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- TF01
- 3,William Campbell at Archon
- 4,by Tim Smith
-
- William Campbell at Archon '94
- --------------------------------
- Edwardian International Hotel, London
- ---------------------------------------
- Saturday, August 27th 1994
- ----------------------------
-
-
- William Campbell, familiar to Trekkers everywhere as Trelane from the
- Classic Trek episode "The Squire Of Gothos" and the Klingon Koloth
- from Classic Trek's "The Trouble With Tribbles" and Deep Space Nine's
- "Blood Oath", made a guest appearance at Archon in 1994. Tim Smith
- was there to report on the talk...
-
-
- "Ladies and gentlemen, I can't tell you how happy I am to be here
- with you today. I can only thank Pam Clarke and her group for
- inviting me. I was here in England 30 years ago doing a picture
- called 'Sheriff Of Fractured Jaw' with Kenneth Moore and had some
- marvellous moments with him. He has passed on, and of course Jayne
- Mansfield has gone, and many many of my colleagues, and I'll talk to
- you alot about that today."
-
- "It's true that I was born in Newark, New Jersey. My father worked
- for the water department. My mother was houseproud. I have a
- brilliant brother who is now one of the great mystery writers of the
- world, but he also wrote "Man Of A Thousand Faces". You remember
- that. It was the story of Lon Chaney with Jimmy Cagney. He was an
- Academy Award nominee writer, and he did many other things."
-
- "But we're here to talk about myself and my relationship to Star
- Trek. I didn't come into this acting business easily. I didn't know
- what I was going to do. I was certain because of my academic
- negatives that I was going to end up working in the water department
- in some sort of plumber inspectors job, but fate led me to other
- fields. And the way that happened was I went through the marvellous
- teenage years with a loving family, and all of a sudden the war hit.
- I was 16 and I was finished with high school. I took a brief job with
- the RCA radio company as an office boy for about six months, then I
- enlisted. My mother signed for me. Just before the age of seventeen I
- went in the Navy and ended up on a minesweeper in the Pacific. I went
- to Hiroshima, Nagasaki and started to see a little bit of the world."
-
- "As luck would have it on board my ship was an officer who planned to
- become an actor. And indeed he did become an actor. His name id
- Leonard Stone and he's a character actor but he never went too far
- with it. We used to sit up on the bridge en route to Japan, that was
- before the bomb dropped, and we would talk about his desire to become
- an actor. I told him that I thought it was interesting, but didn't
- know how a boy from Newark, New Jersey could do that."
-
- "The war ends, I get my points, and back home I come, and we had in
- America what we used to call the 52-20 Club. They gave you $20 a week
- for 52 weeks. I gave my father and mother $10 dollars of that. That
- was my room and board. With the other $10 I clothed myself, etc. and
- I just hung around the quarter with the boys for a year. Then my dad
- said to me one day 'Do you plan to go to school or got to work?';
- 'Well, I'm planning to go to school.'. He said, 'Well you better
- choose something Bill because you're not going to stay in this house
- unless you're working.' So I went down to my high school and I went
- to a drama teacher whom I knew. She said, 'Have you ever thought of
- going into showbusiness?' I said, 'After the experience I had?'"
-
- "The experience I had was when I was in the drama club we did a play
- called 'The Patsy' and I was kind on the leading teenager. I had a
- scene with a girl on a sofa, and I'm trying to get her to profess her
- love to me, and she won't do it. I had the expression, 'Well, I guess
- nobody loves me.' One of my school mates yells out from the balcony
- 'Your mother does!' Well that nearly sunk my acting career right
- there. I lost the lines and it took me about 5 minutes to get back
- on."
-
- "But I went home and I thought about it and called her back and she
- said she knew a drama school in New York, and I ended up there on a
- two year college acredited course. But I wasn't doing it because I
- thought I was going to be an actor. I was doing it because I was lazy
- and I didn't want to go to work right away, and the government was
- paying for this so why not? What happened was suddenly I saw I was
- getting some, shall we call it special treatment. Then I saw that it
- wasn't difficult, and I'd hear all the marvellous things about how
- you get paid for doing things you like, and the bug got me."
