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 He was aboard the H.M.S. Coventry
when it was sunk off the north coast of Africa during the Second World War. He
even killed himself once, but lives today to tell the story.
Born in Gosport, Hampshire on Sept 15,
1922, the Englishman was latter to become an Olympic athlete and coach. Today
he is in the second half of a two-year contract as Canadian Fencing
Association's Technical Director. His name - Bob Anderson, his game - fencing.
I met Bob and his wife Pearl in the
summer of 1984. They were both responsible for running Friday night Youth Group
at the Constance and Buckham's Bay Community Centre. I had dropped off my kids
and noticed a young man desperately trying to fix a ghetto blaster so he could
DJ for his friends. I casually mentioned to Bob that it was too bad the centre
didn't have a decent sound system that could be used for playing music. I even
offered to run it for them. Bob suggested that I drop by his house after Youth
Group so we could discuss it further. I had no idea what I was about to see
upon entering his house. He lived kitty corner from the Point on Lane street. A
cottage that had been winterized - but, as soon as I walked in the front door,
I knew that Bob had some secrets.
The
house was filled with every description of swords and sabres. In his office,
picture of him with Errol Flynn, an Olympic medal and even more swords. It took
me a long time to get the story out of
him. He was a very humble man and I have no idea how he ended up living in Constance Bay - but here is his story.
Born into a service family, his Dad
was in the Royal Marines and son Robert J. followed suit, spending the early
part of the War on the Mediterranean Sea. Returning in the early '40's his next
40 years were to include studies in physical education, stunt work in the film
industry and a long and distinguished tenure as Britain's Senior National
Fencing Coach. (Editor's note: Professor Robert J. Anderson had also been
President of the oldest and most prestigious of Coaching Academies, the British
Academy of Fencing. He attended every World Championship and Olympic Games
fencing competition from 1952 to 1979, missing the Olympics in Moscow to break
the string. His most recent journey into the film world occurred with the Star
Wars Company production, The Empire Strikes Back.
In January 1979 he retired after
nearly 30 years as Head National Coach of British Fencing. Two months later he
was stocked in woolen underwear and other Norwegian site of Finse. Temperatures
were as cold as 50 below. Here filming was taking place for the snow scene in
the Star Wars continuing saga about the Imperial and Rebel Forces.
After playing a small part as one of
the Imperial Officers who spotted the Rebels on the snow-bound horizon.
Anderson was back at London's Elstree Studios to work as stunts doubles man
along with Colin Skeaping. Stunts Co-coordinator was Peter Diamond who'd first
worked with Bob on the Monte Cristo series in the 1950's.
Bob, who can't now recall just how many
movies he's had a hand in, says, "There's a lot of color in working in the film
industry, but it's not as colorful and not as exciting as people who don't work
in the industry think. They have a great idea about what working with stars in
all about. In fact, the making of films is an industry. It's a very hard and
pressurized industry. And when you work on a film you have to get up fairly
early in the morning and you finish late at night. The money's extremely good,
but it's part-time employment. Nobody works full time in the film industry.
They're just hired for a picture."
As a doubles man during
his "spare" moments while Senior National Fencing Coach, Anderson got to work
with Douglas Fairbanks, Tony Curtis, Ryan O'Neal, Roger Moore and dozens of
other actors. "Quite often in films we're faced with a situation where the
expert swordsman is not the expert", explains Anderson. "And, in fact, the non
expert becomes the expert. They select the players, the actors, according to
the part, which quite often has nothing to do with his fencing ability. "It was
a similar case with the film Barry Lyndon with Ryan O'Neal, who I trained for
some time before the film started (in the late '70's). He developed an
excellent sword sense and became a very good swordsman because he's a great
all-round athlete. His opponent, however, was supposed to be the expert
swordsman and Ryan was not. So it became difficult trying to make the
not-so-good swordsman look like the expert. And this is not the first time I've
come across it." This situation often necessitates the use of a person to
double the actor for the sequence. "Therefore the actor will look excellent at
the end of the film", remarks the Canadian Fencing Association's Technical
Director, adding that this was not the case in Barry Lyndon since Ryan O'Neal
and his opponent were both good enough to do their own fencing.
After his return from the
Mediterranean during the War, Anderson was stationed in southern England at
Deal, Kent, studying Physical Education, he was exposed to a multitude of
sports, an exposure, which he believes, not only suited him for future movie
work but provided firm footing for his fencing vocation. "I remember that I
wanted to go to the Olympics, so I set myself a task of getting to the 1952
Olympics, I thought fencing as my best sport. I seemed to get my best results
in fencing". So that's where the task was undertaken.
