Ryan Potter
Ryan Potter (born September 12, 1995) is an American actor, martial artist, director, photographer, and philanthropist of half-Japanese and half-Jewish-American descent.[1][2] Born in Portland, Oregon, to a Japanese father and Jewish-American mother, he spent his early childhood in Tokyo, Japan, until age seven, when his family relocated to the United States.[1][3] Potter began studying martial arts as a child and made his acting debut starring as Mike Fukanaga in the Nickelodeon action-comedy series Supah Ninjas (2011–2013).[3][4] He rose to further prominence voicing the lead character Hiro Hamada in Disney's animated film Big Hero 6 (2014), its sequel television series (2017–2021), and the short-form series Baymax! (2022).[4] Potter portrayed Garfield "Gar" Logan / Beast Boy in the DC Universe / HBO Max live-action series Titans (2018–2023), earning recognition for his performance in the superhero genre.[4] In addition to acting, he has directed short films and engaged in philanthropy supporting causes related to Asian-American communities and youth empowerment.[1]
Early life
Family background and upbringing in Japan
Ryan Potter was born on September 12, 1995, in Portland, Oregon, to a Japanese father and an American mother named Jordanna Potter, who is of Caucasian and Jewish descent.[1][5] He bears his mother's surname and is of mixed Japanese and European ancestry, with his mother's side including English, German, Swedish, and Jewish heritage.[5] Potter spent the majority of his early childhood in Tokyo, Japan, where he lived until the age of seven.[6][7] Immersed in Japanese culture from a young age, he became fluent in both Japanese and English during this period.[5][3] His upbringing exposed him to elements of Japanese pop culture, such as giant robot animations and the films of directors Hayao Miyazaki and Satoshi Kon.[8] Following his parents' separation, Potter relocated to the United States with his mother, marking the end of his primary residence in Japan.[9] This move occurred around 2002, after which he was raised primarily by his single mother.[10]Return to the United States and early interests
Potter returned to the United States at the age of seven, around 2002, after spending his early childhood in Tokyo, Japan, where he had learned Japanese as his first language.[1][5] He was subsequently raised by his single mother in the U.S., becoming fluent in both Japanese and English.[2][9] Upon returning, Potter developed several early interests outside of what would later become his acting career. He engaged in sports and physical activities, including playing baseball for over nine years and skateboarding.[9] Additionally, he took up playing the drums as a childhood hobby.[9] These pursuits reflected a active, multifaceted youth before his entry into the entertainment industry at age 15.[7] Potter also began training in martial arts during this period, specifically Kung Fu through the White Tiger Kung Fu style, which laid foundational skills he would later incorporate into roles requiring combat proficiency.[11] This training emphasized discipline and physical conditioning, aligning with his broader interests in athletic and performative disciplines.[9]Acting career
Early television roles
Potter's acting debut came in 2011 with the lead role of Mike Fukanaga in the Nickelodeon action-comedy series Supah Ninjas, which aired from March 17, 2011, to April 13, 2013. In the show, he portrayed a shy Japanese-American high school student who inherits ninja skills from his late grandfather, played by George Takei, and teams up with friends to fight crime.[12] The series featured 39 episodes across two seasons, blending martial arts action with teen comedy elements targeted at a young audience.[4] During the run of Supah Ninjas, Potter made a guest appearance as Bryan in an episode of the Nickelodeon series Fred: The Show on July 25, 2012.[13] This role marked one of his initial forays outside his lead series, portraying Fred's best friend in the live-action adaptation of the viral YouTube character. These early television credits established Potter in the children's programming space, leveraging his martial arts background for action-oriented characters.[2]Voice acting breakthrough
Potter's entry into voice acting came with his casting as the protagonist Hiro Hamada, a 14-year-old robotics prodigy, in Disney's animated feature film Big Hero 6, released on November 7, 2014.[14] This marked his debut in voice-over work, selected after an audition process that emphasized his youthful energy and martial arts background to match the character's inventive and agile personality.[15] The film, inspired by the Marvel Comics team but reimagined in a futuristic San Fransokyo setting, grossed over $658 million worldwide and earned the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2015, elevating Potter's profile in animation. The role garnered Potter a nomination for Breakthrough Voice Actor of the Year at the 2015 Behind The Voice Actors Awards, recognizing his nuanced portrayal of Hiro's grief-driven transformation from bot-fighting teen to superhero leader.[16] Critics noted how Potter's performance captured Hiro's emotional depth, particularly in scenes involving the loss of his brother Tadashi, contributing to the film's resonance with audiences on themes of innovation and resilience.