How quiet scenes help make ‘The Great Escape’ so thrilling

By Ray Bennett
John Sturges’s terrific prisoner-of-war adventure ‘The Great Escape’ is an annual treat around this time of year and remained great entertainment when I watched it on BBC-TV for the enth time. Elmer Bernstein’s splendid score was the first film soundtrack recording I ever bought and it is still thrilling. For me, too,  some of the best scenes, which actually enhance the drama and chase sequences, are quiet ones between James Garner, as Hendley, the scrounger, and British actor Donald Pleasance playing forger Blythe, who loses his sight.

There appears to be genuine chemistry between the two actors and when I interviewed Garner in the Seventies, he agreed. ‘I felt so,’ he said. ‘I loved it! I just think Donald is so marvellous and it was a good relationship. We got to do some things on our own in there.’

Garner lauded director Sturges for being very accommodating. ‘He was very good about that,’ he said. ‘As long as we stuck to the point of it, we could change a little dialogue. I wrote about three scenes in the picture. They were small character things, you know, like the stealing of the equipment they needed for the forgeries.’

A poignant sequence in the film is when Hendley suspects and then sees that Blythe is going blind. ‘I really loved working with Donald,’ Garner told me. ‘As a matter of fact, John apologised profusely to me because there were two scenes that you never saw that were really absolutely wonderful. Donald was fantastic and they were beautifully shot and everything but they were left on the cutting-room floor so we could get Steve McQueen on his motorcycle.’

Garner was pragmatic about what made the film so exciting. ‘That turned out to be, I guess, the right thing to do,’ he said, ‘but it would have been better for Donald and me to keep those scenes. You have to look at the picture as a whole and it was the right thing to do: get McQueen on that bike.’

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Meeting Rob Reiner a second time showed me a different man


By Ray Bennett

Fame and popularity can so easily go to the head of entertainers and so it seemed the first time I met Rob Reiner when he was still in his 20s and starring in the smash hit TV sitcom ‘All in the Family’.  Just shy of ten years later, I was pleased to discover that he had changed completely.

Reiner was with a bunch of other celebrities at the Hiram-Walker distilling facility in Windsor, Canada, in 1976 in connection with a charity tennis tournament across the river in Detroit sponsored by the liquor firm’s Lauder’s Scotch brand. Funds raised on the tour went to the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

Charlton Heston, Lloyd Bridges, Chad Everett (‘Medical Centre’), Chris Connelly (‘Peyton Place’) and Desi Arnaz Jr. were among the group and, covering the event for The Windsor Star, I chatted to several of them over lunch in the plant’s reception centre.

Afterwards, we all toured the bottling plant where I was in for a surprise. A mugshot ran on my column in the newspaper and I had made quite a few radio and television appearances. For a time, I participated in a current affairs programme with our editorial writers on Detroit’s PBS-TV station. All of which meant that, locally, I was reasonably well-known.

Still, I didn’t expect it when a couple of girls in the bottling plant asked me for my autograph. ‘No, no, I’m just with the paper,’ I said as Reiner and Arnaz Jr. looked on. ‘We know,’ the girls said, ‘and we’d still like your autograph.’ I signed and Reiner, with a disgusted expression on his face, said to Arnaz Jr. ‘Makes you wonder what the fuck we’re doing here.’

In 1985, I was in Los Angeles where I landed an assignment to profile a young actor named John Cusack who was starring in Reiner’s second picture following the cult classic ‘This is Spinal Tap’, a likeable film titled ‘The Sure Thing’ that I reviewed for  Canadian TV Guide’s Video+Movies section. I arranged to speak to the actor and the director for stories in  the magazine and the Los Angeles Herald Examiner.

One of five children of Emmy Award-winning documentary filmmaker Richard Cusack, John Cusack was 18 at the time but with a lot of screen work in industrial films, commercials and three features behind him he was confident and engaging.