In 1949 the British Fencing Association
hired French Olympic Coach Roger Crosnier. "He said I had some talent," says
Anderson, so I trained with him for three years in all three weapons - sabre,
epee, foil - and at the end of that training I got my Fencing Master's
Diploma". That he explains, "is the highest coaching qualification you can get
anywhere in the world in fencing. It is the highest coaching award conferred by
any Fencing Academy. Each country has its Professional Fencing Academy."
Canada's formed in 1972, a year after the incorporation of the Canadian Fencing
Association.
In 1950, when fencing
became part of the British Empire (Commonwealth) Games for the first time,
Anderson represented Britain, winning two gold and three silver medals in
Auckland, N.Z. In 1951 and 1952 he was amateur and professional champion of
Great Britain. "In the services I was also three weapon champion of combined
services for seven years, no, for five years, because in 1953 I became National
Coach for Great Britain." The British hired Crosnier with the plan of having
Anderson trained and later ready to fill the position of National Fencing
Coach. Anderson, who was still in the services while training under Crosnier,
sets the background: "The services wanted to specialize and wanted a lot of
publicity from its good players, so they insisted that the Phys. Ed teachers
become qualified coaches with the governing bodies of sport." He fit that
scene, explaining, "I took almost every qualification I could put my hand on. I
became a life saving instructor, swimming coach, basketball was a great love of
mine. And with my normal work as a teacher of Phys. Ed. There was gymnastics
and keep-fit and all that stuff. It was part of my job, so I was ideally suited
to go into the film industry as a stunt man with a specialization in fencing. "
His first work in films happened the
year of the Helsinki Olympics. "I was working in London in 1952, but I was
waiting to go to Helsinki. I had 10 days free and I got a phone call from
Elstree Studios. They were making a film called Master of Ballanrrae with Errol
Flynn and an actor called Tony Steel. They wanted three fencing experts to do a
big fight and I had 10 days so I went along and met Errol Flynn. "I don't think
there is anyone around today who is comparable. Flynn was the greatest actor of
that period, he was a cavalier-fitness type. He was certainly the top actor of
the world at that time, just before and just after the last War."
After the Olympics, Anderson was invited
to continue with the Master of Ballantrae for the pirate sequences in Italy. "I
arranged the fights, I suppose you'd call me the choreographer. And in the
action sequences I doubled almost everyone who fought Errol Flynn. I doubled
five actors in that film and when it was cut together
. One sequence
showed me killing myself because I had doubled two actors who actually had a
fight together. It was a lot of fun. It was my first film," he adds. "I
thoroughly enjoyed it. I didn't make a lot of money but I certainly enjoyed it.
In the studios I was paid 10 pounds a day and on location I got 50 pounds a
week, in those days, in 1952, that was a lot of money. That was when England
was cheap and North Americas came to England. It's totally reversed now.
Anyway, it was the beginning."
Although
Anderson was a gifted fencing competitor, the rules of his more formal game
could not always be applied in the melodramatic movie setting where men dual to
protect their lives and dignity. Anderson had to be creative. "Riposte and
counter-riposte, that's the way to build up the sequence, it's like a dance
sequence. You do this first by seeing the Director and finding out how long he
wants the fight. You also have to look at the set and see what is available in
terms of space and props. In the early stages a lot of it is creation. Once
you've got the ideas from the Director you then have to sit down and use your
knowledge of the fencing skills and create a fight sequence that will not only
fit into the set and give the Director what he wants, but also be exciting and
a good portrayal of characters."
Hours-wise,
the film industry occupied six weeks of "holiday-work" in the summer, to which
he was entitled after building up overtime by often working seven days a week.
Summer work included Walt Disney productions work on films such as Kidnapped,
One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing and Robin Hood. Within his official fencing
position he helped develop the coaching fencing scheme in the United Kingdom.
He was also a founder of the British Association of National Coaches about a
decade ago. Anderson says the National Coaches never got together. "They never
had courses together to improve our knowledge and ability in sports psychology,
sports physiology, and technical and practical methods. So I said, "This has to
stop." I wrote to all the National Coaches, there were 30-odd employed and
everyone attended a weekend conference I laid on. And from that the British
Association of National Coaches developed."
