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[narrator] What is
the power of makeup?
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00:00:21,000 --> 00:00:23,458
For me... it's everything.
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00:00:23,500 --> 00:00:24,708
[uplifting music]
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00:00:24,750 --> 00:00:26,291
[Vincent] It's magic.
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It's to fool your
audience into believing
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that what they're
seeing is 100% reality.
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[Alec] The power of makeup is
the power of transformation.
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If you're the wearer of the
makeup, it sort of
gives you permission
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to be a different character.
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00:00:42,250 --> 00:00:46,791
[Greg] Makeup effects
and makeup allows actors
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00:00:46,833 --> 00:00:50,916
to tap into different
parts of their personality.
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00:00:52,333 --> 00:00:55,625
[Ve] Whether it's
a zombie, or a princess,
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00:00:55,666 --> 00:00:57,625
or a Frankenstein monster,
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00:00:57,666 --> 00:01:00,875
it's what enables
an actor to actually emote.
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00:01:00,916 --> 00:01:02,500
[dramatic music]
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00:01:02,541 --> 00:01:04,541
[John] Want to
hear something scary?
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00:01:04,583 --> 00:01:09,291
Makeup and hair are the most
dangerous people on a set
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00:01:09,333 --> 00:01:13,041
because they get the actors
first thing in the morning
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and they're right in their face.
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00:01:15,375 --> 00:01:19,458
I've seen hairdressers and
makeup people just fuck movies.
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00:01:19,500 --> 00:01:22,458
So you always want to
be on their good side.
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00:01:22,500 --> 00:01:26,041
[Leonard] Good makeup helps
create a good character.
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00:01:26,083 --> 00:01:28,833
Characters are what make
a movie interesting.
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If the makeup is ineffectual,
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00:01:32,791 --> 00:01:34,541
it's going to destroy
the whole movie.
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00:01:35,750 --> 00:01:39,458
[Michael] It has the power
to heal, it has the power
to inspire,
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00:01:39,500 --> 00:01:42,875
and it also inspires
and creates imagination
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00:01:42,916 --> 00:01:44,833
to be able to tell stories.
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00:01:44,875 --> 00:01:46,500
[narrator] Makeup
has given artists
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00:01:46,541 --> 00:01:49,333
and filmmakers
incredible freedom.
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00:01:49,375 --> 00:01:53,541
But all that innovation and
invention can be traced back
to a moment in time
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00:01:53,583 --> 00:01:58,166
when one film proved
nothing was impossible.
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00:01:58,208 --> 00:02:01,000
[dramatic music]
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00:02:16,708 --> 00:02:18,416
[narrator] Makeup
in film has existed
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00:02:18,458 --> 00:02:20,458
since the turn of
the 20th century.
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00:02:21,500 --> 00:02:25,375
Early artists were actors who
experimented on themselves.
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00:02:25,416 --> 00:02:27,541
The successful ones
were then asked
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00:02:27,583 --> 00:02:29,750
to work on other actors.
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00:02:29,791 --> 00:02:32,916
One of the first breakout
artists was Cecil Holland.
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00:02:34,125 --> 00:02:36,208
An early attempt at
creating a simian makeup
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was Holland's work
on The Lost World.
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00:02:40,166 --> 00:02:44,041
To me, Cecil Holland was
the genesis of it all,
the beginning of,
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maybe even the first
makeup effects person.
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00:02:47,500 --> 00:02:49,875
[narrator] Meanwhile,
at Universal Studios,
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the horror genre
began to thrive,
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and with it rose
the fame of actor
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00:02:54,708 --> 00:02:57,875
and self-taught makeup
artist, Lon Chaney Sr.
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[Guillermo] To me,
it all begins with him.
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00:03:01,250 --> 00:03:04,500
There is a bridge
between theatrical makeup
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00:03:04,541 --> 00:03:06,125
and movie makeup.
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00:03:06,166 --> 00:03:07,041
He starts it.
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He did makeups that no one
else had ever attempted
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00:03:11,833 --> 00:03:14,833
and some of them became,
you know, legendary.
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00:03:14,875 --> 00:03:17,125
[Vincent] Watching the original
Hunchback with Lon Chaney,
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that was one of those
moments where I thought that's,
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00:03:19,583 --> 00:03:22,958
that is something that
I would love to try and emulate.
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00:03:23,000 --> 00:03:25,041
[Bill] My favorite
Lon Chaney makeup
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00:03:25,083 --> 00:03:26,833
was The Phantom of the Opera.
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I thought that was
just the most amazing
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transformation I've ever seen.
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[narrator] Known as
the man of 1,000 faces,
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Chaney propelled the horror
genre to new heights.
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00:03:37,541 --> 00:03:41,166
But his untimely death
in 1930 created a void
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00:03:41,208 --> 00:03:43,500
in the makeup world
that was quickly filled
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00:03:43,541 --> 00:03:47,041
by another actor turned
makeup artist, Jack Pierce.
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00:03:47,916 --> 00:03:52,083
If he had done nothing but
create Frankenstein's monster,
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00:03:52,125 --> 00:03:57,166
Jack Pierce would have
a place in, uh, you know,
the movie pantheon
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of heroes and legends.
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That makeup is so indelible,
it's so recognizable,
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00:04:05,625 --> 00:04:07,333
it's been so much imitated.
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There have been so many
inferior knockoffs of it,
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but he did it.
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As he did The Wolf Man,
another extraordinary piece
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of makeup that didn't have
today's technology behind it,
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just a lot of hard work
and a lot of imagination.
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[Guillermo] Whether
he's enhancing the mouth
of Conrad Veidt
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in The Man Who Laughs,
or doing The Monkey Talks,
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which is a beautiful precedent
to Planet of the Apes,
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in a way, the key comes from
studying the face of the actor.
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And saying, "Okay,
What do I need to build,
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00:04:42,541 --> 00:04:44,000
what do I need to take down?"
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I remember seeing the episode
of This Is Your Life
with Boris Karloff,
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and Jack Pierce had come out,
and he's there with
the bolt and all.
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It was the first time
I heard Jack Pierce's voice,
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and it was similar to what
I thought his voice would be,
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you know, kind of like
this scrappy guy.
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It's wonderful to see you.
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The best makeup
man in the world.
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-Thank you.
-I owe him a lot.
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First person that I idolized
was Jack Pierce,
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'cause he's
the Frankenstein's monster,
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The Wolf Man, The Mummy.
Classic universal horror films.
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And those were the films
that really inspired me
to want to do this.
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[narrator] As time progressed,
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makeup became more sophisticated
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but the quality of films
began to deteriorate.
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In the years following World War
II, science fiction became
a popular genre
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and there were
some notable films
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like The Day
the Earth Stood Still
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and The Thing from
Another World.
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Very few serious filmmakers
had really approached
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science fiction,
and there were a couple
of attempts in the 50s
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to make some expensive
science fiction pictures
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that didn't really
make enough money.
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After a little while,
those films got cheaper,
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and tackier, and really became
B-movies and kiddie fodder.
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[announcer] Nobody will
believe theInvasion of
the Saucer Men.
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[dramatic music]
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[light bell music]
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[narrator] In the early 1960s,
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20th Century Fox producer, Arthur P. Jacobs, was searching
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for a project that would astound
audiences around the globe.
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Planète des singes,
orMonkey Planet,
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00:06:21,750 --> 00:06:25,750
was originally published
in France in January 1963.
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Natalie Trundy who was then
Arthur P. Jacobs' girlfriend,
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had read the book
and suggested it to Arthur.
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[narrator] By June of 1964,
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the book had been
translated into English
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and published in America.
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[Scott] What a book, right?
This whole thing where
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apes have taken over society
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and humans have devolved into
being sort of a lower form
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of life than the apes,
was sort of ahead of its time.
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00:06:51,625 --> 00:06:54,375
[narrator] Richard Zanuck,
the head of 20th Century Fox,
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helps Arthur Jacobs obtain
the option for Boulle's novel.
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Jacobs hires Rod Serling
ofTwilight Zone fame
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to write a treatment
titledPlanet of the Apes,
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00:07:04,833 --> 00:07:07,625
in hopes of turning it
into a full motion
picture screenplay.
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[man] I was a man,
a man from Earth,
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[voiceover] a reasoning
creature who made it a habit
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to discover
a logical explanation
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and not a beast hunted down
by highly developed apes.
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[Richard] Rod Serling,
he was a genius.
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They didn't give you the script.
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You sat down in a meeting...
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00:07:30,291 --> 00:07:33,333
and they'd start to
tell you a little about...
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So by the time they were done,
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they really had you hooked.
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[dramatic music]
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Planet of the Apesis just
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the biggest sheet cake version
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00:07:43,875 --> 00:07:46,375
of a Twilight Zone
episode you can find.
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[narrator] Serling was busy
rewriting the screenplay.
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He later claimed to have
written over 40 drafts.
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[voiceover] Somewhere
in the universe,
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there has to be
something better than man.
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Rod Serling highlighted
a lot of the, uh, contradictions
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00:08:03,083 --> 00:08:07,500
of our society, in many cases,
uh, the nihilism of our society.
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And the original script
was actually very different
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00:08:10,708 --> 00:08:13,208
from the final version
of the script,
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which was then worked
on by Michael Wilson.
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[narrator] Zanuck and the
Fox board calculate a budget
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of $2 million, a risky bet
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00:08:21,916 --> 00:08:24,875
given Fox's financial
situation at the time.
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00:08:24,916 --> 00:08:27,875
The problem, I think,
intrinsically was
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00:08:27,916 --> 00:08:32,958
that it was such new
groundbreaking motion
picture-wise,
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00:08:33,833 --> 00:08:36,125
the studio was very,
very uneasy with it.
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And the only one that really
had faith in the whole thing
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was Richard Zanuck.
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20th Century Fox was not
in good shape financially.
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It's been blamed on Cleopatra
and apparently unfairly blamed
on Cleopatrain many cases.
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They used it as
an overall excuse
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for some bad decision making.
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[narrator] The screenplay
eventually wound up
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00:08:58,916 --> 00:09:01,500
in the hands of one of
Hollywood's biggest stars,
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00:09:01,541 --> 00:09:03,333
Charlton Heston.
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00:09:03,375 --> 00:09:05,833
I think that this film
would not have happened
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had, uh, Charlton not
wanted to do it.
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00:09:09,333 --> 00:09:12,375
[Leonard] He was just the right
actor for that part.
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His physicality was ideal
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and he had the gravitas
to match the physicality.
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[Lou] It was his project.
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00:09:23,750 --> 00:09:28,125
He helped greenlight it,
so it was very close to him.
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[narrator] Charlton
Heston recommended
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00:09:29,750 --> 00:09:31,875
director, Franklin J. Schaffner,
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00:09:31,916 --> 00:09:35,083
who he was currently working
with onThe Warlord.
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00:09:35,125 --> 00:09:36,625
With a trimmed budget,
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00:09:36,666 --> 00:09:39,125
commitments from
Heston and Schaffner,
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00:09:39,166 --> 00:09:41,125
and Edward G. Robinson
coming on board
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00:09:41,166 --> 00:09:43,750
to portray
the orangutan, Dr. Zaius,
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00:09:43,791 --> 00:09:47,583
Jacobs convinced Fox to
greenlight a 10 minute
screen test
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00:09:47,625 --> 00:09:49,916
in March 1966.
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00:09:49,958 --> 00:09:52,666
[Tom] Ben Nye was
the department head of makeup
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at 20th Century Fox, and he
was getting ready to retire
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00:09:57,375 --> 00:10:00,250
but he agreed to
do a screen test.
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Good evening, Mr. Thomas.
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00:10:02,708 --> 00:10:04,958
Everything fine, I hope.
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Considering I've been kept
in a cage for six weeks,
I'm fine, yes.
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[Joe] Prior to this, when you
saw a gorilla in a movie,
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00:10:12,000 --> 00:10:15,583
it was either played by
a guy in a gorilla suit
or it was played by a monkey.
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00:10:15,625 --> 00:10:18,125
But the approach here was
a little different because
the idea was
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00:10:18,166 --> 00:10:21,083
that these ape characters
were being played by
recognizable actors,
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00:10:21,125 --> 00:10:24,833
and so there needed to be
a way to allow them to emote.
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00:10:25,750 --> 00:10:31,291
When you see, uh, original ones
and, uh, do the makeup test,
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00:10:31,333 --> 00:10:32,791
it's not there.
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00:10:32,833 --> 00:10:34,958
[Alessandro] Even though
that's nowhere close
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to what the makeup
actually wound up being,
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00:10:37,125 --> 00:10:38,750
the scene was effective.
