![]() His voice was dubbed by another actor for the first two advertisements, but reinstated thereafter. Shortly before Lucas’s movie started shooting in 1976, Prowse began his 14-year stint as the superhero-like Green Cross Man in a popular series of road safety commercials. He starred in comedies including Carry On Henry (also 1971) and Terry Gilliam’s Jabberwocky (1977), and appeared with his future Star Wars co-star Carrie Fisher in her mother Debbie Reynolds’s show at the London Palladium in 1974. His most notable pre-Star Wars credit was Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange, in which he was the bodyguard to the writer played by Patrick Magee. He also became a fitness consultant at Harrod’s while keeping his hand in with acting. He opened his first gymnasium in south London in 1969 his clients included Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Conservative prime minister Edward Heath. He made an uncredited appearance in the star-studded James Bond comedy Casino Royale (1967), as Frankenstein’s monster, later reprising the role in a more orthodox context in The Horror of Frankenstein (1970) and Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974). From there, he moved on to commercials, television series and eventually films. While selling equipment in a gym in the early 1960s, he was approached by an acting agent who invited him to play the part of Death in Don’t Let Summer Come at the Mermaid theatre in London. He switched to competitive weightlifting and went on to be British heavyweight champion for three consecutive years from 1962. Photograph: ANL/Rex/ShutterstockĪt 16 he dedicated himself to bodybuilding and at the age of 25, having worked as a lifeguard and a bouncer, he entered the Mr Universe contest, during which a judge told him he would never win because of his “ugly feet”. He was educated at Bristol grammar school and from the age of 12 spent three years wearing a leg-iron because of suspected tuberculosis of the knee, a diagnosis that later proved to be unfounded.ĭavid Prowse as the Green Cross Man, the superhero of road safety. ![]() Prowse was born in Bristol and was raised by his mother after his father died when he was five. “Sometimes in the cinema, I want to yell out: ‘Hey, that’s me up there, that’s me you’re all watching.’” “As Darth Vader, you always feel as if fame and fortune’s coming towards you, but, just as it’s going to hit, it passes you by,” he lamented. Such slights were in keeping with his general frustrations about the role. To add insult to anonymity, this death scene was concealed from Prowse, who claimed not to have been shown script pages during shooting. When Vader was unmasked in the latter film, moments before his death, it was the actor Sebastian Shaw, rather than Prowse, whose face was shown, and who got to speak the character’s final words. And though he performed his share of the light-sabre duels in the first picture, they were mostly handed over to the stunt department for the sequels The Empire Strikes Back (1980) and Return of the Jedi (1983). Nor did he get to supply Vader’s menacing heavy breathing (that was the sound designer Ben Burtt, using scuba-diving apparatus). What we’re finding out is you’ve got to keep his voice on a very narrow band of inflection because he ain’t human, really.David Prowse as Darth Vader in The Empire Strikes Back, 1980. When he “naturally … wanted to make Darth Vader more interesting, more subtle, more psychologically oriented,” Jones says,” Lucas reportedly replied, “No, no. ![]() As one of the 20th century’s greatest actors, it’s fair to say that Jones not only provided Vader’s voice, but he also provided the villains soul, inasmuch as the Sith Lord had one left.Īlthough he redeemed himself at the end of Return of the Jedi, Vader’s humanity was an open question throughout most of the trilogy. The quality by which we most know (and fear) him – the booming voice that commands and kills from afar - came, of course, from James Earl Jones. Vader is a composite creation of several different talents. ![]() The hulking black-caped figure, “a walking iron lung,” as George Lucas called him in 1977, Darth Vader more than rightly tops a list of the 50 best movie villains of all time as the “gold standard of villainy,” but it took more than inspired costuming to make him so. ![]()
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