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Yakima Canutt

Enos Edward "Yakima" Canutt (November 29, 1895 – May 24, 1986) was an American champion rodeo rider, actor, stuntman, and action director. He developed many stunts for films and the techniques and technology to protect stuntmen in performing them.

Yakima Canutt
Canutt in The Man From Utah (1934)
Born
Enos Edward Canutt

(1895-11-29)November 29, 1895
DiedMay 24, 1986(1986-05-24) (aged 90)
North Hollywood, California, U.S.
Resting placeValhalla Memorial Park Cemetery
Other namesYak Canutt
Occupations
  • Rodeo rider
  • actor
  • stuntman
  • director
Years active1912–1975
Spouses
(m. 1917; div. 1922)
Minnie Audrea Yeager Rice
(m. 1931)
Children3

Early years edit

Born Enos Edward Canutt in the Snake River Hills near Colfax, Washington, he was one of five children of John Lemuel Canutt, a rancher, and his wife Nettie Ellen Stevens. He grew up in eastern Washington on a ranch near Penawawa Creek, founded by his grandfather. His father operated the ranch and also served a term in the state legislature.

Canutt's formal education was limited to elementary school in Green Lake, then a suburb of Seattle. He gained the education for his life's work on the family ranch, where he learned to hunt, trap, shoot, and ride.[1]

Canutt first broke a wild bronco when he was 11. As a 6-foot-tall (1.8 m) 16-year-old, he started bronc riding at the Whitman County Fair in Colfax in 1912, and at 17 he won the title of World's Best Bronco Buster. Canutt started rodeo riding professionally and gained a reputation as a bronc rider, bulldogger, and all-around cowboy. It was at the 1914 Pendleton Round-Up that he got the nickname "Yakima" when a newspaper caption misidentified him.[2] "Yakima Canutt may be the most famous person NOT from Yakima, Washington" says Elizabeth Gibson, author of Yakima, Washington.[3] Winning second place at the 1915 Pendleton Round-Up brought attention from show promoters, who invited Canutt to compete around the country.[2]

"I started in major rodeos in 1914, and went through to 1923. There was quite a crop of us traveling together, and we would have special railroad cars and cars for the horses. We'd play anywhere from three, six, eight, ten-day shows. Bronc riding and bulldogging were my specialties, but I did some roping," said Canutt.[4]

 
Kitty Canutt, champion lady rider of the world, on Winnemucca, 1919

During the 1916 season, he became interested in divorcee Kitty Wilks, who had won the Lady's Bronc-Riding Championship a couple of times. They married on July 20, 1917, while at a show in Kalispell, Montana; he was 21 and she 18. They divorced in 1922.[2] While bulldogging in Idaho, Canutt suffered tears to his mouth and upper lip by a bull's horn; after getting stitches, he returned to the competition. A plastic surgeon corrected the injury a year later.[2]

Career edit

Rodeo edit

Canutt won his first world championship at the Olympics of the West in 1917 and won more championships in the next few years. In between rodeos, he broke horses for the French government in World War I.[5] In 1918, he went to Spokane to enlist in the United States Navy and was stationed in Bremerton. In the fall, he was given a 30-day furlough to defend his rodeo title. He was discharged in spring 1919. At the 1919 Calgary Stampede, he competed in the bucking event and met Pete Knight.[2]

He traveled to Los Angeles for a rodeo, and decided to winter in Hollywood, where he met screen personalities.[4] Tom Mix, who had also started in rodeos, invited him to be in two of his pictures.[2] Mix added to his flashy wardrobe by borrowing two of Canutt's two-tone shirts and having his tailor make 40 copies.[4] Canutt got his first taste of stunt work in a fight scene on a serial called Lightning Bryce;[6] he left Hollywood to compete in the 1920 rodeo circuit.

Canutt won the saddle-bronc competition at the Pendleton Round-Up in 1917, 1919, and 1923 and came second in 1915 and 1929. He won the steer bulldogging in 1920 and 1921, and won the All-Around Police Gazette belt in 1917, 1919, 1920 and 1923.[2] While in Hollywood in 1923 for an awards ceremony, he was offered eight western action pictures for producer Ben Wilson at Burwillow Studios; the first was to be Riding Mad.[citation needed] He won the first leg of the Roosevelt Trophy. The trophy was awarded to the cowboy who accumulated the most points between Cheyenne Frontier Days and the Pendleton Round-Up. After he won three years in a row at the Fort Worth Rodeo in Fort Worth, Texas, it came to be known as "Yak's show."[7]

Acting edit

Canutt had been perfecting tricks such as the Crupper Mount, a leapfrog over the horse's rump into the saddle. Douglas Fairbanks used some in his film The Gaucho. Fairbanks and Canutt became friends and competed regularly at Fairbanks's gym. Canutt took small parts in pictures to get experience.[2] It was in Branded a Bandit (1924) that his nose was broken in a 12-foot fall from a cliff. The picture was delayed several weeks, and when it resumed, Canutt's close shots were from the side. A plastic surgeon reset the nose, which healed, inspiring Canutt to remark that he thought it looked better.[2]

Stuntwork edit

 
Yakima in John Ford's Stagecoach (1939) after doing the "transfer" part of his most famous stunt

When his contract with Wilson expired in 1927, Canutt made appearances at rodeos across the country. By 1928, the talkies were coming out, and though he had been in 48 silent pictures, Canutt knew his career was in trouble.[5] His voice had been damaged from flu in the Navy. He started taking on bit parts and stunts, and realized more could be done with action in pictures.[2]

In 1930, between pictures and rodeoing, Canutt met Minnie Audrea Yeager Rice at a party at her parents' home. They kept company during the next year while he picked up work on the serials for Mascot Pictures Corporation. They married on November 12, 1931, and had three children together. Two sons followed their father into stunt work.[2]

When rodeo riders invaded Hollywood, they brought a battery of rodeo techniques that Canutt would expand and improve, including horse falls and wagon wrecks. He also developed the harnesses and cable rigs to make the stunts foolproof and safe.[4] Among the new safety devices was the 'L' stirrup, which released a rider's foot if he was performing falling off a horse, so that he did not get hung in the stirrup. Canutt also developed cabling and equipment to cause spectacular wagon crashes, while releasing the team of horses, all on the same spot every time.[4] Safety methods such as these saved film-makers time and money and prevented accidents and injury to performers and animals.