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00:10:38,791 --> 00:10:41,416
No one was laughing,
everyone took it seriously,
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00:10:41,458 --> 00:10:45,750
and the project was, uh,
I think, much more tangible
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00:10:45,791 --> 00:10:48,250
as something that could
resonate dramatically
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00:10:48,291 --> 00:10:49,541
with an audience.
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00:10:49,583 --> 00:10:51,500
[Tom] But Ben Nye
decided to retire
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00:10:51,541 --> 00:10:54,750
rather than take on
this huge project.
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00:10:54,791 --> 00:10:57,041
[narrator] Though the screen
test proved it was possible
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00:10:57,083 --> 00:10:59,958
to portray talking simians
in a serious manner,
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00:11:00,000 --> 00:11:02,208
it would take nothing
short of brilliance
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00:11:02,250 --> 00:11:05,041
to getPlanet of the Apes
out of pre-production.
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00:11:08,083 --> 00:11:09,416
[camera clicks]
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00:11:11,166 --> 00:11:14,208
[narrator] John Chambers was
born on September 12th, 1922,
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00:11:14,250 --> 00:11:15,875
in the South Side of Chicago.
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00:11:17,291 --> 00:11:21,833
[Tom] John Chambers was the son
of two Irish immigrants.
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00:11:21,875 --> 00:11:24,208
They grew up in a very
rough neighborhood,
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00:11:24,250 --> 00:11:27,541
where John found it necessary
to defend his sister
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00:11:27,583 --> 00:11:29,291
and his younger
brother all the time.
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00:11:31,541 --> 00:11:34,458
[narrator] During World War II,
Chambers trained as
a dental technician,
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00:11:34,500 --> 00:11:39,125
but his artistry led him to
a career creating facial
restoration prosthetics
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00:11:39,166 --> 00:11:41,500
for wounded
servicemen at the VA.
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00:11:41,541 --> 00:11:45,666
But it's important that he comes
from knowing the human face.
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00:11:45,708 --> 00:11:48,500
It's important that he is
reconstructing the human face.
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00:11:50,083 --> 00:11:52,583
[narrator] Infatuated with
the entertainment industry,
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00:11:52,625 --> 00:11:55,916
Chambers wrote a letter
to NBC Television Studios,
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00:11:55,958 --> 00:11:58,833
asking for a job in
the makeup department.
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00:11:58,875 --> 00:12:00,958
So he drives to Hollywood
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00:12:01,000 --> 00:12:04,541
and then finds out that his
letter of acceptance arrived
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00:12:04,583 --> 00:12:06,250
the day that he left Chicago.
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00:12:07,208 --> 00:12:10,250
[narrator] Chambers quickly
established a name for himself
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00:12:10,291 --> 00:12:15,375
and was sought after for many
of the most popular
television shows of his day.
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00:12:15,416 --> 00:12:18,458
Johnny was outrageously unique.
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00:12:18,500 --> 00:12:20,166
There was nobody like him.
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00:12:20,208 --> 00:12:23,666
He was jovial,
laughing all the time.
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00:12:23,708 --> 00:12:25,333
But when it came to the makeup,
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00:12:25,375 --> 00:12:28,250
all of a sudden
he got real serious.
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00:12:28,291 --> 00:12:32,458
[Fred] He was stern in a way
that it was humorous, [laughs]
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00:12:32,500 --> 00:12:34,375
because when
he put his foot down,
238
00:12:34,416 --> 00:12:38,958
it was always something, "Wow,
this guy's got some cashews."
239
00:12:39,958 --> 00:12:42,000
[Michael] He had almost
a virtual monopoly
240
00:12:42,041 --> 00:12:44,958
on most of the prosthetic
work that was happening
in Hollywood.
241
00:12:45,000 --> 00:12:46,875
They needed something
that was in foam latex,
242
00:12:46,916 --> 00:12:48,375
they went to John.
243
00:12:48,416 --> 00:12:50,416
[narrator] From
his garage studio,
244
00:12:50,458 --> 00:12:53,291
Chambers created some of
the most iconic makeups
245
00:12:53,333 --> 00:12:55,125
of the 1960s.
246
00:12:55,166 --> 00:12:59,208
He was a teacher, probably
more than anything else.
247
00:12:59,250 --> 00:13:04,208
He thoroughly and totally
enjoyed what he did.
248
00:13:05,250 --> 00:13:08,416
John made a tremendous impact
on a whole lot of people
249
00:13:09,291 --> 00:13:11,875
but none more than me.
250
00:13:11,916 --> 00:13:13,625
[soft instrumental music]
251
00:13:13,666 --> 00:13:16,916
[narrator] Tom Burman was born on Thanksgiving Day, 1940,
252
00:13:16,958 --> 00:13:19,583
at Santa Monica
General Hospital.
253
00:13:19,625 --> 00:13:21,833
His father, Ellis,
met his mother, Dorothy,
254
00:13:21,875 --> 00:13:24,500
while attending
the Chicago Art Institute.
255
00:13:24,541 --> 00:13:27,708
After sculpting bronzes
of prominent Nebraskans,
256
00:13:27,750 --> 00:13:30,833
Ellis was commissioned to create several monument statues
257
00:13:30,875 --> 00:13:34,083
in Lincoln
and Omaha for the WPA.
258
00:13:34,125 --> 00:13:36,125
When my father
finished the monuments
259
00:13:36,166 --> 00:13:39,916
he was making in Nebraska,
he packed up the whole family
260
00:13:39,958 --> 00:13:43,333
and drove to Hollywood, where
he got a job at the studios
261
00:13:43,375 --> 00:13:45,416
working in the city department.
262
00:13:45,458 --> 00:13:48,583
And he ended up getting his
own room in the prop shop,
263
00:13:48,625 --> 00:13:51,708
where he specialized
in latex, plastic,
264
00:13:51,750 --> 00:13:53,916
breakaways, and all
kinds of neat stuff.
265
00:13:55,083 --> 00:13:59,791
Now, your father, Ellis Sr.,
I mean, he was like a pioneer
266
00:13:59,833 --> 00:14:02,833
-in making rubber pieces, right?
-Well, he did.
267
00:14:02,875 --> 00:14:05,250
He ran the actual
foam latex pieces
268
00:14:05,291 --> 00:14:08,458
at Universal Studio
for The Wolf Man.
269
00:14:08,500 --> 00:14:11,458
My dad became personal friends
270
00:14:11,500 --> 00:14:15,916
with some of the big Hollywood
actors at Universal back then,
271
00:14:15,958 --> 00:14:20,625
like Claude Rains, Abbott and
Costello, and Lon Chaney Jr.
272
00:14:20,666 --> 00:14:23,125
And sometimes they would come
and have a drink at our house.
273
00:14:23,166 --> 00:14:26,000
I didn't pay much attention
to that, I was too young.
274
00:14:26,041 --> 00:14:28,041
But one day he
takes me to the set,
275
00:14:28,083 --> 00:14:32,333
and there was a makeup man
on the set who called me
over to him,
276
00:14:32,375 --> 00:14:37,166
and he put a little cut,
a little makeup cut on my arm,
which is pretty cool.
277
00:14:37,208 --> 00:14:39,583
And, um, he said,
"What are you doing here?"
278
00:14:39,625 --> 00:14:41,958
And I said, "I'm with my dad."
279
00:14:42,000 --> 00:14:43,916
And he looked at
my dad and he said, "Wow."
280
00:14:43,958 --> 00:14:46,583
He said, "If you're half
as talented as he is,
281
00:14:46,625 --> 00:14:51,000
someday you should think about
becoming a makeup artist."
282
00:14:51,041 --> 00:14:52,416
His name was Jack Pierce.
283
00:14:52,458 --> 00:14:54,500
[light violin music]
284
00:14:54,541 --> 00:14:56,666
[narrator] After a number
of years at Universal,
285
00:14:56,708 --> 00:14:59,333
Ellis opened his own prop shop.
286
00:14:59,375 --> 00:15:03,250
Growing up in my family,
we all worked for my father,
287
00:15:03,291 --> 00:15:07,125
just like a lot of the big
makeup families worked together.
288
00:15:07,166 --> 00:15:10,666
[narrator] Hollywood's makeup
industry had become
a family-dominated business,
289
00:15:10,708 --> 00:15:14,250
with names like Don,
Philips, and Westmore.
290
00:15:14,291 --> 00:15:16,750
My father, who was
the oldest, Monty Sr.
291
00:15:16,791 --> 00:15:20,250
um, was Rudolph Valentino's
personal makeup artist.
292
00:15:20,291 --> 00:15:22,250
Perc became the head
of Warner Brothers,
293
00:15:22,291 --> 00:15:25,000
Ern became the head of RKO,
294
00:15:25,041 --> 00:15:26,666
Bud took over Universal,
295
00:15:26,708 --> 00:15:28,416
Wally took over Paramount.
296
00:15:28,458 --> 00:15:30,500
Frank never really
took over a studio,
297
00:15:30,541 --> 00:15:33,083
but he was very close
with Cecil B. DeMille
298
00:15:33,125 --> 00:15:36,541
and did The Ten Commandments.
299
00:15:36,583 --> 00:15:41,166
There was a wonderful story
about the, the makeup family
300
00:15:41,208 --> 00:15:43,666
of the Westmore
brothers in Hollywood.
301
00:15:43,708 --> 00:15:46,458
So, I contacted
the house of Westmore.
302
00:15:46,500 --> 00:15:48,750
I was able to talk
to Perc Westmore,
303
00:15:48,791 --> 00:15:50,333
said, "Why don't you come over?"
304
00:15:50,375 --> 00:15:52,958
And for the next three,
four, five months,
305
00:15:53,000 --> 00:15:54,625
I was sitting as a subject.
306
00:15:55,541 --> 00:15:57,291
My father called me at work.
307
00:15:57,333 --> 00:16:00,541
He told me that he was
working at Don Paul Studios
308
00:16:00,583 --> 00:16:03,416
and he had a job sculpting
up a "King Kong" gorilla.
309
00:16:03,458 --> 00:16:06,333
And come to find out, John
Chambers was in partnership
310
00:16:06,375 --> 00:16:08,083
with Don Paul's.
311
00:16:10,083 --> 00:16:12,500
While I was there, I found out
that there was a, um,
an apprenticeship opening
312
00:16:12,541 --> 00:16:16,416
at 20th Century Fox and, uh,
John said, "I'll call for you."
313
00:16:16,458 --> 00:16:18,916
And he did. He got me
an appointment with Ben Nye,
314
00:16:18,958 --> 00:16:21,250
the department head of makeup.
315
00:16:21,291 --> 00:16:23,375
I went in to see him, nice man,
316
00:16:23,416 --> 00:16:27,458
and he gave me some
really lousy news.
317
00:16:27,500 --> 00:16:31,166
He told me there are over
90 applicants for the job
318
00:16:31,208 --> 00:16:33,375
and one of them was his own son.
319
00:16:33,416 --> 00:16:36,291
And I thought, "Oh, God,"
here I was, this close.
320
00:16:36,333 --> 00:16:38,000
And I went home
and I was so disheartened,
321
00:16:38,041 --> 00:16:42,000
and, and, um, I didn't think
I'd ever get into makeup.
322
00:16:42,041 --> 00:16:43,875
And that night
I got a telephone call.
323
00:16:43,916 --> 00:16:46,250
It's Ben Nye and he says,
324
00:16:46,291 --> 00:16:47,541
"You want to come
in tomorrow morning
325
00:16:47,583 --> 00:16:49,250
and start your apprenticeship."
326
00:16:50,208 --> 00:16:53,125
Six months later,
I'm in Ben Nye's office,
327
00:16:53,166 --> 00:16:56,083
cleaning up his makeup station,
which I often did,
328
00:16:56,125 --> 00:16:58,250
and Ben comes in with
Richard Hamilton,
329
00:16:58,291 --> 00:17:00,458
who was their assistant
department head,
330
00:17:00,500 --> 00:17:03,125
and Dick Smith, their lab man.
331
00:17:03,166 --> 00:17:06,333
And they looked very forlorn.
332
00:17:06,375 --> 00:17:10,125
And Ben Nye is saying, "I didn't
think they were going to
go through with this project."
333
00:17:10,166 --> 00:17:14,875
And Dick is saying, "We did
everything they wanted,
didn't we, Ben?"
334
00:17:14,916 --> 00:17:17,041
And Richard saying,
"No, they don't look good
335
00:17:17,083 --> 00:17:19,375
and they're,
and they're too stiff.
336
00:17:19,416 --> 00:17:22,375
And, uh, they want to bring
in Bud Westmore."
337
00:17:22,416 --> 00:17:24,291
And he said,
"Because he did the movie
338
00:17:24,333 --> 00:17:26,500
The List of Adrian Messenger."
