B-Grade martial arts star Don ‘The Dragon’ Wilson to tour Australia
Martial arts star Don ‘The Dragon’ Wilson is headed Down Under.
The B-grade action movie performer, 68, is headed to Australia this September.
Wilson has been brought over by Dan Delts, a company known for bringing fans face-to-face with action stars like Steven Seagal, Michale Jai White, and Daniel Bernhardt. Â
Wilson’s September tour will stop in Brisbane, Melbourne, and Sydney.
The main event will be a screening of his film Bloodfist with a Q&A afterwards.Â
Martial arts star Don ‘The Dragon’ Wilson (pictured with fellow martial artist Cynthia Rothrock) is headed Down Under. The B-grade action movie performer is headed to Australia this September
Wilson’s September tour will stop in Brisbane, Melbourne, and Sydney. The main event will be a screening of his film Bloodfist with a Q&A afterwards
But fans will also have the opportunity to meet and greet with the action star with a tiered ticketing system.
Silver ticket holders will get a photo op, while VIP level tickets ensure a photo op and an autograph.Â
Other fans are able to pay for an exclusive martial arts seminar.Â
There is also an option to pay almost $700 to have dinner with the martial arts master.
Fans will have the option to pay almost $700 to have dinner with the martial arts master
After a career as a kickboxer in the 1970s and 1980s where he was called ‘perhaps the greatest kickboxer in American history’, Wilson gained cult status for his series of cheaply-made martial arts films.
1989’s Bloodfist saw him star in his first feature role as Jake Raye, a kickboxer who travels to the Phillipines to enter a fighting competition to avenge the murder of his brother and fellow fighter.
While the film was poorly received by critics, it generated record profits for its production company, Concorde Pictures, prompting many more sequels.
Wilson has starred in many other B-grade and direct-to-video movies over the years, which titles such as Cybertracker, Night Hunter, and Inferno in his filmography.Â
After a career as a kickboxer in the 1970s and 1980s where he was called ‘perhaps the greatest kickboxer in American history’, Wilson gained cult status for his series of cheaply-made martial arts films