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Hollywood 'Stuntman!' Reveals Tricks Of Trade

Hal Needham worked as a Hollywood stuntman for over 40 years. He details some of his most death-defying feats (and why he can't stand modern special effects) in his new memoir, Stuntman!

44:27

Other segments from the episode on February 7, 2011

Fresh Air with Terry Gross, February 7, 2011: Interview with Hal Needham; Review of the television show "The Chicago code."

Transcript

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Hollywood 'Stuntman!' Reveals Tricks Of Trade

TERRY GROSS, host:

This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross.

My guest, Hal Needham, is probably the most famous living Hollywood stuntman.
He did the kind of stunts that would either end with a spectacular shot or an
ambulance. As we'll hear, one stunt with a four-door Chevy left him with a
broken back, six broken ribs, a punctured lung and three missing teeth.

He got his start in western movies and TV shows like "Laramie," "Laredo" and
"Have Gun, Will Travel," on which he was Richard Boone's stunt double and the
show's stunt coordinator. After many years of jumping on horses and
stagecoaches and falling from great heights after being shot, he became famous
for car stunts, especially his work in Burt Reynolds' movies.

He was the stunt coordinator in "Gator" and "White Lightning" and directed
"Cannonball Run," "Smokey and the Bandit" and "Hooper." He's done stunts in
4,500 episodes of TV and 310 feature films.

Hal Needham has written a new memoir called "Stuntman!: My Car-Crashing, Plane-
Jumping, Bone-Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life." Hal Needham, welcome to
FRESH AIR.

Now, what were some of the standard western stunts of the '50s and '60s, when
you were making the westerns?

Mr. HAL NEEDHAM (Author, "Stuntman!: My Car-Crashing, Plane-Jumping, Bone-
Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life"): Well, it had mostly to do with what
we call a saddle fall, where you get shot and fall off the horse. We did horse
falls, rearing falls, wagon wrecks, buggies and so on and so - a thing called a
bulldog, where the bad guy's trying to get away, the good guy comes up behind
him, jumps from his horse and then knocks the guy off the horse, and it
normally winds up in a big fight.

And we did high falls and some roping stuff and pretty well covers the major of
them, anyway.

GROSS: Yeah. Now, one of your early stunts was for "Have Gun, Will Travel," and
you were jumping from a rock about 30-foot high onto a stagecoach that was
moving by.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Oh, yeah. Yes.

GROSS: And you're supposed to land on the top of the stagecoach as it rides by.
Tell us what happened.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, first of all, that was my second stunt on "Have Gun, Will
Travel." I had doubled Boone the day before, and he was kind of impressed, and
he said: All right, you can do some stuff tomorrow.

I got out there, and they said: Can you jump from that rock to the top of a
coach as it's going by, as it's passing? I said: I think so. So anyway, the
rock was 30-feet high, and the top of a coach is six feet long and four feet
wide. They said: You want to see a rehearsal? I said why not?

They brought that thing under me, and I thought: I might have left my alligator
mouth overload my (unintelligible) back end again because it really looked
small. It looked like a postage stamp.

Anyway, they brought the coach through, and I hit it right in the center. As a
matter of fact, I broke through the top right up to my armpits, and that kind
of shocked the folks inside the coach.

And when they got us stopped, Boone came over and offered me the job of being
the stunt coordinator, as well as his double on "Have Gun, Will Travel."

GROSS: So let me as you, when you're jumping off a 30-foot-high rock onto a
moving stagecoach, the top of which looks like a postage stamp because it's so
relatively small from the height that you're at, what kind of mental
calculation do you do to figure out when to jump?

Mr. NEEDHAM: You know, you can't say all right, when the coach get there, to
that mark, I'm going to jump. You just have to look at it because you don't
know how fast those horses are going to be running, anything else. It's just a
thing that it's a clock inside of you that you say now, and you go. There's no
way to set a mark or anything like that to leave the rock.

GROSS: Now on that stunt, was there protection for you? Like, if you missed the
coach, was there padding on the ground?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Nothing.

GROSS: Nothing.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Nothing. It would be impossible - first of all, they'd have to pad
the road in front and behind, and the horses can't go through that, and over
the side, they'd have to camouflage it. No, it's just too much of a problem.
And if you say you can do it, they expect you to do it.

GROSS: I say this with the greatest of respect: I think you have to be crazy to
be a stuntman like you.

Mr. NEEDHAM: I won't argue that point.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: OK. So one of the standard shots that you'd have to do is, like, you're
the bad guy, and you're being shot, and you have to fall.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Uh-huh. You mean fall off the horse or fall off of what?

GROSS: Fall of a balcony, fall off a horse, fall off a rock. You've fallen off
all of them. So say, like, you're falling, you're shot, you're falling off from
a height. So when you started making westerns, what protection was there for
you to fall onto?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, when I started, and that's a long time ago, they would take
sawhorses, you know, like carpenters use. They'd take those, and they'd put
one-by-12, pine one-by-12's across the top, put some cardboard boxes underneath
it and put a mattress or two on top of it, and that's what saved you from being
killed because the boards would bend about six inches, and then they'd all
break, and then the boxes would catch you. So that's what you had, and believe
me, 45 or 50 feet off of that, into those, about all you could handle.

