When it comes to films and TV productions in which I have appeared, is
much more difficult to select my most enjoyable.
According to information gleaned from the WWW and IMB I have been
credited in more than one hundred and fifty TV shows and film productions so,
as you can imagine it would be almost impossible to select one to put at the
top of my favourites list.
Do I select from my most bizarre locations like the jungles of Malaysia
when I filmed Who am I? with Jackie Chan?
Or do I go back to my
first TV job when I appeared in Dixon of Dock Green way back in the early
seventies?
The central character was a mature and
sympathetic police constable, George Dixon, played by Jack Warner in all the
432 episodes, from 1955 to 1976.
This famous police drama, voted
second most popular programme on British TV in 1961, was filmed at the BBC
White City studios and as an actor almost straight out of drama school it was
certainly eventful and terrifying. Just to be working alongside Jack Warner who
played the title role was a huge honour. The
character Dixon was the embodiment of a typical "bobby" who would be
familiar with the area and its residents in which he patrolled and often lived
there himself.
In Warner’s auto-biography he tells of a
visit by the Queen to the studios, where she commented "that she thought Dixon
of Dock Green had become part of the British way of life".
Warner's success as Dixon was also popular
amongst various police forces. He was made an honorary member of both the
Margate and Ramsgate Police Forces in the 1950s. Warner said of Dixon of Dock
Green: "It has been a very good meal ticket for twenty-one years—although
the taxman has never been far behind."
Or, do I select the mountains of land-locked Lesotho,
where I played a fanatical Arab, Sheik Maksood, one
of the first of many Muslim militants who was planning to use a suitcase-nuke to
erase New York from the face of the earth. This was in the filming of American
Ninja 5 with David Bradley and Michael Dudikoff?
I do have some very pleasant memories of
shooting Shaka Zulu and later in the eighties the story of John Ross. Both
these were shot with the base camp in Eshowe, declared the capital of Zululand
in 1887, and was visited by the British Royal family in 1947. It is in central
Zululnd near the Dlinza Forest, in central Qua-Zulu-Natal.
Shakaland, now a major international
tourist hotel was originally built for the filming of Shaka Zulu. It is now a living monument to Zulu culture.
It is from here that people from all over the world come to experience the
lifestyles, social systems and rich culture of the Zulu nation. It is
said that a visit to South Africa is not complete without a visit to Shakaland.
It is a traditional Zulu “Umuzi” or
homestead, dividing the homes of the local Zulu people and the hotel rooms.
Most of our filming for both these
shoots was about 70 kilometres away in a pace called Disappointment Bay just
south of the Tugela river mouth and I had a glorious time there eating freshly
caught mussels and crayfish.
And, I must admit that Munich holds a
desire to be revisited just for the German beer and multitude of sausages I
consumed while filming a movie that I can’t remember the name of, probably
because I never got paid for it, but I do remember sipping ice cold beers in
the English Gardens.
I also remember being trapped in a Range
Rover when an unexpected tropical storm hit the location, we were filming near
the Olympic stadium when the heavens opened and half of Munich was suddenly
under three feet of water, The whole crew and cast that was on call that day
were stranded until the flash flood had subsided. Luckily, I had a book of
Suduko puzzles with me and Toddie was full.
Another project on which I and another
ten actors were stranded was a French movie called, as the working-title Crime
in the Gabon, it was shown as “Le Crime de monsieur Stil”, directed by Ms
Claire Devers. We were left marooned in the one-horse town of Poffadder which is
near the Namibian border after the final day of the shoot.
The crew and the transport manager had
all scarpered forgetting to collect us, we made ourselves at home in the
Poffadder Hotel, until the owner decided we were going to drink his
establishment dry, He loaded us into his Kombi van and drove us like a
demented-Schumacher to Upington airport where we flew back to Johannesburg,
This was an eventful shoot as all us
local English-speaking actors had to speak French. I was an arduous affair and
even with the help of a dialogue coach in French we once took over 70 takes to
shoot a night scene. It would have been hard enough in English as the French
director wanted the whole scene in one hand help tracking shot, the poor
cameraman darted between nine actors trying to pick up each conversation in the
bar. It was a memorable occasion and the film won an award in France!
I have already written about my shoot
with Jackie Chan in a couple of previous posts. I spent over six weeks in
Rotterdam while Jackie kept postponing the scenes I had with him as they were
full of dialogue, he preferred the action scenes where he cold display his
magnificent ability by sliding down glass-built skyscrapers and defeating his
opponents with Dutch wooden clogs on.
I spent most of my time befriending the
local Dutch production drivers who were send weekly to numerous other towns
with a briefcase full of cash to pay the local companies who were hired on the
production. I accompanied them to Amsterdam, Utrecht, Eindhoven, and even
crossed the border once to the Hague in Belgium. Otherwise I toured Rotterdam
on their excellent tramway system with my “Plonkie”, a ticket one could buy
weekly which allowed you to hop trams to various destinations in the far
reaches of the city.
The trams were a cheap delight for my wanderings,
far more enjoyable than riding a motor bike with a side car attached. I had to
learn to do this when I filmed in the late seventies on a TV drama called my
friend Angelo,
I was taught by the great stuntman the
late Janie Wienand who had me careering down open tarmacked roads and across
the open veld steering past rocks, boulders and up and down dongas in no time.
I became so versatile that the director David Lister, with whom I shoot my
movies, let me do my own stunts apart from the dangerous ones.
At times I had a young actor who played
my second in command as the passenger in the sidecar. He too had to have
lessons as the swinging from right to left in a sidecar is crucial when taking
corners.
So, as you can see from the over 150
productions I have been in it is very difficult for me to choose the most
enjoyable, but I can say that as regarding erring an income I still receive a
repeat fee from airings of a job I did way back in 1972. The piece, Pendas Fen
still gets shown across the world today and because of the stringent British
equity laws a few pounds finds its way into my bank account.
So, I’ll pick that one. I think its
available on U-tube so have a look and help keeping those payments into my
account. Thank you.
Please comment.
1 comment:
For me Ron - it must be Algiers Murders. Call me biased - but we writers
continue a never ending journey in search of immortality in print or on film.
Andrew M Smith
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