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-   -   pilot actors.... (https://www.pprune.org/aviation-history-nostalgia/120985-pilot-actors.html)

Aileron Roll 1st Mar 2004 13:54

pilot actors....
 
With the Academy Awards just out for the year, who do you think has acted as a pilot very well, or quite bad !

A couple that come to mind....... (good)


Sam Sheppard who played Chuck Yeager in the Right Stuff (I think he got an Oscar for this)

Robert Redford in The Great Waldo Pepper

Tom Selleck in High Road To China


...and all the guys in Piece Of Cake did quite well from memory !

witchdoctor 1st Mar 2004 18:18

The guy who played Stryker in the Airplane movies - most convincing pilot I've ever seen!:} (Although I've never seen any of the lads miss their mouth with a drink!!!).;)

Brilliantly observed movie.

Iron City 1st Mar 2004 21:58

John Wayne. "Flying Leathernecks" "High and the Mighty" "Flying Tigers"



Bud Abbot and Lou Costello "Pair of Aces"

Think that hits the high and low points.

BEXIL160 2nd Mar 2004 00:41

Jimmy Stewart ....Twice

1) The Spirit of St. Louis
and
2) Flight of the Phoenix

Oh, and he was an operational (and instuctor) pilot on the B17 for real

One of my Heros

Rgds BEX:ok:

Philip Whiteman 2nd Mar 2004 01:29

Steve McQueen in The War Lover

Not sure if he was pilot qualified at the time they shot the film - or at least the flying parts of the film - at Bovington aerodrome. However, he is seen checking the turbocharger impellers for free rotation in prefilighting the Fort one scene and, despite the usual trembling yoke stuff (no doubt demanded by the director) he looked like a pilot.

Great lines from the film, as the McQueen/Robert Wagner B-17 climbs out of cloud:

Wagner (P2): "Look at that beautiful dawn, Buzz"

McQ (P1): "Dawns are for copilots..."

Simtech 2nd Mar 2004 01:34

Kenneth More as Douglas Bader.

Bexil, I thought that James Stewart did his operational flying on B-24s?

willbav8r 2nd Mar 2004 01:38

I believe Steve McQueen flew his Stearman out of Santa Paula in California....

All the actors in Dambusters get my vote.

MLS-12D 2nd Mar 2004 07:35

It appears that Simtech is correct: see here and here. Stewart was a B-17 instructor in the 'States, though.

I agree that Kenneth Moore and Steve McQueen were both great.

Cliff Robertson is such a pro-aviation actor-pilot that I'd like to give him an honourable mention, although his acting style has always seemed wooden to me.

pigboat 2nd Mar 2004 10:21

Cliff Robertson used to own a Spit.
There's John Travolta, of course with a couple of aircraft including a Boeing 720 and a GII, and Harrison Ford owns a Beaver and a helicopter among other aircraft.

Woomera 2nd Mar 2004 13:15

Not forgetting a real pilot who built his own aircraft (and airline), Howard Hughes! :O

Iron City 2nd Mar 2004 21:26

And he built Jane Russel's bra. Talk about engineeing!

skua 4th Mar 2004 03:48

and of course Martin Shaw owns a Stearman....

pigboat 4th Mar 2004 10:28

IC, I thought that was an early project of Bechtel Engineering.;)

Lu Zuckerman 4th Mar 2004 11:26

Jane Russel. A childhood fantasy.
 
To: Iron City & Pigboat

Speaking of Jane Russel I used to see her walking her dog(s) when I was on my way to high school. At the time she was married to Bob Waterfield of the Cleveland Rams.

:E :E Childhood fantasy :hmm:

Lukeafb1 4th Mar 2004 19:28

MLS-12D,

Prepared to be proved wrong here. But I seem to remember reading somewhere, that Cliff Robertson was a qualified captain on 707s and occasionally flew for a U.S. airline when he wasn't making a film.

MLS-12D 5th Mar 2004 06:27

Luke,

That's the first I've heard of it, but you could be correct.

Just a thought: are you perhaps confusing him with John Travolta (who definitely flies his own 707 and is an honourary captain for Qantas: see here).
Cheers,

MLS-12D

treadigraph 5th Mar 2004 08:52

Nicholas Lyndhurst (Rodney Trotter) and Derek Griffiths (Playschool)

Also one of the Lady Weather Forecasters... Helen Young?

atb1943 6th Mar 2004 22:20

I've jotted down:

Christopher Reeve (once upon a time)

Treat Williams

Patrick Swayze

Tom Cruise (ha)

John Denver (most promising new actor 1977)

and I may not forget

Sheila Scott

cheers

atb1943

BEagle 6th Mar 2004 22:53

Holly Hunter wriggling her little jeans-clad bum into a B-26 in 'Always'......

Sir George Cayley 7th Mar 2004 04:41

BEags you always have to bring sex into it
 
Thanks!


Holly Hunter .......phwooor



B26 .......double phwooor


Sir George Cayley

Human Factor 7th Mar 2004 05:47

Helen Young (weather lady) is married to a BA pilot.

Also, mention of Sam Shepherd in The Right Stuff brought to mind Chuck Yeager in a cameo role as 'Fred' in the same film.

Aileron Roll 8th Mar 2004 14:03

Human Factor, I have this film on DVD somewhere, who was 'Fred" ?

BEagle 8th Mar 2004 22:27

'Fred' was the old-timer who hung out in Pancho's bar. He gives a wry smile when the visiting 'suits' make a derogatory comment about 'Yeager'! I think that his only line in the movie was to offer one of them a whisky?

Lukeafb1 9th Mar 2004 00:27

MLS-12D,

No, I'm not confusing him with Travolta.

