Monday, 31 May 2021

Happy Birthday, we celebrate Clint’s 91st Birthday!

Happy Birthday, we celebrate Clint’s 91st Birthday!
In a career that has spanned over 65 years, including 38 movies as a director, Clint has earned a place in motion pictures like few others. While he is often seen as an action and Western icon, it's the sheer variety of films and performances he has given us throughout the years that define him as one of the industry's most consistent and versatile talents.

Today marks Clint’s 91st Birthday – and with the prospect of his latest movie ‘Cry Macho’ due to be released later this year, it seems that there is little sign of Clint slowing down. 

On behalf of everyone at the Archive and the millions of fans around the world, we would like to wish you a very happy birthday, continued good health and a whole fistful of happiness, Sir. 
Beers to you!

Thursday, 27 May 2021

Clint Eastwood Dialogue with Richard Schickel

Clint Eastwood Dialogue with Richard Schickel

Here is a really good interview today by the late Richard Schickel, I like this interview as I have never heard Schickel sound so relaxed, as does Clint.. It took place in front of an audience at the Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis during September 1990, Clint discusses his career with special focus on his films including Play Misty for Me, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Bronco Billy, Sudden Impact, Bird and White Hunter, Black Heart. The full 95 minute audio is included here, along with a download of the transcript and the program. It’s well worth a listen. 

             

Wednesday, 26 May 2021

The Passing of Buddy Van Horn

The Passing of Buddy Van Horn

I was saddened to learn this week that Buddy Van Horn, Clint’s regular stunt double, coordinator and director had died earlier this month aged 91.

Buddy was a prolific American stunt man and occasional small part actor, formerly billed as Wayne Van Horn. The son of a veterinarian who ministered to animals at Universal studios, he first worked as a horse wrangler following a stint in the U.S. Army. This earlier expertise as a rider served him well after he joined his brother Jimmy in Hollywood. Van Horn's riding skills were showcased in many westerns of the 50s and 60s. He frequently doubled for Guy Williams on Disney's popular TV series Zorro (1957). He was qually adept at fencing and fight scenes. Van Horn also made his mark in epic swashbucklers like Spartacus (1960) and The War Lord (1965). Major stars he doubled for have included Gregory Peck in Mackenna's Gold (1969), James Stewart in Firecreek (1968) and Henry Fonda in The Cheyenne Social Club (1970). He was latterly best known as a long-standing collaborator of Clint Eastwood in the capacities of stunt double and stunt coordinator The Enforcer (1976), The Gauntlet (1977), Sudden Impact (1983)), and as director on Any Which Way You Can (1980), The Dead Pool (1988), and Pink Cadillac (1989)) and second-unit director on films such as Magnum Force (1973), The Rookie (1990) and Pale Rider (1985). 

Van Horn worked a great deal more with Clint, often uncredited and stretching as far back as Paint your Wagon (1969), The Beguiled (1971) and arguably his most prominent onscreen appearance as Marshal Jim Duncan in High Plains Drifter (1973). Van Horn even worked on daily contracts for Eastwood in film’s that also included the original Dirty Harry (1971) (see contract below). He was a solid and reliable element of Eastwood’s Malpaso team and was an inductee into the Stuntmen's Hall of Fame and a recipient of the Taurus Lifetime Achievement Stunt Award. 

Remembering Buddy by Marneen Lynne Fields

I was deeply saddened this morning as I heard the news of the passing of the great Buddy Van Horn, Stuntman’s Hall of Fame stuntman and stunt coordinator best known for his work on Clint Eastwood’s films. I still remember the day in 1977 as a young stunt woman when I picked up the phone and a man introduced himself saying, “Hi I’m Buddy Van Horn. We’re shooting a movie and Paul Stader gave me your name saying you could do a jump off a moving train.” He was very soft spoken and had kind of a Southern accent. I accepted the job without hesitation and was hired by Buddy right there, over the phone, because of Paul Stader (who discovered me), his belief in me and reference. 

