Billy Wayne Blanks is an American fitness guru, martial artist, actor, and the creator of the Tae Bo exercise program
Background
Blanks was born in Erie, Pennsylvania, the fourth of fifteen children. He was born with an anomaly in his hip joints that impaired his movement, and a clumsiness that earned him the taunts of his siblings and caused his instructors to believe that he would never accomplish much.
Career
Blanks began his study of the martial arts at the age of eleven, attending karate and tae kwon do classes. Blanks found the answer to these challenges in karate. The discipline of the program began to transform his body.
Blanks was hired as a bodyguard for lead actress Catherine Bach during the filming of 1988"s Driving Force, due to the political unrest in Manila at the time.
He impressed the producers so much, they wrote him into the script. This led to Blanks" work in several martial arts films, including King of the Kickboxers and the first Bloodfist.
Perhaps his most recognizable role to mainstream audiences is in the opening scene of Tony Scott"s The Last Boy Scout, where he plays a doomed pro-football player. Blanks also appeared as the kickboxing instructor to Ashley Judd"s character in Kiss the Girls.
In the late 1980s, Blanks developed the Tae Bo workout, while running a karate studio in Quincy, Massachusetts.
He used components of his martial arts and boxing training. The name is derived fromtae kwon do and boxing. Blanks opened a fitness center in Los Angeles to teach his new workout.
He later attracted some celebrity clients such as Paula Abdul, and the popularity of the workout quickly grew, becoming a popular culture phenomenon after Blanks began releasing mass-marketed videos.