In 1979 he retired as Senior National
Coach, but his original retirement plans were shelved. "I intended to do about
one film a year, which would have brought me in more money than I had earned as
a coach. "But just before Christmas I had a phone call from the President of
the Canadian Fencing Association, asking me if I would consider coming for an
interview. I thought, why not?" The President - Montreal resident, Swiss-born
Carl Schwende - was a fencing medallist himself with three team medals
(gold,silver,bronze) and an individual bronze medal in epee from the 1954
British Empire Games when he represented Canada. Twenty-seven people from nine
countries had expressed interest in the CFA Technical Directorship, says
Schwende. "We had excellent candidates from France, Poland and Italy. We also
had a Russian. Taking everything into consideration and knowing Bob and his
power of persuasion and manner, I don't think it was a difficult choice."
One of the job's first duties was to
get out CFA's Level 1 Coaching Certification manual, called Mini-Fencing,
Anderson believes it utilizes a system, which can attract numbers, "Mini
fencing is for any age, from 7 to 70. It's a combination of good things from
the three weapons and selected things that are simple to understand." It works
on the whole-part-whole principle which Anderson imported from Europe and is
based on the Gestalt theory, developed at the close of the 19th century in
Austria and southern Germany, it says it's necessary to analyze the full nature
of the whole " from above down". "Learning should be based on the
whole-part-whole principle," insists the Technical Director, "in my day you
went through a long and rigorous training based on a rigid system. It's rather
like learning a language, you learn the structure of the language." But the
system isn't being applied that way in mini-fencing, instead, he explains, "you
learn the structure as you go along, I feel this true with the sport of
mini-fencing. It's a system of throwing them in the deep end. You give them
everything from the outset and you learn the structure as you go along. You
don't spend a long rime on how to parry, riposte and attack. The beginner
should be encouraged to play the game first and them learn about it later on."
"I'm having a certain amount of resistance on this because a lot of coaches had
been brought up with traditional methods," remarks the Technical Director,
adding, however, that is not a marked resistance.
Bob was quite surprised that so little
fencing exists in Canadian schools, he says a move is underfoot to get
mini-fencing into the schools. "It is the development of the sport in the
schools that will provide the club members of the future. I see no reason why
it shouldn't work in Canada." After living 25 years on the Thames River just
outside London, Anderson and his wife Pearl took a change of residential
scenery for a number of reasons. "Firstly, it offered me the challenge of
developing a coaching scheme. The Canadian fencing scheme had only just begun
and it was not developing and I had 30 odd years in development of this type of
thing."
"The next thing is that I liked the
people who were in command of Canadian fencing, the people who interviewed me
and those I'd known as a result of the Olympic Games. The third thing, and this
is important, is that I don't know of any other government system that
organizes coaching development alone. In England, I developed a coaching scheme
for 25 years and the only government assistance I got was in fact that they
paid my salary and not all of that, rather 80 percent of it. I was subsidized,
I suppose, indirectly since the sports centers I used were paid for by the
British Sports Council out of government money. But there was no coaching
budget like you have with the Coaching Association, which has an annual budget
for the development of coaching manuals and certification. "And that was an
important factor in my coming to Canada. The other thing that attracted me was
the relationship between the consultants of Sport Canada and the Governing
Bodies. I thought they had more command of how money was spent and they
demanded more from the sports-governing bodies. " The final one, and by no
means the least - I like Canada. I like the freedom, I like the space. Having
lived in London for 25 years I assure you that's important. It's the difference
between eight million people and what, five hundred thousand?"
In the spring of 1979, between
retirement from the British Fencing circle and his coming to Canada, he was
working on The Empire Strikes Back. By 1980 Anderson was to appear on movie
screens around the world through most viewers didn't know it was him, after all
the credits said David Prowse was playing Darth Vader, the dislikeable,
vengeful leader of the Rebel Forces. In one scene, aboard Cloud City, Vader and
Luke Skywalker, played by Mark Hamill engaged in a lazer sword fight. To
prepare for the colorful scene, stunt co-ordinator Peter Diamond and stunt
doubles men, Anderson and Colin Skeaping worked with Hamill and Prowse to hone
their fencing skills. Special artwork was done to add the space age complexion
to the action. Carbon-fibre blades were used with photo-reflective paint and
individual artwork was done on each negative to draw in the lazer effect, says
Bob. One problem was that Prowse, an aspiring but unsuccessful candidate for
the `960 British Olympic weightlifting team, couldn't fence, not well, anyway,
according to Anderson. "Pete was the fight arranger for the film and they
needed somebody rather tall who could get into his costume of Darth Vader. I'm
six-foot-one, but Darth Vader (Prowse) is six-foot-five, so I had to wear lifts
and had my uniform built up so eventually there was not a lot of difference.