GROSS: It sounds so makeshift.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Oh, it definitely was. But, you know, that's all they could come
up with at the time, and I'm going to be really braggadocios here. I'm the one
that brought airbags into the stunt world.

GROSS: What's the highest jump you've done?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Hundred feet.

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Hal Needham, who is one of the
greatest stuntmen in movie history, and he has a memoir called "Stuntman!: My
Car-Crashing, Plane-Jumping, Bone-Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life." He's
also a director, and he directed "Hooper" and "Smokey and the Bandit,"
"Cannonball Run."

Now let's get back to westerns for a minute. You say one of the most dangerous
stunts in westerns - and if you've seen a western, you've seen this one - it's
the stirrup drag, where a guy falls off his horse, but his leg is still in the
stirrup, and the horse keeps galloping, dragging the cowboy across the ground,
over rocks and brush and who knows what else. Why is that the most dangerous
western stunt?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, there's a couple of things. As a matter of fact, I saw one
of our stuntmen get killed during a stirrup drag.

GROSS: Wow.

Mr. NEEDHAM: He had to go through the gate, the entrance to a ranch, and when
he fell off the horse - you rehearse them so they'll go where you want them to
go. Well, this horse didn't follow where he was supposed to go, and when he
came to the gate, he swung around, the horse did, and it flung the guy way out
to the side, and he hit his head on the post, a fence post, and killed him.

So that's the reason it's so dangerous, one reason. The other is when you fall
off the horse and hit the ground, you're tied to the horse with a cable, to the
stirrup, and when you hit the end of that cable, it flings you back under the
horse's feet, his back feet, and so you've got to put one foot up against the
horse's belly to keep yourself from being stepped on by his back feet. It's
pretty dangerous.

Now, the way we get released, you have a release on your foot to the cable, and
you just put a little wire up to your belt, and you pull that, and that's
supposed to release you. If that doesn't work, you have a second release on,
hooked with a cable, something back, way back by the camera, and that releases
the whole saddle.

And if that doesn't work, you put two or three what you hope are your buddies
on the fastest horses you can find, and they're called pick-up men. They get
out there, and if they see you're in trouble, they're supposed to come in, stop
the horse and get you loose. It's really, really dangerous.

GROSS: Were you ever hurt doing one of those yourself?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Thank God no, I never was. I have now done quite a few of them,
and I just got lucky.

GROSS: So what goes through your mind when a stuntman is killed? Is that - it
must be a very sobering experience.

Mr. NEEDHAM: We're all aware of the fact that it can happen, and hopefully,
when you get ready to do the stunt, you've got it figured out, you've got your
confidence up, you say this is going to be OK, and you go for it.

And when something goes wrong, we all understand it because we've all had
things go wrong. One stunt I did, I broke my back, six ribs, punctured a lung,
knocked out some teeth. That wasn't the way I had it planned at all.

GROSS: Yeah, I'm sure it wasn't. We'll talk about that one a little bit later.

Mr. NEEDHAM: OK.

GROSS: One of your most dangerous stunts was for a western, "Little Big Man,"
about Custer's last stand.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Right.

GROSS: And so describe the stunt that you had to do here.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Dustin Hoffman and his wife are heading West, and they're in a
stagecoach that's got a six (unintelligible) horse hooked to it. They get
attacked by the Indians.

The shotgun guard gets shot off the coach. The driver turns chicken, and he's
up there huddling in the boot of the coach, hiding. So the horses run away.

A stuntman doubling Dusty got out of the coach, climbed up on the seat and
jumped to the closest horse to the coach. I as an Indian came up on the outside
and transferred from my horse to the one right next to him.

Then he stands up and jumps from that horse to the back of the one ahead of
him, and I follow him. Then he does it again off to the leader, and I followed
him out there.

So we did that three times, but we did the whole scene 13 times. And here's
what's really hard to believe: We had to do a standing broad jump from the back
of one horse to the back of the next one of 14 feet. And I'll tell you what:
There's no athlete, I think, that can do that standing still.

GROSS: These are horses that are in motion.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Oh, they're runaway, runaway, yeah. A coach running away. When we
training the horses to accept us jumping on their back and everything, the way
we found we could jump the furthest was to get in motion, get in synch with the
horse. So when he pushed off his back feet, we would use his momentum to get us
that extra two or three feet so we could get to the next horse.

It was the toughest physical stunt I ever did in my life, the toughest.

GROSS: Now, I hate to bring this up, but had you failed, you would have been
trampled by the horse then.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Oh, well...

GROSS: Or run over by the coach, depending where you were.

