Veteran performers
talk about playing classic roles in old-time westerns.
“THE SIDEKICK”
“I don’t want to talk about it. ‘Sidekick.’
Thirty years later. It still turns
my stomach!”
“Thirty years, wearing that scraggly beard, that moth-eaten
wardrobe, and every second word out of my mouth was, “Yer dern tootin’!”
“That was my ‘catch-phrase.’
‘Yer dern tootin’’ – I couldn’t get away from it! Once, I was perusing the wine list at an
upscale restaurant. I say to the waiter,
‘Do you have a vintage Bordeaux’? He
says, ‘Yer dern tootin’!’ I could have
killed the man. I was there with a date!”
“I’m a New York-trained actor, for heavens sakes! I played the classics – Shakespeare, Shaw,
Pirandello – who is hardly in their class, but still. I come out to
Hollywood, they say, ‘Can you play a western sidekick?’ I’m an actor; I can play anything. Unfortunately, I played ‘The Sidekick’ so
convincingly no one would cast me as anything else. Can you blame them? Who’d make me the ‘Romantic Lead’ after watching
me land face-first in a cow pie?”
“How would I define a ‘sidekick’? Strip away every shred of human dignity and
what’s left is the sidekick. It’s total
humiliation. You burn your britches
sitting on a hot stove. You hit your
head with a frying pan and walk straight into a wall. You fall asleep in a rocking chair and
‘accidentally’ flip over backwards. I
had terrible fights with the producers.
I said, ‘You’re taking the low road.
The hero’s buffoonish underling can have charming humanity and earthy
wisdom. Remember Sancho Panza.’ They said, ‘Who?’
“Philistines!”
“‘The lowest point of them all?’ Once I’m coming out of a soundstage, costumed
as ‘Soapy’ or ‘Succotash’, or some similar nonsense. And wouldn’t you know it? I bump right into Jack Barrymore. And he’s dressed to play Hamlet! I tell you, I have never
been so humiliated in my life. The man
saw me in The Cherry Orchard on
Broadway!”
“Any ‘happier moments?’
A damn few. We were out promoting
our latest epic on a cross-country publicity tour once, just me and ‘The Good
Guy’ – Tom or Tim, or somebody. Funny
thing is, wherever we stopped, the people seemed to gravitate towards me.
I got more attention, louder applause, signed more autographs.
Did that upset ‘The Good Guy’?”
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