[17] This success directly led to Potter reprising the voice of Hiro in the Disney XD series Big Hero 6: The Series, which premiered on November 20, 2017, and ran for three seasons until 2021, allowing him to evolve the character through 52 episodes focused on superhero team adventures.[18] Beyond Big Hero 6, the breakthrough opened doors to additional voice work, including Kenji Kon in Jurassic World Camp Cretaceous (2020–2022), though these built upon rather than initiated his animation career.[18] Potter has described the experience as surreal, highlighting the technical demands of isolated booth recording and syncing with animators' revisions, which honed his vocal range for expressive, action-oriented roles.[15]Live-action superhero roles
Potter portrayed Garfield "Gar" Logan / Beast Boy, a teenage metahuman with the ability to shapeshift into animals, as a series regular in the DC Universe streaming series Titans, which premiered on October 12, 2018, and concluded after four seasons on April 13, 2023, later moving to HBO Max.[19][12] His character's storyline involved recovering from a near-fatal illness granting his powers, navigating foster care, and integrating into the Titans team while grappling with emotional instability and ethical dilemmas in combat. Potter appeared in 40 episodes, contributing to arcs that explored Beast Boy's growth from a reluctant hero to a more confident fighter, including crossovers with the spin-off Doom Patrol.[12] Casting for the role was announced on October 18, 2017, selected for Potter's prior martial arts experience and youthful energy aligning with the comic book character's athletic, optimistic persona originally created by Arnold Drake and Bob Haney in 1965.[19][20] The portrayal emphasized practical effects for transformations alongside CGI, with Potter performing stunts informed by his training in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and taekwondo to depict Beast Boy's animalistic combat style.[12] In season 3, his arc intensified with confrontations against major antagonists like Red Hood, showcasing Beast Boy's loyalty and vulnerability.[21] In 2024, Potter took on the role of Terry McGinnis / Batman in the independent fan film Batman Beyond: Year One, a short depicting the origin of the futuristic vigilante under a retired Bruce Wayne's mentorship in Neo-Gotham, released on November 16, 2024.[22][23] This non-official project highlighted his continued interest in DC properties, drawing on his Titans experience for the action-oriented portrayal, though it remains outside canonical live-action adaptations.[24]Recent projects and expansions
Following the fourth and final season of Titans in 2023, where Potter reprised his role as Gar Logan / Beast Boy, he transitioned to smaller-scale independent projects.[25] In the same year, he starred in the short film Stuck, directed by Giselle Bonilla, portraying Eli, a man who becomes physically trapped inside a sex doll during an intimate encounter, exploring themes of isolation and artificial connection.[26] The 15-minute production received a 6.4/10 rating on IMDb from limited viewings and screened at festivals including Fantastic Fest in September 2024 and the Manchester Film Festival in March 2025.[27][28] In 2024, Potter expanded into fan-produced content with the leading role of Terry McGinnis / Batman in Batman Beyond: Year One, a short film directed by Michael Yu that reimagines the animated series' origin story set in a dystopian future.[12] The project, honoring the Warner Bros. animated legacy, was released online on November 16, 2024, and featured Potter alongside Isabelle Hahn, emphasizing high-energy action sequences and visual fidelity to the source material.[29] These endeavors mark Potter's shift toward experimental shorts and community-driven films, allowing creative control in niche genres absent from his prior network television work, though no major studio announcements have emerged as of late 2025.[30]Other professional pursuits
Martial arts expertise
Potter began training in White Tiger Kung Fu at the age of eight, a discipline he pursued for at least eight years as of 2013.[31] He has described this foundational training as starting around 2003, aligning with his early childhood interests that also included drums, baseball, and skateboarding.[32] By 2019, he reported over 12 years of cumulative martial arts experience, indicating sustained involvement despite occasional hiatuses for acting demands or recovery.[33][34] In addition to White Tiger Kung Fu, Potter trained in Kyokushin karate for approximately one year and incorporated elements of Wushu kung fu into his regimen.[31] These experiences equipped him with proficiency in stage combat, stunts, and physical choreography, which he applied directly to roles requiring dynamic action sequences.[1] His training emphasized practical application over competitive ranking, with no public records of black belt achievements or tournament participation; instead, it supported his transition into acting, such as discovering audition opportunities via kung fu class announcements.[31] Potter's martial arts background influenced his approach to physically demanding characters, informing movement and energy in performances like the ninja protagonist in Supah Ninjas (2011–2013), where he performed many of his own fight scenes.[31] He has noted collaborating with coordinators like Hiro Koda for stunt work, blending personal skills with professional enhancement to achieve realistic portrayals.[32] This expertise extends to voice acting, where he draws on embodied discipline to convey active, agile personas.[33]Photography and directing work