-
- "I finish the two year course and I end up auditioning for a school
- called the Theatre Wing, which would be like the Royal Academy. At
- Theatre Wing I worked with Oota Haagen who did a play on Broadway
- called Angel Street and her husband Herbert Berghof who was not only
- an actor but one of the great coaches in New York, and any other
- number of people who were teaching at the Theatre Wing, and I was
- doing summer stock."
-
- "The second time I nearly threw in the towel was when I did a play in
- summer stock at Newport Casina Theatre. I was the juvenile of the
- company and I was working with an actor by the name of Neil Hamilton
- who had been a movie star. I got nervous and as I went out the door
- on my exit scene I forgot my coat So I thought 'What do I do? Well I
- guess I'll go back in and just pick up my coat brusquely.' as it was
- just after an arguement. As I walked through the door he throws the
- coat, it hit me in the face and the flat came down with me in the
- middle of the door. I thought that I was going to go home and forget
- all of this, but of course, I didn't."
-
- "I did four years of stock, and you know something? I thought that I
- was going to be a stock actor all my life. I liked it. I kept going
- to school, and one day my father said 'When are you going to get a
- job?'. I said, 'Get a job? I never thought of that.' I was doing
- Tennessee Williams at the Wing, and a representative of the William
- Morris agency came to me afterwards and said they'd like to represent
- me and I became a member of their stable. And within a few days I got
- a call from a fellow by the name of Nate Peters, one of the agents.
- He said 'Mr. Campbell, I want you to go over to Dakota,' that's where
- John Lennon was killed, 'and I want you to see a casting agent there
- by the name of Irene Selznick.'. I said 'Irene Selznick? What play?'.
- 'Streetcar Named Desire.'. I said, 'Who put me up to that?'. He said
- 'Herbert Berghof.'"
-
- "So I call Mr Berghof. I said, 'Herbert, did you tell William Morris
- to have me go over to Irene Selznick for the part of Stanley
- Kawalski?'. I weighed about 135 pounds soaking wet with my knapsack!
- He said, 'No Bill, I want you to go over there because you'll be
- perfect for the part.'. I said 'How can I be perfect for the part.
- Marlon Brando plays that. This is supposed to be a guy whose neck is
- as wide as his head. I can't do that, he's all muscle.'. He said 'Yes
- you can.'. I said, 'How will I portray that?'. He said 'Be natural
- boy.'"
-
- "Well, I go over to see Irene Selznick, and she opens the door and
- looks at me, and before I have time to say 'Hello, Miss Selznick' she
- says 'You know you're not right for the part?'. I say, 'No, I know
- I'm not.'. She says 'Come in anyway and sit down.'. She ended up
- giving me the Western Union telegraph boy. I said 'How long would
- this last?'. She said 'Two years.'. I said 'Can I think this one
- over?'. My heart wasn't really in doing that job. When I got home,
- Nate Peters had rung. I called him back and he said 'Bill, you didn't
- take that job did you? Because they have a roadshow of 'The Man Who
- Came To Dinner' and we've got a hell of a good part for you.'. That
- part led me to Hollywood."
-
- "This is the classic story of coming to Hollywood in a play, looking
- in my box the day after the opening night and finding two cards. One
- from 20th Century Fox from the talent scout who had seen the play,
- and one from Warner Brothers. I'm living at the Cecil Hotel in
- Hollywood for a dollar a night. I used to have my luggage and I would
- wait until all the other actors went to their fancy hotels, never
- telling them where I was living. Frequently, this is the part of
- suffering you always hear about, I would have to con people to get me
- breakfast. I contacted one of the actors and I said, 'I've got two
- cards. What'll I do?'. He said 'Call your agent.'. I said 'Who's my
- agent?'. He said 'You have an agent don't you?'. I said 'Yes, William
- Morris.'. He said 'They're a big agency. They're all over the world.'
