Best Actor)
  • 1993: Won a Young Artist Award for Hook (Outstanding Young Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture)

Trivia

  • Zuko and Jake Long from American Dragon: Jake Long both have the ability to breathe fire. The characters also had adversarial-turned-friendly relations with a character on their respective shows voiced by Mae Whitman, those characters being Katara and Rose/Huntsgirl, respectively. Basco voiced the villain turned friend on Avatar, while Whitman voiced the villain turned friend on American Dragon.
  • Dante Basco had already worked with Mako Iwamatsu, Iroh's original voice actor, prior to Avatar: The Last Airbender in the 1997 film Riot, in which the two played father and son.
  • Dante admitted to being a "Zutara" shipper.[1]
  • Dante Basco, dressed as Zuko, made a cameo in Doug Walker's countdown of the best Avatar episodes, and yelled about his "honor" while in character.[2]

References

  1. Dante Basco Zutara tweet (September 6, 2011). Retrieved on March 13, 2013.
  2. Nostalgia Critic (October 8, 2015). Top 11 Best Avatar Episodes w Dante Basco! - Nostalgia Critic. YouTube. Retrieved on October 11, 2018.
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