339
00:17:26,541 --> 00:17:28,375
Now my ears are really perked up
340
00:17:28,416 --> 00:17:29,958
because I knew that
John did that work.
341
00:17:30,000 --> 00:17:32,375
I had seen the photographs
at his house.
342
00:17:32,416 --> 00:17:33,916
I finally just kind of spoke up
343
00:17:33,958 --> 00:17:36,541
and I said,
"John Chambers did it."
344
00:17:36,583 --> 00:17:38,916
So Ben Nye says,
"We'll give him a call,
345
00:17:38,958 --> 00:17:41,291
see if he'd like to come in
and pick up a script."
346
00:17:41,333 --> 00:17:44,000
So I called him and John told
me, "So I'm busy right now.
347
00:17:44,041 --> 00:17:47,416
I'm making Spock's
ears for Star Trek.
348
00:17:47,458 --> 00:17:50,000
And I said, "Well,
they want Bud Westmore."
349
00:17:50,041 --> 00:17:51,833
And I know he didn't like him.
350
00:17:51,875 --> 00:17:54,750
He goes, [growls], he growls.
351
00:17:54,791 --> 00:17:57,000
They wanted Bud Westmore,
352
00:17:57,041 --> 00:17:59,541
from what I had
heard from Tommy.
353
00:17:59,583 --> 00:18:04,125
And he was listening just as
a new apprentice, apprentice.
354
00:18:05,750 --> 00:18:08,791
And he's the one that was
responsible for telling them
355
00:18:08,833 --> 00:18:11,000
to get me, I was available.
356
00:18:11,041 --> 00:18:13,166
The following day, he drives up,
357
00:18:13,208 --> 00:18:15,750
pulls up with his little Buick,
gets out of the car.
358
00:18:15,791 --> 00:18:18,875
He's waving at me as I'm coming
out of the makeup department.
359
00:18:18,916 --> 00:18:20,875
And he says,
"It's you and me, Tommy."
360
00:18:20,916 --> 00:18:23,166
And he holds out this
script and I read the title.
361
00:18:23,208 --> 00:18:24,750
Planet of the Apes.
362
00:18:29,916 --> 00:18:32,375
[narrator] In the heart of
20th Century Fox Studios
363
00:18:32,416 --> 00:18:34,625
was the makeup lab,
where John Chambers
364
00:18:34,666 --> 00:18:38,083
and Tom Burman were tasked
with creating the simians
365
00:18:38,125 --> 00:18:39,375
forPlanet of the Apes.
366
00:18:41,166 --> 00:18:43,833
So, our very first day,
John and I were standing
367
00:18:43,875 --> 00:18:47,666
in the lab, which was 33 years
old and pretty dingy place,
368
00:18:47,708 --> 00:18:52,625
but in the middle of the room
there was this, uh, two foot by
four foot marble top table.
369
00:18:52,666 --> 00:18:54,916
And we were making lists
of things he needed.
370
00:18:54,958 --> 00:18:57,000
So then John turns around, looks
at me and he said,
371
00:18:57,041 --> 00:19:00,291
"Tommy...
Let's clean this shithouse out."
372
00:19:00,333 --> 00:19:04,000
I started going through all the
boxes, through the shelves,
and underneath the tables,
373
00:19:04,041 --> 00:19:05,916
and I started pulling
out all this stuff.
374
00:19:05,958 --> 00:19:08,666
And you could see at first,
John was kind of
being selective,
375
00:19:08,708 --> 00:19:11,875
"Oh, maybe we could use this."
And then after a while,
I see him overwhelmed.
376
00:19:11,916 --> 00:19:15,041
He goes, "You know what? Throw
it all out. Get rid of it."
377
00:19:15,083 --> 00:19:19,041
I literally cleaned out
33 years of old makeup stuff.
378
00:19:19,083 --> 00:19:23,041
It was loaded with
all personal objects
379
00:19:23,083 --> 00:19:26,333
and I needed a laboratory
to work, you know.
380
00:19:27,250 --> 00:19:29,458
[narrator] While Chambers
and Burman feverishly worked
381
00:19:29,500 --> 00:19:32,875
on the makeup designs, it came time to cast the actors
382
00:19:32,916 --> 00:19:35,916
who would populate
thePlanet of the Apes.
383
00:19:35,958 --> 00:19:38,416
[Lou] My agent said,
"I've got an interview
384
00:19:38,458 --> 00:19:40,208
for Planet of the Apes."
385
00:19:40,250 --> 00:19:41,875
Never heard of it before.
386
00:19:41,916 --> 00:19:43,375
Sounded like a B movie.
387
00:19:43,416 --> 00:19:46,500
So I went to 20th Century Fox.
388
00:19:46,541 --> 00:19:50,583
It was really just an interview
with Franklin Schaffner.
389
00:19:50,625 --> 00:19:52,458
We didn't even talk
about the movie.
390
00:19:52,500 --> 00:19:53,625
I went home.
391
00:19:53,666 --> 00:19:55,833
Hours later, my agent called
392
00:19:55,875 --> 00:20:01,208
and said, um...
"What did you tell him?"
393
00:20:01,250 --> 00:20:02,916
And I said, "What do
you mean? What...
394
00:20:03,833 --> 00:20:05,250
Is he mad at me?
395
00:20:05,291 --> 00:20:06,708
What--" You know.
396
00:20:06,750 --> 00:20:09,291
And she said,
"No, you got the film."
397
00:20:09,333 --> 00:20:12,000
I got the film,
I didn't audition.
398
00:20:12,041 --> 00:20:13,708
[Alessandro] With an actor
like Kim Hunter,
399
00:20:13,750 --> 00:20:17,166
who had an Academy Award and was
very distinguished actor,
400
00:20:17,208 --> 00:20:18,708
Roddy McDowall as well,
401
00:20:18,750 --> 00:20:20,833
asking them to be
buried behind makeup
402
00:20:20,875 --> 00:20:23,250
was something of great concern
to them in the beginning.
403
00:20:24,250 --> 00:20:26,916
When the town heard that
there was going to be
404
00:20:26,958 --> 00:20:31,083
a major motion picture
called Planet of the Apes,
405
00:20:31,125 --> 00:20:33,125
they were interested.
406
00:20:33,166 --> 00:20:36,625
And then when they heard
that Charlton Heston
407
00:20:36,666 --> 00:20:38,833
was going to be in it,
they sat up.
408
00:20:38,875 --> 00:20:41,875
Planet of the Apes
with Charlton Heston?
409
00:20:41,916 --> 00:20:44,041
This must be quite a film.
410
00:20:44,083 --> 00:20:46,750
But when they heard Roddy
McDowall was going to be in it,
411
00:20:46,791 --> 00:20:49,541
everyone was really impressed.
412
00:20:49,583 --> 00:20:51,833
It gave the film class.
413
00:20:52,875 --> 00:20:54,916
[narrator] As the cast
began to take shape,
414
00:20:54,958 --> 00:20:58,666
the producers turned back
to the 1966 test reel
415
00:20:58,708 --> 00:21:01,958
for their first choice
to play Dr. Zaius.
416
00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:05,250
[Tom] Somebody knocked on
the door, so I opened the door
and it's Edward G. Robinson.
417
00:21:05,291 --> 00:21:07,541
He tells Johnny, he says,
"Well, I have a goatee
418
00:21:07,583 --> 00:21:10,708
and a mustache,
and I won't shave that off.
419
00:21:10,750 --> 00:21:12,458
And I'm not going to
wear that appliance.
420
00:21:12,500 --> 00:21:14,625
I'm claustrophobic,
I can't wear it all day."
421
00:21:14,666 --> 00:21:17,083
And John goes,
"Oh, yeah, okay, Eddie.
422
00:21:17,125 --> 00:21:20,000
Oh, yeah, okay, yeah,
that's good, yeah.
423
00:21:20,041 --> 00:21:23,250
Well, we'll work on that."
And so, "Okay, thank you, John."
424
00:21:23,291 --> 00:21:26,083
And he leaves and John goes,
"He's out of the picture."
425
00:21:26,125 --> 00:21:30,291
[laughs] I thought, "Wow, what
power this makeup artist has."
426
00:21:31,208 --> 00:21:35,000
John Chambers was a brilliant
artist, so talented.
427
00:21:35,041 --> 00:21:37,541
But he had one hell of a temper.
428
00:21:37,583 --> 00:21:41,958
My eloquence in
adjectives go pretty far.
429
00:21:42,000 --> 00:21:44,000
Let me ask you about Chambers.
430
00:21:44,041 --> 00:21:47,625
Was he always
two fisted and rough, or?
431
00:21:47,666 --> 00:21:50,333
He was a real tough character.
He was a--
432
00:21:50,375 --> 00:21:51,916
For instance,
on Planet of the Apes,
433
00:21:51,958 --> 00:21:54,375
Arthur Jacobson
and Mort Abrahams would come by,
434
00:21:54,416 --> 00:21:56,833
and they were going
to, uh, see our progress.
435
00:21:56,875 --> 00:21:59,583
John was doing mock-ups
on their heads in clay,
436
00:21:59,625 --> 00:22:01,583
and painting them,
and putting hair on them.
437
00:22:01,625 --> 00:22:04,375
And, uh, I asked him if he--
If it would be okay
438
00:22:04,416 --> 00:22:06,291
if I sculpted a gorilla,
and he said, "Yeah, Tommy,
439
00:22:06,333 --> 00:22:08,041
you do it in the
back room back there
440
00:22:08,083 --> 00:22:09,416
where nobody's going to see it."
441
00:22:09,458 --> 00:22:11,208
'Cause I didn't know
what I was doing.
442
00:22:11,250 --> 00:22:12,916
And so I was sculpting
this gorilla,
443
00:22:12,958 --> 00:22:15,250
and Arthur Jacobson
and Mort Abrahams came by,
444
00:22:15,291 --> 00:22:18,041
and they said, "Is John here?"
And I ran up,
I was an apprentice,
445
00:22:18,083 --> 00:22:20,166
and I brought John back,
and they were looking
446
00:22:20,208 --> 00:22:22,958
at his sculptures of
mock-ups he did.
447
00:22:23,000 --> 00:22:25,500
And they were saying,
"You know, difficulty is,
448
00:22:25,541 --> 00:22:27,250
we're going to have to
take one of these faces
449
00:22:27,291 --> 00:22:29,875
and put it on
a really top actress.
450
00:22:29,916 --> 00:22:31,875
I don't think anybody's
going to want to wear this."
451
00:22:31,916 --> 00:22:34,583
Mort Abrahams walks in the back
room and he sees this gorilla.
452
00:22:34,625 --> 00:22:37,875
Now the gorilla I had
sculpted was not very good
453
00:22:37,916 --> 00:22:42,000
but it was kind of humanoid...
humanoid ape.
454
00:22:42,041 --> 00:22:44,083
And he comes back, and he looks
at this, and he says,
455
00:22:44,125 --> 00:22:46,208
-"Arthur, come out in here
and take a look at this."
-Oh, my God.
456
00:22:46,250 --> 00:22:50,458
-And John looks at me and I knew
[gasps], you know. Oh, boy.
-[laughs]
457
00:22:50,500 --> 00:22:53,541
-'Cause he's Irish
and he just turned kind of red.
-Yeah, red.
458
00:22:53,583 --> 00:22:59,166
And so, they said, "John, come
out here, take a look at this.
Take a look, what is this?"
459
00:22:59,208 --> 00:23:01,916
He said, "Don't worry about--
that's a background mask
and we're working on it.
460
00:23:01,958 --> 00:23:04,250
It's not even close to being
ready. Come on back here."
461
00:23:04,291 --> 00:23:06,791
"No, John, what we
like about this is
462
00:23:06,833 --> 00:23:09,083
it's kind of like
an evolutionary ape.
463
00:23:09,125 --> 00:23:12,041
It's a little more human."
464
00:23:12,083 --> 00:23:15,083
And so I'm feeling pride
that they're enjoying it,
465
00:23:15,125 --> 00:23:18,125
but I look beyond that and
I see John just turning red.
466
00:23:18,166 --> 00:23:20,166
He's going purple, I mean.
467
00:23:20,208 --> 00:23:22,583
And they said, "Well, next
week we'd like to come back
468
00:23:22,625 --> 00:23:24,500
and take a look
at your progress.
469
00:23:24,541 --> 00:23:27,250
But give it some of that,
a little bit of that."
470
00:23:27,291 --> 00:23:28,750
And John's, "Okay, yeah, yeah.
471
00:23:28,791 --> 00:23:31,833
I'll do that, yeah,
okay, uh-huh, yeah."
472
00:23:31,875 --> 00:23:36,083
So, they walk out the door
and he goes, "Huh, huh?
