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VENOMS5: You were born in Cincinnati, is that correct?
ROGER BROWNE: My parents lived in Northern Kentucky. Fort Thomas, Kentucky, and evidently they didn't have hospitals in Northern Kentucky at the time so they went across the river to have me at Deaconess Hospital in Cincinnati.
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RB: No, I wasn't interested in acting growing up. I liked movies when I had the chance to see them which wasn't very often growing up in Lexington, Kentucky. There wasn't much opportunity to see theater there. Later in life I didn't finish college so I was working on a beer truck waiting to get back to graduate school. So I'm delivering beer in Hollywood and one day an agent came up to me while I was looking at clothes in this store called Sy Devore where all the big stars bought their clothes back in the day and he handed me a card and said, "If you're interested in getting a screen test I may be able to arrange it for you. I found Rock Hudson driving a truck". I took the card and said 'thank you' and didn't think much more about it because I really wasn't interested in becoming an actor. Just living my own role in life was difficult enough than thinking about living in some other role which would be more difficult. I found later it was the other way around--it was much easier to play a role on the stage or in films than it was to live the real life. (laughs)
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I worked with Estelle for a couple of years and decided I needed a change. I got in touch with probably one of the top acting coaches at that time--a fellow by the name of Jeff Corey. He'd been an actor but he was blackballed because of communist or pinko organization connections after the war. He was blackballed as an actor but became a very successful and well respected acting coach. So I worked with him for about six months before going to Europe.
RB: I was a struggling actor, studying, not really getting anyplace. I was working at an old studio giving home massage treatments. One of my home massage clients called me and said that his father and wife were in from the islands and he had a bad cold and if I could go over to the Beverly Hills Hotel at his cottage there and take care of him and try to make him feel better. Herbert May was his name. This was 1960. Afterwards he said, "My wife and I are going to Europe this summer and we always take a masseur with us; a healthcare professional to work us out giving us exercises and massages. We have a man in Washington but he's married, a family man, and he probably won't wish to be gone as long as four to seven weeks. If he doesn't want to go would you be interested in going with us?" I told them, "Only if you give me ten minutes to pack otherwise I don't think I can make it." So I'm thinking this isn't gonna happen. I'd never had this kind of luck being invited to go to Europe. I'd always wanted to go and never thought I'd go. So a couple weeks later he calls me and asks if I'm still interested in going with them. I told him, "Where and when?" He gave me a date to be in Washington to meet them in June of 1960. I closed up out here and went home to Louisville and stayed with my folks a week or so; took a plane to Washington and met them and off to Europe I went. It was terrific. I used to take care of Mr. May primarily. I worked on Mrs. May once and I think I rubbed her the wrong way. (laughs)
RB: Yeah, that was my first film over there in an important role. Big part, small film. I was sort of discovered on that one. I'd gotten into doing English dubbing over there and I was sitting outside a dubbing studio outside of Rome and a fella came over to me and said, "Are you an actor?" I told him 'yes' and he said, "I have Emimmo Salvi over here, he's a director and producer. He's seen you and he'd like to meet you." So he sent me over and I met him and he told me about this movie he was shooting, VULCAN, SON OF JUPITER with Rod Flash Iloosh.You remember him? Big Iranian guy. Wonderful guy. Terrific guy. Not too partial to bathing but anyway, that's okay. So Emimmo tells me he has this role for the antagonist in the film, Mars God of War. He told me I'd have a lot of fight scenes and action against the Vulcan character and asked if I'd be interested in doing it. And I said, "Would I be interested in doing it?! Where and when?" (laughs) It was just like going to Rome--just give me ten minutes to pack! (laughs) It was a good experience.
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Roger and Gordon Scott in the failed pilot for a Hercules TV series |
V5: You were a fantastic actor in these movies. Next to you, Gordon Scott was an intense actor as well. You worked with him on the TV pilot HERCULES AND THE PRINCESS OF TROY (1965). Do you have any memories of him?
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I saw Robert Woods a couple weeks ago at the Autry Museum. Once every two months they have a seminar on westerns. Robert invited me to go with him. I was over there for a couple of hours.
V5: I'm not entirely sure, but I think Mark Forest is still around.
