Danny Trejo: The actor who went from prisoner to film star

Con
Air, Zombie Hunter and 3-Headed Shark Attack (yes... that's a real film) are
just three of the movies in which he's ended up dead.
If
you're a Breaking Bad fan, he's the guy whose head famously ends up on top of a
tortoise.
According
to one survey, the 76-year-old has died on screen more than any other actor.
"It
shows I've been working," he jokes.
And
if you didn't know his name before reading this, you'd definitely know his face
from the hundreds of movies, TV shows and games he's appeared in.
In his movies, his
long hair is usually pulled back in a ponytail, he's got his tattooed bare
chest out and he's more than likely carrying a weapon.
"When I was starting to get famous, a good friend of mine told me, 'The whole world can think you're a movie star, but you can't'. I don't want to be a movie star. I want to be a good actor
.
He jokes that when
he started acting he was always cast in jail as "inmate number one",
due to his physical appearance and attitude.
But before his movie
career began, he had really been a high-profile prisoner.
It's
the back story many of his fans will now get to find about in his new
documentary Inmate #1: The Rise of Danny
Trejo.
"It's a miracle
because I wasn't supposed to get out of the 1960s," he tells Radio 1
Newsbeat.
Growing up in
California, Trejo was using hard drugs as a teenager and went on to spend years
in and out of prison in the 1960s on various charges including armed robbery.
Inside, he was a
well-known inmate and became a champion boxer at the notorious San Quentin
State Prison, the oldest jail in California.
The
prison is infamous and Louis Theroux once spent two
weeks there for a documentary.
In Inmate #1, Danny
recalls seeing a fellow inmate getting stabbed in the back.
"He was walking
around the upper yard, reaching for the knife and coughing up blood, and
everyone started laughing. What a messed up place."

Danny also spent
time in two other jails - Soledad and Folsom - and admits that taking
"trips through his youth" for the documentary were
"painful".
"I can remember
being way back in juvenile hall (American youth detention centres) and thinking
my life was over. You get institutionalised right there.
"I tried to
say, 'No, wait a minute. It's not over. You're just getting started'."
He decided to turn
his life around by getting out of trouble and going without drugs.
He became a drugs
counsellor and decided to use his experience to help others. It was his work on
a movie set that got him into acting in the 1980s.
Ever since, he's
"tried to do good" because he measures success by "waking up and
feeling good" rather than counting awards and accolades.
He knows his fame
has influence on others and hopes his story will inspire younger fans: "It
doesn't matter where you start, it's where you end up."
In the documentary,
we watch Danny go into prisons to tell inmates about his own experience. He
says he smells "the fear and the anxiety" every time he goes back.
"I come out and
I have dreams that I'm still in prison. That wakes you up quick and it's a
reminder for me to not step out of line."
The actor has only
got busier the older he's got and a couple of years ago he was on the set of
Adam Sandler movie The Ridiculous 6 when someone asked when he was going to
retire.
"I was playing
a cowboy at the time. I don't see myself retiring anytime soon.
"I'm having too
much fun."
FROM https://www.bbc.com/news/newsbeat
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