- I thought it was one guy in New York and an assistant."
-
- "I call William Morris. A girl answers the phone, 'Who are you,
- Sir?'. 'I'm Bill Campbell.'. She puts me onto a fellow by the name of
- Joe Scheinfeld. He gets on and doesn't know me from a born. And he
- says 'What's it about Mr. Campbell? Why are you calling?'. I said 'I
- had two tickets in my mail box at the theatre.'. He said 'From who?'.
- I said '20th Century Fox...'. 'Stay right there, Mr. Campbell. I'll
- be right back to you!'. And of course he was. He said 'Mr Campbell,
- tomorrow there'll be a limousine picking you up at your hotel.'. I
- said 'A limousine?'. Of course there was a limousine the next
- morning."
-
- "I arrive at 20th Century Fox, the talent scout brings me into her
- office and says 'You're going to meet Mr. Billy Gordon, head of new
- faces. He's going to love you. You were so good in the play, Mr.
- Campbell.'. I go up and there's this fellow with a big desk. He
- greets me. As we're chatting he asks me where I came from, and my
- training, and my background. People would come in from different
- exits to his office. I would be introduced, so I would get up and
- shake hands. The person would look at me quizzically, and then he
- would move out and another would come in, and this kept happening.
- Finally he speaks to me, and he says, 'Mr. Campbell drop by anytime
- you're in town.'. I said 'That's it?'. I bowed out, went down the
- stairs, went over where the limousine was. There's no limousine. I
- went over to a kiosk and said to the fellow, 'Did you see a limousine
- here? I have to get back downtown to the theatre.'. 'No limousine
- there, sir. There's a bus over there. Why don't you get it? Make sure
- you get a transfer on Western.'. So I bused my way back. As I'm on
- the bus I'm thinking 'How rude!'. That was the next time I thought of
- quitting this business."
-
- "I went back and raised hell with my agent and he said 'Bill, I'll
- meet you and take you up Warner Brothers.'. Of course, that's what
- got me into the business, because the gentleman that I met was Bill
- Law who was the son-in-law of Jack Warner. He immediately took me
- around the studio, and I met a great director by the name of Michael
- Curtiz. He was the picture of a director with a beret and a riding
- crop. He says after we've chatted for awhile, 'He's got a good face,
- but I don't have for him a screen test.'. What they would do with a
- screen test is test you with a full crew, and then they would attach
- the cost of the screen test to a picture that was currently in the
- making. They told me that I would be coming back for tests. I didn't
- believe it and went on with the show. I arrived in San Francisco and
- get the word that they're going to test me. I come back. I still have
- the telegram that Monty Woolley, who was a great, great character
- actor, sent me saying good luck on your screen test. I tested, and
- within a week or two I receive a call, and the option was exercised.
- So I went back, and so that was the beginning of a film career."
-
- "The first picture I did was with John Garfield in 'The Breaking
- Point', and he was very kind to me. I worked with some of the
- greatest stars in my business. People often ask me what it is about
- this business when I look back that is most intriguing. I say the
- greatest thing is the people you meet. I met some phenomenal people.
- It's a business where you're meeting people constantly. The bigger
- they were, the greater they were. Some of them were just so sweet.
- Great stories came out of my association with various people."
-
- "One that comes to mind all the time is my association with Elvis
- Presley. I didn't like Elvis Presley's music at the beginning. I
- recognised that he was a phenom. I get a call from my agent, 'Mr.
- Campbell, they want you for an Elvis Presley movie.'. This is 1956
- and they're going to offer me the co-star in an Elvis Presley
- picture, $15,000 dollars. I said 'I'll take it.'. I'm called up.