473
00:23:36,125 --> 00:23:38,875
You and your big
greasy fucking thumb."
474
00:23:38,916 --> 00:23:41,500
-[laughs]
-He said, "You know
what you are?"
475
00:23:41,541 --> 00:23:43,958
He said, "You're
a fucking lunch bucket.
476
00:23:44,000 --> 00:23:46,541
You're a lunch bucket.
You're going to have
that lunch bucket glued
477
00:23:46,583 --> 00:23:48,500
to your hand all your life."
478
00:23:48,541 --> 00:23:51,208
-Oh, my God.
-He walks back,
picks up the gorilla,
479
00:23:51,250 --> 00:23:52,958
smashes it on the floor.
480
00:23:55,208 --> 00:23:57,458
And he says, "Get out, get out!"
481
00:23:57,500 --> 00:24:00,583
For three days he'd come
up the makeup department,
482
00:24:00,625 --> 00:24:02,875
he would check to see
what I was doing.
483
00:24:02,916 --> 00:24:06,375
He wanted to catch me
doing something.
He was still burning inside.
484
00:24:06,416 --> 00:24:09,666
-He was trying to find
something I was--
-I'm quarter Irish, so I know.
485
00:24:09,708 --> 00:24:12,583
Yeah, so I kind of hid out
from him for the most part.
486
00:24:12,625 --> 00:24:16,500
One day, I'm eating my lunch
and he catches me. "You're
eating your lunch early."
487
00:24:16,541 --> 00:24:18,791
I said, "Well, Ben Nye told
me to go to lunch early
488
00:24:18,833 --> 00:24:21,166
because I came in early."
He said, "Yeah?"
489
00:24:21,208 --> 00:24:24,125
And I had drawn a picture of
myself crucified on the wall.
490
00:24:24,166 --> 00:24:27,916
And I had a little caption
that said, "I can laugh
when things aren't funny."
491
00:24:27,958 --> 00:24:31,583
He took a look at that picture
and he goes, just. [laughs]
492
00:24:31,625 --> 00:24:34,708
And he laughs and so hard,
it's like a release for him.
493
00:24:34,750 --> 00:24:36,541
The tears are running
down his face.
494
00:24:36,583 --> 00:24:39,750
He laughed, he goes, "Okay,
okay. Get back in the lab."
495
00:24:39,791 --> 00:24:41,541
And we never spoke
about it again.
496
00:24:41,583 --> 00:24:43,083
-Again.
-Never again.
497
00:24:43,125 --> 00:24:44,583
[eerie music]
498
00:24:46,291 --> 00:24:48,500
[narrator] With Edward
G. Robinson out,
499
00:24:48,541 --> 00:24:51,458
the role of the orangutan,
the protector of the faith,
500
00:24:51,500 --> 00:24:54,208
went to classically
trained Shakespearean actor,
501
00:24:54,250 --> 00:24:56,000
Maurice Evans.
502
00:24:56,041 --> 00:24:59,041
Maurice was the actors'
actor, you know?
503
00:24:59,083 --> 00:25:02,541
He reeked of authority.
504
00:25:02,583 --> 00:25:06,083
Maurice Evans was probably
the only actor on record
505
00:25:06,125 --> 00:25:08,500
who enjoyed getting
into the makeup.
506
00:25:09,416 --> 00:25:12,291
[narrator] With a growing
number of chimpanzees,
507
00:25:12,333 --> 00:25:14,791
orangutans, and
gorillas being cast,
508
00:25:14,833 --> 00:25:17,750
an equally large crew of
artists would be needed
509
00:25:17,791 --> 00:25:19,416
to apply the makeups.
510
00:25:19,458 --> 00:25:22,708
I happened to have a knack
of looking at a person
511
00:25:22,750 --> 00:25:26,125
when I meet 'em,
and God gave me a gift.
512
00:25:26,166 --> 00:25:29,041
I can read 'em
right to the teeth.
513
00:25:29,083 --> 00:25:31,208
Good or bad, you know.
514
00:25:31,250 --> 00:25:33,833
And I don't let 'em
know which way,
515
00:25:33,875 --> 00:25:38,666
but I found out I could find
the people that had the salt.
516
00:25:38,708 --> 00:25:43,125
At that time, I was
working on the third season
517
00:25:43,166 --> 00:25:45,000
of Lost in Space.
518
00:25:45,041 --> 00:25:48,625
Then they took Ben Nye,
he took me off the show
519
00:25:48,666 --> 00:25:51,375
and then I started with John.
520
00:25:51,416 --> 00:25:54,333
I got the job on Apes because
I was, what you would call
521
00:25:54,375 --> 00:25:58,375
a staff, I guess, in those days
over at Fox. So they sent me up.
522
00:25:58,416 --> 00:26:01,833
And so, on the plane going up,
I was sitting with
a young lady and her mother.
523
00:26:01,875 --> 00:26:03,291
And we got to talking,
524
00:26:03,333 --> 00:26:05,833
and realized I had
made her up on a
525
00:26:05,875 --> 00:26:08,000
little test pilot
that they were going to do.
526
00:26:08,041 --> 00:26:10,166
Anyway, when we get up there,
she went to the department
527
00:26:10,208 --> 00:26:13,041
and said, "I'd like that
fellow to do my makeup."
528
00:26:13,083 --> 00:26:15,125
So I did her makeup
while I was up there.
529
00:26:15,166 --> 00:26:17,541
The girl was Linda Harrison.
530
00:26:18,708 --> 00:26:21,916
[Tom] John Chambers
designed the makeups
531
00:26:21,958 --> 00:26:25,041
to be like paint by numbers
532
00:26:25,083 --> 00:26:28,791
because he wanted to
maintain a continuity,
533
00:26:28,833 --> 00:26:31,291
a consistency of uniformity.
534
00:26:31,333 --> 00:26:34,375
He did not want makeup
artists coming in
535
00:26:34,416 --> 00:26:37,125
and putting their own
signature on the makeups.
536
00:26:37,166 --> 00:26:39,833
I took green young men
537
00:26:39,875 --> 00:26:43,958
that I saw a certain talent
in what they produced
538
00:26:44,000 --> 00:26:46,541
in other parts of makeup,
539
00:26:46,583 --> 00:26:49,125
and I said, "This
guy's an artist."
540
00:26:49,166 --> 00:26:52,375
I'd never had any experience
working with prosthetics.
541
00:26:52,416 --> 00:26:54,083
Planet of the Apes
was the first one.
542
00:26:54,125 --> 00:26:56,458
Prosthetics was not my thing.
543
00:26:56,500 --> 00:26:58,958
I had never done prosthetics.
544
00:26:59,000 --> 00:27:03,041
[Maurice] We had two to three
weeks of rehearsal
545
00:27:03,083 --> 00:27:05,166
where we were putting
these appliances on.
546
00:27:06,125 --> 00:27:09,250
[Darrell] Well, we had a couple
of journeymen makeup artists
547
00:27:09,291 --> 00:27:12,791
in the trailers with us
who would go up and down,
548
00:27:12,833 --> 00:27:15,541
and give us pointers,
and tell us what to do,
549
00:27:15,583 --> 00:27:18,375
or what not to do,
or you're doing too much,
550
00:27:18,416 --> 00:27:19,875
or doing too little.
551
00:27:19,916 --> 00:27:23,416
[Maurice] It was kept as
simple as possible.
552
00:27:23,458 --> 00:27:28,583
We had a full face appliance
that had to be prepped,
553
00:27:28,625 --> 00:27:31,416
which meant we had to
clear out the eye area
554
00:27:31,458 --> 00:27:34,250
and the mouth area,
and we had to learn how
555
00:27:34,291 --> 00:27:36,750
to feather out
the edges on the piece.
556
00:27:37,875 --> 00:27:41,666
[John Chambers] All these people
that, that worked with me,
557
00:27:41,708 --> 00:27:45,500
that-- They made that
picture as it was.
558
00:27:45,541 --> 00:27:49,000
I had Tommy Burman,
he was apprentice.
559
00:27:49,041 --> 00:27:51,791
He was a man with his
two sons and a wife,
560
00:27:51,833 --> 00:27:56,666
and they were having a rough
time keeping bread on the table
561
00:27:56,708 --> 00:27:58,375
at that time,
when he was so young.
562
00:27:59,708 --> 00:28:02,625
[Tom] As an apprentice
makeup artist at Fox,
563
00:28:02,666 --> 00:28:04,708
they paid me $90 a week
564
00:28:04,750 --> 00:28:07,666
and I had no
complaints about that.
565
00:28:07,708 --> 00:28:13,625
But when they found out
that I was working seven
days a week, 16 hours a day,
566
00:28:13,666 --> 00:28:16,458
the amount that
I was contributing
to the making of these apes,
567
00:28:16,500 --> 00:28:20,625
they decided to bump me
up to, uh, journeyman wages.
568
00:28:20,666 --> 00:28:24,333
I told him, "I'm going to
put you down as a lab man."
569
00:28:25,208 --> 00:28:30,041
You know, put him into
journeyman salary
and I carried him through it.
570
00:28:30,083 --> 00:28:33,541
He was one of, one of
the best people I'd chosen.
571
00:28:33,583 --> 00:28:37,333
Before that, I'd never
had $100 to my name.
572
00:28:38,333 --> 00:28:41,875
Now I am well-paid, and
John and I are ready to go.
573
00:28:43,083 --> 00:28:45,666
[narrator] After years
of struggle, misfires,
574
00:28:45,708 --> 00:28:49,166
and challenges,Planet of
the Apes was finally ready
575
00:28:49,208 --> 00:28:50,416
to move into production.
576
00:28:50,458 --> 00:28:52,041
[dramatic swells]
577
00:28:52,083 --> 00:28:54,125
[film whirring]
578
00:28:54,166 --> 00:28:55,958
[crew chattering]
579
00:28:57,875 --> 00:29:00,000
[Dan] The studio didn't have
great faith in it,
580
00:29:00,041 --> 00:29:02,375
so they were really
wrenched down
581
00:29:02,416 --> 00:29:03,958
as far as the money is concerned
582
00:29:04,000 --> 00:29:06,541
and as far as
the amount of days.
583
00:29:06,583 --> 00:29:10,541
[Lou] The first day
of our shoot, everyone
was very worried.
584
00:29:10,583 --> 00:29:13,458
You could hear all
the scuttlebutt and everything.
585
00:29:13,500 --> 00:29:17,375
This has got to work
or we're all in trouble.
586
00:29:17,416 --> 00:29:21,416
We spent $6 million to
be the joke of the town.
587
00:29:22,416 --> 00:29:24,208
[Dan] Schaffner, to his credit,
588
00:29:24,250 --> 00:29:27,083
when people were coming
from all sides saying,
589
00:29:27,125 --> 00:29:30,041
"Well, why don't you drop
this scene and do it this way?
590
00:29:30,083 --> 00:29:32,000
It's cheaper and easier."
591
00:29:32,041 --> 00:29:33,000
He resisted.
592
00:29:34,125 --> 00:29:35,291
[John Chambers] I respected him.
593
00:29:35,333 --> 00:29:37,583
He came from television.
594
00:29:37,625 --> 00:29:39,875
My start was in television,
595
00:29:39,916 --> 00:29:42,500
and we talked the same language.
596
00:29:42,541 --> 00:29:47,166
I says, "What I need from
you is your authority
597
00:29:47,208 --> 00:29:51,125
to stop a shot and say
we have to take it over
598
00:29:51,166 --> 00:29:52,791
on account of something I saw."
599
00:29:52,833 --> 00:29:55,541
And I says, "Can I stop camera?"
600
00:29:55,583 --> 00:29:56,583
He said, "Yeah."
601
00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:00,250
[Tom] Working in the lab,
it was a struggle every day
602
00:30:00,291 --> 00:30:02,541
to keep up with production.
603
00:30:02,583 --> 00:30:05,208
And we were working
around the clock.
604
00:30:05,250 --> 00:30:07,500
We couldn't have
worked any more hours.
605
00:30:07,541 --> 00:30:09,750
In those first couple months,
it was really tough.
606
00:30:10,791 --> 00:30:12,916
[John Chambers] The guys were
working hard, you know,
607
00:30:12,958 --> 00:30:15,166
and I came in at two at night,
608
00:30:15,208 --> 00:30:18,250
and I found the guy asleep
on the chair, you know.
609
00:30:18,291 --> 00:30:20,416
The chair, he was so fatigued.
610
00:30:20,458 --> 00:30:22,500
Oh, man, you know, we worked.
611
00:30:22,541 --> 00:30:26,250
Not just five days, but
Saturday and Sunday, you know.
612
00:30:26,291 --> 00:30:29,916
One time I asked,
"Am I going to get some help?"