RB: He's still around. He's teaching opera singing now. I never knew him. He was a big name when I was just getting started over there. I never got a chance to meet him. He had a nice career, big muscleman. Richard Harrison, whom I haven't seen for a lot of years, he's still around. Gordon
Mitchell is gone; Brad Harris died last year; Dan Vadis died a lot of
years back so there's not many of us left.
RB: I talked to Mimmo on the phone probably about ten years ago. We were getting residuals from all the old films that were showing on television in Italy. And I was trying to work it through him so I could get the checks sent to me but it was too complicated and I think that whole program fell through. When I talked to Mimmo I don't think he remembered me even though we'd done three films together. One thing that impressed him the most was that I took so long eating lunch. (laughs) Mimmo was a good guy. He always thought he should be the lead in the film. He had a great look but it was a great look for an antagonist; and he did it well. Big, strong guy, athletic guy. But you'd never see him smile. I didn't even know he had teeth till I saw him eating.
Giacomo Rossi-Stuart (left) and Roger Browne in SEVEN SLAVES AGAINST THE WORLD |
Another one who was like that was Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, remember him? Nice guy. Terrific guy. Good looking guy. A great horseman and very athletic. Very stern looking and always the heavy. He ran the emotions from A to B.
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RB: We shot those first two back-to-back, REVENGE OF SPARTACUS (1964) and SEVEN SLAVES AGAINST THE WORLD (1964). Michele Lupo was really good with action and fight scenes. I wasn't a natural stuntman so I had to work hard at it. Just before I began work on those films they took me up to meet a stunt master by the name of Alfio Caltabiano whom you've seen countless times. He took me up to his villa near Cinecitta for a couple weeks before the start of filming to work on fight scenes. I was a baseball player and a tennis player so I could move good and he made it so I could perform these fight scenes. After one long day of shooting on THE REVENGE OF SPARTACUS--it was the scene where I return home and find my family slaughtered and I'm fighting eight Roman soldiers--I'd been working all day and I'm soaking in a bathtub at De Paolis Studio trying to get the grime and the soreness out of me and there's a knock on the door. It was a stuntman by the name of Fortunato Arena; an old time stuntman. He came in and he said, "Roger, I want to tell you... you did good work today." For a stuntman to admit to an actor that he did well was like the highest compliment you could get; because for those guys, that was their living to do the stunts. So for him to take the time to come in and compliment me at the end of a day, I really appreciated that.
RB: They were long days. There were no union rules over there. One thing they did was they'd send a car to pick up the leading actors. They'd pick me up at 7am and we'd reach the studio around 7:45 or 8am depending on how far away we were on location. Then you'd be in makeup for an hour. And maybe your first shot would take place around 9am. You'd work till 1pm then take an hour for lunch; then you'd go back and work till the sun went down. If it was in the studio, you worked till they turned the lights out. You might work 6 in the morning to 7 at night and you'd do that six days a week, too. It was not an easy life but I was happy to do it. I was just a redneck from Kentucky living and working in Europe and by God I was in hog heaven. And it was so much fun. When you're young you can handle anything in those days. The 1960s in Rome was terrific.
Gordon Mitchell and Roger in THE REVENGE OF SPARTACUS |
Roger & Gordon: SEVEN SLAVES AGAINST THE WORLD |
RB: Gordon was a good guy. He was one of the really good guys. I knew him socially, too. We did those two films together and he got me out of a jam a couple of times. They sent us to Trieste to do a film called 'La Morte Ha Ballato Il Twist'; 'Death Danced the Twist' in English. That film fell through after a few days. We were supposed to get paid. We were supposed to get Per Diem; something like 50,000 lira a day. I foolishly took very little money with me as I was counting on being paid for this movie. When the film was abandoned they told us we could go back to Rome. Well they'd only given us one-way tickets. I didn't have money for a ticket back to Rome. So Chuck... Gordon Mitchell's real name was Chuck Pendleton, he told me not to worry about it that he would take care of it. He gave me the money to get back to Rome--I paid him back, of course.
And then another time, before I'd really got started working I couldn't come up with the money on this apartment I was renting and I called Chuck and I asked him if he could help me out and he said, "Sure, how much do you need?" It was a hundred thousand lira or so and he took care of that. Then I started to work--this is around 1961 or 1962--and I didn't have any problems. But on those two occasions I really appreciated that he was there for me. A really nice guy who is no longer with us.