Canutt developed the 'Running W' stunt, bringing down a horse at the gallop by attaching a wire, anchored to the ground, to its fetlocks and launching the rider forward spectacularly. But this either often killed or severely injured the horse, requiring it to be put down. At a minimum it was badly shaken and unusable for the rest of the day.[4] The 'Running W' is now banned and has been replaced with training for the falling-horse technique.

It is believed that the last time the Running W was used was on the 1983 Iraqi film Clash of Loyalties, when British actor and friend Marc Sinden and stuntman Ken Buckle (who had been trained by Canutt) performed the stunt three times during a cavalry charge sequence.[8][9]

While working on Mascot serials, Canutt practiced and perfected his most famous stunts, including the drop from a stagecoach that he performed in John Ford's Stagecoach (1939). That stunt was filmed on Lucerne Dry Lake, north of Lucerne Valley, California. He first performed it in Riders of the Dawn (1937) while doubling for Jack Randall.[2]

In his 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark, Steven Spielberg paid homage to Canutt, recreating the stunt when stuntman Terry Leonard (doubling for Harrison Ford) 'dropped' from the front of a German transport truck, was dragged underneath (along a prepared trench), and climbed up the back and round to the front again.[10]

 
Yakima in John Ford's Stagecoach doing the "drop" part of his most famous stunt

John Wayne edit

While at Mascot, Canutt met John Wayne while doubling for him in a motorcycle stunt for The Shadow of the Eagle (1932). Wayne admired Canutt's agility and fearlessness, and Canutt respected Wayne's willingness to learn and attempt his own stunts.[11] Canutt taught Wayne how to fall off a horse.[12]

The two worked together to create a technique that made on-screen fight scenes more realistic. Wayne and Canutt found if they stood at a certain angle in front of the camera, they could throw a punch at an actor's face and make it look as if actual contact had been made.[11]

Canutt and Wayne pioneered stunt and screen fighting techniques still in use. Wayne copied much of his on-screen persona from Canutt. The characterizations associated with Wayne – the drawling, hesitant speech and the hip-rolling walk – were pure Canutt.[13] Said Wayne, "I spent weeks studying the way Yakima Canutt walked and talked. He was a real cowhand."[14] In 1934, the two appeared together in the western Randy Rides Alone, in which Wayne starred and Canutt appeared as "henchman Spike".

In 1932, Canutt's first son Edward Clay was born and nicknamed Tap, short for Tapadero, a Spanish word for a stirrup covering. That year Canutt broke his shoulder in four places while trying to transfer from horse to wagon team.[2] Though work was scarce during the Depression, he got by combining stunting and rodeo work.[citation needed]

In 1934, Herbert J. Yates of Consolidated Film Industries combined Monogram, Mascot, Liberty, Majestic, Chesterfield, and Invincible Pictures to form Republic Pictures. Canutt became Republic's top stuntman. He handled all the action on many pictures, including Gene Autry films; and several series and serials, such as The Lone Ranger and Zorro. For Zorro Rides Again, Canutt performed almost all the scenes in which Zorro wore a mask. As a result, he was on the screen as much as the star John Carroll.[15] When the action was indicated in a Republic script, it said "see Yakima Canutt for action sequences."[4]

William Witney, one of Republic's film directors, said:

There will probably never be another stuntman who can compare to Yakima Canutt. He had been a world champion cowboy several times and where horses were concerned he could do it all. He invented all the gadgets that made stunt work easier. One of his clever devices was a step that attached to the saddle so that he had leverage to transfer to another moving object, like a wagon or a train. Another was the "shotgun," a spring-loaded device used to separate the tongue of a running wagon from the horses, thus cutting the horses loose. It also included a shock cord attached to the wagon bed, which caused wheels to cramp and turn the wagon over on the precise spot that was most advantageous for the camera.[16]

In the 1936 film San Francisco, Canutt replaced Clark Gable in a scene in which a wall was to fall on the star. Canutt said: "We had a heavy table situated so that I could dive under it at the last moment. Just as the wall started down, a girl in the scene became hysterical and panicked. I grabbed her, leaped for the table, but didn't quite make it." The girl was unhurt but he broke six ribs.[5]

Ramrod edit

 
Yakima doubling John Wayne in Stagecoach

Canutt tried to get into directing; he was growing older and knew his stunting days were numbered. Harry Joe, Canutt's second son, was born in January 1937. Brothers Joe and Tap later got work as stuntmen with their father.[citation needed]

In 1938, Republic Pictures started expanding into bigger pictures and budgets. Canutt's mentor and action director for the 1925 Ben-Hur, Breezy Eason, was hired as second unit director, and Canutt to coordinate and ramrod the stunts. For Canutt, this meant not only hiring stuntmen and doing some stunts himself, but also laying out the action for the director and writing additional stunts.[4]

In the five years between 1925 and 1930, 55 people were killed making movies, and more than 10,000 injured. By the late 1930s, the maverick stuntman willing to do anything for a buck was disappearing. Now under scrutiny, experienced stunt men began to separate themselves from amateurs by building special equipment, rehearsing stunts, and developing new techniques.