Mr. NEEDHAM: You'd have had two, four or six horses run over you, plus a 4,000-
pound coach, yeah. You couldn't fail. If you messed up, you was going to be in
big trouble.

GROSS: So you worked with a lot of horses doing westerns. You owned horses. You
trained horses. Two of your most beloved horses were named Hondo and Alamo. And
Hondo lost his life as a result of a stunt. He broke his leg doing a stunt.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yep. That's right.

GROSS: What happened?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, you know, as a matter of fact, it was on "Little Big Man." I
played the Indian that came down and jumped from my horse to the horse pulling
the coach. The director wanted a shot of me coming off the hillside prior to
that shot, prior to me transferring. So he said come as fast as you can. I said
all right.

And it was fall, and the hillside, the grass was all dead and everything. So
here I come up-field just as fast as Hondo could run, and in a blink of an eye,
I was sailing through the air. He had stepped in a gopher hole and broke his
leg. And so he slid a long way, so do I. And I looked back, and I could see he
was trying to get up. So I went back to take a survey and see what was wrong
and so on, and I realized he had broken his leg. So I held him down.

Here's the part that I think is - shows how much I love the horse. We were way
out in the country, and I said: Has anybody got a gun? When a horse breaks a
leg, unless he's a thoroughbred or something, you destroy him, you put him out.
So anyway, I said: Anybody got a gun? And the prop man said: No, I don't have
one. And my buddy said, well, he had one in the car. So I said: Go get it.

And he came back and handed me that gun. You know, I could not shoot that
horse, and the reason I had to shoot him, or somebody had to shoot him, they
said: If you don't get a vet out here and verify that he had a broken leg
before you kill him, you can't collect the insurance.

I said: Well, hell, it's going to take an hour and a half, two hours to get a
vet out here. I don't want that horse to lay there suffering. Get me a gun, you
know. So anyway, we wound up shooting him, and don't tell me a big man don't
cry because I did.

GROSS: Did it change how attached you allowed yourself to become to your stunt
horses?

Mr. NEEDHAM: No, you know, I made so much money with them, and I was such
buddies with them, I'll tell you two stories if you'll let me.

One was I had one of them, and I was just practicing a little bit, and a fell,
and I came up, and I was in my backyard or right close to my backyard, and my
wife is out there.

And I fell off this, and I was sitting there, I sat up on my butt, and I was
just sitting on the ground, and he came up, and he put his head over my
shoulder, and I scratched his chin, under his chin. My wife said: If you did
that to me, we'd get along a hell of a lot better, you know.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: So that's how - but also I have a thing in my book about when a
horse - if I got two together, I kept those two together all the time so they'd
become buddies. When you take one away, the other one would just pace back and
forth in the corral until they worked up a sweat.

Or sometimes if they're ill, a little ill, they've got a stomach ache or
something, they'll do the same thing.

I've been known to go out in the corral, go out in the barn, take some hay and
make myself a bed and get a tarp and just cover up and sleep with them, out
there in the barn with them. When I do, they calm down immediately, you know,
and they'll come over and sniff me, and eventually they'll start eating the hay
I'm laying on and things like that.

You've got to have that rapport with them to understand them.

GROSS: So if you're just joining us, my guest is Hal Needham, and he is
probably the most famous stuntman in Hollywood.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Can I say something?

GROSS: Yeah.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Highest-paid.

GROSS: And highest-paid...

Mr. NEEDHAM: I was the highest-paid stuntman in the world.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: I know that means a lot to you. And while we're on the subject, every
time you have to redo a stunt because they didn't get the take they wanted, or
the camera wasn't in the right place, you get paid again, right?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Ching-ching, ring it up.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: OK.

Mr. NEEDHAM: And you know what? Sometimes cameramen, if you had a good friend
that was an operator, camera operator, he'd say: Damn, I missed that. He'd come
over. And then he'd come over and say: How's that, Hal? And I'd say: That's
fine by me, you know.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: That's great. You wouldn't have felt that way about the most difficult
stunts, though, right?

Mr. NEEDHAM: No, no, I was happy to see those gone.

GROSS: All right. So Hal Needham has a new memoir. It's called "Stuntman!: My
Car-Crashing, Plane-Jumping, Bone-Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life."
Let's take a short break here, and then we'll talk some more. This is FRESH
AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Hal Needham, the famous Hollywood
stuntman, who was, by the way, the highest-paid Hollywood stuntman in the
world, and his new memoir is called "Stuntman!: My Car-Crashing, Plane-Jumping,
Bone-Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life." And in addition to doing stunts,
he's also directed several films, including "Cannonball Run," "Smokey and the
Bandit" and "Hooper."

So you did so many westerns. You did so may horse stunts. But later in your
career, you became really famous for your car stunts. So let's talk about one
of your stunts. This is one from "White Lightning," where you had to jump a car
from land onto...

Mr. NEEDHAM: A barge.

GROSS: ...a floating barge. How far away was the barge from where you were?