In ‘The Sure Thing’, he plays a high school graduate whose attitude to girls is changed when he meets two opposites, one studious and standoffish (played by Daphne Zuniga) and the other gorgeous and available (Nicolette Sheridan). Cusack said he could identify with the role: ‘High school girls get a little annoying after a while. There’s a lot of girls out there who are beautiful but don’t have a lot upstairs. Guys still look for those girls who just kind of put out without giving you a headache. I got the chance to go out with some beautiful stupid girls in high school and I got bored with them too.’

He said he hated high school because of the social aspects and concentrated on acting. Switching back and forth from Hollywood soundstages to suburban Chicago classrooms didn’t help: ‘I would go and do a film and meet just beautiful older women. I would start something off but then the film’s over and it’s back to Chicago. That was frustrating.’ He already had a wise head on young shoulders. ‘The Sure Thing’ might be a hit or not – it was – but he said, ‘That’s all right because it’s a good film. If I’m good in it then I was good in a good film. If you’re good in a bad film, that’s something else.’

Cusack appeared so unaffected by his success that my memory of Reiner’s youthful boorishness made me apprehensive about interviewing the director. Maybe it was the learning curve he had gone through collaborating with three other talented comedic creators – Christopher Guest,  Michael McKean and Harry Shearer – but he had become the man all his friends and coworkers have described. In fact, he reminded me very much of his father, Carl Reiner, who had been gracious and candid when I interviewed him about his film ‘All of Me’ a few months earlier during the Toronto International Film Festival. Years later, when I chatted with Rob Reiner in London at the U.K. launch of his film ‘Bucket List’, he was just as relaxed and open.

Back in 1985, the filmmaker welcomed me to his office and gave me as much time as I needed. He spoke enthusiastically about Cusack and admitted that he cast him in ‘The Sure Thing’ because ‘he reminded me of me’. Zuniga, he said, was the girl he would have been in love with at college.

The title role had to be the epitome of a Southern California fantasy girl, a blonde on the beach with a great tanned body in a string bikini and Reiner was hilarious speaking of casting Nicolette Sheridan. ‘When she walked into my office,’ he said, ‘I acted like Jerry Lewis for about ten minutes’.

Sheridan read well but Reiner said he knew she was the right girl for the part when he explained that he would have to ask to see her in a bikini. Sheridan smiled at him and said, ‘I don’t think you can handle it.’ I thought of that years later when I saw Reiner’s film ‘A Few Good Men’ and heard Jack Nicholson’s iconic unscripted line ‘You can’t handle the truth!’

At the London launch, I asked Rob Reiner about a line in ‘The Bucket List’ when Jack Nicholson says to Morgan Freeman, playing a character named Carter, ‘Mind if I call you Ray? My main man, Ray.’ Rob said, ‘Oh, Jack came up with that. It wasn’t in the script. I don’t know why but it fit Jack’s character and everyone likes a Ray, don’t they?’ Then he clapped me on the back.

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Woody Allen on ‘Annie Hall’ and why he disliked his other films


By Ray Bennett

As Woody Allen turns 90 today, I’m reminded of his remarkably candid comments at a New York junket for ‘Annie Hall’ in the Spring of 1977. He hated having to publicise his films, he said, ‘I don’t think it’s helpful, for one thing. I don’t think anyone comes to see a picture because of reviews. Movie companies think it helps but I don’t. I don’t go on network television and up until this movie I’ve never permitted film clips to be shown on television. I have a real dim view of television. I didn’t find it a good medium for me to work in. Television is soul-deadening. Not TV itself but the content today in general is moronic.’ Continue reading

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When I spoke to Wonder Woman, she had no clothes on …

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By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Lynda Carter, in her ‘Wonder Woman’ prime, stepped naked and wet from the shower as I said ‘hello’ to begin our interview about life after three seasons as TV’s top female superhero.

