
Age: 54
male
Born in Bangor, North Wales and raised in Brighton, on the South coast of England, Ian Whyte was 7'1" tall by the time he was 17 years old. Ian always stood out from the crowd. Tall, slim and athletic, little did he know of his future career in the limelight. Ian discovered basketball in his teens, and quickly caught the attention of national team scouts who saw his physical attributes and determination as valuable assets. He quickly progressed to the junior national team ranks, but uninspired by school at the time, Ian was keen to escape at the earliest possible opportunity. He spent a year at Henry Hudson High School in New Jersey, where he again attracted the attention of basketball scouts, earning sports scholarships to Iona College in New York and Clarion University in Pennsylvania. Ian returned to England in 1994 to play for the London Towers, a new franchise owned by the music promoter Barry Marshall. Still eager to find himself Ian only stayed a season with the Towers, transferring to their crosstown rivals, The London Leopards, but again, only for one season. in 1995, Europe freely opened its doors to sportsmen and women from across the continent. Ian played for teams right across Europe. In France, Belgium, Greece and Portugal, where he won the domestic treble; League, cup and playoff championships with F.C. Porto in 1997 and went to the ¼ finals of the European cup. Ian returned to England soon after to play for the Newcastle Eagles, a place that would become his home until his retirement from the game in 2003. Throughout his career Ian tirelessly distinguished himself, representing his country 80 times. In 2003 Ian received a phone call that would change the whole course of his life. By his own admission he was keen to retire from basketball on his terms rather than through injury or old age, so he responded to a casting call for the new film Alien Vs Predator. His success in gaining the role is a matter of history, but personally it was a tremendous victory for him to finally find an outlet for his emotional creativity. Ian was fortunate to work alongside such luminaries as the Oscar winning special effects duo of Alec Gillis and Tom Woodruff Jr as well as Oscar winning VFX supervisor John Bruno. He also met soon to be double Oscar winning makeup effects artist Mark Coulier who encouraged him to get in touch with Nick Dudman, the creature effects supervisor for the Harry Potter franchise. Upon completion of filming on AVP Ian travelled back to England and straight into the world of Harry Potter. Not credited as an actor this time, Ian was hired to help bring to life the character of Madame Maxime played by the sublime Francis De La Tour. Ian worked full time for an entire year on the film, faithfully doubling The character who stood a glorious 8'6" tall.

Gears of War is a 2026 American military science fiction action film written and directed by Roland Emmerich and based on the video game franchise of the same name. Produced by Legendary Pictures and The Stone Quarry and distributed by Lionsgate Films, it is the first installment in the Gears of War trilogy, a franchise that is set in the same universe as the games as well as in-between the events of the main games and the RAAM's Shadow DLC. Gears of War features an ensemble cast that includes Sasha Calle, Ian Whyte, Diego Tinoco, Sung Kang, Trevante Rhodes, Emilia Clarke, Chris Pratt, Karl Urban, Cate Blanchett, Liev Schreiber, Jack Quaid, Jason Momoa, Robert Patrick, and Liam Neeson. The film follows Clementine Valera, a stranded and the younger sister of a gear who died one year ago, as she joins the Coalition of Gears and is placed in Delta squad, later going into conflict with the cruel Locust general RAAM in the snowy landscape near Mount Kadar. Gears of War opened in theaters on December 1st, 2026; it received generally positive reviews from critics and audiences who praised the atmosphere, visuals, story, action sequences, Hans Zimmer's musical score, direction, performances (particularly Calle, Whyte, Pratt, and Patrick), and faithfulness to the source material, but critics found the violent content too graphically similar to the games and criticized its long running time. It was also a box-office success, grossing $853 million worldwide. A sequel is in development