Potter served as behind-the-scenes director for the 2015 martial arts film Underdog Kids, directed by Phillip Rhee, in which he portrayed the character Eric Barrett alongside actors such as Nicolas T. Vaporis and Adam Kaufman.[35] This role involved coordinating supplemental footage and documentation during production, marking one of his early contributions to filmmaking beyond acting.[36] In addition to acting, Potter maintains an active interest in photography, regularly sharing his work on personal social media accounts.[12] His portfolio includes landscape and candid shots, with notable exhibitions such as a display of his photographs at Hosum Bistro, announced via Instagram in October 2024.[37] While not pursued as a primary profession, this avocation complements his creative endeavors, often intersecting with his travels and personal experiences.[38]Advocacy and philanthropy
Asian American representation efforts
Potter, who is biracial with a Japanese mother and Caucasian father, has voiced support for increased Asian American visibility in media, particularly through lead roles that avoid stereotyping. In a 2014 interview promoting Big Hero 6, where he voiced the Japanese-American protagonist Hiro Hamada—the first Asian lead in a Disney animated feature film—he expressed enthusiasm for the film's potential to inspire young Asian-American viewers by reflecting their experiences on screen.[39][17] He highlighted the underrepresentation of Asian characters in prominent positions, noting that such portrayals could foster identification among audiences traditionally sidelined in Hollywood narratives.[40] In subsequent discussions, Potter critiqued the limited opportunities for Asian actors, emphasizing the need for authentic depictions rather than token inclusions. During a 2019 panel on Asian Pacific representation, he argued that casting decisions must prioritize genuine portrayal, stating, "if you want to hire me as the 'Asian American' kid, you have to represent me and show me in the right light. You can't just have me as a token."[6] He has also addressed challenges faced by hapa (half-Asian) performers, advocating for roles that embrace mixed heritage without diluting cultural specificity, as explored in a 2015 NBC News interview where he called for more diverse casting to reflect America's demographic reality.[41] Potter's portrayal of Beast Boy (Gar Logan) as an Asian-American character in the DC Universe's Titans series (2018–2023) further aligned with his views on diversifying superhero genres, where Asian leads remain scarce. In interviews, he drew inspiration from figures like George Takei to push for media that counters historical marginalization of Asian narratives, though he has focused primarily on personal platform-building over formal organizational involvement.[42][43] His comments have coincided with broader industry shifts, such as post-Crazy Rich Asians (2018) gains, but he has cautioned that progress requires sustained, non-superficial commitments from producers.[44]Environmental and technological initiatives
Potter founded Clear Matter in 2024 as a company aimed at addressing global water scarcity by deploying atmospheric water generation (AWG) technology, which extracts drinkable water from ambient humidity without relying on traditional groundwater or desalination methods.[45] Partnering with inventor Moses West and AWG Contracting, the initiative focuses on scalable, sustainable water production to disrupt the bottled water industry, emphasizing reduced plastic waste and energy-efficient harvesting from air.[46] In a May 2025 interview, Potter highlighted AWG's environmental advantages over conventional systems, noting its ability to operate in arid conditions like those exacerbated by Los Angeles wildfires and prolonged droughts, where it cools air below dew point to condense vapor into purified water.[47] Clear Matter's operations include deploying AWG units for community water security, with Potter advocating for their integration into disaster relief and urban infrastructure to promote long-term stewardship.[48] The technology, which Potter champions as a response to climate-driven shortages, reportedly yields up to 5,000 liters of water daily per industrial-scale unit under optimal humidity, bypassing contamination risks from polluted sources.[47] Potter has positioned this venture as a pivot from acting toward entrepreneurial impact, drawing on West's patented designs to prioritize verifiable output metrics over unsubstantiated sustainability claims prevalent in competing green tech sectors.[12] As of late 2024, early deployments targeted high-need areas, with plans for expansion via investor-backed scaling to mitigate reliance on finite aquifers amid rising global demand projected to exceed supply by 40% by 2030.[45]Criticisms of advocacy approaches