613
00:30:29,958 --> 00:30:32,125
And they says, "Nope." I said,
614
00:30:32,166 --> 00:30:34,333
"Well, What do you want me
to do, put a broom up my rear
615
00:30:34,375 --> 00:30:36,083
and sweep the floors as well?"
616
00:30:37,041 --> 00:30:39,958
[Ken] John Chambers was on
location and he was leaving
617
00:30:40,000 --> 00:30:41,500
to go back to the studio.
618
00:30:41,541 --> 00:30:44,041
And he knew how hard
I'd been working.
619
00:30:44,083 --> 00:30:47,625
And he said, you know, he says,
"You've been really
busting your butt.
620
00:30:47,666 --> 00:30:51,541
You take off tomorrow. You sleep
late, you just stay home."
621
00:30:51,583 --> 00:30:55,125
Four in the morning,
pounding on the door.
622
00:30:55,166 --> 00:30:57,833
"Get up and get dressed,
you're going on the set!"
623
00:30:58,708 --> 00:31:01,958
I said, "Well, John told me
I could have the day off."
624
00:31:02,000 --> 00:31:03,083
"No, no, no.
625
00:31:03,125 --> 00:31:05,666
He's not here and we are."
626
00:31:06,916 --> 00:31:11,375
[Lou] Our call was 2:30 for
seven o'clock on the set.
627
00:31:11,416 --> 00:31:15,166
They stumbled,
and were slow, and everything,
628
00:31:15,208 --> 00:31:17,041
but it was in
the middle of the night.
629
00:31:17,083 --> 00:31:19,166
It was rough.
630
00:31:19,208 --> 00:31:20,375
[Darrell] We worked,
and worked, and worked
631
00:31:20,416 --> 00:31:22,125
to get those edges covered.
632
00:31:22,166 --> 00:31:24,541
And then we laid hair over 'em.
633
00:31:24,583 --> 00:31:28,875
We had to work with
straight human Asian hair,
634
00:31:28,916 --> 00:31:32,625
black, which is the hardest
thing to work with
635
00:31:32,666 --> 00:31:34,916
that I've ever found.
636
00:31:34,958 --> 00:31:37,625
[Lou] Tom spent a lot of
his day in the lab
637
00:31:37,666 --> 00:31:40,083
with Werner and Fern Langdon.
638
00:31:40,125 --> 00:31:43,916
And if it wasn't for them,
we wouldn't have makeup.
639
00:31:43,958 --> 00:31:45,833
I created an assembly line.
640
00:31:45,875 --> 00:31:48,666
I had 'em working through
the night, a shift.
641
00:31:48,708 --> 00:31:52,583
Putting rubber in the oven
eleven o'clock at night,
642
00:31:52,625 --> 00:31:54,250
taking it out in the morning.
643
00:31:54,291 --> 00:31:56,875
You know, no one ever
did this before, see?
644
00:31:56,916 --> 00:31:58,666
[Dan] I think on Roddy
McDowall at one time,
645
00:31:58,708 --> 00:32:02,000
we were down to one mask
ahead the next day's work.
646
00:32:02,041 --> 00:32:03,708
If the running
the oven went bad,
647
00:32:03,750 --> 00:32:05,666
which they do many times...
648
00:32:06,958 --> 00:32:09,166
the following day we're screwed.
649
00:32:09,208 --> 00:32:12,416
[Tom] Working the lab long
hours was bad enough,
650
00:32:12,458 --> 00:32:15,166
but then having to go to
the set and work there
651
00:32:15,208 --> 00:32:18,791
was completely exhausting.
But every day was a thrill.
652
00:32:18,833 --> 00:32:21,208
Getting up in the
morning was a thrill.
The whole day was a thrill
653
00:32:21,250 --> 00:32:23,666
because I knew I was working
on something special.
654
00:32:25,250 --> 00:32:28,500
We had a lot of little problems
655
00:32:28,541 --> 00:32:31,416
that we resolved by
working together on it.
656
00:32:32,416 --> 00:32:34,625
It was great,
it was like a club.
657
00:32:35,541 --> 00:32:38,916
[Dan] People excelled,
absolutely excelled.
658
00:32:38,958 --> 00:32:40,250
Every time they turned around,
659
00:32:40,291 --> 00:32:43,083
it was another huge obstacle.
660
00:32:43,125 --> 00:32:46,875
Just this constant
push, push, push.
661
00:32:46,916 --> 00:32:49,583
Probably the greatest
effort I've ever seen
662
00:32:49,625 --> 00:32:51,208
in the motion picture industry.
663
00:32:52,208 --> 00:32:53,708
[Maurice] The actors had to eat.
664
00:32:53,750 --> 00:32:56,500
The actors that were
in all of the makeup.
665
00:32:56,541 --> 00:33:00,208
One of the gorillas was
supposed to be driving a wagon.
666
00:33:00,250 --> 00:33:03,666
It looked fine but as
soon as he took the reins,
667
00:33:03,708 --> 00:33:06,208
and he snapped 'em,
and he yelled real loud,
668
00:33:06,250 --> 00:33:08,000
he opened his mouth real big,
669
00:33:08,041 --> 00:33:12,416
the whole front part of
the bottom piece broke loose.
670
00:33:12,458 --> 00:33:18,333
I look down in there
and I see peas. Like,
peas that you eat.
671
00:33:19,416 --> 00:33:23,875
[narrator] From that point on,
they served milkshakes at
lunch, anything with a straw.
672
00:33:24,958 --> 00:33:28,208
We were at the bottom
of the Colorado River
673
00:33:28,250 --> 00:33:30,875
and base camp was way up on top.
674
00:33:30,916 --> 00:33:33,000
And we moved everything
down with us
675
00:33:33,041 --> 00:33:35,458
and they forgot straws.
676
00:33:35,500 --> 00:33:40,333
Well, that doesn't mean too
much to the average person
677
00:33:40,375 --> 00:33:44,416
but for Kim, Roddy,
Maurice, and me...
678
00:33:45,500 --> 00:33:48,625
we couldn't, we couldn't drink.
679
00:33:48,666 --> 00:33:51,166
So, Heston says,
"You don't have any straws?
680
00:33:51,208 --> 00:33:52,666
Where are the straws?"
681
00:33:52,708 --> 00:33:54,583
"They're back at the base camp."
682
00:33:54,625 --> 00:33:59,250
He ran back to the base camp
and brought straws back for us.
683
00:33:59,291 --> 00:34:02,583
So, you know, that--
just to let you know
684
00:34:02,625 --> 00:34:06,375
what a, what a great
common guy he was.
685
00:34:07,375 --> 00:34:11,625
Kim Hunter was
the queen of the set. [chuckles]
686
00:34:11,666 --> 00:34:17,583
She was articulate and, like
Roddy, just a super actor.
687
00:34:19,375 --> 00:34:23,708
[Maurice] Maurice Evans,
who played an orangutan,
played chess,
688
00:34:23,750 --> 00:34:29,666
and I played chess.
We found ourselves sitting
outside, Fox back lot,
689
00:34:29,708 --> 00:34:31,416
and the two of us were
looking at each other
690
00:34:31,458 --> 00:34:33,875
just like, this is
normal everyday thing.
691
00:34:34,833 --> 00:34:37,208
[Dan] I remember my
superior, Doc. Murman,
692
00:34:37,250 --> 00:34:38,833
he said, "Well,
we'll go to the dailies,
693
00:34:38,875 --> 00:34:41,083
we got to watch this
piece of junk again today,
694
00:34:41,125 --> 00:34:43,666
you know, 15 minutes of this."
He says--
695
00:34:43,708 --> 00:34:46,541
You know. I said,
"Well, don't underestimate
696
00:34:46,583 --> 00:34:48,500
what an ape can do,
you know?" [chuckles]
697
00:34:49,375 --> 00:34:51,083
[narrator] To ensure
the locations would be
698
00:34:51,125 --> 00:34:52,958
as groundbreaking
as the makeups,
699
00:34:53,000 --> 00:34:56,125
production designer,
Bill Creber, created Ape City,
700
00:34:56,166 --> 00:34:59,375
shot on Fox Ranch
in Malibu Canyon.
701
00:34:59,416 --> 00:35:01,916
I always loved Ape City
because everything was rounded
702
00:35:01,958 --> 00:35:04,583
and had these soft
curves to them
703
00:35:04,625 --> 00:35:07,750
that, that looked primitive
but functional.
704
00:35:09,458 --> 00:35:11,916
[narrator] For the final
beach scene, filmed in Malibu,
705
00:35:11,958 --> 00:35:14,333
the makeups and heavy
costumes had to be worn
706
00:35:14,375 --> 00:35:16,916
in 100 degree heat.
707
00:35:16,958 --> 00:35:20,708
[Lou] I think it was, uh,
Charlton Heston's idea
708
00:35:20,750 --> 00:35:23,083
to helicopter us all in.
709
00:35:23,125 --> 00:35:27,375
So we all met at 20th Century
Fox, there's a helipad there,
710
00:35:27,416 --> 00:35:30,750
and we were helicoptered
to the actual set.
711
00:35:30,791 --> 00:35:33,333
Then we had our makeup started.
712
00:35:33,375 --> 00:35:36,000
[Tom] You knew they
weren't comfortable.
We tried to keep everybody
713
00:35:36,041 --> 00:35:38,458
as comfortable as we could,
but it wasn't easy.
714
00:35:40,041 --> 00:35:43,000
When we finally wrapped
Planet of the Apes,
715
00:35:43,041 --> 00:35:47,208
it was, I...
I guess it was bittersweet
716
00:35:47,250 --> 00:35:52,000
because, you know, you'd been--
I'd been so involved
for eight months
717
00:35:52,041 --> 00:35:53,875
without a day off.
718
00:35:53,916 --> 00:35:56,250
It totally consumed my life.
719
00:35:56,291 --> 00:36:00,375
All of a sudden, I didn't
have to get up at 3:15.
720
00:36:00,416 --> 00:36:02,708
I wouldn't be seeing all of
my friends that I worked with,
721
00:36:02,750 --> 00:36:05,250
and I'd made a lot of
friends on that show.
722
00:36:05,291 --> 00:36:07,250
And it was a very
strange feeling
723
00:36:07,291 --> 00:36:09,875
because I wanted to
continue doing that,
724
00:36:09,916 --> 00:36:11,458
continue doing just
what I was doing,
725
00:36:11,500 --> 00:36:13,458
what I'd been doing
for eight months.
726
00:36:15,333 --> 00:36:18,291
[Darrell] When they said,
"that's a wrap"
for the last time...
727
00:36:18,333 --> 00:36:19,333
[laughs]
728
00:36:20,750 --> 00:36:23,375
I left there,
I thought, "I don't ever want
729
00:36:23,416 --> 00:36:27,000
to do another appliance
as long as I live."
730
00:36:27,041 --> 00:36:31,000
[Maurice] Planet of the Apes
was a real team effort
731
00:36:31,041 --> 00:36:37,208
because all of us were brand
new at applying this amount
732
00:36:37,250 --> 00:36:40,666
of appliance work
on a daily basis.
733
00:36:40,708 --> 00:36:45,666
But when you look at what is
going to end up on the screen,
734
00:36:46,750 --> 00:36:51,916
the worst makeup job is
going to represent everybody.
735
00:36:52,875 --> 00:36:57,208
The best makeup job is also
going to represent everybody.
736
00:36:58,541 --> 00:37:00,125
[narrator] Filming of
Planet of the Apes wrapped
737
00:37:00,166 --> 00:37:02,875
on August 10th, 1967.
738
00:37:02,916 --> 00:37:05,375
It was now in the hands of
the post-production team,
739
00:37:05,416 --> 00:37:09,833
including Jerry Goldsmith,
who was composing
the iconic score.
740
00:37:09,875 --> 00:37:12,500
John told me, he said, "It's
going to have a rough screening.
You want to go and see it?"
741
00:37:12,541 --> 00:37:14,750
And I think Wes Don,
the other apprentice and I,
742
00:37:14,791 --> 00:37:16,583
"Yeah, let's go see it."
743
00:37:16,625 --> 00:37:18,750
I was devastated 'cause
I never saw a movie
744
00:37:18,791 --> 00:37:21,958
without color correction,
without music,
745
00:37:22,000 --> 00:37:24,583
you know, with just temp music,
missing scenes.
746
00:37:24,625 --> 00:37:27,666
And I came back and John said,
"What do you think, Tommy? Eh?
747
00:37:27,708 --> 00:37:31,333
Eh? What do you think?" And I'm
terrified of telling him
I think it's one of
748
00:37:31,375 --> 00:37:33,541
the worst things I've ever seen.