- We're going to have an audience with the King. I go up to the
- projection room. I arrived a little late and they were already
- showing screen tests of other actors that were going to be in it. I
- hear this twangy accent behind me, and I realise that I'm sitting
- right in front of Elvis. Elvis was a sweet kid. I hear him saying,
- when he saw the picture of Debra Paget. He said to the Colonel, 'Is
- she good looking! Am I going to kiss her in this picture?'."
-
- "Now they show all the tests and the light go up. Colonel Parker
- comes down and he says, 'Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to introduce
- you to Elvis Presley.'. We're all invited to have a sandwich and
- drink, and Richard Egan and I are chatting, and all of a sudden I get
- a tap on my shoulder. It's Elvis. He says, 'Mr. Campbell, you're in
- my favourite picture.'. I said, 'Really, what is that?'. He said 'Man
- Without A Star'. I've seen that picture 11 times. I love westerns. Mr
- Campbell, I've never done any acting, will you watch me, and if I do
- anything that you think could be improved upon, would you tell me?'.
- Well, the fact of the matter was I took that as almost a job. I would
- watch him, and his biggest problem was what to do with his hands. He
- would stand like a soldier, and I would go over and take him aside
- and say, 'Look, why don't you do what Humphrey Bogart does? Put your
- thumbs in the loops of your pants, put them in your pockets, cross
- your arms, put on arm behind you, get a little loose you know.'. And
- he would do it. He had tremendous sense."
-
- "Colonel Parker walks upto me one day and he said, 'You know Bill, we
- can't get out of the main gate at daytime. There's so many people.'.
- They couldn't get the limousine out to take him to the hotel. So he
- said to me, 'Would you do us a favour? Could you drive Elvis home?'.
- So I go out the back gate, and they have the limousine go out the
- front gate, and everybody thought Elvis was going out there. First
- day we go out Elvis says to me, 'Do we have to go right back to the
- hotel?'. I said 'No, what do you want to do?'. He said, 'I've never
- seen the Pacific Ocean. Can we go down there?'. I said 'Sure.'. He
- said 'Can I ride your car?', because he was a racing car driver."
-
- "He took my little car, and I'm white knuckled. We're going down
- Olympic Boulevard to the beach. He said, 'You know what I'd like to
- have? I'd like to have a greasy hamburger.'. Sure enough there's this
- hamburger stand. He parks up there, and he goes in. There's this guy
- with five days of his cooking on his apron, and a belly hanging over
- his belt. 'What d'ya want?'. Elvis said 'Give me a big, greasy
- hamburger and I want some chips!'. The guy brings him this beautiful
- big, greasy hamburger. Elvis loved anything with a lot of grease. Now
- everyday when I'd take him home, he'd want to go down there. I said
- to him, 'I can take you to the best hamburger place in Los Angeles,
- why do we keep going down to this greasy spoon? This guy's nasty.'.
- He said 'That's what I like about him. He doesn't know who I am, so
- he doesn't bug me.'."
-
- "Well, the picture carries on. We're two weeks into the picture and
- the director says 'Bill, I want you to bone up on that song on the
- porch.'. I said 'Really? Why?'. He says 'You're going to sing with
- Elvis.'. First of all, I couldn't stomach the music - I was for the
- big band era. I said, 'Look, I was hired as an actor. Nobody told me
- anything about singing. I'm going to be embarrassed. I'll never work
- again. I'm not doing it.'. Now Elvis is hearing this. The director
- said 'Look, I can't have Richard Egan singing with him, because Elvis
- is married to Richard Egan's fiance, so I can't have that. I can't
- have Jim Durie. He's from Texas, he doesn't have any rhythm. You're
- from New York. You've got rhythm!'. I did everything I could, tears,
- it wouldn't work. Elvis came over, and he said 'Bill, come on. Let's
- go to my dressing room.'. So we get in the dressing room. He gives me
- a very sly look and he says 'Bill, remember what you did for me when
- I asked you to help me with acting?'. I say 'Yes, and I enjoyed it.'.