RB: Yeah, Jose Greci. I worked with her on THE TEN GLADIATORS (1963) and SEVEN REBEL GLADIATORS (1965; see insert). Thank God for makeup. I remember first day on the set I came in and there's this little girl, very plain little girl sitting in the corner there, very shy... I thought she was an extra or something. I hardly said hello I just nodded and got in the makeup chair. Next thing I know she's the leading lady in the film! (laughs) With the makeup, eye lashes, hair, everything... she came out a beauty. She really was. A very nice girl. She married a director, I can't remember his name. I played him in a tennis tournament once. Foolishly enough, I beat him... and if I had any sense I'd of let him beat me and maybe I'd of got cast by him. I wasn't very smart, either! (laughs)
Roger and Scilla Gabel in SEVEN SLAVES AGAINST THE WORLD |
Scilla Gabel (see above) was Sophia Loren's stunt double. She didn't look much like her, I don't think. She had the same bone structure, high cheek bones, voluptuous figure. She was perfect in long shots.
Same thing with Steve Reeves's stunt double, Giovanni Cianfriglia. He didn't look like Steve but he had the same proportions. He was smaller, but very well built. In long shots you could believe it was Steve Reeves. Steve wasn't very athletic. He looked good and he could pose well, but with the right stuntman in all those action films, Steve was great. So many of us owe so much to him because he started it all with HERCULES (1957) and HERCULES UNCHAINED (1958) for Pietro Francisci. He was discovered by Francisci's daughter after seeing him in an American movie called ATHENA (1954). She said 'that's the guy' and the rest is history.
V5: Did you ever get to meet Steve Reeves?
RB: I only met him one time. He was a friend of Dan Vadis and I met him when we were all shooting at De Paolis Studio once. Seemed like a nice guy but I didn't really get to know him.
V5: You worked with Dan Vadis on THE TEN GLADIATORS (1963). What can you say about him? Did you keep in touch with him up till he died in 1987?
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Roger on right side of Jayne Mansfield. |
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Roger & Mimmo in THE TEN GLADIATORS |
RB: Well, the Italians were a lot like Mimmo. He thought he should've been Hercules. For one thing they didn't have the cache of acting and another was to have an American actor in your film over there was a real plus; thanks to Steve Reeves. Then Gordon Scott came over, then others came like Gordon Mitchell, and Dan, and Brad, and Mark and people like that. Having Americans in the movies was so good the Italian actors changed their names like Mario Girotti changed his name to Terence Hill. I dubbed him several times in his films; the TRINITY's I dubbed into English. There was a little tension over there. I ran into Terence Hill at the airport once. I walked up to him and I said, "Mr. Hill, I'm Roger Browne. I had the pleasure of dubbing you in English in several of your films." He sort of looked down his nose at me like, 'Huh, you're the one.' (laughs) But Terence Hill, I guess he was alright. I didn't get to know him at all. He spoke English quite well. His mother was German. He spoke English like Peter Lorre. You remember Peter Lorre with the funny accent? Well, I shouldn't of told him I was the one doing the dubbing. (laughs) They don't like that. Anyway, it was a pretty good living for me for quite a while there. (laughs)
V5: There were several hundred westerns made in Europe prior to the end of the Sword and Sandal and muscleman movies. Did you ever receive any offers to star in any of those?
RB: I started a western and was on it for one week then the money fell through. Other than that I never got the chance to do those. I don't think I was the western type in those days; between the age of 30 and 40. Maybe after 40 when I started getting some character in my face. I never saw myself as a western type. Maybe it's just an excuse but I'd of certainly done it. I don't think anyone saw me as a western actor. I was a much better fit for the spy films.
V5: I think you would've made a fantastic James Bond.
RB: Yeah, that was the goal of everybody to be James Bond. I've got photos trying to copy that look holding the gun across my chest.