749
00:37:33,583 --> 00:37:37,625
The actors looked great
but the rest of the movie
looked terrible.
750
00:37:37,666 --> 00:37:39,041
[narrator] Planet of
the Apes also required
751
00:37:39,083 --> 00:37:41,750
considerable ADR, or dubbing,
752
00:37:41,791 --> 00:37:45,000
due to the muffled voices
of the actors in makeup.
753
00:37:45,041 --> 00:37:48,000
[Lou] Doing the looping,
Franklin would give direction,
754
00:37:48,041 --> 00:37:51,541
and then he had a golf cup
and he'd putt.
755
00:37:51,583 --> 00:37:55,458
And then, "Okay,
go ahead, Lou." [laughs]
756
00:37:55,500 --> 00:37:57,750
[Tom] So, Danny Striepeke
gives me a gorilla mask
757
00:37:57,791 --> 00:38:01,125
and tells me to take it
over to the scoring stage.
758
00:38:02,041 --> 00:38:05,291
When I get there, Jerry's in
the middle of scoring the film,
759
00:38:05,333 --> 00:38:06,833
and I was just blown away
760
00:38:06,875 --> 00:38:09,583
because I never heard
anything like it.
761
00:38:09,625 --> 00:38:12,041
And Jerry wanted to wear
the mask for inspiration
762
00:38:12,083 --> 00:38:14,125
while he conducted
his orchestra.
763
00:38:15,375 --> 00:38:18,083
It's a very unusual score.
I mean, that was another
thing about Jerry was
764
00:38:18,125 --> 00:38:23,208
that he loved to take chances.
And he would use orchestrations
and combinations of approaches
765
00:38:23,250 --> 00:38:26,916
that ordinarily wouldn't
probably be considered
by most people.
766
00:38:26,958 --> 00:38:29,500
[uplifting music]
767
00:38:30,875 --> 00:38:32,875
[Dan] It all coalesced.
768
00:38:32,916 --> 00:38:34,625
That doesn't happen very often.
769
00:38:35,625 --> 00:38:38,333
To bring all those
divergent talents together
770
00:38:38,375 --> 00:38:42,041
into one, I call it
a column of creativity.
771
00:38:43,791 --> 00:38:45,541
[tense music]
772
00:38:45,583 --> 00:38:47,416
[narrator] Planet of
the Apes was completed
773
00:38:47,458 --> 00:38:52,416
near the end of 1967 and slated for a March 1968 release.
774
00:38:53,875 --> 00:38:57,208
[John Chambers] The biggest fear
we had was, will they laugh
775
00:38:57,250 --> 00:38:59,083
or accept the apes?
776
00:38:59,958 --> 00:39:02,125
But I thought if they laughed,
777
00:39:02,166 --> 00:39:04,333
this was going to
be a Mickey Mouse.
778
00:39:06,000 --> 00:39:09,208
20th Century Fox had
a lot riding on this movie.
779
00:39:09,250 --> 00:39:11,375
And the rumor around the lot was
780
00:39:11,416 --> 00:39:13,458
that if this thing was a flop
781
00:39:14,458 --> 00:39:16,625
that they would be in
tremendous jeopardy.
782
00:39:17,916 --> 00:39:20,291
[Charlton] Hundreds of
technicians and
the largest number of
783
00:39:20,333 --> 00:39:21,875
makeup artists ever assembled
784
00:39:21,916 --> 00:39:24,875
assisted the producers,
the writers,
785
00:39:24,916 --> 00:39:26,583
the director, and the cast.
786
00:39:28,333 --> 00:39:30,958
[Ed] I didn't really think it
was going to be that big, no.
787
00:39:31,000 --> 00:39:34,333
But I know it'd been tried
before and it was a flop.
788
00:39:34,375 --> 00:39:36,208
[announcer]Planet of the Apes,
789
00:39:36,250 --> 00:39:38,500
beyond your wildest dreams.
790
00:39:40,083 --> 00:39:42,458
I was fortunate enough
to get a ticket
791
00:39:42,500 --> 00:39:46,291
from 20th Century Fox to go
see their premiere opening.
792
00:39:47,833 --> 00:39:50,208
I sat dead center
in the theater.
793
00:39:50,250 --> 00:39:53,333
And once I saw that gorilla
come up in the corn field,
794
00:39:53,375 --> 00:39:56,291
that big zoom shot,
I went, "Oh, my God."
795
00:39:57,541 --> 00:40:00,041
The reveal of the gorillas
796
00:40:00,083 --> 00:40:03,583
is still absolutely
extraordinary sequence.
797
00:40:03,625 --> 00:40:06,666
You see the sticks,
and you see the people running,
798
00:40:06,708 --> 00:40:10,541
and the astronauts are like,
"What's up?" You know.
799
00:40:10,583 --> 00:40:12,000
[Richard] Starting to get
really into the movie
800
00:40:12,041 --> 00:40:16,708
and then as you realize,
wait a minute,
801
00:40:16,750 --> 00:40:21,000
I'm, I'm relating to these--
They're apes.
802
00:40:21,041 --> 00:40:23,250
You didn't even think about it.
803
00:40:23,291 --> 00:40:26,375
Charlton Heston looked more
animated than the apes did.
804
00:40:26,416 --> 00:40:31,125
Take your stinking paws off me,
you damn dirty ape!
805
00:40:32,041 --> 00:40:34,916
As soon as we saw the apes,
806
00:40:34,958 --> 00:40:38,375
I, I was-- I just
stared and stared,
807
00:40:38,416 --> 00:40:40,458
trying to figure out,
how did they do that?
808
00:40:42,375 --> 00:40:44,291
[Guillermo] It's hard
for people to imagine now
809
00:40:44,333 --> 00:40:48,333
what a massive
mind-destroying thing it was
810
00:40:48,375 --> 00:40:49,625
to see apes talk.
811
00:40:51,416 --> 00:40:54,458
It blew me away.
Because all of a sudden,
you're seeing chimpanzees,
812
00:40:54,500 --> 00:40:58,083
and you're seeing orangutans,
and you're seeing gorillas.
813
00:41:00,333 --> 00:41:03,083
[Scott] But I think what people
still to this day talk about
814
00:41:03,125 --> 00:41:06,625
is that amazing ending where
he's home, all the time.
815
00:41:08,000 --> 00:41:10,291
That stunned people,
that shocking ending.
816
00:41:10,333 --> 00:41:12,208
And they play it
without any music.
817
00:41:14,833 --> 00:41:18,458
All you hear is the ocean
lapping up on the shore.
818
00:41:18,500 --> 00:41:21,833
And he's just screaming
his guts out.
819
00:41:23,458 --> 00:41:25,833
And then you get a point of
view shot which pulls back
820
00:41:25,875 --> 00:41:28,458
and you see the Statue
of Liberty in ruins,
821
00:41:28,500 --> 00:41:31,541
blown to pieces,
and rusted, and decrepit.
822
00:41:33,500 --> 00:41:38,250
It's so devastating because
the symbol is not accidental.
823
00:41:39,250 --> 00:41:44,291
It's liberty, it's everything
that was good about the world,
824
00:41:45,500 --> 00:41:47,083
that is destroyed.
825
00:41:47,125 --> 00:41:49,791
It said everything
I believed in.
826
00:41:49,833 --> 00:41:51,375
Um...
827
00:41:51,416 --> 00:41:53,166
We were living in an era...
828
00:41:54,208 --> 00:41:55,958
where we were still
afraid of the bomb.
829
00:41:56,000 --> 00:41:58,708
Of course we are now, today,
830
00:41:58,750 --> 00:42:02,208
but it was very prevalent then.
831
00:42:02,250 --> 00:42:06,875
And this script said,
you know, you idiots.
832
00:42:06,916 --> 00:42:11,916
You keep fooling around
and you're going to blow
everything up.
833
00:42:11,958 --> 00:42:13,125
[solemn music]
834
00:42:13,166 --> 00:42:15,458
[Tom] I was so moved and so, um,
835
00:42:15,500 --> 00:42:18,083
proud to have
worked on this film.
836
00:42:18,125 --> 00:42:20,458
It was like
the highlight of my life
837
00:42:20,500 --> 00:42:22,958
to be able to sit
and watch something that I had
838
00:42:23,000 --> 00:42:26,208
given so much
of my, uh, time and effort,
839
00:42:26,250 --> 00:42:28,666
trying to make my part
the best I could.
840
00:42:39,750 --> 00:42:42,291
[narrator] Just three months into what was already shaping up
841
00:42:42,333 --> 00:42:45,583
to be the most tumultuous
year of the 20th century,
842
00:42:45,625 --> 00:42:49,625
Planet of the Apes
premiered on March 27th, 1968.
843
00:42:50,666 --> 00:42:54,750
Everything about
a movie is who you are,
844
00:42:54,791 --> 00:42:59,833
how old you are, who you're
with the first time you see it.
845
00:42:59,875 --> 00:43:03,458
And when you ask people for
one of their favorite movies
846
00:43:03,500 --> 00:43:07,958
or something, not only can
they tell you about the movie,
847
00:43:08,000 --> 00:43:09,375
but you say,
"Where'd you see it?"
848
00:43:09,416 --> 00:43:10,916
They'll tell you the theater.
849
00:43:12,750 --> 00:43:16,458
My mom dropped us off,
it was a little
theater in Santa Ana.
850
00:43:16,500 --> 00:43:19,208
Um, [clears throat] we ran out
to the car and said,
851
00:43:19,250 --> 00:43:20,583
"We want to see it again!"
852
00:43:22,083 --> 00:43:23,500
[Maurice] When Planet of
the Apescame out,
853
00:43:23,541 --> 00:43:25,166
that's all people talked about.
854
00:43:27,000 --> 00:43:29,166
[Darrell] It was pretty intense.
855
00:43:29,208 --> 00:43:32,125
I mean, they lined up
to see this movie.
856
00:43:34,000 --> 00:43:35,875
[Lou] You really don't
know what to think
857
00:43:35,916 --> 00:43:39,208
of a film called
Planet of the Apes.
858
00:43:39,250 --> 00:43:45,208
You don't think it's going to
tackle such important things.
859
00:43:47,916 --> 00:43:50,458
[Leonard] It was the kind of
film everybody wanted to see,
860
00:43:50,500 --> 00:43:52,208
that everybody buzzed about.
861
00:43:53,291 --> 00:43:55,291
It was a film that
made an impression.
862
00:43:56,416 --> 00:43:57,416
How could it not?
863
00:43:58,916 --> 00:44:02,166
There was something magical,
funny, whimsical, poignant.
864
00:44:04,083 --> 00:44:07,833
[Steve] The worldwide
nerve that it struck,
865
00:44:07,875 --> 00:44:10,500
besides the story,
which is incredible,
866
00:44:10,541 --> 00:44:12,458
and there's so many
subtexts to it as well,
867
00:44:12,500 --> 00:44:14,416
the makeups were
pretty outstanding.
868
00:44:16,250 --> 00:44:18,541
[Michael] As everyone in this
industry is going to tell you,
869
00:44:18,583 --> 00:44:21,458
Planet of the Apeswas
a complete game changer
870
00:44:21,500 --> 00:44:25,458
where the makeup was
such an integral part
871
00:44:25,500 --> 00:44:29,041
of telling of that story.
If the makeup didn't work,
the film wouldn't have worked.
872
00:44:29,083 --> 00:44:30,375
It would've looked silly.
873
00:44:32,083 --> 00:44:34,041
In the makeup world,
it was revolutionary
874
00:44:34,083 --> 00:44:35,833
as sound coming to film.
875
00:44:38,416 --> 00:44:40,625
[Tom] Thinking back to day one
876
00:44:40,666 --> 00:44:42,708
when John Chambers
pulled up in his car,
877
00:44:42,750 --> 00:44:44,583
waved at me getting out,
878
00:44:44,625 --> 00:44:47,000
and he said, "It's you and me,
Tommy," holding the script,
879
00:44:47,958 --> 00:44:50,166
and it was Planet of the Apes.
880
00:44:50,208 --> 00:44:54,666
And he says, "I'm going to
win the Academy Award."
881
00:44:55,833 --> 00:44:57,916
And I thought, "Come on,
882
00:44:57,958 --> 00:45:00,500
the Academy doesn't even
give awards for makeup."
883
00:45:01,791 --> 00:45:03,791
[presenter] This year, a board
of governors at the Academy
884
00:45:03,833 --> 00:45:06,375
has voted a special
award for makeup.
885
00:45:06,416 --> 00:45:08,333
Would John Chambers
please come out here
886
00:45:08,375 --> 00:45:09,958
and get his award?
