Robert Shaw: actor…novelist.
Chances are, you probably didn’t know about that last distinction.
And more is the pity.
Shaw was quite an accomplished author. Indeed: one senses Robert
Archibald Shaw was probably far more proud of his novels than his many film
roles.
Pride in his books over his films is certainly the way I choose
to depict Mr. Shaw in my new novel.
DEATH IN THE FACE
NOW AVAILABLE here
Shaw is one of several
authors who drive the plot of my new, James-Bond-inflected Hector Lassiter
novel, DEATH IN THE FACE, featuring my fictional novelist Mr. Lassiter, 007
creator Ian Fleming, Japanese novelist Yukio Mishima and Robert Shaw.
Shaw finds his way into this novel because he also bleached
his hair, built up his bulk, and played the chilling, would-be Bond assassin
Red Grant in FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE.
Ian Fleming, actor Pedro Armendariz and Robert Shaw in Istanbul. |
ROBERT SHAW with LOTTA LENYA (AKA, ROSA KLEBB) |
As a child, I first watched all of the original Connery 007
films with my father, usually during ABC Movie Of-The-Week special showings.
(My
mother, father and I managed to see YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE in a grand old Columbus,
Ohio downtown theater when the film was new. After, we went to a nearby
downtown department story where I got my own vintage Corgi Aston Martin with
patented ejector seat).
Shaw, Connery, and the run-up to a classic fight scene. |
I remember my father, with real relish, preparing me for the climactic and particularly vicious fight scene between Shaw and Sean Connery: a filmic hand-to-hand brawl matched only in his mind by the train fight between Lee Marvin and railroad bull Ernest Borgnine in EMPEROR OF THE NORTH.
(Oddly enough, current Bond Daniel Craig would engage in a
similar, train-top melee in SKYFALL, even resorting to the use of chains, as in
EON.)
The battle to the death between Grant and Bond in FROM
RUSSIA WITH LOVE is, indeed, one of cinema’s greatest and most visceral fight
scenes.
Years later, and with piercing poignancy, Robert Shaw’s
Sheriff of Nottingham would square off a last time against Sean Connery’s Robin
Hood for another nasty— and far more bloody and bittersweet—mano-a-mano in Richard Lester’s ROBIN AND
MARIAN (1976).
In addition to an epic turn as the Irish gangster mark in
THE STING (1974), Shaw is probably best remembered for his portrayal of
would-be shark hunter Bartholomew M. Quint in JAWS.
A last bit of trivia: They say Shaw, the accomplished
novelist, proved his chops as a writer yet again by deftly editing down many
pages of his Quint monologue to the now-classic “Indianapolis Speech” that
centers the film’s final third. (Shaw purportedly cut the speech down from John
Milius’ original ten-page version to about five pages.)
In one of his last roles, Shaw easily swamped Harrison Ford
in the charisma-stakes in FORCE 10 FROM NAVARONE, playing a character with the
last name (a Bondian premonition?) of “Mallory.”
Shaw died of a heart attack at the rather young age of fifty-one.
Oddly enough, just like Ian Fleming, Shaw’s last good hours
were spent at a golf club. (My take-away for aging authors: Eschew golf and
country clubs, like the goddamn plague.)
To explore more about Robert Shaw, author, check out this very fine piece.
NEXT UP: YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE, AND ITS ROLE IN DEATH IN THE
FACE
DEATH IN THE FACE
NOW AVAILABLE here
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