Mr. NEEDHAM: That barge was supposed to be - because it was up against a bank,
and then he was to be backing out into the water, and it's a long story. So
I'll just cut it real short and say: I had him do it a couple times in
practice, and I thought: OK, I want him about 75 feet out so when I hit my
ramp, I would be doing about 70 miles an hour and knew I could hit this big
barge, and everything would be good.

But what I didn't know is when we got ready to shoot it, I said: Captain, are
you ready? And he said: Yeah. I said: OK, and when I say go, firewall that
thing. And that means the throttle, put it all the way to the firewall.

Well, he did, and he was about 85 feet out. And so when I went out, when I was
in the air, I said: This ain't going to be pretty. I hit the back of the barge
with the front of my car, and it just stood it up in the air, and it balanced
right on the back end. The back wheels were in the water. I was out of that
thing in a heartbeat.

But the reason he was so far out, he had been rehearsing at three-quarter
throttle, and I didn't know that.

GROSS: Oh,yeah.

Mr. NEEDHAM: So when I told him to firewall it, he said OK, you know, without -
so you've got to be real careful. If that were another stuntman driving that
barge, he'd know what I meant, but this guy, he was a local down there in
Arkansas, and he had no idea, and he wanted to do exactly as I wanted him to.
So when I said firewall it, he took me at my word, and he firewalled it and
damn near killed me.

I mean, had that thing fallen into the river, first of all the river was muddy,
deep and swift. I had a couple of stunt guys out there with SCUBA gear on. I'd
have been down in Louisiana before they found me.

GROSS: When you did hit with the front of the car onto the barge, how great was
the impact? I mean, you were flying through the air, must have really hit hard.

Mr. NEEDHAM: I had a hand on each side of the steering wheel. I bent that
steering wheel right down against, on both sides right down against the
steering column, you know, where the steering wheel comes out. I bent it
completely down.

I put a big knot on my forehead, and even with a harness on, I had a safety
harness, shoulder harness on, I still went forward far enough to hit the
steering wheel. And it really didn't hurt me.

When I got out of the car, I looked out the window, and I saw water below me,
and I said - I'm thinking: This thing goes in the water, I'm dead. Man, I -
they timed it on film, you know, 20 frames a second, so they could time it. I
was out of that car in about two-and-a-half seconds, standing on the barge.
When I got on the barge, I just passed out, you know.

But I had enough consciousness to know I had to get out of there. When I got on
the barge where I was safe, I said: Oh, hell. I just fell down, laid down. But
it didn't hurt me. It didn't hurt me.

GROSS: So how do you end up doing something like that again? I mean, you used
that take, I don't mean literally...

Mr. NEEDHAM: Oh, yeah.

GROSS: ...do the stunt again but going out and doing more stunts after flying
through the air and nearly killing yourself. Why do you go and do it again?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, one because it's better than robbing 7/Elevens. You know, I
mean, what else am I going to do?

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: And besides, I said OK, and when I found out what happened with
the captain, I said OK. So next time, I got to watch for that. I've got to, you
know, rethink this situation and make sure I don't make that mistake again.

But my confidence didn't wane from that because I know had he not been way out
there, that car would have landed 20, 30 feet onto the barge, and I'd have been
perfect, you know. So you've just got to look it all over and clear up your
mistakes and say let's go.

GROSS: My guest, Hal Needham, will be back in the second half of the show. His
new memoir is called "Stuntman!" I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross.

Let's get back to our interview with Hal Needham, who's probably Hollywood's
best-known living stuntman. He started in the 1950s doing movie and TV
westerns. On the show "Have Gun, Will Travel," Needham was Richard Boone's
stunt double and the show's stunt coordinator. After lots of horse stunts,
Needham became famous for his car stunts, especially his work in Burt Reynolds'
films. Needham was the stunt coordinator in "Gator" and "White Lightning" and
directed "Cannonball Run," "Smokey and the Bandit" and "Hooper." His new memoir
is called "Stuntman!: My Car-Crashing, Plane-Jumping, Bone-Breaking, Death-
Defying Hollywood Life."

Let's talk about the stunt that really came close to killing you. You broke six
ribs...

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: Which one?

GROSS: You broke your back.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yeah.

GROSS: You punctured a lung and you lost I think it was three teeth.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yeah.

GROSS: This for the John Wayne film "McQ."

Mr. NEEDHAM: Right.

GROSS: Why don't you describe the stunt? Like what was supposed to happen?

Mr. NEEDHAM: We were up in Washington and the script called for John Wayne to
be going down the beach and the bad guys come up and shoot his car up and
things or whatever. So, instead, when they pull up alongside - and the bad guys
pull up alongside of me, Wayne sticks an automatic out the window and blows
them apart and the car is supposed to turn over on the beach. Well, you can't
turn a car over just on flat surface. It would be really hard to do and maybe
you get it and maybe you won't. So the stunt coordinator was a kid named Ronnie
Rondell and he said Hal, you got any ideas? And I said yeah. So I told him my
idea and he said well, we can't do that first time in front of the camera. In
case it don't work we will look like a bunch of fools. I said I'll go home and
practice.

