Jim Brown

  1. Ernest Borgnine, The Wild Bunch, 1968. 
  2. 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!
  3. 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.
  4. 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