Born in
Cullman, a small city in
Alabama, Tatum has one sister. He has
French,
Irish, and
Native American ancestry. His family moved to
Mississippi when he was six, although he visits Alabama, where
his mother's family still lives. Tatum grew up in the
bayous
near the
Mississippi River, where he enjoyed a rural existence, including
"All the rattlesnakes and alligators a boy could possibly chase,
fishing every day,
Pop Warner football league, stuff like that."[1]
Tatum has said that his modeling career has helped him with his
life, specifying that "It's made my life, and my family's life, a
lot easier, because I never knew what I wanted to do and now they
don't really have to worry about me anymore. I've been able to
explore life, and through exploring it I've found that I love art, I
love writing, I love acting, I love all the things that make sense
to me. And I've been given the chance to go out and see the world,
and to see all the things out there. Not everyone gets that chance".[1]
Tatum began his acting career in 2004, appearing in an episode of
the television series
CSI: Miami. His first feature film role was in 2005's high
school drama,
Coach Carter, playing Jason Lyle, a street smart basketball
player opposite
Samuel L. Jackson; Tatum also appeared in rapper
Twista's "Hope"
music video, which accompanied the film. In the same year, Tatum had
an uncredited bit role in
War of the Worlds when posing as a boy in a church, a
factory endorsed top motocross racer in
Supercross, and part of the supporting cast in
Havoc. Although Tatum has said that he loves modeling, he
has taken a break from the profession to concentrate on his acting
career, saying that he prefers making more mature films.
Tatum will play in the indie film The Trap, which is
directed by
Tom Hanks' wife
Rita Wilson. The actor was chosen to play a role in the film
Poor Things, starring
Lindsay Lohan,
Shirley MacLaine,
Rosario Dawson, and
Olympia Dukakis, but had to turn down the role because of
scheduling conflicts. Tatum will also be playing a soldier in
another
New Line Cinema film which is based on a popular
Nicholas Sparks bestseller called Dear John. Besides, he
will be starring in
Christopher McQuarrie's upcoming feature project The Stanford
Prison Experiment,
Paul McGuigan's film
Push, and Oliver Stone's next
Vietnam War drama, Pinkville, with veteran actor
Bruce Willis. Tatum is also slated to play a renegade
New York City cop who must infiltrate the underground world of
free running, known as
parkour, to bust a seemingly unstoppable gang of bank robbers in
an untitled film for New Line Cinema.
Tatum and
Dito Montiel, the star and director of 2006's acclaimed
independent feature A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, have
signed to reteam on an action drama for
Rogue Pictures. Kevin Misher will produce the film called
Fighting through his Misher Films. Rogue co-presidents Andrew
Karpen and Andrew Rona made the official announcement about the
film. Tatum will star as Sean Arthur, a young man who scrapes up a
living scalping tickets in New York City.
Fox Searchlight Pictures's subdivision
Fox Atomic has also picked up a pitch from screenwriter Doug
Jung. The role as a "fish-out-of-water" story where Tatum will play
an American cop in
South Korea, a country that no other Hollywood production studio
has ever filmed in.
Tatum has been added to the cast of writer/director/producer
Michael Mann's 2009 crime drama Public Enemies, in which
will play the ill-fated 1930s American gangster
Pretty Boy Floyd. Tatum is also slated for the role of
Duke in 2009's
G.I. Joe,
Paramount Pictures' live-action film based on the popular
Hasbro
action figures.