Disappointingly for me, we were more than 2,000 miles apart; she at her ranch just north of Malibu in California, me in Toronto, Canada.  She chuckled as she explained why it had taken her so long to come to the phone. We were live on the radio but I dined out for a long time on my yarn about the time I interviewed Wonder Woman when she was in the nude and it’s a fond memory on the 50th anniversary of the launch of her series. Continue reading

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Recalling Michael Conrad, Hill Street’s articulate sergeant

By Ray Bennett

The only word for Michael Conrad, the American actor born on this day 100 years ago, who played veteran cop Sgt. Phil Esterhaus in the long-running U.S. crime series ‘Hill Street Blues’ in the early Eighties, was formidable.

It wasn’t just that he stood a robust six-feet-four but his countenance stirred apprehension. He told me, ‘I can put a look on my face that people back away from.’ Esterhaus was the loquacious officer who led the roll call at the start of each episode of the show and told his men, ‘Let’s be careful out there.’ Continue reading

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That time on set with Mickey Rooney and Jackie Cooper


By Ray Bennett

In March 1981 I was at the CBS Studio Center on Radford Avenue in Studio City watching two legendary former child stars working together again. Mickey Rooney and Jackie Cooper had co-starred with Freddie Bartholomew in the 1936 comedy-drama ‘The Devil is a Sissy’.

Now, Rooney, who was born on this day in 1920, was starring in a tearjerker TV-movie titled ‘Leave ‘em Laughing’. He played a real-life clown named Jack Thum who with his wife Shirlee (played by Anne Jackson) cared for many abandoned children in a Chicago tenement even as he is diagnosed with terminal cancer. Jackie Cooper was the director. Continue reading

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How I helped keep Bill Murray subversive

Ghostbusters

By Ray Bennett

I had a bone to pick with Bill Murray, who turns 75 today. It was 1990 and all the rebellious early comedians on “Saturday Night Live” appeared to have lost their way. From radical satire they’d moved to mainstream comedy and sappy dramas. They were no longer subversive and they had let a generation down.

Murray said, “I feel the same thing about other people. There are people that have a responsibility to me that aren’t living up to it. If I ever see them in traffic, I’m gonna bump into them.”

He did not, however, disagree. Continue reading

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When Topol stood me up to go off to war

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By Ray Bennett

LONDON – ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ star Chaim Topol cancelled my interview with him in June 1967 but he had a very good reason. He left his starring role of Tevye in the hit West End production to return to Israel to be there for what turned out to be the Six-Day War.

The Israeli actor, who was born on this day in 1935, had made tickets for the show at Her Majesty’s Theatre in London’s Haymarket almost impossible to find, but when his country faced peril, he didn’t hesitate.

Right in the middle of his record-breaking run in the biggest hit the West End had seen in years, he took off to join his countrymen. Only when an uneasy peace was obtained did he return to the role of Sholem Aleichem’s rascally Jewish milkman whose family is forced to emigrate from Tsarist Russia in 1905. Continue reading

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Why Emma Samms took nude scenes on TV in stride

By Ray Bennett

Emma Samms, who turns 65 today, was one of the hottest young actresses on American television in 1985 when she segued from playing Holly Sutton on the daytime soap opera ‘General Hospital’ to replacing Pamela Sue Martin as Fallon Carrington on the prime-time soap ‘Dynasty’.

I spent several days with her for a story in People Magazine. Self-confident with a bright personality, coming from a filmmaking family in England, she was unfazed by the attention and the fact that, with her good looks, directors couldn’t wait to get her undressed for onscreen love scenes. Continue reading

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Jill St. John wanted to share recipes but not Robert Wagner

By Ray Bennett

Jill St. John, who turns 85 today, has brightened big and small screens in countless TV shows and movies including her big splash as the first American James Bond girl, Tiffany Case, in ‘Diamonds Are Forever’ opposite Sean Connery in 1971.

When I spoke to her on the phone in 1985 for a story for Canadian TV Guide, the Los Angeles-born actress was busier with a cooking segment on ABC-TV’s ‘Good Morning America’. That came about after she was a guest of chef Julia Child’s ‘Celebrity Cooks’ pieces on the show and the network was bombarded with requests to see her again. Continue reading

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