RB: No, but I did meet Roger Moore before I went to Rome. Met him at a party once on Sierra in Hollywood. I was just a nobody and we shook hands and that's it. Later on I did an episode of RETURN OF THE SAINT. Roger Moore had already moved on from THE SAINT and Ian Ogilvy took over. It was an episode shot in Rome. I wasn't in it very long. I played an American spy and I had lots to do. Ian Ogilvy was a nice guy. He said "You guys are amazing. You come in here, you work one day, you get pages of dialog, you get killed, and I just sort of float through the day there as the lead." (laughs) I told him, "You're a lucky son of a gun and I'm glad I'm getting to work with you." (laughs)
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RB:
That was another fluke. I got a call from a cameraman on the last Sword
and Sandal movie I did, SEVEN REBEL GLADIATORS (1965). He tells me the
director, Osvaldo Civirani, was having problems with Ken Clark. They wanted to dye Ken's hair black. He
didn't want to do it because he wanted to keep the blonde hair. So they
agreed not do it. So I was asked if I was interested in doing the
film. And again, "Only if you give me ten minutes to pack!" (laughs) You
can dye my hair whatever color you want. Just give me a chance to do
something in clothes, you know? I went in to meet the director and they'd started
the wardrobe for Ken Clark. They'd picked out the clothes at Brioni's
in Rome so they sent me over there. Ken was bigger than me but we were
more or less the same proportion. They could make minor adjustments to
fit the clothes to me; and so that's how that turned out. I got very
lucky and got into doing Eurospy movies and adventure films.
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RB: "Maledetto Toscano" (Damn Tuscan). He was Tuscan and he would cuss all the time. People from Tuscany were known to use foul language a lot. He was good. Not real great with actors, but he would always bring the film in on time and under budget. He was good with putting all the action scenes together. He didn't know how to instruct actors so he sort of left it up to them. Most of the people he used, like me for example, he just gave me the script and let me figure out what I'm supposed to do. I was always like George Raft--I'd learn my lines, hit my mark and worked with a cold. We had good casts and crews on the Lenzi pictures. He kept it moving. Lenzi always came to the set prepared. The only problem I had with him was on one film I'm playing an American spy. And in one scene to determine whether I'm right or left handed--this was how much he didn't know about American sports, in particular baseball--he said, "This guy's gonna throw you the key and you're gonna grab it. That way they're gonna find out if you're right-handed or left-handed." So they threw it to me and me being an ex-baseball player I catch it in my left-hand, of course. Lenzi goes, "No, no, no, you're right-handed; you can't catch with your left hand." I said, "No, Umberto. I'm right-handed. I throw with the right hand. I catch with the left hand." He says to me, "Va bene, Che cazzo so io di Pallebase?" Roughly translated to English, "Okay, what the fuck do I know about baseball?" (laughs)
Another time on the set of THE SPY WHO LOVED FLOWERS (1966), Yoko Tani--who was a real flake--asked Umberto, "Che cos è La Fregna?" This is an Italian slang for a woman's private part. Without missing a beat Umberto responded, "Tu hai Bella, Emma Daniela ha brutta." In English that's "You have a beautiful one, Emma Daniela has an ugly one." Emma Daniela was the female lead in the picture. So that's how it was working with Umberto Lenzi.
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Like with the baseball story, sometimes you have to help the directors in other ways. Another story along the same line happened on ARGOMAN, or HOW TO STEAL THE ROYAL CROWN. You saw ARGOMAN, right? There's a scene with the girl, Mirella Pamphili. She's got the crown and she's walking down the staircase with this crown on her head, holding her hands up on the crown. I look under her arms... hair under the arms. I told the director, Sergio Grieco, "If you want to distribute this in the English language you might want to take Mirella back to wardrobe and shave those armpits." He tells me "Why? It's what we do." So I explain I'm not discussing that, it's a culture thing in America that it's going to be laughable out there. So they took her back and shaved her armpits and we finished the scene. Every now and then you have to help them out like that. (laughs)
Roger and Rosalba in SUPERSEVEN CALLING CAIRO |
V5: Regarding your leading ladies during this period, what can you say about Rosalba Neri and Helga Line?
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RB: No, I wasn't married yet. I met my to-be wife in 1971 and by then the bulk of my career was over. I was working a little bit here and there but I wasn't doing any big parts anymore. My wife and I we married in 1976. Till then I led a normal, red-blooded life. Nothing scandalous or anything, but there's one I can tell you about. I took the family to Rome 12 years ago. My wife and Kelsey are walking down the street and we saw a billboard of Edwige Fenech who I was seeing for a little while after making SAMOA, QUEEN OF THE JUNGLE (1968). That was a tense moment there, but that was years before I'd met my wife. When I met Edwige I didn't know whether to date her or adopt her. (laughs) I decided not to adopt her.