— from Falling: How Our Greatest Fear Became Our Greatest Thrill by Garrett Soden.[17]

John Ford hired Canutt on John Wayne's recommendation for Stagecoach, where Canutt supervised the river-crossing scene as well as the Indian chase scene, did the stagecoach drop, and doubled for Wayne in the coach stunts. For safety during the stagecoach drop stunt, Canutt devised modified yokes and tongues to give extra handholds and extra room between the teams.[4] Ford told him that whenever Ford made an action picture and Canutt wasn't working elsewhere, he was on Ford's payroll.[2] Also in 1939, Canutt doubled Clark Gable in the burning of Atlanta in Gone With the Wind. He also appeared as a renegade accosting Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh) as she crosses a bridge in a carriage driving through a shantytown.[citation needed]

Directing edit

In 1940, Canutt sustained serious internal injuries while doubling for Clark Gable in Boom Town (1940) when a horse fell on him. Though in discomfort for months after an operation to repair his bifurcated intestines, he continued to work.[2] Republic's Sol Siegel offered him the chance to direct the action sequences of Dark Command, starring Wayne and directed by Raoul Walsh. For Dark Command, Canutt fashioned an elaborate cable system to yank back the plummeting coach before it fell on the stuntman and horses; he also created a breakaway harness from which they were released before hitting the water.[18]

In 1943, while doing a low budget Roy Rogers picture called Idaho, Canutt broke both his legs at the ankles in a fall off a wagon.[2] He recovered to write the stunts and supervise the action for another Wayne film, In Old Oklahoma. In the next decade, Canutt became one of the best second unit and action directors. MGM brought Canutt to England in 1952 to direct the action and jousting sequences in Ivanhoe with Robert Taylor. This would set a precedent by filming action abroad instead of on the studio lot. Canutt introduced many British stuntmen to Hollywood-style stunt training.[2] Ivanhoe was followed by Knights of the Round Table, again with director Richard Thorpe and starring Robert Taylor. Canutt again was brought in for lavish action scenes in King Richard and the Crusaders.[19]

In 1954, Canutt directed the Hollywood western movie "The Lawless Rider," starring Johnny Carpenter and Texas Rose Bascom.[20]

Canutt directed the close-action scenes for Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus (1960). He took five days to direct retakes that included the slave army rolling its flaming logs into the Romans, and other fight scenes featuring Kirk Douglas, Tony Curtis and John Ireland.[21]

Ben Hur edit

For Ben-Hur (1959), Canutt staged the chariot race with nine teams of four horses. He trained Charlton Heston and Stephen Boyd to do their own charioteering. He and his crew spent five months on the race sequence.[22] In contrast to the 1925 film, not one horse was hurt, and no humans experienced serious injuries. His son Joe Canutt, while doubling for Charlton Heston, cut his chin because he did not follow his father's advice to hook himself to the chariot when Judah Ben-Hur's chariot bounced over the wreck of another chariot.[23]

Other films edit

Walt Disney brought Canutt in to do second unit work for Westward Ho, the Wagons! in 1956. He followed this first live action Western feature film with Old Yeller the next year. In 1960, Canutt worked with Disney on Swiss Family Robinson, which involved transporting many exotic animals to a remote island in the West Indies.

Anthony Mann specifically requested Canutt for the second unit for his El Cid (1961), where Canutt directed sons Joe and Tap, doubling for Charlton Heston and Christopher Rhodes, in a stunning tournament joust. "Canutt was surely the most active stager of tournaments since the Middle Ages" – from Swordsmen of the Screen.[19] He was determined to make the combat scenes in El Cid the best that had been filmed.[23] Mann again requested him for The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964). Over the next 10 years, Canutt continued to work, bringing his talents to Cat Ballou, Khartoum, Where Eagles Dare and A Man Called Horse (1970).[24]

In 1985, Yakima appeared as himself in Yak's Best Ride, directed by John Crawford. His final screen credit was as a consultant for the stunts in Equus.[24]

Death edit

On May 24, 1986, Yakima Canutt died of cardiac arrest at the age of 90 at the North Hollywood Medical Center in North Hollywood, California.[25][26] He was cremated and his ashes were scattered in the Garden of Remembrance at the Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery. Canutt has a memorial plaque in the cemetery's Portal of Folded Wings.[25]

For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Yakima Canutt has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1500 Vine Street.[27] In 1967, he was given an Academy Honorary Award for achievements as a stuntman and for "developing safety devices to protect all stunt men everywhere".[24][27]