(Left; Marneen, Buddy and Clint during The Gauntlet 1977)

The phone call from Buddy and my work for him on Clint Eastwood’s “The Gauntlet” would change my life overnight and catapult me to the top of the stunt world in Hollywood. It was my first movie, and my backwards jump with a half twist off the moving train in “The Gauntlet” was considered one of the most dangerous stunts performed by a young stunt woman on film in 1977. Paul knew I could do the jump because of my champion gymnastic talent and being able to perform some of Olympic gold medallist Olga Korbut’s moves on floor exercise and balance beam. For the next twelve years, I would not have to hustle work as a stuntwoman because my magical phone would ring every month in the same way with the voice of a stunt coordinator hiring me to perform stunts on the film or primetime TV show they were coordinating. You do a dangerous stunt like that, in a scene opposite the most famous actor/director in the world, and news spreads like a lightning bolt. I was so blessed. To arrive in Arizona and stand with these two giants, Buddy Van Horn and Clint Eastwood, and not only be directed by Clint Eastwood, but also get to do a fight scene with him and then punched off the train by him - all resulted in my career skyrocketing overnight! My jump made all the papers. As I sat up on the ground after my stunt awaiting further instructions, the train came rolling, slowly, backwards to where I was. Mr. Eastwood jumped out of the train and ran over to me. He gave me hug and said, “Thank you Marneen. I loved it!” What I remember most about Buddy was his gracious approach; he was so confident, but without an ego. Clint Eastwood was the director and Buddy knew his role. They both were so amazing to stand in the presence of and work with, handsome also. My work on “The Gauntlet” remains the stunt I’m most famous for. Buddy Van Horn will be deeply missed by everyone who ever met him and for his sensational contribution to films. He certainly changed my life. 


It was reported that Buddy died on May 11th, 2021 with an undisclosed cause of death.
Our sincere condolences go out to his friends and family.
RIP Sir. 

Thank you to Davy Triumph for alerting me of this sad news and our dear friend Marneen Lynne Fields for her memories and kind contribution.

Tuesday, 18 May 2021

Chuck Hicks, Stuntman and Actor in Clint Eastwood Films dies at 93

We received the sad news this week that Chuck Hicks, one of Clint’s regular crew members had died at the age of 93. The Hollywood Reporter announced that:

Chuck Hicks, the stuntman, actor and frequent Clint Eastwood combatant whose credits included Every Which Way but Loose, The Twilight Zone, Cool Hand Luke and Dick Tracy, hag died.

Hicks died May 4 in Las Vegas after suffering a stroke about six months ago, his son Kirk told The Hollywood Reporter.

Survivors also include his wife, stuntwoman Kaye Wade Hicks. They met in Burbank in the early 1950s, reconnected in 1980 when he was playing Omar Sharif’s bodyguard in the CBS telefilm Pleasure Palace and wed some 10 years ago

.

Six-foot-2 and a muscular 230 pounds in his prime, Hicks was a onetime running back, boxer and rugby player who worked on scores of films and TV shows and served as a stunt double for the likes of Clint Walker, Brian Keith and Brian Dennehy.

He was a charter member and past president of the Stuntmen’s Association of Motion Pictures who was inducted into the Stuntmen’s Hall of Fame.

He was frequently pummeled by Clint Eastwood characters. The pair first worked together on a 1962 episode of CBS’ Rawhide, followed by Paint Your Wagon (1969), Dirty Harry (1971), Magnum Force (1973), The Enforcer (1976), Every Which Way but Loose (1978), Bronco Billy (1980), Any Which Way You Can (1980) and City Heat (1984).

For Cool Hand Luke (1967), Hicks portrayed the prisoner known as Chief and coordinated the brutal boxing scene that saw George Kennedy put a licking on Paul Newman. He also served as the stunt coordinator on the 1988-92 NBC series In the Heat of the Night.

As Dennis McCarthy described it in a 2011 profile of Hicks in the Los Angeles Daily News, his life was “one big black-and-white movie. He’s the guy in the shadows with the blackjack, waiting for the leading man to walk out of the nightclub; the getaway man, bar bully, crooked cop, hood, prizefighter taking a dive.

I was the bad guy, always getting beat up,” Hicks said in the piece.

Born on Dec. 26, 1927, in Stockton, California, Charles Hicks was a star running back at Burbank High School, where one of his classmates was future actor (and fellow tough guy) William Smith.