RB: It was terrible. I couldn't see a thing. It was very uncomfortable. I did so much of the film in that costume. I had to jump onto tables and fight and I could hardly see anything. It was not an easy thing to do. You know, I'm glad I did it. If they had really been smart--and I'm glad they weren't--you couldn't tell who was in that costume anyway. It could've been anybody. The only scene I wasn't inside the suit was when he was running on top of the train. That was the only time I used a stuntman. I wouldn't of done that anyway because I probably would've fallen off the train, got knocked off or blown off by the wind or something. Everything else was me.
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RB: No input at all. I hardly knew what I was doing when I was doing it. They gave me the script and all I could hope for was that it was a good translation of the Italian script. They usually were. Every now and then you'll come to a line that they'd need to adjust a little. They make a lot of changes in the dubbing anyway. Dubbing was a way of life over there. It's a way of life for their own films that they dub in their own language because after the war they used so many people right from the street that they'd put in the film. They'd have the right look for the part, like vegetable sellers or things like that. They would get the theater actors to dub them after shooting was done to round out the part. I don't know what they're doing now; maybe they're doing direct sound but back in those days you'd have a guide track to help the adaptation for the dubbing. Sometimes it didn't make any difference what you said they were gonna change it anyway; or change the dialog in the dubbing studio.
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RB: I did, yes. I started learning it the first day I got to Italy. I had an Italian book for tourists and on IT HAPPENED IN ATHENS (1962) I worked with Bob Mathias... you remember Bob Mathias? He was a two-time Decathlon champion in 1948 and 1952. He played the coach in the movie. He turned me on to a book called 'Italian For Americans'. I've still got it, too. I tried to study a half hour everyday. Italians are very good. You string three words together and they love you for it; they embrace you. You've honored them by speaking their language. Whereas you go to France and you don't speak it maturely they don't wanna know about it. The only one who ever complimented me in France for my French was a cab driver taking me out to the Roland Garros Tennis Tournament; and he was just looking for the tip. (laughs)
I was called in to test for an actor by the name of John Philip Law in 1963. He did an episode for an Italian television series where he was supposed to speak Italian. They wanted somebody who spoke Italian but had an American accent. So I did that and at that point, I figured I was speaking Italian pretty well.
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RB: The spy pictures were more interesting. They're more modern. I got to travel a lot. I went to Spain a few times; to Switzerland a few times; Greece was another place... they were more interesting from that point of view. The Sword and Sandal movies were fun, they were hard work; a lot more physical. For their time they were fine. I liked the process of acting. It was fun and exciting. Even today; I don't do that much today but when something comes up I do it and it's still fun to do.
V5: This goes back to the dubbing discussion, but I'd read you were the president of ELDA, the English Language Dubbers Association. Can you elaborate on that?
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RB: I was president from 1966 to 1975. In 1975 we got organized, got a lawyer and made it official. It's a shame it didn't happen earlier. If you're a lead for 20 years you can qualify for an Italian pension, Italian social security. I was at 20 years and I get Italian social security today. It's been great. But if I'd had those 15 years of dubbing--I did a lot of dubbing in those years from 1960 to 1975. If I had that going towards my social security, that would've been very nice. But people started ELDA on somebody's kitchen table. Back in the late 50s, they had these films and they needed somebody to dub. They needed people who knew something about acting and they had a few English teachers there and a few actors around town; they got them together and started dubbing films. You learned by the seat of your pants. When I got there in 1960 and got in on it and learned what to do and how to do it... it was not an easy craft. We didn't have all the technology of today to move things into place. Back then we had to pretty much hit it on the mark. It was quite an industry in itself over there.