Honors edit

Filmography edit

Selected filmography edit

Film awards edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ World Bio. 2001.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Canutt. 1979.
  3. ^ Gibson. 2002.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Baxter. 1974
  5. ^ a b c LA Times, April 17, 1960
  6. ^ Carlin, Rex (September 14, 2017). "Throwback Thursday: Yakima Canutt and the Pendleton Roundup". NBC Right Now. www.nbcrightnow.com. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  7. ^ "The legend of Yakima Canutt". East Oregonian. www.eastoregonian.com. September 14, 2017. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  8. ^ "The Greatest Movie Story Never Told". Esquire. July 2012. pp. 126–133.
  9. ^ "The Film Programme interview". BBC Radio 4. August 5, 2011. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
  10. ^ "Cowboy Stuntman Yakima Canutt". Deborah J. Lightfoot Sizemore. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
  11. ^ a b Kazanjian. 2007.
  12. ^ Look 1971 interview with Wayne.
  13. ^ Cody. 1982. p.91.
  14. ^ Willis. 1997.
  15. ^ Glut. 1973.
  16. ^ Whitney. 1996.
  17. ^ Soden. 2003
  18. ^ Gilbert. 1970
  19. ^ a b Richards. 1977.
  20. ^ "The Lawless Rider". IMDb.
  21. ^ Winkler. 2007.
  22. ^ Herman. 1996. p.396
  23. ^ a b Heston. 1995
  24. ^ a b c Monaco, James (1991). Monaco, James; Pallot, James (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Film. Perigee Books. p. 94. ISBN 0-399-51604-2.
  25. ^ a b Ellenberger, Allan R. (2001). Celebrities in Los Angeles Cemeteries: A Directory. McFarland & Company Incorporated Pub. p. 202. ISBN 0-7864-0983-5.
  26. ^ "Yakima Canutt Dies; Stunt Man in Movies". The New York Times. Associated Press. May 26, 1986. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
  27. ^ a b Goldstein, Alan (May 26, 1986). "Yakima Canutt". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
  28. ^ "Yakima Canutt". Pendleton Round-Up and Happy Canyon Hall of Fame. pendletonhalloffame.com. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  29. ^ "Rodeo Hall of Fame Inductees – Yakima Canutt". National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. nationalcowboymuseum.org. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  30. ^ "Yakima Canutt". Hollywood Stuntmen Hall of Fame- Members. www.stuntmen.org. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  31. ^ "Yakima Canutt". Hollywood Walk of Fame. www.walkoffame.com. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  32. ^ "Yakima Canutt". Western Heritage from the Texas Trail of Fame. www.texastrailoffame.org. July 14, 2013. Retrieved April 14, 2018.

References edit

  • Ames, Walter (April 17, 1960). "Yakima Canutt Falls for Who's Who of Movies". Los Angeles Times.
  • Baxter, John O. (1974). Stunt; the story of the great movie stunt men. Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-06520-5.
  • Canutt, Yakima & Drake, Oliver (1979). Stunt man: the autobiography of Yakima Canutt. New York: Walker. ISBN 0-8027-0613-4.
  • Cody, Iron Eyes; Perry, Collin (1982). Iron Eyes, my life as a Hollywood Indian. New York: Everest House. ISBN 0-89696-111-7.
  • Donev, Stef (1997). The Fun of Living Dangerously: The Life of Yakima Canutt (Spotlight Books, Grade 3, Level 9, Unit 1). New York: Macmillan. ISBN 0-02-182190-9.
  • Gale Group eds. (2001). Encyclopedia of world biography supplement, Vol. 21. Detroit: Gale Research. ISBN 0-7876-5283-0. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  • Gibson, Elizabeth (2002). Yakima, Washington (Images of America). Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-2086-1.
  • Glut, Donald F.; Harmon, Jim (1973). The great movie serials: their sound and fury. London: Woburn Press. ISBN 0-7130-0097-X.
  • Goldstein, Alan (May 26, 1986). "Yakima Canutt, Rodeo Rider Who Became Film Stunt Man, Dies". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
  • Herman, Jan (1995). A talent for trouble: the life of Hollywood's most acclaimed director, William Wyler. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 0-399-14012-3.
  • Heston, Charlton (1995). In the arena: an autobiography. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-80394-1.
  • Kazanjian,Howard; Chris Enss (2007). The young Duke: the early life of John Wayne. Guilford, Conn: TwoDot. ISBN 978-0-7627-3898-4.
  • Nevins, Francis M.; Witney, William (1996). In a Door, Into a Fight, Out a Door, Into a Chase: Moviemaking Remembered by the Guy at the Door. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-7864-2258-0.
  • Richards, Jeffrey H. (1977). Swordsmen of the screen, from Douglas Fairbanks to Michael York. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. ISBN 0-7100-8478-1.
  • Soden, Garrett (2003). Falling: How Our Greatest Fear Became Our Greatest Thrill. New York: Norton. p. 224. ISBN 0-393-05413-6.
  • Wallis, Michael (2001). The Real Wild West : the 101 Ranch and the creation of the American West. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780312192860
  • Wills, Garry (1997). John Wayne's America: the politics of celebrity. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-80823-4.
  • Winkler, Martin M. (2007). Spartacus: Film and History. Blackwell Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-4051-3181-0.

External links edit

  • "Yakima Canutt's Saddle", History Detectives, PBS.org
  • Yakima Canutt at IMDb
  • Yakima Canutt at Find a Grave