He served in the U.S. Merchant Marine and U.S. Navy during World War II, then attended Loyola Marymount University, where he received a football scholarship and boxed.

Hicks had tryouts with the NFL’s Los Angeles Rams and Washington Redskins, played seven years of semipro football and boxed professionally under the name Chuck Daley because his handler thought “that sounded more Irish.” He won five of his eight bouts by first-round knockout.

I was making $75 a fight,” he said. “My manager took a third of that, my cutman and second got $10 each. After the government took its cut, I had nothing left, so I quit.”

After working as a lifeguard at the community Pickwick Pool in Burbank, Hicks was cast as football players in She’s Working Her Way Through College (starring Ronald Reagan) and The Rose Bowl Story, two of the four 1952 films in which he appeared.

He appeared on other films including The Caddy (1953), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), Blackboard Jungle (1955), Rebel Without a Cause (1955) and Around the World in 80 Days (1956) before he began a regular gig in 1956 as Walker’s stand-in and stunt double on ABC’s Cheyenne.

Also that year, he portrayed LaMarr Kane, one of Eliot Ness’ (Robert Stack) original Untouchables, on the first season of the ABC drama.

Hicks went on to work on multiple episodes of other shows including Maverick, Peter Gunn, Honey West, Batman, Mannix, The Rockford Files, Starsky and Hutch and The Fall Guy and on films including Hell Is for Heroes (1962), Shock Corridor (1963), Our Man Flint (1966), Point Blank (1967), Slaughter’s Big Rip-Off (1973), Hide in Plain Sight (1980), Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982), Johnny Dangerously (1984), Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984), Runaway Train (1985) and Lethal Weapon 4 (1998) before retiring in 2010.

Survivors include another son, Kevin.

RIP sir,

My kind thanks to Dave Turner for this story.

 

Wednesday, 14 April 2021

Where Eagles Dare: Snowballs at Dawn!

It’s nice to know that even during the filming of an epic adventure such as Where Eagles Dare, there was still time for a bit of fun in the snow. Here is a selection of photos which capture both Clint and actor Darren Nesbitt in a staged snowball fight. Our Where Eagles Dare expert Neil Thomson reliably informs me that there were two still photographers who worked on the film, 1st unit was John Jay whilst 2nd unit was John Silverside. It is the general opinion that John Jay (1920-2005) was most likely responsible for taking these fabulous shots.

Brixton born Jay enjoyed a long career as a photographer and worked on films that included Born Free (1966), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), The Last Valley (1971), Straw Dogs (1971) and Star Wars (1977).

These great images capture a real sense of fun while shooting on location and in testing conditions. Let’s hope some more will eventually emerge over time. 


Tuesday, 30 March 2021

The Passing of Jessica Walter


The Passing of Jessica Walter

Earlier this week we received the sad news that Jessica Walter, Clint’s co-star from Play Misty for Me, had died at the age of 80. 

Below are a couple of reports from various news outlets.


The Hollywood Reporter by Chris Koselu

Jessica Walter, the sassy actress who excelled at portraying unhinged types, from the obsessed fan of a radio deejay in Clint Eastwood's Play Misty for Me to nutty matriarchs on Arrested Development and Archer, has died. She was 80.

Walter died Wednesday night at home in New York, her daughter, Fox Entertainment executive Brooke Bowman, said.

"It is with a heavy heart that I confirm the passing of my beloved mom, Jessica," she said. "A working actor for over six decades, her greatest pleasure was bringing joy to others through her storytelling both on screen and off. While her legacy will live on through her body of work, she will also be remembered by many for her wit, class and overall joie de vivre”.


Walter's husband of 36 years, Tony-winning actor Ron Leibman, died in December 2019 at age 82.


Early in her career, the New Yorker stood out in a pair of 1966 features as Libby MacAusland, an ambitious, acerbic wit who finds professional success but has trouble expressing her sexuality in Sidney Lumet's The Group (1966), and as Pat Stoddard, a woman who has romantic entanglements in the Formula One-set Grand Prix, directed by John Frankenheimer.

She won an Emmy in 1975 for portraying San Francisco's first female chief of detectives in the limited series Amy Prentiss (the character was introduced on Ironside) and was nominated three other times, the last in 2005 for her delicious turn as the manipulative Lucille Bluth on Arrested Development. (She started on the series in 2003.)