I seem to remember probably 10 years (or more) ago, that there was something in one of the TV schedule mags (probably TV Times) at the time when one of his old aviation films was on.

Don't remember the title of the film, but he played a 707 captain. I'm sure that the blurb mentioned that he flew the same type of aircraft for American Airlines or TWA, in his "spare time".

Volume 9th Mar 2004 14:16

John Travolta in ´Look who´s talking´
Humphrey Bogard in ´Chain Lightning´
(I love that quote, when he, playing a test pilot, says to his boss something like "Then it was OK to build planes which had flaws, it was war time. But today there is no excuse for building a plane which is not perfect !" He should tell this today´s plane manufacturers :} )
Bud Spencer in ´All the way boys´

Simtech 9th Mar 2004 14:40

On a lighter note, Peter Graves as Captain Clarence Oveur in "Airplane!"

"We have our clearance, Clarence"

"Roger, Roger. What's our vector, Victor?"

"Huh?!"

:E

Fris B. Fairing 11th Mar 2004 10:51

I always used to enjoy Glenn Ford in "Fate is the Hunter".
Then there was that jet powered DC-6!

Extend the thread to include air traffic controllers and Lloyd Bridges wins hands down for "Flying High/Airplane"

max roll rate 15th Mar 2004 08:38

what about David Carradine in cloud dancer , i have been trying to find out if he did do some of the flying in the film , maybe someone here might know ?

Aileron Roll 15th Mar 2004 10:28

CLOUD DANCER !

Yep great film, must be some of the best Pitts flying on film... iv used it to show students about rate of turn where the Piper Arrow (i think) was out turning the Mustang.

I don t think Carrodine did the flying himself, but spent afew hours getting "rung out" in the back cockpit. There was a good article about how they did it in an American Flying Magazine years ago, ill see if I can find it and will scan you a copy !

wub 15th Mar 2004 16:04

Michael Dorn, who plays 'Worf' in Star Trek owns and flies a Lockheed Jetstar and a T-33 and used to own an F-86

ShyTorque 15th Mar 2004 21:52

Mel Gibson, as a flying boat pilot in "Tales of the Golden Monkey" was unbeatable (his co-pilot, a Jack Russell terrier with an eye-patch, was even better. He could bark once for yes and twice for no).

For example, in one episode, flying out of sight of land, somewhere in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, Gibson was asked over the radio for his position. He looked out of the window at the waves and gave a lat and long!! Now that takes some doing. :hmm:

jetjackel 16th Mar 2004 06:59

Cliff Robertsons protrayal of the DC8 Captain with the drinking problem is well done in "The Pilot", with good cockpit and flying sequences on the "8".

Rod Taylor also did a good movie called "The Hell With Heroes", about post WW 2 guys flying overseas with surplus DC3 etc. Not bad. Claudia Cardinale added to it.

Best all time is John Wayne in "The High and the Mighty", his character having been displaced with failed airlines etc and at the end of his career. Even includes P.A.C.E. situation.

Lu Zuckerman 16th Mar 2004 14:38

Mistooken Identity
 
To: ShyTorque

The pilot of the Grumman Goose was not Mel Gibson. For the life of me I can't remember the actors name but it wasn't Mel Gibson.

Steven something or another comes to mind.

:E :E

wub 16th Mar 2004 14:46

Stephen Collins was the lead in Tales of the Golden Monkey

JDK 16th Mar 2004 15:51

For Goose fans, go to The Gneech's Goose Page which has a lot of (old but) valuable info, including links to other Goose and Golden Monkey stuff.

fernytickles 17th Mar 2004 02:14

Harrison Ford was recently announced as the chairman of EAA's Young Eagles: www.youngeagles.org

Eric Mc 18th Mar 2004 21:53

Jimmy Stewart also acted as a pilot in "Strategic Air Command".

Homer Simpson gets to fly (and crash) a Wright Flyer in an episode of "The Simpsons".

Brian Marshall in "Buccaneer".

Roy Marsden in "Airline".

Mike Pratt in "The Brothers".

Robert Conrad in "Baa Baa Black Sheep".

Rock Hudson in "A Gathering of Eagles".

James Garner in "The Great Escape".

corsair 19th Mar 2004 01:54

I read the other day that Jimmy Stewart once flew a B52 on a bombing mission over Vietnam as a Brigadier General. He 'flew' the B36 and B47 in 'Strategic Air Command' too. I wonder did he do that in real life?

Anyone remember 'Spencer's pilots''. A hokey TV series in the Seventies, I think. Some good flying in it I seem to remember. Probably Art Scholl. I was a bit young to remember the details.

Eric Mc 19th Mar 2004 07:47

I remember "Spencer's Pilots" - a sort of airborne "Starsky & Hutch" from around 1977/78.
A Catalina featured quite regularly in it.

Other actor/pilots:

Clark Gable - "Test Pilot"

Dean Martin - "Airport"

Charlton Heston - "Airport '75"

There was also an American children's animated series made around 1970/71 called "Dusty and the Skyhawks". It wasn't that bad actually, the drawings were realistic as were the planes (very similar in style to today's "King of the Hill"). The aircraft were usually well drawn and accurate "modern" general aviation types- such as the Cessna 172 Skyhawk from which the programme got its name

Chimbu chuckles 19th Mar 2004 09:23

Yes Jimmy Stewart was command rated on the early boeing jet bombers. After active service as a bomber pilot with the 8th in Europe he remained active reserve and flew the B36 and B47....and I have read somewhere that he did fly some missions over VN in a Buff....amazing character.


Chuck.


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