yakima, canutt, enos, edward, yakima, canutt, november, 1895, 1986, american, champion, rodeo, rider, actor, stuntman, action, director, developed, many, stunts, films, techniques, technology, protect, stuntmen, performing, them, canutt, from, utah, 1934, born. Enos Edward Yakima Canutt November 29 1895 May 24 1986 was an American champion rodeo rider actor stuntman and action director He developed many stunts for films and the techniques and technology to protect stuntmen in performing them Yakima CanuttCanutt in The Man From Utah 1934 BornEnos Edward Canutt 1895 11 29 November 29 1895Colfax Washington U S DiedMay 24 1986 1986 05 24 aged 90 North Hollywood California U S Resting placeValhalla Memorial Park CemeteryOther namesYak CanuttOccupationsRodeo rideractorstuntmandirectorYears active1912 1975SpousesCatherine Kitty Wilks m 1917 div 1922 wbr Minnie Audrea Yeager Rice m 1931 wbr Children3 Contents 1 Early years 2 Career 2 1 Rodeo 2 2 Acting 2 3 Stuntwork 2 3 1 John Wayne 2 3 2 Ramrod 2 4 Directing 2 4 1 Ben Hur 2 4 2 Other films 3 Death 4 Honors 5 Filmography 5 1 Selected filmography 6 Film awards 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly years editBorn Enos Edward Canutt in the Snake River Hills near Colfax Washington he was one of five children of John Lemuel Canutt a rancher and his wife Nettie Ellen Stevens He grew up in eastern Washington on a ranch near Penawawa Creek founded by his grandfather His father operated the ranch and also served a term in the state legislature Canutt s formal education was limited to elementary school in Green Lake then a suburb of Seattle He gained the education for his life s work on the family ranch where he learned to hunt trap shoot and ride 1 Canutt first broke a wild bronco when he was 11 As a 6 foot tall 1 8 m 16 year old he started bronc riding at the Whitman County Fair in Colfax in 1912 and at 17 he won the title of World s Best Bronco Buster Canutt started rodeo riding professionally and gained a reputation as a bronc rider bulldogger and all around cowboy It was at the 1914 Pendleton Round Up that he got the nickname Yakima when a newspaper caption misidentified him 2 Yakima Canutt may be the most famous person NOT from Yakima Washington says Elizabeth Gibson author of Yakima Washington 3 Winning second place at the 1915 Pendleton Round Up brought attention from show promoters who invited Canutt to compete around the country 2 I started in major rodeos in 1914 and went through to 1923 There was quite a crop of us traveling together and we would have special railroad cars and cars for the horses We d play anywhere from three six eight ten day shows Bronc riding and bulldogging were my specialties but I did some roping said Canutt 4 nbsp Kitty Canutt champion lady rider of the world on Winnemucca 1919During the 1916 season he became interested in divorcee Kitty Wilks who had won the Lady s Bronc Riding Championship a couple of times They married on July 20 1917 while at a show in Kalispell Montana he was 21 and she 18 They divorced in 1922 2 While bulldogging in Idaho Canutt suffered tears to his mouth and upper lip by a bull s horn after getting stitches he returned to the competition A plastic surgeon corrected the injury a year later 2 Career editRodeo edit Canutt won his first world championship at the Olympics of the West in 1917 and won more championships in the next few years In between rodeos he broke horses for the French government in World War I 5 In 1918 he went to Spokane to enlist in the United States Navy and was stationed in Bremerton In the fall he was given a 30 day furlough to defend his rodeo title He was discharged in spring 1919 At the 1919 Calgary Stampede he competed in the bucking event and met Pete Knight 2 He traveled to Los Angeles for a rodeo and decided to winter in Hollywood where he met screen personalities 4 Tom Mix who had also started in rodeos invited him to be in two of his pictures 2 Mix added to his flashy wardrobe by borrowing two of Canutt s two tone shirts and having his tailor make 40 copies 4 Canutt got his first taste of stunt work in a fight scene on a serial called Lightning Bryce 6 he left Hollywood to compete in the 1920 rodeo circuit Canutt won the saddle bronc competition at the Pendleton Round Up in 1917 1919 and 1923 and came second in 1915 and 1929 He won the steer bulldogging in 1920 and 1921 and won the All Around Police Gazette belt in 1917 1919 1920 and 1923 2 While in Hollywood in 1923 for an awards ceremony he was offered eight western action pictures for producer Ben Wilson at Burwillow Studios the first was to be Riding Mad citation needed He won the first leg of the Roosevelt Trophy The trophy was awarded to the cowboy who accumulated the most points between Cheyenne Frontier Days and the Pendleton Round Up After he won three years in a row at the Fort Worth Rodeo in Fort Worth Texas it came to be known as Yak s show 7 Acting edit Canutt had been perfecting tricks such as the Crupper Mount a leapfrog over the horse s rump into the saddle Douglas Fairbanks used some in his film The Gaucho Fairbanks and Canutt became friends and competed regularly at Fairbanks s gym Canutt took small parts in pictures to get experience 2 It was in Branded a Bandit 1924 that his nose was broken in a 12 foot fall from a cliff The picture was delayed several weeks and when it resumed Canutt s close shots were from the side A plastic surgeon reset the nose which healed inspiring Canutt to remark that he thought it looked better 2 Stuntwork edit nbsp Yakima in John Ford s Stagecoach 1939 after doing the transfer part of his most famous stuntWhen his contract with Wilson expired in 1927 Canutt made appearances at rodeos across the country By 1928 the talkies were coming out and though he had been in 48 silent pictures Canutt knew his career was in trouble 5 His voice had been damaged from flu in the Navy He started taking on bit parts and stunts and realized more could be done with action in pictures 2 In 1930 between pictures and rodeoing Canutt met Minnie Audrea Yeager Rice at a party at her parents home They kept company during the next year while he picked up work on the serials for Mascot Pictures Corporation They married on November 12 1931 and had three children together Two sons followed their father into stunt work 2 When