887
00:45:10,000 --> 00:45:13,041
[audience applauds]
888
00:45:19,541 --> 00:45:22,458
Mr. Chambers is responsible
for making monkeys
889
00:45:22,500 --> 00:45:26,250
out of Roddy McDowall,
Maurice Evans, and Kim Hunter
890
00:45:26,291 --> 00:45:27,916
for Planet of the Apes.
891
00:45:27,958 --> 00:45:30,291
[audience applauds]
892
00:45:36,333 --> 00:45:38,416
And quite brilliantly, too.
893
00:45:39,625 --> 00:45:41,958
Will one of the friends
of Oscar back there
894
00:45:42,000 --> 00:45:44,666
please bring
Mr. Chambers his award?
895
00:45:44,708 --> 00:45:46,583
-[John chuckles]
-[audience gasps]
896
00:45:46,625 --> 00:45:48,541
[audience applauds]
897
00:46:09,208 --> 00:46:11,458
That's what I call
a terrific makeup job.
898
00:46:11,500 --> 00:46:14,375
[audience laughs]
899
00:46:16,166 --> 00:46:19,583
-How can I follow
an act like that?
-[audience laughs]
900
00:46:19,625 --> 00:46:23,041
May I thank the Board
of Governors for
this wonderful honor.
901
00:46:23,083 --> 00:46:26,208
May I thank Mr. Zanuck,
Mr. Jacobs,
902
00:46:27,083 --> 00:46:29,291
and Ben Nye and Dan Striepeke,
903
00:46:29,333 --> 00:46:31,875
who share this award
with me, I say.
904
00:46:31,916 --> 00:46:35,291
But most of all, all those
wonderful makeup men
905
00:46:35,333 --> 00:46:37,916
and hairstylists
that worked so hard
906
00:46:37,958 --> 00:46:39,958
to make this picture a success.
907
00:46:40,000 --> 00:46:42,416
From all of us to all of you,
908
00:46:42,458 --> 00:46:44,583
God bless you
and thank you so much.
909
00:46:44,625 --> 00:46:46,333
[audience applauds]
910
00:46:46,375 --> 00:46:48,875
[slow jazz music]
911
00:46:48,916 --> 00:46:50,791
[Tom] John Chambers
wanted to acknowledge
912
00:46:50,833 --> 00:46:53,208
all the makeup artists
that worked for him,
913
00:46:53,250 --> 00:46:55,416
so he went to a jeweler,
and he got this jeweler
914
00:46:55,458 --> 00:46:58,375
to make these little gold
and silver ape heads.
915
00:46:58,416 --> 00:47:01,000
The gold ones went
to the makeup artists
916
00:47:01,041 --> 00:47:02,708
who did the principal actors.
917
00:47:03,958 --> 00:47:08,041
This was a gift
from, uh, John Chambers
918
00:47:08,083 --> 00:47:11,833
to all of us who started
and finished on the movie.
919
00:47:13,000 --> 00:47:16,583
And I've treasured this
over the years.
920
00:47:16,625 --> 00:47:22,041
This was John's way of
sharing his Academy Award
921
00:47:22,083 --> 00:47:22,958
with all of us.
922
00:47:29,708 --> 00:47:32,833
[narrator] With
Planet of the Apes
a financial and critical hit,
923
00:47:32,875 --> 00:47:35,958
and having proved that
nothing was impossible,
924
00:47:36,000 --> 00:47:40,166
a new generation of makeup
artists were inspired
to join the craft.
925
00:47:40,208 --> 00:47:42,166
[Rick] The first time
I even heard about
Planet of the Apes,
926
00:47:42,208 --> 00:47:45,583
actually, my parents had
a subscription to Life Magazine.
927
00:47:45,625 --> 00:47:47,708
They had a picture of
Maurice Evans in the makeup.
928
00:47:47,750 --> 00:47:51,166
I turned the page and saw
this amazing orangutan,
929
00:47:51,208 --> 00:47:53,125
this guy, you know,
"What the hell is this?"
930
00:47:53,166 --> 00:47:54,333
It was so cool.
931
00:47:54,375 --> 00:47:57,125
[upbeat jazz music]
932
00:47:57,166 --> 00:47:59,541
[Tom Woodruff] I remember
learning about
Planet of the Apes
933
00:47:59,583 --> 00:48:01,625
in the Famous
Monsters of Filmland.
934
00:48:01,666 --> 00:48:03,791
It was just such
an amazing thing
935
00:48:03,833 --> 00:48:06,333
to see that process
in a, in a magazine,
936
00:48:06,375 --> 00:48:07,916
the step by step process.
937
00:48:09,041 --> 00:48:13,291
I knew then that I was thinking,
I have to get into that.
938
00:48:13,333 --> 00:48:15,791
And that's when I started
playing around.
939
00:48:15,833 --> 00:48:18,416
The first makeup was Planet
of the Apesmakeup, you know.
940
00:48:18,458 --> 00:48:20,583
It was so much fun doing.
941
00:48:20,625 --> 00:48:27,500
It has this ability to
intrigue every makeup artist.
942
00:48:27,541 --> 00:48:31,875
I don't know one makeup artist
that's been like, "Please,
Planet of the Apes."
943
00:48:31,916 --> 00:48:34,083
It just left this
permanent mark,
944
00:48:34,125 --> 00:48:37,125
uh, uh, that I really
wanted to be part of,
945
00:48:37,166 --> 00:48:40,625
and, and it was the only thing
that, that I ever wanted to do
since I was a kid.
946
00:48:42,333 --> 00:48:45,583
My first ever movie
was a Super 8
947
00:48:45,625 --> 00:48:48,333
with my Planet of
the Apes,uh, figures.
948
00:48:51,000 --> 00:48:54,708
I think the studio, Fox
was really, uh, surprised,
949
00:48:54,750 --> 00:48:58,708
taken aback by just
how many people,
950
00:48:58,750 --> 00:49:00,708
uh, fell in love
with this movie.
951
00:49:01,916 --> 00:49:04,791
[Dan] Tremendous, tremendous
reception to the film.
952
00:49:05,666 --> 00:49:08,791
And particularly Fox,
when they started seeing
the coffers fill up.
953
00:49:08,833 --> 00:49:12,625
And the studio went, "Sequel,
sequel," you know, right away.
954
00:49:12,666 --> 00:49:15,791
The pressure on us was
to come up with something
955
00:49:15,833 --> 00:49:19,291
as groundbreaking,
and as unusual, and original,
956
00:49:19,333 --> 00:49:21,833
like the very first
Planet of the Apes.
957
00:49:21,875 --> 00:49:23,833
[dramatic music]
958
00:49:23,875 --> 00:49:25,916
[narrator] Production of
Beneath was difficult
959
00:49:25,958 --> 00:49:28,708
due to Charlton Heston only
being willing to work one week
960
00:49:28,750 --> 00:49:32,000
and Fox battling
producer Richard Zanuck,
961
00:49:32,041 --> 00:49:34,458
eventually leading to his
firing from the studio.
962
00:49:35,541 --> 00:49:38,333
[Tom] The script for Beneath
the Planet of the Apescalled
963
00:49:38,375 --> 00:49:42,375
for humans to live under
the surface of the Earth.
964
00:49:42,416 --> 00:49:44,333
These humans were mutations.
965
00:49:45,583 --> 00:49:49,625
[John] When John Chambers
set up his makeup lab,
I would go over there,
966
00:49:49,666 --> 00:49:55,500
and, and there-- originally
it was just John,
and Mr. Burman, and Verner.
967
00:49:55,541 --> 00:49:58,500
And I would go over and hang out
there 'cause it was so cool.
968
00:49:58,541 --> 00:50:01,250
You know, I'm a Famous
Monsters of Filmlandkid.
969
00:50:01,291 --> 00:50:03,333
So to be with--
they had all this stuff.
970
00:50:03,375 --> 00:50:06,000
And in that movie are mutants.
971
00:50:06,041 --> 00:50:08,416
I watched all the prototypes
972
00:50:08,458 --> 00:50:11,250
and there were a couple
that were so gross.
973
00:50:11,291 --> 00:50:14,125
There was one that
had teeth coming, like,
974
00:50:14,166 --> 00:50:17,958
I mean, really malformed,
and was so grotesque,
975
00:50:18,000 --> 00:50:20,458
it literally made you sick.
976
00:50:20,500 --> 00:50:24,458
I think we came up with half a
dozen or so different sculptures
977
00:50:24,500 --> 00:50:27,458
of different,
uh, mutated people.
978
00:50:27,500 --> 00:50:32,208
And what I noticed was...
We were-- In the script,
979
00:50:32,250 --> 00:50:35,291
they were supposed to be able
to take their normal faces
980
00:50:35,333 --> 00:50:39,458
and peel them off to reveal
that they were mutated.
981
00:50:39,500 --> 00:50:41,583
Well, I kept looking at these
heads that we were doing,
982
00:50:41,625 --> 00:50:43,166
and these heads
were so distorted
983
00:50:43,208 --> 00:50:45,416
you'd never be able
to put a face over it.
984
00:50:45,458 --> 00:50:48,333
Somebody saw the book,
Gray's Anatomy.
985
00:50:48,375 --> 00:50:50,083
It had an illustration
of a guy in there
986
00:50:50,125 --> 00:50:52,166
with all the veins, and muscles,
and everything showing.
987
00:50:52,208 --> 00:50:53,750
And went, "Oh, that's it."
988
00:50:53,791 --> 00:50:56,416
Because that we could
put a thin skin on
989
00:50:56,458 --> 00:50:58,041
and make it look like
the person underneath,
990
00:50:58,083 --> 00:50:59,666
so when they pulled it off,
991
00:50:59,708 --> 00:51:01,583
it would marry
to it beautifully.
992
00:51:03,833 --> 00:51:06,041
Beneath the Planet of
the Apesturned out
993
00:51:06,083 --> 00:51:08,750
to be a very successful sequel.
994
00:51:08,791 --> 00:51:12,833
And if Fox was surprised by
the success of the original,
995
00:51:12,875 --> 00:51:15,166
I think they were
even more surprised
996
00:51:15,208 --> 00:51:17,000
by the success of the sequel.
997
00:51:17,041 --> 00:51:21,416
So there was an immediate
need to keep the story going.
998
00:51:24,208 --> 00:51:25,500
[narrator] At the
end ofBeneath,
999
00:51:25,541 --> 00:51:27,333
the Earth is destroyed,
1000
00:51:27,375 --> 00:51:30,166
seemingly ending the
Planet of the Apes franchise.
1001
00:51:30,208 --> 00:51:32,458
[low rumble]
1002
00:51:33,666 --> 00:51:36,208
By sending apes back in time,
1003
00:51:36,250 --> 00:51:39,583
a whole new world of
opportunities was opened.
1004
00:51:39,625 --> 00:51:42,375
[Joe] The cleverest of
the follow up pictures
1005
00:51:42,416 --> 00:51:43,958
is Escape from
the Planet of the Apes,
1006
00:51:44,000 --> 00:51:45,916
which is a time travel picture
1007
00:51:45,958 --> 00:51:48,791
in which the apes
go back to 1973
1008
00:51:48,833 --> 00:51:51,666
and are harbingers of what's
going to happen in the future.
1009
00:51:51,708 --> 00:51:54,583
And of course, there are, uh...
1010
00:51:54,625 --> 00:51:57,250
people who want to stop
them from breeding
1011
00:51:57,291 --> 00:51:58,791
and make sure that that world
1012
00:51:58,833 --> 00:52:01,416
of apes conquering
man never happens.
1013
00:52:01,458 --> 00:52:04,333
Uh, and it's a really
cleverly plotted movie,
1014
00:52:04,375 --> 00:52:05,791
and it's my favorite
in the series,
1015
00:52:05,833 --> 00:52:08,041
just because it's so much fun.
1016
00:52:09,208 --> 00:52:12,500
It has an ending
that could have only...
1017
00:52:13,625 --> 00:52:15,916
happened in the 70s,
1018
00:52:15,958 --> 00:52:19,250
where... well, "How do
you want to end it?"
1019
00:52:20,208 --> 00:52:21,458
"Let's shoot a baby."
1020
00:52:22,500 --> 00:52:24,500
"Okay." [chuckles]
1021
00:52:24,541 --> 00:52:27,250
Planet of the Apesis
the first major franchise
1022
00:52:27,291 --> 00:52:30,500
outside of James Bond that
was successful in its sequels.
1023
00:52:32,750 --> 00:52:35,083
I ran out to every
single one of 'em.
1024
00:52:36,958 --> 00:52:39,708
My favorite is Conquest
of the Planet of the Apes,
1025
00:52:39,750 --> 00:52:41,958
which, to my knowledge, was shot
1026
00:52:42,000 --> 00:52:45,208
on the Century City, uh, grounds
1027
00:52:45,250 --> 00:52:48,750
after 20th Century Fox
had sold their back lot.
