On a wide, busy pedestrian shopping street
in the south-east of Budapest
there is a statue. Eight feet high in bronze, it depicts a burly, smiling
figure in an open-necked shirt carrying a saddle on his shoulder with a six-gun
sitting in a holster at his left hip. On the other side of the city a green
space bears the man’s name: Bud Spencer Park.
During the Iraq War American soldiers and journalists
arriving in Saddam Hussein’s home city of Tikrit
reported enthusiastic locals rushing out of their houses to greet them
shouting, “Bud Spencer! Bud Spencer!”
The GIs were baffled because the name Bud Spencer meant
nothing to them. It sounded like a name they should know, there probably aren’t
many more American-sounding names than Bud Spencer, but none of them had any
idea what the Iraqis were talking about. One reporter was even told by a Tikrit
resident the only Americans he’d ever heard of were George W. Bush – and Bud
Spencer.
For a man who came to personify the American West for
Iraqis, Hungarians and in many other nations around the world Bud Spencer was
in fact about as American as the Bay of Naples. That’s where Carlo Pedersoli
was born and raised. He would adopt the name Bud Spencer to add authenticity to
his roles in the spaghetti westerns in which he starred during the 1960s and
1970s, Bud coming from his favourite American beer and Spencer a tribute to his
movie hero Spencer Tracy.
A huge man, six feet four and as wide as a house, Spencer’s
most successful films were the string of action comedies he made in partnership
with the small and slight Terence Hill, aka Mario Girotti from Venice, the pair
becoming household names in countries where English wasn’t the first language.
In Germany,
for example, they were massive.
“When I went to the Berlin Film Festival one year 8,000
people turned out to see me,” he said. “Jack Nicholson and Nicole Kidman? 200.”
At the Cannes Film Festival in 2016, the year of Spencer’s
death, when an interviewer compared Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling in The
Nice Guys to Spencer and Hill, the Australian visibly brightened. “Dude,
now you’re talking!” he exclaimed. “That’s a really flattering compliment.”
There was far more to Carlo Pedersoli than the grunting,
villain-bashing, gunslinging galoot of his screen persona. He had a law degree,
became a qualified commercial pilot, founded a freight-carrying airline, made
documentaries, wrote lyrics for popular Italian singers, registered patents for
a number of inventions and was one of the greatest competitive swimmers Italy
ever produced.
Born into a wealthy Naples
family, Pedersoli excelled at school academically and on the sports field and
was barely 17 when he embarked on a degree in chemistry at university in Rome. However, with the
post-war Italian economy in the doldrums Pedersoli senior accepted a job in Brazil
and took his family with him.
Carlo worked first on an assembly line and then at the
Italian consulate, where he developed a taste for legal matters and returned to
Rome to study
law. Extracurricular activities competed for his attention, not least in the
swimming pool. He played water polo for the prestigious Società Sportiva Lazio
Nuoto and became the champion of Italy in individual freestyle and
relay teams. In 1950 he became the first Italian to swim the 100 metres
freestyle in under a minute.
What made his success even more remarkable was that he
wasn’t really trying. He rarely trained, was a heavy smoker and reflected later
in life that if he’d actually practised and taken better care of himself he
could have been one of the top swimmers in the world. Despite an ambivalent
attitude to training he managed to put down his cigarettes long enough to reach
the semi-finals of the 100 metres freestyle at both the 1952 and 1956 Olympic
Games.
An emigration to Venezuela put an end to his
swimming career. He worked on the Pan-Pacific
Highway then took a job in Caracas with Alfa Romeo. It was as if he
couldn’t settle on what he wanted to do and he would remain restless his entire
life, trying different things, looking to find something to fulfil his
intellectual curiosity even if he thought it lay on the other side of the
world.
In the end it was romance that took him back home. He’d
known Maria Amato since they were children and they were always close. She was
the daughter of Giuseppe Amato, producer of The Bicycle Thieves, and
Pedersoli’s earliest screen roles had been the result of Maria’s cinematic
connections. When there was a small part for a big man Pedersoli was happy to
oblige: among his earliest, fleeting roles was as a hulking member of the
Praetorian Guard in the 1951 epic Quo Vadis. The longer Pedersoli
spent in South America the more he found himself thinking about Maria and by
1960 he was back in Rome
and married.
Despite his regular screen appearances, not to mention the
range of other careers in which he’d dabbled, Pedersoli never really considered
acting a viable option until his late thirties. He became tangentially involved
with the industry, producing documentaries for the Italian national broadcaster
RAI and composing songs for soundtracks, but it took until 1967 and the
spaghetti western Dio perdona... io no! (God forgives… I don’t!)
for Pedersoli to finally focus his ambitions on the cinema. Dio perdona…
was where he first met Girotti, the pair’s screen chemistry so instant and
obvious they were signed up for a string of further projects. Bud Spencer was
born.
Spencer and Hill’s most popular films were the Trinity
series beginning in 1970 with Lo chiamavano Trinità (They Call Me
Trinity), a spaghetti western in which Spencer and Hill help a group of
Mormons to fight off a bunch of nefarious bandits. It was riproaring,
fast-paced and became Italy’s
biggest-grossing film of the year. Not bad considering Spencer couldn’t ride a
horse. In addition, his Neapolitan accent was so thick his voice had to be
dubbed even for Italian audiences.
The pair would appear in a dozen films together, each
following the same basic formula of saving innocents from bad guys with little
in the way of meaningful dialogue but plenty in the way of violence. Rife
though it was, the violence was more slapstick than bloodthirsty, owing more to
Laurel and Hardy than Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, and could be transplanted
easily to more than just westerns. Among Spencer’s film credits are titles such
as Banana Joe, Watch Out, We’re Mad!, and I’m for the
Hippopotamus: whatever the subject, no matter how obtuse the title, the
formula propelled Spencer to huge fame and wealth enough to indulge the
restless spirit that still dwelled within him.
When filming ...più forte ragazzi! (...All the
Way, Boys!) in Colombia
in 1972, for example, Spencer spent so long in the air for his role as a pilot
he convinced himself he could actually fly a plane. During a break from
filming, with the crew and cast preoccupied with lunch, he climbed into the
pilot’s seat, pointed the small aircraft up the runway and somehow managed not
only to take off but also to land safely. He went on to obtain a pilot’s licence
and in 1984 founded Mistral Air, a successful charter airline he later sold to
the Italian Post Office.
In 2005 he took it upon himself to enter politics, standing
in Rome for
Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia in a regional council election.
“There are only three things I haven’t been: a ballet
dancer, a jockey and a politician,’’ he said. “The first two are out of the
question now so I’ll throw myself into politics instead.”
He lost the election but he wouldn’t have minded too much.
Serving a fixed political term wouldn’t have suited him; he was always looking
for the next thing.
Spencer’s was a mind permanently on the move with little
time for introspection. It was perfectly suited to the breakneck-pace films he
made whose success permitted him to indulge himself in the next thing to take
his fancy. Buying a tugboat, say, or taking out a patent for a toothbrush that
came ready-primed with toothpaste.
“When the Eternal Father calls me, I’m keen to see what
happens next,” he said shortly before his death. “If there turns out to be
nothing I’m going to be very angry with him. Why would you make me get up every
morning for 86 years for nothing?”
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