Fresno Bee
By Vernon Scott
December 14, 1967
HOLLYWOOD – (UPI)
- “Head ‘em off at the pass, Giuseppe.” The Italians are rustling the
traditional Hollywood staple, the Western.
Hore operas
are bigger in Italy than gran opera.
Edd Byrnes,
television’s Kookie in the defunct “77 Sunset Strip” series, recently returned
from the land of Lasagna where he starred in three cowboy shoot-em-ups, and he
knows.
“I LOVE IT
over there,” he said, “They give me parts that would go to Paul Newman in this
country. And the money is terrific – as long as you have it deposited in a
bank.”
Edd made a
fourth, non-Western picture while he was there and plans to return to Europe
for another contemporary picture after the first of the year.
“It’s a good
way to keep your weight down,” he concluded. “I lost 15 pounds while I was over
there, probably some if it from fright.”
“The Italians
have a flare for Westerns,” says he. “But they’re wilder the old wild West.”
“Sometimes I
was lucky to escape with my life.”
In one scene,
Edd was to touch off a fuse with a cigar. He followed instructions and the fuse
blew up in his face, setting his hair afire ang singing his eyebrows.
LUCKILY the
scene was on the bank of a lake, into which Byrnes hastily jumped.
“They don’t
have special effects experts there like they do in Hollywood,” Edd explained.
“When the
script calls for them to blow up a cabin they really blow it up with dynamite.
They load their six-shooters- all copies of American guns-with fully loaded
blanks. In Hollywood we only use quarter loads.
“WHEN YOU fire
a gun people can get hurt easily at close range. So you’ve got to keep ducking
or get powder-burned.”
In another
instance, our hero was almost killed by a pack of runaway horses.
II THOUGHT it
was just a rehearsal,” Byrnes recalled. “But I found myself in the middle of a
field with nothing to hide behind when a dozen horses came thundering at me. I
had to run for my life.”
Byrnes has
nothing bu praise for his Italian directors who were only members of the crew
who spoke English.
“It’s a rough
life for the horses, though,” he sighed. “They don’t train them. When horses
are supposed to fall, they just attach a wire to their legs and down they go.
You can lose a lot of horses that way.”
Byrnes like
Clint (Rawhide) Eastwood, found that his television series pave the way for
Italian adoration. He was given the full star treatment.
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