- He said 'Well, I don't know a damn thing about acting, but I know
- alot about singing. We're going to rehearse for a couple of days.'.
- And we did, and I felt more comfortable. I was still embarrassed to
- hell when I saw the picture. However now I'm very proud of that
- moment. It was a great moment. He was a great guy, and when I became
- the director of fundraising for the motion picture home and hospital,
- he gave me a million dollars for the organisation, which I thought
- was just superb."
-
- "I did a picture with John Wayne, and as a matter of fact I got fired
- from Warner Brothers because of that picture. When I went there I
- thought I was going to have one major career immediately, because the
- first picture I did was 'The Breaking Point' with John Garfield. I
- played a gangster. I didn't have a problem with that being from New
- Jersey. I go right from that to 'Breakthrough' with a co-starring
- role as a soldier, and I'm getting great reviews for my second
- picture, and I'm believing it. The along comes a picture called
- 'Operation Pacific', and I was absolutely elated because it was a
- John Wayne picture. I'm going to tell you something. There have been
- lots of movies stars, however, when Wayne walked through a door, you
- are in awe! He was bigger than life, and yet he was a great family
- guy."
-
- "My part in the picture is the talker. It was the easy part because I
- was always around John Wayne who was the captain of the submarine.
- He'd say 'Come to course 270.'. I'd say 'Coming to course 270, Sir.'.
- Well, evidently the producer didn't think I was putting my best foot
- forward. I might have looked a little dower. We had a fight and I
- said, 'I'm not only disturbed at the insult of having me do this
- role, but I don't have any lines to say. I just repeat what Mr. Wayne
- says. You don't even give me a name. Why don't you give me a name?
- John Doe, anything. I mean I'm the talker.'. Well, the next thing I
- know, I'm getting a call from Jack Warner to come up to his office. I
- got up to his office, and he said to me 'I understand you're not
- happy about your role.'. I said 'Yes sir, I am.'. He said 'Are you
- unhappy about your contract?'. I said 'I'm getting unhappier sir'. He
- said 'Well then, we're going to let you go.'. I said 'Really? Well
- okay, if that's the you want it sir.'. He worked me to death over the
- next four months. Threw me into two extra pictures, and of course
- dropped my option."
-
- "I was a Broadway kid. I'm going back to New York. This is the way
- Hollywood is, and I'm getting prepared to drive back, and I get a
- call for a little anthology show called 'Biglow Theatre'."
-
- "The sixth time I nearly walked out was when I was working on a
- picture with Spencer Tracey. I looked upon him as a bit of a god. We
- sat around chairs and we did a chair rehearsal. The only thing he
- said to me, he greeted me of course, 'Does anthing seem stilted Mr.
- Campbell? Are there any changes you'd like made?'. I said 'No, sir.'.
- We get ready for a scene, and it's fourteen pages of a courtroom
- sequence with Spencer Tracey, and I panicked. I couldn't remember my
- first line which I think was 'Yes'. I seriously, and I mean
- seriously, thought 'Do I kill myself or leave and get lost in
- Kentucky somewhere?'. To make it worse the assistant finds me and
- kind of drags me to where I'm sitting on the witness stand, and when
- I get there Mr Tracey come over and says, 'Mr. Campbell, we're going
- to do the first take without rehearsal.'. I said 'Is there a reason
- for that sir?'. And he gave me the greatest reason in the world. He
- said 'Yes, the first take the adrenalin is flowing, and many times
- that is the best take of the picture. Let's do it that way. If it
- doesn't work, for whatever reason, then it's a good rehearsal and
- we'll just go over it again.'."