Always drinking, always exuding an air of entitlement, the sarcastic Lucille was at the center of an ever-evolving mess of a once-wealthy, now desperate family on the Fox/Netflix sitcom. Her razor-sharp work was a huge reason for the show's cult appeal, and her lines became catchphrases and her mannerisms memes.



"People have been great, especially in New York, where you are walking around a lot," Walter noted in an interview with Vanity Fair in 2013. "The one line I get a lot is, 'I'd like to cry but I can't spare the moisture.'

"And winks! Actually, I can do that wink, and it is very difficult, with one eye totally closed and one eye totally open. It said in the script that Lucille winks, and since I can do that in real life, I just thought it would be good to do a specific wink for the character. And they liked it so much that they started writing in more winks. I can't believe my wink has gone viral!"



Her performance helped Walter land her gig as Malory Archer on FX/FXX's Archer starting in 2009. As the former CEO of the International Secret Intelligence Service, the agency where her son, Archer (H. Jon Benjamin), works, she was ruthless, domineering and critical — and rarely seen without a cocktail.



Archer creator Adam Reed told her that she was the first one cast on the animated show, and the fact that Malory and Lucille were similar in nature was not coincidental.


As she told The Daily Beast in 2017: "They sent out copy for auditions to people that said, 'Think of the type as Jessica Walter from Arrested Development.' And my agent who got the copy called me and said, 'They're thinking about you. If you like it, I'll tell them you're interested in doing it.' I said, 'That sounds smart.' And that's exactly how it happened."


Born in Brooklyn on Jan. 31, 1941, Walter was raised in Astoria, Queens. Her father, David, was a world-class violinist who performed with Arturo Toscanini and Pablo Casals, and her mother, Esther, was an immigrant from Russia. Her brother, Richard, would go on to write screenplays and teach the craft to Dustin Lance Black, Alexander Payne and Andrew Bergman, among others, as a longtime UCLA professor.

Walter studied acting at Manhattan's High School of Performing Arts and the Neighborhood Playhouse, where she was guided by Sydney Pollack and her classmates included James Caan and Brenda Vacarro, who years later would introduce her to Leibman.


In 1960, she made it to Broadway as the secretary Liz in the original production of Advise and Consent, starring Ed Begley and Richard Kiley, and appeared on the CBS medical drama Diagnosis: Unknown.


She popped up frequently on the small screen back then, guest-starring on Naked City, Route 66, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Ben Casey and the pilot for Flipper, working for a couple years on the daytime soap Love of Life and co-starring with William Shatner on For the People.


Walter was honored with the Clarence Derwent Award in 1963 as most promising female performer for her work on Broadway in Peter Ustinov's Photo Finish, and she would return to the New York stage for productions including 1964's A Severed Head, 1988's Rumors and 2011's Anything Goes.


In 1964, Walter made her movie debut alongside Warren Beatty and Jean Seberg in Robert Rossen's psychiatric hospital-set drama Lilith. It was Gene Hackman's first movie, too, and she played his wife.


The Group, based on Mary McCarthy's best-selling novel and also starring Candice Bergen, Joan Hackett, Elizabeth Hartman and Shirley Knight, followed a circle of women who graduated from an all-girl college during the 1930s and stayed friends as their lives evolved over the next seven years. Walter's Libby becomes bitter as the movie goes on.


She received a Golden Globe newcomer nomination for Grand Prix for playing the unhappy wife of a race car driver (Brian Bedford) who has a fling with another (James Garner). Two years later, Lumet hired her again for Bye Bye Braverman (1968), where she played the widow of a man mourned by pals played by George Segal, Jack Warden, Sorrell Booke and Joseph Wiseman


For her chilling portrayal of Evelyn Draper in Play Misty for Me (1971), Walter landed a second Globe nom.