rodeo riders invaded Hollywood they brought a battery of rodeo techniques that Canutt would expand and improve including horse falls and wagon wrecks He also developed the harnesses and cable rigs to make the stunts foolproof and safe 4 Among the new safety devices was the L stirrup which released a rider s foot if he was performing falling off a horse so that he did not get hung in the stirrup Canutt also developed cabling and equipment to cause spectacular wagon crashes while releasing the team of horses all on the same spot every time 4 Safety methods such as these saved film makers time and money and prevented accidents and injury to performers and animals Canutt developed the Running W stunt bringing down a horse at the gallop by attaching a wire anchored to the ground to its fetlocks and launching the rider forward spectacularly But this either often killed or severely injured the horse requiring it to be put down At a minimum it was badly shaken and unusable for the rest of the day 4 The Running W is now banned and has been replaced with training for the falling horse technique It is believed that the last time the Running W was used was on the 1983 Iraqi film Clash of Loyalties when British actor and friend Marc Sinden and stuntman Ken Buckle who had been trained by Canutt performed the stunt three times during a cavalry charge sequence 8 9 While working on Mascot serials Canutt practiced and perfected his most famous stunts including the drop from a stagecoach that he performed in John Ford s Stagecoach 1939 That stunt was filmed on Lucerne Dry Lake north of Lucerne Valley California He first performed it in Riders of the Dawn 1937 while doubling for Jack Randall 2 In his 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark Steven Spielberg paid homage to Canutt recreating the stunt when stuntman Terry Leonard doubling for Harrison Ford dropped from the front of a German transport truck was dragged underneath along a prepared trench and climbed up the back and round to the front again 10 nbsp Yakima in John Ford s Stagecoach doing the drop part of his most famous stuntJohn Wayne edit While at Mascot Canutt met John Wayne while doubling for him in a motorcycle stunt for The Shadow of the Eagle 1932 Wayne admired Canutt s agility and fearlessness and Canutt respected Wayne s willingness to learn and attempt his own stunts 11 Canutt taught Wayne how to fall off a horse 12 The two worked together to create a technique that made on screen fight scenes more realistic Wayne and Canutt found if they stood at a certain angle in front of the camera they could throw a punch at an actor s face and make it look as if actual contact had been made 11 Canutt and Wayne pioneered stunt and screen fighting techniques still in use Wayne copied much of his on screen persona from Canutt The characterizations associated with Wayne the drawling hesitant speech and the hip rolling walk were pure Canutt 13 Said Wayne I spent weeks studying the way Yakima Canutt walked and talked He was a real cowhand 14 In 1934 the two appeared together in the western Randy Rides Alone in which Wayne starred and Canutt appeared as henchman Spike In 1932 Canutt s first son Edward Clay was born and nicknamed Tap short for Tapadero a Spanish word for a stirrup covering That year Canutt broke his shoulder in four places while trying to transfer from horse to wagon team 2 Though work was scarce during the Depression he got by combining stunting and rodeo work citation needed In 1934 Herbert J Yates of Consolidated Film Industries combined Monogram Mascot Liberty Majestic Chesterfield and Invincible Pictures to form Republic Pictures Canutt became Republic s top stuntman He handled all the action on many pictures including Gene Autry films and several series and serials such as The Lone Ranger and Zorro For Zorro Rides Again Canutt performed almost all the scenes in which Zorro wore a mask As a result he was on the screen as much as the star John Carroll 15 When the action was indicated in a Republic script it said see Yakima Canutt for action sequences 4 William Witney one of Republic s film directors said There will probably never be another stuntman who can compare to Yakima Canutt He had been a world champion cowboy several times and where horses were concerned he could do it all He invented all the gadgets that made stunt work easier One of his clever devices was a step that attached to the saddle so that he had leverage to transfer to another moving object like a wagon or a train Another was the shotgun a spring loaded device used to separate the tongue of a running wagon from the horses thus cutting the horses loose It also included a shock cord attached to the wagon bed which caused wheels to cramp and turn the wagon over on the precise spot that was most advantageous for the camera 16 In the 1936 film San Francisco Canutt replaced Clark Gable in a scene in which a wall was to fall on the star Canutt said We had a heavy table situated so that I could dive under it at the last moment Just as the wall started down a girl in the scene became hysterical and panicked I grabbed her leaped for the table but didn t quite make it The girl was unhurt but he broke six ribs 5 Ramrod edit nbsp Yakima doubling John Wayne in StagecoachCanutt tried to get into directing he was growing older and knew his stunting days were numbered Harry Joe Canutt s second son was born in January 1937 Brothers Joe and Tap later got work as stuntmen with their father citation needed In 1938 Republic Pictures started expanding into bigger pictures and budgets Canutt s mentor and action director for the 1925 Ben Hur Breezy Eason was hired as second unit director and Canutt to coordinate and ramrod the stunts For Canutt this meant not only hiring stuntmen and doing some stunts himself but also laying out the action for the director and writing additional stunts 4 In the five years between 1925 and 1930 55 people were killed making movies and more than 10 000 injured By the late 1930s the maverick stuntman willing to do anything for a buck was disappearing Now under scrutiny experienced stunt men began to separate themselves from amateurs by building special equipment rehearsing stunts and developing new techniques from Falling How Our Greatest Fear Became Our Greatest Thrill by Garrett Soden 