Born June 23, 1957, in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, Peter
Kent was predestined to be a thrillseeker and adrenaline addict. As a
young child, raised along the banks of the often treacherous Seymour
River, he was shooting rapids and climbing the highest trees available,
then letting himself fall through the branches to the ground, or
pedaling his bicycle across planks placed 12 feet atop the family's
laurel hedge to get the desired adrenaline rush, usually resulting in
lacerations and stitches.
On another occasion he tried to extract his own loose teeth with a
hammer in the family garage. At six years of age his parents divorced
and he moved to New Jersey with his mother, a move responsible for the
dual Canadian-US citizenship which would come in so useful later in
life.
Returning again to Canada at age 11, he and his mother ran a local
bed-and-breakfast style boarding house while he attended Nanaimo Senior
Secondary school on Vancouver Island, and worked in the usual variety
of West Coast jobs: Sawmill, salmon fishing, pulp mill, paving crew,
bouncer and electronics salesperson in both the towns of Nanaimo and
Victoria. He also worked on the road as a sound engineer for various
Canadian bands, for five bohemian years.
Nearly killed in a terrible motor vehicle accident in the early 1980s,
he survived only through willpower. Multiple skull fractures, broken
cheekbones, a crushed nose and a fractured jaw transformed his look,
some say, to closely resemble actor
Arnold Schwarzenegger. This was to
prove fateful indeed. In 1984, having done Shakespeare in various local
theater groups, he decided to move to Los Angeles to pursue a film
career, although he had no previous film experience or acquaintances in
Los Angeles. After living in the notorious YMCA off Hollywood's
infamous Sunset Strip for a tenuous and outrageous six months, he was
taken under the wing of
James Cameron to double
Schwarzenegger in
The Terminator (1984).
His minimal stunt experience did not stop him from quickly learning the
ropes and becoming one of the most celebrated and highly paid stuntmen
in the business. His association with Schwarzenegger lasted 14 films
and 13 years, both as friend, workout partner, ski buddy, confidant,
chef and dialogue coach. His apprenticeship on 14 of Schwarzenegger's
films (from "Terminator" to
Jingle All the Way (1996)) has
put Kent in a position to understand that genre better than most, and
having access to a variety of the best screenplays in Hollywood, was to
again prove useful in later years.
While making
Eraser (1996), Kent was
almost killed when he was struck by a three-ton shipping container 100
feet in the air. It was then he decided to pursue a different, less
life-threatening line of work, seeing as how he had been injured in
some way during nearly all of Schwarzegenner's pictures.
He has studied with several different Los Angeles-based drama groups,
but his longtime coach has been
Zina Provendie, former head of MGM's
drama department for 26 years, and coach to
James Dean in
Giant (1956), as well as
Richard Burton and
Elizabeth Taylor in
Cleopatra (1963). After a 14 year
absence, Kent returned home to Vancouver,BC, where he met the love of
his life, a nurse, Marcia Kent. The two were engaged in Venice,Italy in
December of 2005 and married in Victoria, BC in August of 2007.
Currently, they are expecting twin boys in the fall of 2009.
Kent has been interviewed in numerous publications, including
"Entertainment Tonight","Extra", "People Magazine", Germany's "Der
Stern", as well as London's "Daily Mirror", "The New York Times",
"Dallas Star", "Los Angeles Times" and hundreds of TV and radio
stations worldwide. In June 2009, Kent was inducted into the "Hollywood
Stuntman's Hall of Fame."