So I called one of my buddies at home. I said get an old junker car. I want you
to get a cannon with walls an inch and a half thick and about three and a half
feet long, weld it in the back of the car, behind the front seat in the back of
the car, backseat, with a muzzle pointed towards the ground. And I said give me
a phone pole three and a half feet long so we can shove that phone pole up in
there, put a wire under the bottom of it to hold it, but main - the thing I
really said get was five four ounce black powder bombs.

And I put those bombs up in the cannon with a button so I could fire them, put
the pole in and they pushed me. The car wouldn't even run. They pushed me with
a pickup truck and I told them they got to 55 miles an hour, blow the horn back
off. I threw the car sideways and hit the button. The next thing I knew I was
upside down, backwards, going backwards across a desert floor about 30 feet in
the air and I said boy, there's going to be some kind of wreck here any moment.
And there was. When I hit I mean the car hit on the top, it caved in and they
couldn't hardly get me out and when I got out I wasn't breathing. But anyway,
that's how it happened. It was the damnedest wreck you'd ever seen in your
life.

GROSS: OK. So just to recap, you broke your back, six ribs, punctured a lung
and lost three teeth. And you had already broken your back once before.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yes.

GROSS: You've broken many more bones than the bones just mentioned. How many?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Oh, I broke 56 total...

GROSS: OK.

Mr. NEEDHAM: ...in doing stunts. I broke seven last summer helping my...

GROSS: Seven last summer?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yeah. Well, I was helping my neighbor unload some brush and I fell
off the truck.

GROSS: Oh my God.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yeah. That's what my wife said.

GROSS: That wasn't even a stunt; that was real life.

Mr. NEEDHAM: No. Yeah.

GROSS: So are you in pain now?

Mr. NEEDHAM: No. No. I tell you what, and I don't limp and I'm not all hunched
over or anything else. I'm in pretty damn good shape, considering everything
I've done to my body. I mean I have no pain. I go to bed. I go to sleep and I
workout in the gym everyday and, you know, I'm OK.

GROSS: What kind of painkillers were used in the '50s and '60s when you were at
the peak of your stuntman career?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Percodan. Carried a bottle with me all the time. When a stuntman
got hurt they'd call Hal and tell him to bring his Percodan.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: When I'd go on location like maybe go down to Mexico or somewhere
like that, we're doing three or four months down there, hell, I'd take a
hundred with me. And because I know I'd be the only one that had them so I
could pass them out when the guys got hurt and you work a lot when you're hurt
if you're a good stuntman because you're going to be hurt quite a bit. And you
can't let a sore leg or a bruise or something like that stop you so you just
take a Percodan and go to work.

GROSS: But that dulls your senses, doesn't it?

Mr. NEEDHAM: No. You know what? Now, I say no. I'm not a doctor but I tell you
what, it didn't bother my timing and everything, not one iota. I could do the
same things after taking Percodan than I could before I took them. It didn't
bother me.

GROSS: I must interrupt here and say: do not try this at home.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: No. No.

GROSS: No. Did you have an addiction problem to painkillers?

Mr. NEEDHAM: No. You see, I knew, my doctor told me, he said Hal, these things
are addictive. He said don't get hooked on these. And I said OK. And my hand to
God and I never took a Percodan unless I was really hurting and the minute I
got over the hurt I quit taking Percodan. I mean I had enough sense, I think,
to realize that I didn't want to be an addict, so I just made damn sure I never
took them. Even though I had them all the time, I never took them unless I
absolutely had to. And I mean had to.

I've done stunts when I was hurting so bad I couldn't hardly breathe and yet,
go ahead and do it. And if it were something that I couldn't perform unless I
had the use of this leg or an arm or something like that that was really sore
and hurting, then I'd take one.

GROSS: Now, I know you wear hearing aids. You have one in each ear.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yes.

GROSS: Did you lose some hearing from explosions?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yes. I was in Czechoslovakia doing a film called "Bridge at
Remagen" and believe me, when you work in a country where the languages are
different you've got to be really, really careful. The shot was, they had a
Czechoslovakian soldier in the tank and just a small window that he was looking
out of. The director had a camera up behind the tank, up in the air looking
down over the top of the tank in the barrel of the gun. I was a soldier running
across in front of the barrel and he wanted to fire it. I said OK but you got
to wait till I get to a certain point. And he said that's OK.

So I put the soldier inside and I said, along with my interpreter, and I said
tell him to watch me. We're going to do this four or five times. When he sees
me throw my hand in the air, when we do the shot, that's when I wanted to fire
the cannon. That means I'm going to be about 10 feet past it. I said, OK.