"He, (Prowse) got the job because he was supposed to be able to fence, but he
couldn't, I worked with him for a long time but we weren't able to make him
good enough for the part. I doubled for him, and Peter and I worked out the
fight sequences. What you see is Mark Hamill and myself. Mark is very good, I
trained him." Skeaping, who had a Phys. Ed. Background from Britain's St.
Luke's College, did a lot of the dangerous scenes, remarks Anderson. "But he
didn't double Mark for the sword fight because Mark developed into a better
swordsman than Colin. Mark and I did the sequence from start to finish."
Anderson sits back in the chair behind
his desk in the CFA offices, laughing lightly before saying "It's the first
time I've doubled the "baddy" and won."
Anderson is
almost cocky. He is certainly self-assured. Asked if he has ever created a
fight sequence in a movie, which proved, unsuccessful or embarrassing to him,
he replies unflinchingly, "I don't think so. I think I was very good at my job.
I had a very good background. I was not only an International British Fencer
but I was a properly trained Coach. I studied fencing for three years and I was
also a good athlete and so I had all the qualifications for being a good action
man on film." Being confident hasn't hindered his film industry performance,
right? "I've never been put down by anybody because I supposed I sound as if I
know what I'm talking about.", responds Anderson. "Quite often I'm not
absolutely sure but I don't make that obvious. We all find ourselves in
situations where we have to think hard and cripes, I don't think I can do this,
but what you have to do is have the confidence in yourself, and I've always had
that." Confident, but still learning. He's taking French courses so he can
communicate better wit the fencers in Quebec, the nucleus of Canadian fencing
power. "I'll tell you one thing," says Anderson, "I realized upon coming to
Canada how little I do know. I never spent a lot of time organizing
competitions, I always had people do that. My job was mainly coaching. I
coached the top British fencers (who continue to monopolize the medal count
until the sport was dropped after the 1970 Commonwealth Games). I'm learning
now about sending teams abroad, accommodating them, the organization of
competition. I have to have a greater command of the rules."
The Technical Director plans to settle
down in Canada, a plan that CFA, it appears, won't have much objection to, says
CFA President Schwende, "His two years (on contract) finish next March, but we
hope he will be able to extend his term. Two years is really not enough time to
implement certain work, thinking and philosophies. Also, our coaching levels
will not have been sufficiently advanced, though we will probably have levels 2
and 3."
Canadian fencing does not rank
within the sports best on a global basis. Naturally, there will be people in
this country's fencing establishment who hope they can learn an enormous amount
from Robert (Bob) J. Anderson, alias Darth Vader. May the Force be with him.
David Prowse acts like he is the one
and only person who could ever be Darth Vader. In fact, he signs autographs
"Dave Prowse IS Darth Vader" as if nobody else helped out. I offer to you the
following quotes from Mark Hamill in Starlog #72 from 1983:
"Bob Anderson was the man who actually
did Vader's fighting," Hamill reveals. "It was always supposed to be a secret,
but I finally told George I didn't think it was fair any more. Bob worked so
bloody hard that he deserves some recognition. It's ridiculous to preserve the
myth that it's all done by ONE man. As a matter of fact, when I shot the fight
scene with Darth Vader for Empire, Dave was in America with Tony Daniels
touring science-fiction conventions promoting the re-release of Star Wars."
Despite the stuntman substitution, Hamill was persuaded to pose for publicity
photos with Prowse in the rehearsal hall. "I thought that was NONSENSE," he
charges. "They had us pose in rehearsal clothes with our swords crossed. I had
actually been rehearsing all morning with the 'real' Darth Vader, and then Dave
just came in for the photo session." Bruce speaks about the swordmaster who is
working with them. His name is Bob Anderson, and there in the OnFilm article
you can see him at the back of the stunt team group photo. He looks like a hale
and healthy 50-year-old with a big grin and a full head of grey hair. In fact,
Bob Anderson is 77, and Olympic fencer, and he worked with Errol Flynn, did
every Zorro film and TV series, did Highlanders, First Knight, and on top of
that he played Darth Vader. (Well, maybe the fight scenes. I thought it was
that big weightlifter guy the rest of the time - Tehanu) Bruce says of him:
"Even now he moves like Bruce Lee.
When he has a sword or weapon in his hand, he makes the hair on the back of
your head stand on end."
My favorite Bob
Anderson quote from the talk was done as Mark balanced the blade he brought
that had been used in First Knight.
"Using a sword is like good sex. It's all a matter of balance, leverage and
timing." --- Bob Anderson
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