17 John Ford hired Canutt on John Wayne s recommendation for Stagecoach where Canutt supervised the river crossing scene as well as the Indian chase scene did the stagecoach drop and doubled for Wayne in the coach stunts For safety during the stagecoach drop stunt Canutt devised modified yokes and tongues to give extra handholds and extra room between the teams 4 Ford told him that whenever Ford made an action picture and Canutt wasn t working elsewhere he was on Ford s payroll 2 Also in 1939 Canutt doubled Clark Gable in the burning of Atlanta in Gone With the Wind He also appeared as a renegade accosting Scarlett O Hara Vivien Leigh as she crosses a bridge in a carriage driving through a shantytown citation needed Directing edit In 1940 Canutt sustained serious internal injuries while doubling for Clark Gable in Boom Town 1940 when a horse fell on him Though in discomfort for months after an operation to repair his bifurcated intestines he continued to work 2 Republic s Sol Siegel offered him the chance to direct the action sequences of Dark Command starring Wayne and directed by Raoul Walsh For Dark Command Canutt fashioned an elaborate cable system to yank back the plummeting coach before it fell on the stuntman and horses he also created a breakaway harness from which they were released before hitting the water 18 In 1943 while doing a low budget Roy Rogers picture called Idaho Canutt broke both his legs at the ankles in a fall off a wagon 2 He recovered to write the stunts and supervise the action for another Wayne film In Old Oklahoma In the next decade Canutt became one of the best second unit and action directors MGM brought Canutt to England in 1952 to direct the action and jousting sequences in Ivanhoe with Robert Taylor This would set a precedent by filming action abroad instead of on the studio lot Canutt introduced many British stuntmen to Hollywood style stunt training 2 Ivanhoe was followed by Knights of the Round Table again with director Richard Thorpe and starring Robert Taylor Canutt again was brought in for lavish action scenes in King Richard and the Crusaders 19 In 1954 Canutt directed the Hollywood western movie The Lawless Rider starring Johnny Carpenter and Texas Rose Bascom 20 Canutt directed the close action scenes for Stanley Kubrick s Spartacus 1960 He took five days to direct retakes that included the slave army rolling its flaming logs into the Romans and other fight scenes featuring Kirk Douglas Tony Curtis and John Ireland 21 Ben Hur edit For Ben Hur 1959 Canutt staged the chariot race with nine teams of four horses He trained Charlton Heston and Stephen Boyd to do their own charioteering He and his crew spent five months on the race sequence 22 In contrast to the 1925 film not one horse was hurt and no humans experienced serious injuries His son Joe Canutt while doubling for Charlton Heston cut his chin because he did not follow his father s advice to hook himself to the chariot when Judah Ben Hur s chariot bounced over the wreck of another chariot 23 Other films edit Walt Disney brought Canutt in to do second unit work for Westward Ho the Wagons in 1956 He followed this first live action Western feature film with Old Yeller the next year In 1960 Canutt worked with Disney on Swiss Family Robinson which involved transporting many exotic animals to a remote island in the West Indies Anthony Mann specifically requested Canutt for the second unit for his El Cid 1961 where Canutt directed sons Joe and Tap doubling for Charlton Heston and Christopher Rhodes in a stunning tournament joust Canutt was surely the most active stager of tournaments since the Middle Ages from Swordsmen of the Screen 19 He was determined to make the combat scenes in El Cid the best that had been filmed 23 Mann again requested him for The Fall of the Roman Empire 1964 Over the next 10 years Canutt continued to work bringing his talents to Cat Ballou Khartoum Where Eagles Dare and A Man Called Horse 1970 24 In 1985 Yakima appeared as himself in Yak s Best Ride directed by John Crawford His final screen credit was as a consultant for the stunts in Equus 24 Death editOn May 24 1986 Yakima Canutt died of cardiac arrest at the age of 90 at the North Hollywood Medical Center in North Hollywood California 25 26 He was cremated and his ashes were scattered in the Garden of Remembrance at the Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery Canutt has a memorial plaque in the cemetery s Portal of Folded Wings 25 For his contribution to the motion picture industry Yakima Canutt has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1500 Vine Street 27 In 1967 he was given an Academy Honorary Award for achievements as a stuntman and for developing safety devices to protect all stunt men everywhere 24 27 Honors edit1969 Pendleton Round Up and Happy Canyon Hall of Fame 28 1975 National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum Rodeo Hall of Fame 29 Stuntmen s Hall of Fame 30 1985 Hollywood Walk of Fame 31 2001 Texas Trail of Fame 32 Filmography editMain article Yakima Canutt filmography Selected filmography edit Lightning Bryce 1919 as the Deputy The Desert Hawk 1924 The Riddle Rider 1924 Branded a Bandit 1924 Romance and Rustlers 1925 A Two Fisted Sheriff 1925 The Riding Comet 1925 White Thunder 1925 Scar Hanan 1925 The Human Tornado 1925 Wild Horse Canyon 1925 The Devil Horse 1926 The Fighting Stallion 1927 Bad Men s Money 1929 The Three Outcasts 1929 Riders of the Storm 1929 Firebrand Jordan 1930 Westward Bound 1930 Ridin Law 1930 as Buck Lambert The Hurricane Horseman 1931 The Shadow of the Eagle 1932 as Boyle Battling Buckaroo 1932 Guns for Hire 1932 The Wyoming Whirlwind 1932 The Texas Tornado 1932 as Jackson Henchman The Telegraph Trail 1933 as High Wolf Scarlet River 1933 as Yak Sagebrush Trail 1933 as outlaw band leader West of the Divide 1934 as Hank The Man from Hell 1934 Fighting Through 1934 as Big Jack Thorne The Man From Utah 1934 as Cheyenne Kent Randy Rides Alone 1934 as Henchman Spike The Star Packer 1934 as Yak The Lawless Frontier 1934 as Bad Man Neath the Arizona Skies 1934 as Bad Man The Dawn Rider 1935 as Saloon Owner Lawless Range 1935 as Joe Burns Outlaw Rule 1935 as Blaze Tremaine Paradise Canyon 1935 as Curly Joe Gale Pals of the Range 1935 as Brown Cyclone of the Saddle 1935 as Snake The