-
- "As it turned out, we started getting into the scene. We get through
- the first five pages, and in my senses I'm thinking 'I got through
- the first five.'. I see that Tracey's in it with me, and he's getting
- angry, and I'm laying it on him. By the time I get to the tenth page
- I'm thinking 'I've really got him!'. When I got into the twelfth page
- I'm thinking 'Wow! I'm really socking it to him!'. The scene ends and
- it was only then that fear really grasped me, because I thought 'We
- really did it!'. I see him walk over to me slowly. He leaned on me
- and said 'Are you under contract?'. I said 'No sir.'. He said 'Would
- you like to be?'. I said 'Yes sir.'. He grabs me by the hand and
- takes me over to a telephone and makes a call. He says 'Danny, I've
- got a kid here who wants you to put him under contract.'. Talks to
- him for a few seconds and hangs up. He says, 'Bill when we're
- finished for the day, go on upto Mr. Thaw's office.'."
-
- "You can imagine, my feet were off the ground. Boom! Upto Mr. Thaws
- office. I'm led right into this typically Hollywood moguls office. I
- sit down and he pushed the contract in front of me and says 'Read
- that Mr Campbell, and if you like it, sign it.'. I look at it, and a
- funny thing comes to my mind. My salary was going to be $750 a week.
- He said 'Is there something wrong?'. I said 'No sir, there's nothing
- wrong.'. He said 'Well what's funny about the contract?'. I said 'Do
- you realise, sir, that I'm going to start here making ten time as
- much as my dad does?'. He smiled, and I signed it. I called my agent
- the next day and said 'We're under contract!'. It was just a
- sensational experience."
-
- "John Wayne was a phenomenal guy, and a true movie star. He hated
- baseball, just hated it. You see he was a football player. John Wayne
- says to his son, 'We're going to have to buy tickets for the
- Dodgers.'. They used them for business. He would give these tickets
- away. He went to one game, and when he got to the game, at about the
- seventh inning he was bored to tears. He starts hearing the fans yell
- 'WE WANT DUKE! WE WANT DUKE!'. This happened three or four times. His
- son finally tells him, 'Dad, will you stop standing up every time
- they say 'We want Duke'?'. He said 'Well what the hell are they
- yelling it for?'. He said 'No, that's for Duke Snyder. He's a famous
- player!'. Wayne said 'There's a guy on this team called Duke? Go tell
- him he's going to have to change his name when I come to the
- stadium!'."
-
- "When he came home, John liked a few to drink. He would always stop
- at an Italian restaurant, and he would have a couple of drinks with
- the bartender. One night he goes and asks for a couple of double
- shots, and there's some guy singing in the back. He said 'Who the
- hell is that?'. The bartender said 'That's Mr. David Bryant.'. He
- said 'Well you go back and tell him that John Wayne's here, and I
- want to relax over a drink or two, and his singing is lousy!'. So the
- bartender goes over to the dark of this room where David Bryant is
- bombed and he says 'Mr. Bryant, John Wayne's out at the bar. He says
- you sing lousy and he wants you to stop.'. David Bryant says 'He
- does, does he? You tell Mr. Wayne to **** ** ***!'. The bartender
- goes over and tells Wayne this. Wayne, who was 6'6" and in good
- shape, comings walking through the door. David Bryant saw the
- silhouette and starts thinking, 'Who does he know, that I know?'. He
- happened to have known a make up man that Wayne likes. So as Wayne
- goes towards him, David Bryant says 'Oh - hi Duke! I was just talking
- to John about you yesterday.'. They get down and they get bombed
- together."
-
- "Now the first one to pass out is David Bryant. Wayne gets up and
- takes David Bryant home. Wayne gets out of the car and knocks on the
- door; no one's home. No key. He decides to take Bryant and put him in
- the cabana next to the pool. He gets him on his shoulder, carries him
- down these stairs to the swimming pool area, and sees that there is a
- couch there. He lays him on it, and goes back up. Then it occurs to
- him that Bryant may fall in the pool and drown. So he finds a broom
- clost and puts David Bryant in it, locks the door and leaves. When
- David Bryant comes to, he thought he was dead. He flails about and
- goes through the door, not knowing what happened. Later, David Bryant
- would tell this story constantly because he was so proud to have been
- taken home by John Wayne."
