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    Movie sword-fight master Bob Anderson dies at 89

    LONDON (AP) — Olympic fencer and movie sword master Bob Anderson appeared in some of film's most famous dueling scenes — though few viewers knew it.

    Anderson, who has died at age 89, donned Darth Vader's black helmet and fought light saber battles in two of the three original "Star Wars" films, "The Empire Strikes Back" and "Return of the Jedi."

    Anderson, who worked with actors from Errol Flynn to Antonio Banderas during five decades as a sword master, fight director and stunt performer, died early New Year's Day at an English hospital, the British Academy of Fencing said Monday.

    Vader, "Star Wars'" intergalactic arch-villain, was voiced by James Earl Jones and played by six foot six (1.98 meter) former weightlifter David Prowse, but Anderson stepped in during the key fight scenes.

    "David Prowse wasn't very good with a sword and Bob couldn't get him to do the moves," said Anderson's former assistant, Leon Hill. "Fortunately Bob could just don the costume and do it himself."

    The scenes worked beautifully, although Anderson, then nearing 60, was several inches shorter than Prowse.

    Few knew of Anderson's role until Mark Hamill, who played Luke Skywalker, said in a 1983 interview that "Bob Anderson was the man who actually did Vader's fighting."

    "It was always supposed to be a secret, but I finally told (director) George (Lucas) I didn't think it was fair any more," Hamill told Starlog magazine. "Bob worked so bloody hard that he deserves some recognition. It's ridiculous to preserve the myth that it's all done by one man."

    Robert James Gilbert Anderson was born in Hampshire, southern England, in 1922, and was drawn to fencing from an early age.

    "I never took up the sword," he said in an interview for the 2009 documentary "Reclaiming the Blade." ''I think the sword took me up."

    Anderson joined the Royal Marines before World War II, teaching fencing aboard warships and winning several combined services titles in the sport.

    He served in the Mediterranean during the war, later trained as a fencing coach and represented Britain at the 1952 Olympics and the 1950 and 1953 world championships.

    In the 1950s, Anderson became coach of Britain's national fencing team, a post he held until the late 1970s. He later served as technical director of the Canadian Fencing Association.

    His first film work was staging fights and coaching Flynn on swashbuckler "The Master of Ballantrae" in 1952.

    He went on to become one of the industry's most sought after stunt performers, fight choreographers and sword masters, working on movies including the James Bond adventures "From Russia With Love" and "Die Another Day"; fantasy "The Princess Bride"; Banderas action romps "The Mask of Zorro" and "The Legend of Zorro"; and the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.

    Fencing academy president Philip Bruce said Anderson was "truly one of our greatest fencing masters and a world-class film fight director and choreographer."

    Hill remembered him as "a splendid man, a great man who gave so much to fencing that can never be repaid."

    Anderson is survived by his wife Pearl and three children. Funeral details were not immediately available.

    _______

    Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

     

    770 comments

    • Eddie  •  Laredo, Texas  •  4 months ago
      Give credit where credit is due!
      • K 4 months ago
        That should also go for listing where the info for this story really came from, when it is not your own works.. rather than taking credit for someone else's news story.
      • Eric Matthues 4 months ago
        Associated Press writer Jill Lawless. The information is right at the top of the page.
      • Bruce 4 months ago
        and the bottom...
    • ArmyNavyVeteran  •  4 months ago
      I've seen most of his work. Mark Hamill did the correct thing in given Mr. Anderson his props.
      • Bill 4 months ago
        'giving', not given.
      • FP 4 months ago
        @bill, let's geev wear credet was due. me believe your a idiot!
      • The Children's Televi ... 4 months ago
        Not as big an idiot as the skeeve that purposely misspells words and uses caveman english to make a point.

        You DO have a point, FP...but why point out the deformed shape of your head?
    • WildBillCody  •  Binghamton, New York  •  4 months ago
      Mark Hamill might be a bit eccentric, but the guys got honor.
    • Don B  •  Ruston, Louisiana  •  4 months ago
      Mark Hamill did the right thing.
      • B.S. 4 months ago
        that was great of him to do that!!both deserve the recognition!!
      • Rebecca 4 months ago
        Mark Hamill has always been a class act. He's always been one of my favorite actors, even if Hollywood didn't take him up.
      • Don B 4 months ago
        Apparently 4 folks think that Mark Hamill did the wrong thing. Either that... or they were GOPs haunting my every post.:-) Get a life.
    • darkeyes7  •  4 months ago
      Movies (that have sword fights in them) will never be the same. The Sword Master's touch will be missing!!!
      • Back home, for now. 4 months ago
        Will never be the same..............

        7, you never knew of this person... What a putz you are.
      • someone 4 months ago
        Hey "Back Home", what the Hell?
      • big g 4 months ago
        Hey baqck home. The putz is not darkeyes. Look in a mirror,PUTZ
    • Brian  •  Fayetteville, New York  •  4 months ago
      "Touche'" Mr Anderson rest well you deserved it .And thank you for your service in W.W.2
    • Patrick  •  Griffith, Indiana  •  4 months ago
      I truly respected your work Mr. Anderson, the list of movies that you made better is long. Errol Flynn's movies, Princess Bride, Star Wars, Lord of the Rings. Thank you for sharing your gifts and knowledge.
    • Local Crank  •  Petaluma, California  •  4 months ago
      He didn't die. He became more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
    • Rat-Man  •  4 months ago
      Had no idea this guy was such a presence in films. He will be missed.
    • GEORGE  •  4 months ago
      Wow... a resume for the ages indeed. Very well done Mr. Anderson. RIP.
    • Carol  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
      Fencing is truly an art form & he did it well... RIP
    • KevinN  •  4 months ago
      Another amazing cinema talent is lost. RIP in Mr. Anderson.....
    • Nojerryfan  •  Doylestown, Pennsylvania  •  4 months ago
      Cool. This is the kind of story I like...
    • Rand March  •  Jersey City, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
      When filming "The Adventures of Robin Hood", Basil Rathbone - who was a world-class fencer - enjoyed teasing Errol Flynn about Flynn needing coaching for the sword-fight scenes. Flynn's response: "It really doesn't matter, Basil. I'm going to beat you anyway. It says so in the script"
    • THX 1138  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  4 months ago
      "Princess Bride" had some great fencing scenes.
    • Brad  •  4 months ago
      Bob Anderson was the guy to bring in for sword fighting scenes. He also did HIGHLANDER, and the PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN movies as well as the 1993 remake of THE THREE MUSKETEERS. Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery, and Kiefer Sutherland all worked with him to learn sword fighting.

      R.I.P. Mr. Anderson.
    • Gunny  •  4 months ago
      RIP Sword Master
    • ItsAllSoGoofy  •  4 months ago
      Princess Bride has THE best sword sequence...EVER. The man was truly an artist.
    • GetReal  •  4 months ago
      a true classy Hero on and off the screen.
    • Earl J  •  Reno, Nevada  •  4 months ago
      A salute to a master. Thank you Mr. Anderson. You will be missed.

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