MovieChat Forums > Have Gun - Will Travel (1957) Discussion > RIP Hal Needham HGWT's Stunt Coordinat...

RIP Hal Needham HGWT's Stunt Coordinator


One of Hollywood’s most famous stuntmen and the writer-director of Smokey And The Bandit died this morning. Hal Needham, who received an Honorary Oscar this year, was 82. The co-founder of Stunts Unlimited performed and/or coordinated stunts for hundreds of films and TV shows during his long career. He also pioneered a number of technical gadgets that furthered the art — and safety — of Hollywood stunt work, including the high-fall air bag, the air ram, the car cannon turnover and Shotmaker Elite camera car and crane, for which he won a Scientific Oscar in 1987 and an engineering Emmy three years later. The Memphis native and Korean War paratrooper was Richard Boone’s stunt double on Have Gun — Will Travel from 1957-63 and also worked on such classic series as Gunsmoke, The Big Valley, Star Trek, Mission: Impossible and Mannix. By the mid-’70s, Needham was focusing mostly on movies, working on such hits as Blazing Saddles, Chinatown, The French Connection II and A Star Is Born. He began a long association with Burt Reynolds with the 1973 western The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing. He went on to work with the popular actor on films including White Lightning, The Longest Yard and Gator before penning and helming the 1978 smash Smokey And The Bandit.

Related: 85th Academy Awards Nominees Photo

The film’s success led Needham to focus on directing, and he helmed the ensuing Reynolds starrers Hooper, Smokey And The Bandit II, Stroker Ace, The Cannonball Run and its sequel. He also wrote the screenplays for Stroker Ace, Cannonball Run II and 1983′s Megaforce. He also wrote and directed a series of Bandit TV movies in the mid-’90s. Outside of Hollywood, he and Reynolds owned the Skoal Bandit NASCAR team, which won a number of races during the 1980s.



http://www.deadline.com/2013/10/r-i-p-hal-needham/

He was brilliant and innovative. We'll miss you, Hal.








reply

So sorry to hear this. Hal popped up on my radar only recently when I started watching HGWT. I really like watching stuntwork closely and it didn't take long to spot Hal's expertise.

In Burt Reynolds' WW AND THE DIXIE DANCEKINGS, I assume that was Hal as the cop, hanging on for dear life to the hood of their car. When I saw that decades ago, it sparked a new respect for stuntmen.

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0624102/reference

||||||
||||||

reply

If you're interested in learning more about Hal and his story, his book STUNTMAN, is fascinating. I recommend it highly for a good read on how he invented most of the safety equipment used on today's stunts. Hal had an interesting life as well and he has wonderful tales he tells on himself. It's a great read.





Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

Thanks, this book is on my Christmas Wish List.

Just saw the episode, DREAM GIRL, and Hal had an exceptionally good part as the lead. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0597507/combined I thought the girl looked familiar, and turns out she was earlier famous for child/young adult roles in the movies (A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN). Surprising some of the bio/histories you run across with this series.

||||||
||||||

reply

Maybe Hal's most impressive stunt on HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL was in an episode called "The Tax Gatherer" (Season 4: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0597669/combined -- Paladin takes an assignment to gather taxes on various ranchers' cattle; it costarred Harry Carey Jr and Roy Barcroft).

Hal is perched up in a tree, taking potshots at Boone who returns fire and kills him. The height of the fall is greatly enhanced by how they placed the camera: It's at the base of the tree, but the tree itself is on the edge of a steep slope which drops down to a stream. So Needham starts his fall from high above the camera which pans to follow him down. But of course he continues to drop below camera height, down the slope. The camera pans down quite a bit before his actual impact, which is briefly obscured by some brush. He immediately comes back into view and is seen rolling down into the water (and of course since he's "dead" must remain still without showing signs of bracing himself). Now I don't know what sort of mattress they used to break his fall, but it had to be a very hard impact ... that was a lonnng fall.

||||||
||||||

reply

Hal missed the mattress and hit the riverbank. He broke his leg in the fall. The consummate professional that he was, he rolled into the water and saved the scene. Boone's alarm in the scene was real as he was directing the episode.

Richard Boone and Hal Needham were good friends all their lives. Boone gave Hal his first break as a stuntman. Many stunts went slightly or more wrong and Hal broke quite a few bones on HGWT. Read about them in his book. You won't be sorry.




Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

That makes it all the more impressive that he could still play dead while in obvious pain. Actors and stuntmen endure a lot more than the average viewer would believe. Burt Reynolds seemed to know and respect what a stuntman had to face.

An Example (from my favorite movie): Phil Silvers got messed up badly 3 times when making IT'S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD. One of those times actually shows on-screen when Jonathan Winters is pushing him against a gas pump -- he slightly drops out of character to say, "That's too much." Got some cracked ribs out of that scene. Also nearly drowned later in the movie when he drove his car into a river -- even though he couldn't swim he insisted on doing the stunt himself, because he knew the effect was needed.

||||||
||||||

reply

Didn't know that. I'll have to see that again. I've had badly broken ribs myself, that hurts a lot. Thanks for sharing with me.

Hal Needham broke a lot of bones in HGWT. I was fortunate in making contact with his son, David, online, not long before he passed away. Hal answered questions I had about HGWT and Richard Boone. He was exactly as kind and generous as he seemed in his book. Maureen O'Hara cast aspersions on the sexual orientation of Richard Boone in her autobiography and Hal busted them wide open. I'm glad to have had the chance to talk with him about that and clear that up.





Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

IT'S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD is on my DVR now. I've got to make time to watch it now. I'll look for that scene with Phil Silvers and his broken ribs. Thanks for the heads-up on it.

Off-topic: I'm always amazed as a FL native going back hundreds of years when someone can't swim. How do they get past childhood without learning this important life skill? I don't get it? I couldn't pass a puddle as a kid without jumping in it and a pond or other body of water? I WAS IN IT, clothes and all!






Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

I hope you like it. It can make a big difference if watching on a BIG wide screen, because it was filmed for Cinerama, and it really doesn't come across the same on a small screen. The pace of the editing is slower which works if you can drink in all the details (sometimes there are several people in one shot, all doing marvelous reaction-shots) ... much of that is lost on small sets, and it just seems too long.

||||||
||||||

reply

... growing up pretty near-sighted, I can sympathize with someone like Silvers. It's not fun hanging around a pool when you can't see. I did learn to swim, but just didn't feel like it once my vision changed. Plus Silvers probably had less opportunity when growing up (in a big city, early 20th Century). I heard he did learn finally as an adult (I wonder if the MAD WORLD experience gave him incentive).

||||||
||||||

reply

Oh, I know what you mean. I was legally blind without glasses which I didn't get until I was nearly 10 years old. It was still impossible to keep me out of the water. Later I had contact lenses so I could see what was going on. When I was diving with a mask it made quite the difference! I've been a certified scuba diver for years.

A few years ago I had laser surgery, I see like a hawk now. My vision was -925 in my left eye and -715 in my right eye. My love for the water overrode everything. It would have been nice to be able to see but the water is wonderful. Can't do without it!




Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

Light travels differently through water, and it's not as blurry without correction (although -9.00 would still be pretty bad). I didn't mind my vision while underwater, but didn't like hanging around the beach or pool. LASIK is pretty nice, but you still need reader-specs for up-close work -- once you reach "a certain age".
Silvers had big trouble with cataracts, evidently because they hadn't yet made the technology breakthroughs that we now enjoy. It was driving him bonkers until they finally took care of it.

||||||
||||||

reply

We're fortunate to live now. My sister died decades ago of a cancer that now has a 97% cure rate. A boy in my elementary school who died of leukemia would likely be cured today. Thirty years makes a huge difference.



Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

I was just thinking about you (and here you replied), because ...
I just found a copy of Hal's book! Wandered into a used book store on my lunch hour, and there it was. Looking forward to setting some time aside to read it.

||||||
||||||

reply

That's great! You'll certainly enjoy reading it, he had a fascinating life. I was lucky enough to get into contact with him the last year of his life through his son, David. He was a wonderfully generous man. He sent me an autographed photo.

Hal answered many questions about Richard Boone. He held nothing back. Hal was always grateful for Boone's help in getting started in Hollywood. I'm grateful I got to know him a little through him son. He was just as nice as he seems in his book.



Some things you just can't ride around...

reply

Hal Needham and Yakima Canutt, maybe the best two to ever ply their trades. Let me just say thank you gentleman for much enjoyment and may you have and enjoy the excitement you both craved and spread, where ever you are.
Vaya con dios, amigos
Rich in New Mexico.

reply