"You can't take your eyes off Walter" in the movie, Nojan Aminosharei wrote in a February 2019 profile of the actress in Elle. "One minute, she oozes genuine, 100 percent natural sweetness. The next minute, she snaps. But it's the way she snaps. That's when her star power comes into sharp relief. It's at once jarring but uncomfortably familiar to anyone who's ever felt so much as a pang of unrequited love. In one scene, she gives Eastwood's character a surprise gift, a new pair of shoes. Her dejection at his lack of gratitude is heartbreaking. You'd almost empathise if she didn't follow it up with attempted murder."


"The movie revolves around a character played with an unnerving effectiveness by Jessica Walter," Roger Ebert wrote in his review. "She is something like flypaper; the more you struggle against her personality, the more tightly you're held."


In a 2012 chat with The A.V. Club, Walter reflected on why she found playing unbalanced characters so appealing.


"They're juicy, much better than playing the vanilla ingenues, you know — Miss Vanilla Ice Cream," she said. "I don't know that I'm attracted to them. I think people just think of me for them, and I read them and I like them. … They're much more fun to play and find the levels, because nobody's that one-color evil. There's lots of levels to why they became that way."


Walter appeared in other films including Number One (1969), Goldengirl (1979), The Flamingo Kid (1984), Ghost in the Machine (1993) and Slums of Beverly Hills (1998), but she worked mostly in television.


She had regular roles on Bare Essence, Three's a Crowd, Aaron's Way, Dinosaurs, Coach, 90210, Retired at 35 (opposite Segal) and Jennifer Falls and guest stints on The F.B.I.; Love, American Style; Mannix; Medical Center; The Love Boat; and Murder, She Wrote.


Walter also received Emmy noms in 1977 for a turn as a money launderer hunted by the mob on The Streets of San Francisco and in 1980 for portraying Pernell Roberts' wife on Trapper John, M.D.


She worked with Leibman in a 1986 Los Angeles Theatre Center production of Molière's Tartuffe, on Broadway in Rumors, on a 1996 episode of Law & Order, in the film Dummy (2002) and finally on Archer when he came aboard in the fourth season as Ron Cadillac, Malory's new husband with a shady past.


Walter also was married from 1966-78 to Ross Bowman, a theatrical manager on Advise and Consent. Survivors include a grandson, Micah.


In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to Guiding Eyes for the Blind.


LA Times, By CHRISTIE D’ZURIL

Jessica Walter, the prolific actor whose career spanned six decades and included signature roles on “Arrested Development” and “Archer,” has died, her publicist has confirmed. She was 80.

Walter was born in Brooklyn on Jan. 31, 1941, to a musician father and a mother who was an immigrant from the former Soviet Union. She went to New York’s High School of Performing Arts and the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre, where the late director-actor Sydney Pollack was her teacher.


Among her classmates were James Caan and producer Jerry Weintraub — whom she remembered as “the bad boys” — and Brenda Vaccaro, who would introduce Walter to second husband Ron Leibman some 20 years later.

Walter started her career in theater, with Broadway productions including “Advise and Consent,” “Rumors,” “A Severed Head,” “Nightlife” and “Photo Finish.” The last earned her the Clarence Derwent Award for most promising female newcomer in 1963, the year Gene Hackman won for most promising male newcomer.


Walter’s feature film debut was in the 1964 movie “Lilith,” with Warren Beatty, Jean Seberg and Hackman, who coincidentally was also making his big-screen debut. From there she carved out a notable career as a dramatic actress in films such as Sidney Lumet’s 1966 movie “The Group.” Her work in that movie caught Clint Eastwood’s eye for the role of the obsessed stalker in “Play Misty for Me,” his 1971 directorial debut.

“He called me in,” Walter told The Times in 2014. “No audition. We had a talk, and he offered me carrot juice. The next day my agent called and said, ‘You have the part.’” The result was a Golden Globe nomination for best actress in a motion picture


“There’s a bit of Evelyn in me — the smothering, capable of killing, desperate, pathetic kind of person,” Walter told The Times about her stalker character in “Play Misty,” shortly after the movie opened. “The characteristics are way down deep. They’re only dormant threats, black things that a sane, civilized woman doesn’t employ. But they’re there — in all of us.”


Walter also appeared in numerous TV series, including “The Streets of San Francisco” and “Trapper John, M.D.,” and won an Emmy for her lead role in the 1974 show “Amy Prentiss.” Like so many New York actors, she had guest roles in “Law & Order,” “Law & Order: Criminal Intent” and “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.”