Well, hell, you know the answer. I run by there. When he saw me he fired that
thing and it was right over the top of my head, blew my helmet off, knocked me
down, people came running over and I could see their lips moving but I couldn't
hear a damn thing. Well, the medicine over there, their doctor's care and
things, that's not too good. Anyway, I went to the doctor there and he said
yeah, you got a problem but we think it's going to be all right. Fair enough
and then back to the set I go.

After a couple of days I started hearing. I could hear people if they were
close and spoke real loud. When I got home I went to a hearing specialist and
he said yeah, you did some damage to your eardrums. You've got to wear hearing
aids, and that was '69, '70, something like that.

GROSS: My guest is Hal Needham. His new memoir is called "Stuntman!: My Car-
Crashing, Plane-Jumping, Bone-Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life." We'll
talk more after a break. This is FRESH AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Hal Needham, and he was
Hollywood's highest paid stuntman. He started working in westerns in the 1950s.
He's done a lot of westerns and action films, horse stunts, car stunts. Among
the people he doubled for were Richard Boone and Burt Reynolds, Burt Reynolds a
very good friend – of his, not mine.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: And Hal Needham has written a new memoir called "Stuntman!: My Car-
Crashing, Plane-Jumping, Bone-Breaking, Death-Defying Hollywood Life."

Now among the things to your credit are some inventions that have helped you
and other stuntmen do your job, you know, effectively. For example, you came up
with a way of people being blown into the air on the battlefield.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Mm-hmm.

GROSS: Yeah. Tell us about the old way versus your way.

Mr. NEEDHAM: OK. The old way, special effects would dig a little hole in the
ground, put a charge in it. Stuntman runs by, you set the charge off the
stuntman and fling his body as far as it could, get all out of shape and
everything. You can only fling your body so far. So I came up with an
apparatus. It's only about three and a half inches high and about 14 inches
square. It's got a plate on top that's air activated. So when you step on that
plate it triggers this activation of the air of the rim and that top piece will
throw you through the air. And the more pressure you put on it the higher it'll
throw you. That thing will put you 30 feet in the air if you want to go that
high and if you can go that high.

So what you do is you hook the explosion on to that air rim so that when it
activates the plate that throws you, it also sets off the charge. And believe
me, it looks effective and you look like you really got blown up.

GROSS: And what about landing on the way down?

Mr. NEEDHAM: That's your problem.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, it's like working off of a trampoline or something. You
learn to control your body. And the best way to do it is when you see a ground
come up it's do what you call a tuck and roll. I always land with my right
hand. I use it as a gauge. When it touch a ground I just tucked it under real
tight, go right to my shoulder. Hell, I could just roll out and come right up
on my feet.

GROSS: Now you introduced rocket power to stunts.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yes I did.

GROSS: How?

Mr. NEEDHAM: I had a friend, Bill Frederick, who was an engineer, and he was
building a rocket car to break the sound barrier, but he told me - he knew
about all of the things we did in business and everything and he said Hal, boy,
you'd be surprised what you can do with rocket power. So anyway, he took me
out. We got an old car. He built me a small rocket, had, I don't know, I think
like maybe 5,000 pounds of thrust or something, I don't remember. But it was
only about as big as a Coke bottle, and you put it on the car and you point the
nozzle to the ground, you can just drive along, hit that button, it'll just
flip that car right over.

And now when I did "Hooper," I directed "Hooper," we made a jump, Burt jumps a
river there where a bridge is out and all this stuff. We put a rocket, a big
rocket in the back of a car and jumped probably about 450 feet through the air
and to the other side. Of course, we didn't have anybody in the car, but anyway
it - so I introduced rocket power and they use it quite a lot now.

GROSS: So as a stuntman, you've doubled a lot of people, including Burt
Reynolds...

Mr. NEEDHAM: Mm-hmm.

GROSS: ...who became a very good friend. You met him on the TV series
"Riverboat."

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: That's right.

GROSS: Went on to be his stunt double and good friend. You lived in the
carriage house of his house for many years.

Mr. NEEDHAM: I lived there 12 years in his guest house.

GROSS: So, in order to double somebody, whether it's Burt Reynolds or Richard
Boone, the star of "Paladin," who you doubled for a long time, how close do you
have to be to their size and to their figure?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, the closer you are the closer the camera can work to you. So
for instance, James Arness on "Gunsmoke" was like 6'4, probably 230 pounds. And
as a joke Andy McLaglen, the director who loved to put me on the spot and
thing, said Hal, tomorrow I want you to double Jim Arness. I said get out,
Andy. He said no. So all I had to do was do a transfer from my horse to a horse
pulling a buckboard. And he wore a - he meaning Jim Arness - wore hat that had
a seven, eight inch brim on it. When I put that thing on I looked like a flying
saucer with legs, you know what I mean?

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: But they put the camera way back so it could've been a trained
chimpanzee out there and they would've known the difference.

GROSS: So before you became a stuntman did you see many movies with a lot of
stunts in them? Like your parents were sharecroppers.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yeah.

GROSS: You grew up, you know, in a rural area, probably weren't like...

