Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Roy N. Sickner was born on 30 September 1928 in Winkelman, Arizona, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for The Wild Bunch (1969), The Wild Bunch and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964). He died on 15 February 2001 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • January 1, 1
    • Winkelman, Arizona, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Los Angeles, California, USA
  2. Roy N. Sickner was born on September 30, 1928 in Winkelman, Arizona, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for The Wild Bunch (1969), The Wild Bunch and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964). He died on February 15, 2001 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • September 30, 1928
    • February 15, 2001
  3. Feb 15, 2001 · Actor and stuntman for motion pictures and television. His birth name was Roy Cooley. Among the tv shows he either acted or in was a stuntman for (in some cases both) included the original Star Trek, Mission: Impossible, The Man From U.N.C.L.E, Sky King, Batman and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.

    • Lee Marvin Almost Played The William Holden role.
    • It Forced A Change to Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid.
    • The Story Was Originally Conceived by The Marlboro Man.
    • Peckinpah insisted on Realistic Gunshot Sound Effects.
    • Ernest Borgnine Had A Cast on His Foot.
    • There Were only Two Minor Injuries During Filming.
    • There Were, However, Numerous Threats of injuries.
    • Peckinpah Enjoyed Giving His Actors A Hard time.
    • They Paid A Mexican Town to Procrastinate Bringing in Electricity.
    • They Had 350 Mexican Soldiers' Uniforms But Blew Up 6000.

    The Wild Bunch served as a comeback for William Holden, whose star had waned in the 1960s. But it almost didn't happen that way. Another veteran actor, Lee Marvin, was cast in the role first. He backed out when he got a better offer (read: more money) to star in another unorthodox Western: Paint Your Wagon. (What if The Wild Bunchhad been a musical...

    Warner Bros. wanted The Wild Bunch to hit theaters before 20th Century Fox's Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Over at Fox, they weren't too concerned about the timing, but the competing film with similar subject matter did present a problem. You see, in real life, Butch and Sundance's gang was nicknamed "The Wild Bunch." Nothing to do with this ...

    Roy N. Sickner, a stuntman and occasional actor, had the idea for a movie about aging outlaws doing one last job, for which he thought his friend Lee Marvin would be perfect. Sickner reached out to Walon Green, a writer he'd met while doing stunt work on an earlier film, and the two developed the script (which director Sam Peckinpah later revised)....

    Before The Wild Bunch, the gunshots in Warner Bros. movies all sounded the same, no matter what kind of gun was being shot. Peckinpah, who'd grown up firing guns and doing other cowboy things on his grandfather's ranch near Fresno, California, insisted on each firearm having its own distinct sound effect.

    At 52, Borgnine was no spring chicken when he shot The Wild Bunch, but if you notice him moving stiffly, that's not why. He'd broken his foot while making a film called The Split and had a walking cast on it for most of his time on The Wild Bunch set.

    Ben Johnson broke his finger on the machine gun, and William Holden's arm was burned by a squib (an exploding blood packet). Not bad for a 79-day shoot involving hundreds of stunts, all overseen by a sometimes-reckless director.

    Robert Ryan threatenedto punch Peckinpah if he wasn't given time off to campaign for Robert F. Kennedy, and Borgnine threatened the same if he didn't get a break from the choking dust and heat. Then there was the time a crew member was assigned to club another crew member in the head. It was during the scene where the bridge is blown up, a dangerou...

    Peckinpah was a rascal, to put it mildly—a heavy-drinking, hard-living, sometimes violent man not too different from many of his movies' characters. The lighter side of all that is that he was fun-loving and rambunctious, and he enjoyed good-naturedly (?) harassing his actors. On The Wild Bunch, he targeted Strother Martin (who later said, "I sense...

    Much of the film was shot in Parras de la Fuente, Mexico (home of the oldest wineryin the Americas). In 1968, the town was still small and rural enough to pass for 1913, but Peckinpah was almost too late: local officials were on the verge of going electric. The addition of power lines would have ruined the scenery, so Peckinpah got his producers to...

    Wardrobe supervisor Gordon Dawson had his hands full keeping the extras who played Mexican soldiers dressed appropriately. He had plenty of uniforms—350 of them—but the Mexican soldiers in the film kept getting shot or blown up, and the costumes would be torn and/or bloodstained after almost every take. Dawson and his team worked around the clock t...

  4. The basis of the story began as a pitch from Hollywood stunt performer, “Marlboro Man,” and bit part actor Roy N. Sickner, looking to power move up the chain to producer of his own material. He also came up with the title.

    • Roy N. Sickner1
    • Roy N. Sickner2
    • Roy N. Sickner3
    • Roy N. Sickner4
  5. Roy Sickner (30 September 1928 – 15 February 2001; age 72) was an actor and stuntman, who played an Neuralese villager in the Star Trek: The Original Series second season episode "A Private Little War". He went uncredited for his appearance.

  6. Academy Awards, USA. 1970 Nominee Oscar. Best Writing, Story and Screenplay Based on Material Not Previously Published or Produced. The Wild Bunch. Shared with: Walon Green · Sam Peckinpah.