But all that seriousness changed in 2003, when she was cast as deliciously caustic Lucille Bluth, the vodka-swilling mother from hell in the Emmy-winning Fox and Netflix comedy series “Arrested Development.” Suddenly, Walter was all about the funny — and she had a new generation of fans.

“Jessica Walter’s spectacular turn as the devilish Lucille Bluth is one of the great comedic performances of television history, and we loved working with her as much as audiences loved her on ‘Arrested Development,’” 20th Television said in a statement Thursday.

Walter’s turn on “Arrested Development” led directly to a decade-plus gig voicing the toxic mom Malory Archer on FX’s irreverent animated spy comedy “Archer,” and to a role as a snooty dowager mother on Broadway in the 2011 revival of the musical comedy “Anything Goes.” She also flexed her comedic chops as a mom with parenting issues in TV Land’s short-lived 2014 comedy “Jennifer Falls.”


“Oh, my God, those parts are the best,” Walter told The Times in 2014, in an article that described her as tall, whippet-slender, sweet and funny, with a kind word for everyone. “We don’t want to be Miss Vanilla Ice Cream.”


The producers on “Archer” were looking for a Jessica Walter “type,” rather than Walter herself, to voice the part of the belligerent, alcoholic CEO of the show’s spy agency and the mother of not-so-ace spy Sterling Archer. “We didn’t think she would do our little cartoon show,” Matt Thompson, an executive producer on the series, said in 2014. But once she saw the script, Walter was all in as Malory Archer.


“Jessica was a consummate professional, an actor’s actor, and the exact opposite of Malory Archer — warm, caring, and kind, with an absolutely cracking sense of humor — and it was both a privilege and a true honor to work with her over these many years,” Adam Reed, the creator of “Archer,” said in a statement Thursday. FX, the network, remembered Walter as “a comedic genius and a brilliant actor who personified wit, grace and elegance.”

In addition to her “Amy Prentiss” win, Walter was nominated three other times for Emmys, for work on “Arrested Development,” “Trapper John, M.D.” and “The Streets of San Francisco.” Besides “Play Misty for Me,” her other Golden Globe nomination was for 1966’s “Grand Prix.”


Additionally, she worked with New York’s famed Playwrights Horizons and the Los Angeles Theatre Center. She served as second national vice president of the Screen Actors Guild and was an elected member of the SAG board of directors for more than a decade.

Walter was married twice, first to Ross Bowman, from 1966 to 1978, and then to actor Ron Leibman, from 1983 until his death in 2019. In 2014, she referred to her and Leibman’s marriage as “31 happy, fulfilled, glorious years” together.

She is survived by Bowman, her daughter, who is senior vice president for drama programming at Fox Entertainment, and grandson Micah Heymann.


On behalf of everyone here at the Archive, our thoughts and condolences are with Jessica’s family and friends. RIP


Wednesday, 24 March 2021

Clint Eastwood neo-western ‘Cry Macho’ gets October 2021 release date

The Screendaily website has posted the following by Jeremy Kay. 

Cry Macho, the neo-western and potential awards contender directed by and starring Clint Eastwood, will open via Warner Bros in the US on October 22 this year. The 1978-set film will also debut on Warner Bros’ stablemate HBO Max for a limited period.

Eastwood plays a former rodeo star and washed-up horse breeder who accepts a job bringing his former employer’s son home from his alcoholic mother. As they face challenges crossing rural Mexico en route to Texas, the ageing horseman finds redemption as he teaches the youngster what it is to be a good man.

Eduardo Minett and Dwight Yoakam also star. Nick Schenk and the late N. Richard Nash adapted the screenplay to Cry Macho from Nash’s novel of the same name.

Eastwood, Albert S. Ruddy, Tim Moore, and Jessica Meier serve as producers. Eastwood’s last film as director, 2019’s Richard Jewell, grossed $44m worldwide in a roughly even international-North American split. That said, box office comparisons with any 2021 releases are likely to be unreliable indicators as available cinemas and audience numbers will continue to be overshadowed by the pandemic even during exhibition recovery.

Thanks to Davy Triumph for this update.