Mr. NEEDHAM: Rural? Rural? That ain't even the right word.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: I mean I was so far back in the mountains you had to pump sunshine
to us.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: Go ahead. I'm sorry.

GROSS: So there probably weren't a lot of movie theaters around.

Mr. NEEDHAM: I never saw a movie until I was 10.

GROSS: Mm-hmm.

Mr. NEEDHAM: No, you know, we had no electricity, no plumbing - indoor
plumbing, nothing. I mean you couldn't get a - a model A Ford couldn't drive
any closer than about three miles to our house because of big ruts and rocks
and things. We were poor, I mean poor.

GROSS: So how did you break into Hollywood?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Quite by accident. First of all, I was, before I went into the
military I was a tree topper. When I went into the military I was a
paratrooper. When I got out...

GROSS: A tree topper, meaning you could climb to the top of trees and prune
them or do whatever.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Yeah. Right. Tree topper, a climber, a tree climber, a tree
topper. And then I got in the - I joined the military. I volunteered for the
paratroops. I got out. I moved to Orange County. I met a guy there who was an
ex-paratrooper who was trying to break into Hollywood. And the first thing I
did was with him. He got us a job. It was on a show called "You Asked For It."
It was a request program and he wrote the request and we did the stunt.

And what it was, he was on horseback at a full gallop, obviously, and I was
sitting out on a wheel of a 150 Cessna, and as we flew over I jumped out of the
Cessna and knock him off the horse. That's where I got my first job. He got me
my second job, which was "The Spirit of St. Louis," the story of Lindbergh's
life, starred Jimmy Stewart. His and my job were to either stand on the top of
the wing, an old biplane, double-wing planes, as they were doing loops and
turns and things, or hanging - be on rope ladder, hanging – that was me –
upside hanging by my ankles on a rope ladder, and then transfer from the top of
one wing to the bottom of another one. And that was my second job and I said,
wow. Look at all of the money I made - I think I'll change jobs. So I decided
to be a stuntman. And that's where I went.

GROSS: Do you mind my asking you how old you are now?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Eighty. I'll be 80 March the 6th.

GROSS: So now that you can't do extreme stunts...

Mr. NEEDHAM: I can't do anything.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: What do you do to get the adrenaline going?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Well, maybe I'm adrenalined out, I don't know. But I, to keep in
shape, I work out. I go to the gym. I have a gym in my building where I live. I
like to play golf and so that pretty well occupies my time.

GROSS: And do you see a lot of movies now?

Mr. NEEDHAM: Quite a few. I belong – I'm an Academy member and I belong to
Screen Actors Guild and the Directors Guild and the Writers Guild, and they all
have theaters and I get invitations and I can go to anything in any of them
anytime I want to, so yeah, I get to see quite a few.

GROSS: So when you see special effects now that are using computer-generated
graphics...

Mr. NEEDHAM: I hate it.

GROSS: Yeah. OK.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: I thought you might say that.

Mr. NEEDHAM: I hate it. You know what? I've seen film - and one particular
comes to mind, a guy jumps off of a 250 foot dam and hits the water and they
cut to the water and he bobs up like he's a duck or something, you know, and
you go wait a minute. Give me a break. A guy would kill himself doing that.
There's no way you could do that. And they - and just with cars and motorcycles
and all kinds of things. And to me it takes all the reality out of the show. I
just can't stand it. Because I grew up and even as a director, we never used
that stuff. We did it for real.

And I can look at it on screen and say that's BS. That don't work. You can't do
that. And so, I lose all interest in the film and a few of them I walked out on
and you're not supposed to do that at the Academy. You're supposed to sit there
through it whether you like it or not. But after so much of that stuff I just
say to hell with it and I walk out.

GROSS: OK. Well, one more thing, it's still easy to see your work on
television, because a lot of your western TV shows are being rerun, western
movies are sometimes on TV, your movies with Burt Reynolds. So when you turn on
the TV and one of your films or TV shows is on and there you are risking your
life doing a stunt, what goes through your mind?

Mr. NEEDHAM: I got a residual coming.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: Boy, the more they show them the better I like them. As a matter
of fact, "Smokey and the Bandit," you can't or I don't know where you live and
- but in California and L.A., you can't go through the TV Guide one week
without seeing that thing on.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. NEEDHAM: I mean it runs all the time and every time I do I go oh, honey, we
got another check coming, you know? So it's kind of nice. And not only that,
being a little braggadocios, but I also own a percentage of the profits so that
don't hurt either.

GROSS: Well, Hal Needham, it has been really great to talk with you. Thank you
so much and thanks for all those great stunts you've done over the years.

Mr. NEEDHAM: Hey, listen, I appreciate it, lady, very much. And thanks for
having me on.