-
- "When I got Star Trek, I got a call from Gene Coon. I didn't get a
- call from an agent. Gene Coon was the heart and soul of the original
- Star Trek. Roddenberry was the creator, the concept, the idea. There
- were some changes, you've all read about, but Gene Coon had a true
- sense of the morality play, the concept, and this business of
- togetherness that you all describe, and that's the way they wanted to
- gear their show. I get on the phone and he says 'My name is Gene
- Coon, and I'd like to chat to you about Star Trek.'. I knew of Star
- Trek. I wasn't particularly into science fiction, or anything else.
- If I were to say I were into anything it was that which influenced me
- most in my life, and that was the western. He said 'Let me explain.
- We've got a casting agent by the name of Joe Degasta. He doesn't
- think you can do this part.'. Well that's all he had to say to me. I
- said 'What do you mean, he doesn't think I can it? What's the role?'.
- He said, 'Well, it's kind of an English fop.'. I said 'Of course I
- can do and English fop. I am an English fop!'. He said 'Well I know
- you can do it. Would you be willing to read for Joe Degasta?'. I said
- 'Sure, I'll read for Joe Degasta.'. I was scared to death!"
-
- "He said 'Let me give you an advantage. I'm going to send the script
- over to you. I want you to read it, and you can break it down so that
- when you see Degasta...'. I said 'I'll read it for you.'. So sure
- enough, 20 minutes later the script came. I read through it - it was
- a barn burner! I said 'I always wanted to be a ham, and here's my
- chance!' It was somewhere I could be completely out of myself. As I
- was looking through it I was worried, because they'd marked down the
- various scenes, and I see that the three scenes are where I'm talking
- to people, quick one line retorts. As said 'Oh, this is dangerous.'
- because I was going to be reading with Joe Degasta's gopher who
- wasn't an actor. I thought 'I gotta find something.'. So if you
- remember in 'The Squire of Gothos' where he makes them all come to
- the planet, and he greets them. He's going to have them to dinner.
- It's a monologue, and all I have to say is one line that I have to
- contend with, and it cues me in."
-
- "The next days I arrive and Degasta hugs me and makes a little joke
- about how he didn't think the role was for me, and then he finally
- says 'Shall we get to it?'. I told him that I wanted to change things
- a little bit and do this scene. We got through a paragraph, and he
- said 'Let's go to wardrobe.'."
-
- "My feeling at that particular time was simply pleasure at having a
- show in which I could tell Bill Shatner 'This is my show.'. Of course
- along comes the costume, [at this point, William CAmpbell actually
- shows the Squire's jacket to the audience!] and this is the Squire's
- jacket. This jacket was given to me by the fans. They went to Western
- Costume and purchased the whole outfit for me. More than that, this
- jacket was made for Michael Rennie in 'Desiree', the Marlon Brando
- picture."
-
- "People have different views of Bill Shatner, and most of them are
- true. I am a good friend of Jimmy Doohan and George Takei, and today
- I do not know what the deep chasm is between the two. I asked Jimmy
- one day, and he was reluctant. I said 'Jimmy, I'm not asking you to
- reveal an atomic bomb secret. What the hell is it?' and he really
- didn't give me an answer. As you know Bill Shatner wrote a book, and
- I'm in that book, talking about Gene Coon who became my dearest
- friend. I never asked Gene for a job, although he would constantly
- comment about my working in Star Trek. I had a verbal agreement for
- 13 shows as Captain Koloth, but it was at that time that they called
- it a day."
-
- "The thing about the Shatner situation was that he made a fatal
- mistake when he brought up the subject about get a life. I cannot
- tell you the impact that had in the States with the Star Trek fans.