Clutching Hand 1936 Wildcat Trooper 1936 Riders of the Rockies 1937 Stagecoach 1939 second unit director stunt coordinator and stunts Cavalry scout all uncredited Gone With the Wind 1939 as man who attacks Scarlett while riding through shanty town also uncredited stunt coordinator stunt double for Clark Gable citation needed Angel and the Badman 1947 second unit director Ivanhoe 1952 second unit director Knights of the Round Table 1953 second unit director uncredited The Lawless Rider 1954 director King Richard and the Crusaders 1954 second unit director Old Yeller 1957 second unit director Ben Hur 1959 second unit director Swiss Family Robinson 1960 second unit director El Cid 1961 second unit director The Fall of the Roman Empire 1964 second unit director Cat Ballou 1965 second unit director executive in charge of production uncredited stunt coordinator Khartoum 1966 second unit director The Flim Flam Man 1967 second unit director Where Eagles Dare 1968 second unit director A Man Called Horse 1970 second unit director Rio Lobo 1970 second unit director Breakheart Pass 1975 second unit directorFilm awards edit1959 National Board of Review of Motion Pictures Special Citation shared with Andrew Marton for directing the chariot race in Ben Hur 1967 Academy Honorary Award for achievements as a stunt man and for developing safety devices to protect stunt men 1975 Inducted into National Cowboy Hall of Fame 1978 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences A tribute to Yakima Canutt dinner 1984 The Motion Picture amp Television Fund s Golden Boot Award Hollywood Walk of Fame star at 1500 Vine Street Notes edit World Bio 2001 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Canutt 1979 Gibson 2002 a b c d e f g h i Baxter 1974 a b c LA Times April 17 1960 Carlin Rex September 14 2017 Throwback Thursday Yakima Canutt and the Pendleton Roundup NBC Right Now www nbcrightnow com Retrieved December 27 2017 The legend of Yakima Canutt East Oregonian www eastoregonian com September 14 2017 Retrieved December 27 2017 The Greatest Movie Story Never Told Esquire July 2012 pp 126 133 The Film Programme interview BBC Radio 4 August 5 2011 Retrieved August 6 2011 Cowboy Stuntman Yakima Canutt Deborah J Lightfoot Sizemore Retrieved September 5 2012 a b Kazanjian 2007 Look 1971 interview with Wayne Cody 1982 p 91 Willis 1997 Glut 1973 Whitney 1996 Soden 2003 Gilbert 1970 a b Richards 1977 The Lawless Rider IMDb Winkler 2007 Herman 1996 p 396 a b Heston 1995 a b c Monaco James 1991 Monaco James Pallot James eds The Encyclopedia of Film Perigee Books p 94 ISBN 0 399 51604 2 a b Ellenberger Allan R 2001 Celebrities in Los Angeles Cemeteries A Directory McFarland amp Company Incorporated Pub p 202 ISBN 0 7864 0983 5 Yakima Canutt Dies Stunt Man in Movies The New York Times Associated Press May 26 1986 Retrieved December 26 2017 a b Goldstein Alan May 26 1986 Yakima Canutt Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 26 2017 Yakima Canutt Pendleton Round Up and Happy Canyon Hall of Fame pendletonhalloffame com Retrieved December 27 2017 Rodeo Hall of Fame Inductees Yakima Canutt National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum nationalcowboymuseum org Retrieved December 27 2017 Yakima Canutt Hollywood Stuntmen Hall of Fame Members www stuntmen org Retrieved December 27 2017 Yakima Canutt Hollywood Walk of Fame www walkoffame com Retrieved December 27 2017 Yakima Canutt Western Heritage from the Texas Trail of Fame www texastrailoffame org July 14 2013 Retrieved April 14 2018 References editAmes Walter April 17 1960 Yakima Canutt Falls for Who s Who of Movies Los Angeles Times Baxter John O 1974 Stunt the story of the great movie stunt men Garden City N Y Doubleday ISBN 0 385 06520 5 Canutt Yakima amp Drake Oliver 1979 Stunt man the autobiography of Yakima Canutt New York Walker ISBN 0 8027 0613 4 Cody Iron Eyes Perry Collin 1982 Iron Eyes my life as a Hollywood Indian New York Everest House ISBN 0 89696 111 7 Donev Stef 1997 The Fun of Living Dangerously The Life of Yakima Canutt Spotlight Books Grade 3 Level 9 Unit 1 New York Macmillan ISBN 0 02 182190 9 Gale Group eds 2001 Encyclopedia of world biography supplement Vol 21 Detroit Gale Research ISBN 0 7876 5283 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Gibson Elizabeth 2002 Yakima Washington Images of America Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 2086 1 Glut Donald F Harmon Jim 1973 The great movie serials their sound and fury London Woburn Press ISBN 0 7130 0097 X Goldstein Alan May 26 1986 Yakima Canutt Rodeo Rider Who Became Film Stunt Man Dies Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 12 2013 Herman Jan 1995 A talent for trouble the life of Hollywood s most acclaimed director William Wyler New York NY G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 0 399 14012 3 Heston Charlton 1995 In the arena an autobiography New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 80394 1 Kazanjian Howard Chris Enss 2007 The young Duke the early life of John Wayne Guilford Conn TwoDot ISBN 978 0 7627 3898 4 Nevins Francis M Witney William 1996 In a Door Into a Fight Out a Door Into a Chase Moviemaking Remembered by the Guy at the Door Jefferson N C McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 7864 2258 0 Richards Jeffrey H 1977 Swordsmen of the screen from Douglas Fairbanks to Michael York London Routledge and Kegan Paul ISBN 0 7100 8478 1 Soden Garrett 2003 Falling How Our Greatest Fear Became Our Greatest Thrill New York Norton p 224 ISBN 0 393 05413 6 Wallis Michael 2001 The Real Wild West the 101 Ranch and the creation of the American West New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312192860 Wills Garry 1997 John Wayne s America the politics of celebrity New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 80823 4 Winkler Martin M 2007 Spartacus Film and History Blackwell Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 4051 3181 0 nbsp Biography portalExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yakima Canutt Yakima Canutt s Saddle History Detectives PBS org Yakima Canutt at IMDb Yakima Canutt at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yakima Canutt amp oldid 1186738320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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