GROSS: Hal Needham's new memoir is called "Stuntman!" You can read a excerpt on
our website, freshair.npr.org, where you can download podcasts of our show.
This is FRESH AIR.
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'Chicago Code': This Time The Good Cops Get A Shot

TERRY GROSS, host:

With his innovative TV cop series "The Shield," starring Michael Chiklis as a
rogue cop, series creator Shawn Ryan put the FX Network on the map. Tonight he
unveils a new police drama, but this time the central characters are honest,
and this time the series isn't made for cable.

Our TV critic David Bianculli has this review.

DAVID BIANCULLI: If you watched the Super Bowl yesterday, you saw plenty of
promos for the new cop show from Fox. It's called "The Chicago Code," and it's
kind of the flip side of "The Shield." It may turn out to be just as
compelling.

In "The Shield," Vic Mackey and company were corrupt cops who would kill even
their fellow officers to protect their power base and their often ill-gotten
gains. Yet over the years, we rooted for Vic rather than for the various police
captains and lieutenants who tried to expose and fire him. He was like Tony
Soprano with a badge; it was easy to like the guy, so long as you didn't look
too closely.

"The Chicago Code," premiering tonight, flips that equation. In this show, the
big corrupt figure is Alderman Ronin Gibbons, played by a smooth-looking Delroy
Lindo from "Get Shorty." He's got the makings of a classic TV villain, and
plays each scene with an almost snake-like smugness - like a black Chicago
version of J.R. Ewing. Gibbons is a Chicago powerbroker with his hand in
everything - legal or illegal. He recently appointed the city's first female
police superintendent: Teresa Colvin played by Jennifer Beals from the
Showtime's "The L Word." He expects her to be subservient, naive and easily
controlled.

It's the same logic that got Jimmy Stewart appointed as a junior senator in
"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" and Teresa's appointment backfires just as
quickly. She, too, is incorruptible and annoyingly persistent, and she decides
to target Gibbons with a secret investigation. She enlists, as her major
confidante, her former partner when she was a cop on the beat, Jarek Wysocki,
played by another Showtime cable star, Jason Clarke from "Brotherhood." At
first he's reluctant to come aboard until she reveals her hole card.

(Soundbite of TV show, "The Chicago Code")

Mr. JASON CLARKE (Actor): (as Jarek Wysocki) You know what? I like to fight the
good fight as much as the next guy but I'm not ready to start walking in there
and start throwing haymakers at a heavyweight like Gibbons.

Ms. JENNIFER BEALS (Actress): (as Teresa Colvin) What if I told you that
Gibbons was working with the Irish mob?

Mr. CLARKE: (as Jarek Wysocki) I've heard the rumors. I've yet to see any of
the proof.

Ms. BEALS: (as Teresa Colvin) Well, how's this for ammo, I've got a cop working
undercover in the organization.

Mr. CLARKE: (as Jarek Wysocki) Undercover. How long?

Ms. BEALS: (as Teresa Colvin) Almost a year. He's working his way up the ladder
and pretty soon he's going to give us the connection to Gibbons. What would you
say to that?

Mr. CLARKE: (as Jarek Wysocki) Life just got fairer.

Ms. BEALS: (as Teresa Colvin): That's right.

BIANCULLI: There's one other key character in "The Chicago Code," at least in
its first three episodes. That's Caleb Evers, Jarek's brand-new squad-car
partner. He's young, he's smart, and he's played by Matt Lauria, who plays Luke
Cafferty on "Friday Night Lights."

All three of these good-guy cops come from excellent TV shows and turn in very
strong performances. Matt Lauria is understated but confident, and lets you see
the intelligence behind his character's silences. Jennifer Beals is strong
enough to stand firm while dismissing a veteran cop who's furious at her, yet
playful enough at other times to flash a quick smile or a quicker insult. And
Jason Clarke, as the moral center of "The Chicago Code," is instantly likable.

Well, not instantly. The entire pre-credits sequence of tonight's pilot - the
all-important first impression - is so over-the-top it plays like an expensive
parody of a TV cop show, rather than a real one.

But ignore that, let the dust settle and relax, because from that point on,
"The Chicago Code" quickly finds its way. That way borrows a little from "The
Wire," HBO's landmark series about entrenched, corrupt city institutions, and a
little from "EZ Streets," the vintage Paul Haggis cop series that gave equal
weight to its good guys and its bad guys. But hey, those are great places to
start.

And what Shawn Ryan is doing here that is quite original - and may be almost
revolutionary - is that he's swimming against the current of 21st-century
television. These days, almost all of the smart and best shows are on cable,
and the best TV talent has defected from broadcast to cable TV. Shawn Ryan, who
helped lead that revolution, is now reversing field.

There aren't many intelligent shows left on broadcast TV, but there are a few:
"The Good Wife," "30 Rock," "Modern Family." And maybe, just maybe - like a few
honest cops in a corrupt system - their presence and their efforts still can
make a difference.

GROSS: David Bianculli is founder and editor of TVWorthWatching.com and
teaches TV and film history at Rowan University in New Jersey.

I'm Terry Gross.
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Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.

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