Tatanka Means

Tatanka Means

Known For: American actor (born 1985)

Category: Actors

Occupation: comedian, film actor, activist, boxer, entrepreneur

Country: United States of America

City: Chinle

Date of Birth: Tuesday, 19 February 1985

Language English

Tatanka Wanbli Sapa Xila Sabe Means is an American actor and comedian, of Oglala Lakota, Omaha, Yankton Dakota, and Diné descent. He is best known for his roles in Killers of the Flower Moon and The Son.

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Means' first screen role was in 2004 playing lead stunt double in the film Black Cloud, which was shot in the same gym where he had previously trained as a boxer. He has since had major roles in several films and TV series. In the miniseries Into the West (2005) he played Crazy Horse. In More Than Frybread (2012), he played Buddy Begay, a "hip-hop Navajo fry-bread rock star" who sells fry-bread from a truck on the reservation. A reviewer who described it as the "showiest part" in the film said, "Means .. overdoes it a little ... but that's part of Buddy's personality." In Tiger Eyes (2012), based on the novel by Judy Blume, he played Wolf Ortiz, a Native American boy who shows the main character his ancestral lands and introduces her to his culture. Critics have applauded Means' casting and performance in Tiger Eyes. One described him as "quietly affecting"; another said that he "could have come off as a holy-native cliche, but instead seems entirely real"; and another wrote that he was "superbly cast ... [with] a voice that can quickly disarm and charm a newcomer ... it's clear that we're seeing something almost never seen in a contemporary feature film, which is an utterly authentic representation of a New Mexican." Another review said he is "New Mexican down to his body language and the expression in his eyes .. a thrill to behold on screen." Other major roles include Hobbamock, an elite Pokanoket warrior, in Saints & Strangers (2015), Delvin in Neither Wolf Nor Dog (2016), and Charges the Enemy in The Son. Means has also appeared in The Burrowers (2008) as 'Tall Ute', Sedona (2011) as Chuck, The Host (2013), Banshee (2014) as 'Hoyt Rivers', A Million Ways to Die in the West (2014), The Night Shift (2014-2015), Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials (2015), and Graves (2016). In 2019, he appears in Once Upon a River as Bernard Crane, in Montford: The Chickasaw Rancher as Rising Wolf, and in The Dust Monologues as The Jackrabbit. Also in 2019, he was cast in a film version of Alex Kershaw's book The Liberator as Private Thomas Otaktay, a Lakota soldier fighting with the 157th Field Artillery Regiment during World War II. Means takes pride in portraying Native men as modern, complex people rather than the racist or stereotypical characters sometimes found in Hollywood films. As a comedian, Means performs with the group 49 Laughs Comedy. Other members include Pax Harvey, James Junes, Ernie Tsosie ii, and Adrianne Chalepah. His standup routines have strong ties back to his Native heritage. In one popular standup, he discusses how Native people tease each other ruthlessly and always solve any awkwardness with the phrase “Aaaayyyyeeee". In another, as he tries to explain email, his grandfather is horrified that he would throw spam into the trash.

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