Some observers criticized Ryan Potter's 2016 decision to publicly release his audition tape for the role of Robin in a planned Batman film, arguing that the action violated professional etiquette by disseminating material intended for private studio review and pressuring executives on casting diversity.[49] This approach, aimed at highlighting the potential for Asian American representation in major superhero franchises, drew accusations of overstepping boundaries in an industry where auditions typically remain confidential until official announcements.[50] Potter's social media advocacy, including posts on anti-racism, human rights, and opposition to hate speech—such as his 2018 statements condemning racist backlash against Titans co-star Anna Diop—has prompted sporadic online pushback from portions of the fandom.[51] Detractors in fan discussions have labeled these efforts as overly politicized or emblematic of "woke" Hollywood trends, questioning their authenticity amid broader skepticism toward celebrity interventions in cultural debates.[52] Such reactions, while limited in scope and lacking institutional endorsement, reflect tensions between actors' public stances on representation and fans' preferences for fidelity to source material.Filmography
Feature films
Potter's feature film roles span independent live-action projects and animated blockbusters, beginning with his debut in 2014.[12] He provided the voice for the protagonist in Disney's Big Hero 6, which grossed over $657 million worldwide and won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature Film.[14] Subsequent credits include supporting roles in martial arts-themed indies and a romantic drama set in Hawaii.[4]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Senior Project | Peter Hammer | Live-action indie comedy[53] |
| 2014 | Big Hero 6 | Hiro Hamada | Voice role; animated superhero film[14] |
| 2015 | Underdog Kids | Eric Barrett | Live-action family action film[54] |
| 2016 | Throne of Elves | Fish | Voice role; English dub of animated fantasy |
| 2018 | Running for Grace | Jo | Live-action romantic drama[55] |
Television series
Potter's acting debut in television came with the lead role of Mike Fukanaga, a shy high school student inheriting ninja skills from his grandfather, in the Nickelodeon action-comedy series Supah Ninjas, which ran for two seasons from January 17, 2011, to April 27, 2013, comprising 39 episodes.[12] [4] In 2012, he appeared in a recurring capacity as Bryan, Fred's best friend, on the Nickelodeon series Fred: The Show.[36] He guest-starred as Riker in the premiere episode of Disney XD's Lab Rats: Elite Force on March 2, 2016.[4] From 2018 to 2023, Potter portrayed Garfield "Gar" Logan / Beast Boy, a shape-shifting teenage superhero grappling with trauma and team dynamics, as a main cast member across all four seasons of the DC Universe/HBO Max live-action series Titans, appearing in 40 episodes; he also received story credit for the episode "Dude, Spying You" in season 3.[12] [4] This role marked his most prominent television work to date, showcasing his martial arts background in action sequences.[36]Voice roles and animation
Potter's voice acting career began with the role of Hiro Hamada, a 14-year-old robotics genius and the protagonist of the 2014 Disney animated film Big Hero 6, directed by Don Hall and Chris Williams.[56] The character, inspired partly by Potter's own background in martial arts and technology interests, leads a team of young heroes after inventing the inflatable healthcare robot Baymax.[57] He reprised the voice of Hiro in the Disney XD series Big Hero 6: The Series, which aired from November 2017 to March 2021 across three seasons, expanding on the film's San Fransokyo setting with additional adventures involving the superhero team.[18] Potter also voiced Hiro in the 2022 Disney+ miniseries Baymax!, a six-episode anthology focusing on the robot's standalone cases while featuring brief appearances by Hiro.[18] In 2020, Potter took on the recurring voice role of Kenji Kon, an affluent and initially arrogant Japanese teenager, in the Netflix animated series Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous, which ran for five seasons until 2022 and follows a group of kids surviving dinosaur encounters at a theme park.[58] Kenji, son of a park executive, evolves from comic relief to a more responsible team member across the series' 50 episodes. Potter did not reprise the role in the 2024 sequel series Jurassic World: Chaos Theory, citing scheduling conflicts in a personal social media update.[59] Beyond television and film, Potter has provided the voice of Hiro Hamada in video game adaptations, including Kingdom Hearts III (2019), where the character appears in a crossover storyline, and the racing game Disney Speedstorm (2023).[18]| Year(s) | Project | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Big Hero 6 (film) | Hiro Hamada | Lead protagonist; Academy Award winner for Best Animated Feature.[12] |
| 2017–2021 | Big Hero 6: The Series | Hiro Hamada | 52 episodes; Emmy-nominated series.[18] |
| 2020–2022 | Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous | Kenji Kon | Main cast; 50 episodes across five seasons.[58] |
| 2022 | Baymax! | Hiro Hamada | Guest appearances in 6-episode miniseries.[18] |