Roger in SEVEN REBEL GLADIATORS |
RB: I'd already passed my heyday. I was married and my son was born in 1979... I got married in Nashville and my wife liked it over here and I figured maybe it's time to move back and get back into healthcare. So we came back to America in 1980. I went to chiropractic college and started working in a hospital. I'd been a physical therapist before. So I passed my exam and worked in the hospital for almost 32 years. Well, 31 years minus one day. I mean, sometimes enough is enough... right? (laughs)
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RB: I liked most of them that I did. I liked all the Sword and Sandal films I did except for THE THREE CENTURIONS (1963). I did the most dangerous scene I've done in my career. I'm going downhill and the horses are pulling me down and I have to jump off because the horses are going over. I jump off and when I landed everybody gasped and thought I'd hurt myself really bad. I'm okay and I'm thinking how good this is going to look on the screen. But the filmmakers did such a poor job shooting it you never see the stunt; it was like I jumped off a stool or something. I'm particularly fond of the three I did for Michele Lupo. They had good fight scenes and good production values. ARGOMAN has the most production value of them all. The Lenzi films I enjoyed making. They were clean; nothing spectacular, but I had good people all around me on those.
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RB: I hardly remember that film at all other than shooting on the beach, but I do have a funny story on it. My nephew by marriage, he's a musician. He was in Spain after a gig and he was up in his room late at night. He turns on the TV and he was watching this old Italian movie; he didn't know the name of it, you know. So he's watching it and he sees this guy and he's thinking to himself, 'This guy... he looks familiar to me. I wonder who that is? I feel like I know him. I feel like I've seen him before.' So he goes down to the concierge and says, "This film that's playing on TV... what's the name of the lead actor?" And the guy says, "Oh, that's Roger Browne." And my nephew goes, "Oh hell, he's my uncle!" (laughs)
V5: Last question. Is there anything you'd like to say to your fans, and to any who may be discovering your work for the first time?
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I'd like to thank Roger Browne for taking the time to participate in this interview. I would also like to thank his daughter Kelsey for setting it up for me. I wish Mr. Browne and his family all the best in their future endeavors.
You can find him on Twitter HERE.
You can find him on Facebook HERE.
You can also see him on the ELDERS REACT series on youtube HERE.
9 comments:
WOW. Amazing interview! This is a lot like things we would get from VideoWatchdog, people and films we weren't aware of, but because of a fantastic interview become instantly compelling.Mr Brown has a wonderful candor and impeccable memory, what a great read. Thanks for doing this!
Thank you for the kind words. I don't get to post as often as I used to, but one thing I try to do is differentiate CAC from everyone else in any way possible. There's not a great deal out there on the making of these types of films, so it was an honor to be able to talk to one of the genres major players. I'm glad you enjoyed reading it as much as I did putting it together.
What a fantastic interview Brian! A wealth of information from one of the great peplum stars and thank you for allowing to share your work too.
Excellent interview! I have been a euro-spy and peplum fan for years and Roger has been one of my very favorites in those genres. Honestly, that was one of the best interviews of its kind I've ever read. Thank you for being a genuine fan who knew the right questions to ask.
@ Steven: Thank you, my friend! As big of a fan as you are of these films, your remarks mean a lot to me. I was hoping you would enjoy reading it.
@ Steve Carroll: Thank you for the kind remarks, they are truly appreciated. I hadn't found much in English about either genre and had always wanted to learn about the making of the films--particularly the gladiator and muscleman movies. So I was honored when Mr. Browne agreed to discuss his career with me.
Many thanks for this first-rate interview with Roger Browne. He was one of the great stars of sword and sandal and also Eurospy films, and one of the best actors in those fields. It's great to get to know the man behind the star. I've seen that he is on facebook and thought about contacting him, but honestly, you asked all the questions I would have asked him and more. In the final round of sword and sandal films, 1964 and early 1965, it seemed as though most of the films either starred Mr. Browne or Kirk Morris, and there were some gems from that period. I'm sorry THE THREE CENTURIONS was not that enjoyable of an experience for him because for me it's a great film----he, Mimmo Palmara, and Tony Freeman were the perfect trio. Thanks again for taking the time and effort....and to Mr. Browne for so freely discussing his fascinating career and life.
@Bill: Thank you for the kind words. I agree, Mr. Browne is a fantastic actor who deserves a spot as one of the best actors in those genres. It was a sincere honor to discuss his career with him.
A great read and I´m honoured to count you as a friend, Brian.
P.S.--I hope someday we found out what really happened to Dan Vadis whom I grew up watching in rerurns of The 10 Gladiators"
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