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Debbie Evans  
Debbie Evans Headshot

Service: Teddy's
debbie@usastunts.com
Website
Affiliations: SAG/AFTRA

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Info Credits Bio Pics Reel
Stats
Height: 5'4" 1/2
Weight: 115 lbs.
Eyes: Blue
Hair: Blonde
Shoe: 6 1/2
Hat: 6 7/8
Shirt: Medium
Glove: 6
Waist: 29
Inseam: 29
Coat: 6
Abilities
Rollerblades
Air Ramps
Rappelling
High Falls
Hydroslide
Jet Ski
Athletic in All Sports
Skates
Wheelchair Wheelies
Rock Climbing
Snow Skiing
Windsurfing
Certified SCUBA Diver
Skateboards
Ratchets
Foot Falls
Water Skiing
Wet Bikes
Drives Ski Boats
MOTORCYCLES: Jumps, Balancing Act, Wheelies, Trick Riding, Crashes On & Off Road, ATCs, Quads, Side Cars, Odysees, Pocket Bikes
CARS: Chases, Turnovers, Car Hits, Precision Driving, Jumps, Crashes, CBS Stunt Competition Car Race Winner
BICYCLES: Wheelies, Jumps, Crashes On & Off Road, Trick Riding, Unicycle
FIGHTS: Judo, Karate, Tae Kwon Do, Stunt Fights
Access to a multitude of stunt equipment.
Bio
Debbie Evans, veteran of hundreds of motion-picture, television, and commercial stunts has been featured in numerous publications such as the LA Times, Reader's Digest, Glamour Magazine, Cycle World, Dirtbike, and on television shows like Montel, ESPN, Winning Women, and Entertainment Tonight.

In 2003 Debbie was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame. She has been awarded for her work on Matrix Reloaded at the 2004 Taurus World Stunt Awards in the category "Best Overall Stunt by a Stuntwoman," previously winning two Taurus awards in 2002 for driving a Honda Civic under a moving semi-truck in The Fast and the Furious.

Debbie Evans is considered one of Hollywood's top stuntwomen. Before beginning her stunt career, Debbie was considered to be the unofficial 1976-80 women's world motorcycle trials champion. Her stunt career began when she was just 18 years old and she was called to do a motorcycle jump over a 30-foot ravine for the movie Death Sport. Since then, she has been in over 200 movies and TV shows. Her career really launched when she tied for second overall in the CBS Stunt Competition as the only female competitor. Since then she has pioneered stuntwork for women, doing stunts that at one time only men were allowed to do, doing everything from cannon rolls to car hits. She has done just about every type of stunt imaginable, including setting the world long and high jump records for an air ramp.

In 1998 Debbie came out of an extended retirement from competitive motorcycling to become America's Top Rider in the FIM Women's World Championship, currently sponsored by Sherco and Ryan Young Products. In 2002 she raced road bikes at Daytona. Debbie is married to Lane Leavitt, her motorcycle trials sweetheart, and has 3 children, proving that a woman can balance career, sport, and family life all at the same time.

 

More than 20 years of excellence