- Ernest Borgnine, The Wild Bunch, 1968.
- Otis Young, The Last Detail, 1973. While the Robert Towne script was awaiting a pause in Jack Nicholson’s schedule, Columbia’s Peter Guber suggested re-tooling it with Brown, Burt Reynolds and… David Cassidy!
- Ken Norton, Mandingo, 1974. Author James Wolcott reported how US football hero Jim Brown passed the slave Mede to the 1978 world heavyweight boxing champ – “sparing himself considerable personal indignity and James Mason’s atrocious southern accent.” Chicago critic Roger Ebert hit harder, calling the film a piece of racist manure. “Obscene in its manipulation of human beings and feelings, excruciating to sit through… This is a film I felt soiled by.” And yet Norton made the sequel, Drum, in 1976Yes in a different role, but not a better movie. In fact, producer Dino De Laurentiis took his name off it. And Roger Ebert did not see it- or if he did, he didn’t review it.
- Mr T, Rocky III, 1982. Mr. T (Laurence Tero) said he beat “1,500 black guys – even Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans” to the flamboyant Clubber Lang, including real heavyweights Joe Frazier, Ken Norton, Earnie Shavers. The role won him a TV series, The A Team, Nancy Reagan as First Fan, but by 1993, he was reduced to Freaked as… a bearded lady!
Birth year: 1936Death year: 2023Other name: Casting Calls: 4