- It's not one that you can excuse away easily, because get a life is
- an expression in the States that means pretty harsh. At lunch, I
- bought that up. He said 'How come I was never invited to any of the
- parties that you and Jimmy, Roddenberry and Coon had?'. I said 'Bill,
- I don't know. Maybe you should search your problem.'."
-
- "Now there were alot of things I talked to Bill about on that given
- occasion in regard to the fans, I said to a few people the other day
- at the newcomers party I was invited to 'I've always been distrubed
- about some actors attitudes towards fans.' and I'm not even part of
- Star Trek in the sense that I was not a regular, who really was
- beholden to Star Trek for my living. For these guys some of them owe
- everything, beyond just a living wage, to you people."
-
- "I remember when the first show went out, and the move was on by the
- fans to get them to come back, and they did come back in a horrible
- picture. The first one, Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and I said
- 'They've just had the coupe de grace. It's over.' but you, and those
- fans in the States put life into it. Paramount couldn't care less.
- It's all dollars, and that's where the ball game is. But the fans
- kept it up. There was a gal by the name of Bjo Trimble, and she just
- absolutely kept punching. almost to the point of getting ill over it,
- it got that intense."
-
- "Bill would have made a living, but to say to people 'Get a life.'. I
- said 'Bill, let me tell you something, for the majority of fans it's
- a hobby. It's part of their life just like the rest of us who used to
- watch 'The Honeymooners'. There are vast conventions where everybody
- looks like Art Carney and Jackie Gleason. Desilu, and I'm talking
- about Desie and Lucy. They have conventions where 15000 people all
- look like the two of them, but that's the fun!'."
-
- "I had a big debate with someone the other day about Woodstock. They
- talk about Woodstack as if I was born after Woodstock. The first
- Woodstock was an atrocity! It was vulgar! I mean we try all these
- years to become civilised, and we're still doing it. Star Trek fans,
- I've never seen dope, I've never seen children that were snotty to
- you, people get along. Woodstock, they're in the mud, they're blowing
- pot, the people who are singing overdose and die. I mean it was a
- disgusting display, and everybody said 'It's a new way. It's love!'
- Love, my ***! This is love [indicates to the audience] and
- friendship, and getting together, and hope. That's what Star Trek
- meant to me."
-
- "I'm going to tell you one story before I leave. There was a great
- director by the name of Raol Walsh, and he told me a story about
- Cheyenne Billy. In the old days they didn't use stuntmen, they got
- real cowboys for the westerns they were doing. Cheyene was 85 years
- old and wore a buckskin hat. Raol said that everytime he did a film
- he would hire him, and he liked him because they would get drunk
- together. When he got drunk, Cheyene would cry and say 'Mr. Walsh,
- when I die, I want you to send me back to Wyoming and give me a
- cowboy burial.'. One day he comes on set, and Raol says 'You look
- bad. Take this man to a doctor.'. He goes to a doctor, and comes
- back. Raol says 'What the doctor say about you?'. Cheyene says 'I've
- got ferocious of the liver!'. Raol says 'You ought to have ferocious
- of the liver. Go back to your apartment, and I'll see you next
- week.'. Next week comes, no Cheyene. Raol sends someone over to his
- apartment. He opens up the door, and Cheyene's on the bed, dead. Raol
- feels pangs of remorse. Raol rents a ranch house, puts food in there,
- gets a pine box, puts Cheyene in it, calls an undertaker in Wyoming
- and gets him to say he'll bury him and arranges his trip back. He
- calls all this cowboys up there, and they're all crying. Pretty soon
- he's gotta go. Upon the stage coach they put his casket, down the
- hill they go, and Raol starts counting up the money this cost. This
- 1919, and that funeral cost him $800! He was making good money, and
- he figured he did a good deed for his old friend Cheyene. Three weeks
- went by, and there's a letter in the mail box, from the Attorney
- General of the state of Wyoming. He opens it up, and there's a $2,500
- cheque. Cheyenne was wanted dead or alive, and it was the reward!"
-
-