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I had arrived at Elstree studios in steaming hot June weather with stars in my eyes. Alec Guinness, the enigmatic veteran of classics such as The Lavender Hill Mob, was about to give me an interview. My excitement increased on arrival in the lobby, which bristled with Elstree’s famous past. A photograph of Richard Todd, jaw jutting forward, as Wing Commander Guy Gibson in The Dam Busters dominated one wall. Even the studio staff wore uniforms, heavy with badges and braid, like fighter pilots. Then came the first missile on what was to have been my first interview on a film set. Guinness had changed his mind: the interview was off.
Through the dry-mouthed disappointment, I was offered thin consolation. Carrie Fisher, the film’s leading lady, playing someone called Princess Leia, had agreed to see me for lunch. But, and this was the start of a series of buts, could I meet with a pleasant but rather dull guy, Harrison Ford, who was one of the leads, Han Solo? And would I also interview Darth Vader, played by the 6ft 7in Mr Universe contestant and British weightlifting champion Dave Prowse? Who were these people? What were they playing at? And what was I doing, the newest show-business reporter on the Daily Express, stumbling across characters with indecipherable names? Even Guinness was called Ben Obi-Wan Kenobi.
An uneasy feeling soon turned to despair at the sight of what passed for “action”: small men, ugly men, a hairy character called Chewbacca and incomprehensible references to C-3PO and R2-D2. The costumes and scenery were like castoffs from an early episode of Doctor Who, and chaos seemed to reign at every turn. On one side loomed Darth Vader, dressed in what looked like an expensive black bin liner, talking in a thick Bristol accent, my dear.
The little dialogue I heard made no sense at all.
I lurched to lunch in the studio restaurant with the realisation that no senior journalist had come near the set of Star Wars for one simple reason: their experience and advance information told them that this sci-fi movie was going to disappear into a big black hole.
Yet there was no chance of an early escape. Fisher, aged 19, was already at the table. She ate melon, followed by a small portion of trout. A glass of wine was rejected. “Maybe I will get onto alcohol when I grow up,” she said, followed by a manic and inexplicable laugh. She has since admitted that she was on something far stronger than Liebfraumilch: cocaine. She thrice bounded up from the table in our 45 minutes together to go to “the bathroom”. Obviously nervous, I thought.
Ford, by comparison, looked like the sort of man who would regard a trip to the men’s room as a sign of weakness. He talked low and slow. He wore long, bushy sideburns, and his sloping poker face gave nothing away. He was 34, and had made just six film appearances in eight years. “I guess you won’t know about those,” he said, perfectly accurately. “I have high hopes of something special from this.” He didn’t look or sound convincing. The poor guy had about as much star appeal as Elstree’s car-park attendant.
Prowse was next. Villain? He was less threatening than Yogi Bear, despite his enormous bulk. He reeled off an impressive set of statistics, in a voice several octaves too high (it was later to be dubbed by the baritone James Earl Jones). He weighed in at 273lb, with a 50in chest, a 38in waist, 45in hips, an 18in neck and 18in biceps. He was 41, and had lived with his mum in Bristol until he was 28. Until recently, he had trained Edward Heath, the former prime minister, at a gym in London’s Grosvenor House hotel. “I took this part because people always remember the baddie in movies,” he said. “I just hope nobody forgets Darth Vader in this one.” Dream on, big boy, I thought.
Among props that could have been passed on from a panto, I was introduced to someone referred to as Luke Skywalker. He was an American actor, Mark Hamill, aged 24, whose cherubic face and blond hair made him look about 12. “I have been playing virgins for years,” he announced cheerfully. Hamill, Ford and Fisher were even squashed into the same car on the way to and from the studios each morning. Their status was not helped by the fact that the great Guinness could not even recall Ford’s first name: at times, he had called him both Tennyson and Ellison. “I doubt if he is ever going to light up the Thames or the East River,” he predicted to a friend. He had also written a letter, revealed many years later, explaining why he had rejected all on-set interviews. “New rubbish dialogue reaches me every other day on wodges of pink paper,” he declared. “And none of it makes my character clear or even bearable. The film plods on.”
Nobody was saying this at the time, of course. Elstree studios, in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, had opened in 1926 and had seen great days. But in the year before my visit, its owners, EMI, had closed six of its nine stages and announced 213 redundancies, leaving a skeleton staff of just 48. Earlier in 1976, the films being made included Confessions of a Driving Instructor and Stand Up Virgin Soldiers. Everyone was putting on a brave face. A new system had been introduced. The studio was offering freedom to a producer to hire whom and what he or she wanted. So when Twentieth Century Fox booked the whole studio for 18 weeks for Star Wars, described as a “space adventure fantasy”, there was a mood of hope.
That hope had been dented by the parade of unknowns playing the main characters, the nonstop script changes and the browbeaten figure of the director, George Lucas. He was a small, bearded man, who apparently talked to his cynical British crew about special effects that would transform film-making: a geek ahead of his time. He also believed he was going to make stars out of his unknown cast.
I might have been young and inexperienced, but who was he kidding? I wasn’t that daft...
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