1028
00:52:50,541 --> 00:52:52,166
I was at the University
of California Irvine,
1029
00:52:52,208 --> 00:52:53,541
I was a premed student.
1030
00:52:53,583 --> 00:52:56,500
Um, I looked out
the window one day,
1031
00:52:56,541 --> 00:52:59,666
and I was in my chemistry lab,
and I saw a film crew
on the set,
1032
00:52:59,708 --> 00:53:02,208
and apes running all
over our campus.
1033
00:53:02,250 --> 00:53:04,958
And it was Conquest for
the Planet of the Apes.
1034
00:53:05,000 --> 00:53:09,416
And so, I told my lab partner,
"Hey, finish up here.
1035
00:53:09,458 --> 00:53:11,208
I'm going to go pay a visit."
1036
00:53:11,250 --> 00:53:14,208
And I met J. Lee
Thompson on the set,
1037
00:53:14,250 --> 00:53:16,750
had lunch with him,
and then six months later
1038
00:53:16,791 --> 00:53:19,916
I was Cornelius on Battle
for the Planet of the Apes.
1039
00:53:21,666 --> 00:53:24,041
[John] I knew J. Lee Thompson,
1040
00:53:24,083 --> 00:53:27,875
and Lee said to me,
"I'm doing another Apes movie."
1041
00:53:28,833 --> 00:53:30,541
And I said,
"Oh, good, you know."
1042
00:53:30,583 --> 00:53:33,375
And he said,
"Why don't you be in it?"
1043
00:53:33,416 --> 00:53:34,875
I said, "I'd love to be in it."
1044
00:53:34,916 --> 00:53:36,125
He said, "Okay."
1045
00:53:36,166 --> 00:53:39,291
So, I'm mostly cut out of it.
1046
00:53:39,333 --> 00:53:41,583
I'm a face on the cutting
room floor in that movie
1047
00:53:41,625 --> 00:53:44,583
although I get
pretty big billing right
in the main title. [chuckles]
1048
00:53:44,625 --> 00:53:48,708
But, uh, I played a human
slave to Roddy McDowall.
1049
00:53:48,750 --> 00:53:50,458
No cracks.
1050
00:53:50,500 --> 00:53:52,416
But I got a lot of
shit for it, you know,
1051
00:53:52,458 --> 00:53:53,541
especially from Roddy.
1052
00:53:54,916 --> 00:53:56,375
[Bobby] The role of Cornelius
wasn't really going
1053
00:53:56,416 --> 00:53:59,416
to be that significant
until they realized
1054
00:53:59,458 --> 00:54:02,333
that they had, you know,
a sentimental storyline.
1055
00:54:02,375 --> 00:54:06,791
After a few days of watching
Roddy work up close,
1056
00:54:06,833 --> 00:54:10,916
I noticed that his makeup
was more expressive,
1057
00:54:10,958 --> 00:54:14,125
more pliable than many
of the other characters.
1058
00:54:14,166 --> 00:54:17,875
And so, I asked my makeup
artist, Jimmy Phillips,
1059
00:54:17,916 --> 00:54:21,583
how it was that Roddy could do
this little nose wiggle thing
1060
00:54:21,625 --> 00:54:23,375
that was unique.
1061
00:54:23,416 --> 00:54:24,833
And he said,
"Well, that's a secret."
1062
00:54:24,875 --> 00:54:27,708
And I said, "I know,
but I'm his son.
1063
00:54:27,750 --> 00:54:30,458
I should be able to do
the same thing that he does."
1064
00:54:30,500 --> 00:54:34,750
And he said, "Well, if you can
get Roddy to tell you the story
of how that gets done,
1065
00:54:34,791 --> 00:54:39,166
I'll do it for you."
And so, I was brand
new in the industry,
1066
00:54:39,208 --> 00:54:41,000
a little intimidated,
but I went to Roddy
1067
00:54:41,041 --> 00:54:44,625
and said, "Look, Mr. McDowall,
I'm playing your son.
1068
00:54:44,666 --> 00:54:47,583
I should have a characteristic
similar to yours.
1069
00:54:47,625 --> 00:54:49,708
Would you agree?" And he said,
"Yeah, what do you got?"
1070
00:54:49,750 --> 00:54:51,291
I said, "How do you
do the nose thing?"
1071
00:54:51,333 --> 00:54:55,125
And he said, "Tell Jimmy
to hollow out the inside
1072
00:54:55,166 --> 00:54:58,333
of the appliance." The following
day, I got on a scene,
1073
00:54:58,375 --> 00:55:00,666
he was in the shot, and
I did the little nose wiggle,
1074
00:55:00,708 --> 00:55:03,625
and it was well-received.
1075
00:55:05,416 --> 00:55:08,916
They still had other ideas for
how to expand the Apes universe,
1076
00:55:08,958 --> 00:55:12,166
and they brought Planet
of the Apesto television.
1077
00:55:12,208 --> 00:55:16,083
When they did that, they,
first of all, managed
the biggest crew,
1078
00:55:16,125 --> 00:55:19,041
which was to keep Roddy
McDowall as part of the cast,
1079
00:55:19,083 --> 00:55:20,958
as a brand new character, Galen,
1080
00:55:21,000 --> 00:55:22,500
a chimpanzee on the run
1081
00:55:22,541 --> 00:55:25,708
because he helped
two marooned astronauts.
1082
00:55:26,875 --> 00:55:28,708
[Dan] I was involved
in the TV series
1083
00:55:28,750 --> 00:55:32,916
and, uh, we tried to adhere,
within budget constraints,
1084
00:55:32,958 --> 00:55:35,416
to what was done
in the original pictures.
1085
00:55:36,291 --> 00:55:38,625
In fact, we probably had
to do, on a percentage basis,
1086
00:55:38,666 --> 00:55:40,458
more appliances than masks
1087
00:55:40,500 --> 00:55:43,541
because of the TV
medium being so close.
1088
00:55:44,541 --> 00:55:46,833
Danny Striepeke called me up...
1089
00:55:48,416 --> 00:55:51,250
and he said, uh,
"Fred, I want you to do
the Planet of the Apes.
1090
00:55:51,291 --> 00:55:52,958
We're doing a TV series."
1091
00:55:53,000 --> 00:55:54,583
I says, "Really?"
1092
00:55:54,625 --> 00:55:56,708
He says, "Yeah, you're
going to do Roddy."
1093
00:55:56,750 --> 00:56:00,500
I started working on Roddy
and it was just heaven on earth.
1094
00:56:01,500 --> 00:56:04,666
[Darrell] Roddy McDowall,
when they called a wrap,
1095
00:56:04,708 --> 00:56:07,583
he would say, "Are you sure?"
1096
00:56:07,625 --> 00:56:09,000
They'd say,
"Yes, that's a wrap,"
1097
00:56:09,041 --> 00:56:11,416
and he would go.
[mimicking tearing]
1098
00:56:12,375 --> 00:56:14,750
And tear the whole
thing off in one piece.
1099
00:56:15,750 --> 00:56:18,958
The physical challenges
of production,
1100
00:56:19,000 --> 00:56:23,000
I think, just was impossible
to do on a weekly basis.
1101
00:56:24,333 --> 00:56:27,583
[narrator] Despite its
popularity, thePlanet of
the Apes TV series
1102
00:56:27,625 --> 00:56:30,333
is canceled
after just one season.
1103
00:56:30,375 --> 00:56:34,625
An animated series follows
but also only lasts a year.
1104
00:56:34,666 --> 00:56:37,833
This would be the last Apes
project produced by Fox
1105
00:56:37,875 --> 00:56:39,958
for over 25 years.
1106
00:56:40,000 --> 00:56:41,166
[TV static]
1107
00:56:44,041 --> 00:56:46,291
[Tom] John called me
and asked me if I wanted
1108
00:56:46,333 --> 00:56:48,625
to, uh, go into
partnership with him
1109
00:56:48,666 --> 00:56:51,625
to open the very first
independent makeup studio.
1110
00:56:51,666 --> 00:56:54,500
He said I could also
bring my brother with me.
1111
00:56:54,541 --> 00:56:57,833
We were going to be doing motion
picture and television work,
1112
00:56:57,875 --> 00:56:59,750
but that was only our cover.
1113
00:56:59,791 --> 00:57:05,666
It was our job to help the CIA
create quick change disguises.
1114
00:57:06,875 --> 00:57:10,458
John stayed with them
all the way up till the 1980s.
1115
00:57:11,666 --> 00:57:15,375
We all knew that he was
working on something secretive.
1116
00:57:15,416 --> 00:57:17,500
[tense music]
1117
00:57:17,541 --> 00:57:19,458
[crowd shouting]
1118
00:57:19,500 --> 00:57:25,791
There were six people when
the Iranian embassy was overrun
1119
00:57:25,833 --> 00:57:27,416
that had gotten away.
1120
00:57:29,208 --> 00:57:33,083
John Chambers and Bob Sidell
created a fake movie
1121
00:57:33,125 --> 00:57:35,041
just to get these
people out of Iran.
1122
00:57:37,208 --> 00:57:39,125
[narrator] The details of John
Chambers and the CIA's
involvement in
1123
00:57:39,166 --> 00:57:43,541
the Canadian caper remained classified until 1997.
1124
00:57:43,583 --> 00:57:46,041
The full extent of their
mission wouldn't be revealed
1125
00:57:46,083 --> 00:57:50,583
until 2012, whenArgo
premiered to critical acclaim,
1126
00:57:50,625 --> 00:57:53,000
winning the Academy
Award for Best Picture.
1127
00:57:53,041 --> 00:57:55,000
[audience applauds]
1128
00:57:58,291 --> 00:58:00,541
[Tom] John, one day, came in
and he was real grumpy,
1129
00:58:00,583 --> 00:58:02,833
and he looked torn,
he looked beaten,
1130
00:58:02,875 --> 00:58:05,333
he looked downtrodden.
I said, "What's wrong?"
1131
00:58:05,375 --> 00:58:09,541
And he said,
"Well, I've been diagnosed
with Hodgkin's Disease,
1132
00:58:09,583 --> 00:58:12,875
which is lymphoma or
cancer, blood cancer,
1133
00:58:12,916 --> 00:58:15,541
and I need you guys
to buy, buy me out."
1134
00:58:16,500 --> 00:58:19,583
Well, my brother and I had
to scrape every dollar we had
1135
00:58:19,625 --> 00:58:20,750
to be able to buy him out.
1136
00:58:22,416 --> 00:58:26,250
We found out later that
the whole Hodgkin's Disease
1137
00:58:26,291 --> 00:58:27,791
was something he just made up
1138
00:58:27,833 --> 00:58:29,375
because he wanted us
to buy him out.
1139
00:58:32,875 --> 00:58:34,541
[curious music]
1140
00:58:37,125 --> 00:58:40,500
[narrator] The first film
produced after Chambers' exit
wasPhantom of the Paradise.
1141
00:58:40,541 --> 00:58:45,500
Despite having no involvement,
John Chambers was given full
credit for the production
1142
00:58:45,541 --> 00:58:48,583
due to his status as
an Academy Award winner.
1143
00:58:48,625 --> 00:58:50,250
After we bought
John Chambers out,
1144
00:58:50,291 --> 00:58:51,625
it was tough finding work.
1145
00:58:51,666 --> 00:58:53,708
We didn't have any contacts.
1146
00:58:53,750 --> 00:58:55,708
And my brother and I
really couldn't afford
1147
00:58:55,750 --> 00:58:58,083
to keep two families going
on what we were making,
1148
00:58:58,125 --> 00:59:02,291
so we decided to flip a coin
to see who was going to
take over the studio.
1149
00:59:02,333 --> 00:59:04,000
I won.
1150
00:59:04,041 --> 00:59:05,583
And I did several things
1151
00:59:05,625 --> 00:59:07,291
and started getting
the reputation,
1152
00:59:07,333 --> 00:59:08,791
things started
to work real well.
1153
00:59:08,833 --> 00:59:11,041
And then John Chambers
calls me to ask me
1154
00:59:11,083 --> 00:59:13,291
if I would like to, uh,
work with him
1155
00:59:13,333 --> 00:59:15,583
on The Island of Dr. Moreau.
1156
00:59:15,625 --> 00:59:17,708
You know, his ego
got out of check,
1157
00:59:17,750 --> 00:59:19,916
he was overbearing,
harassing people.
1158
00:59:19,958 --> 00:59:22,958
He was really miserable,
it was tough on everybody.
1159
00:59:23,000 --> 00:59:26,000
Even Danny Striepeke, who had
been his friend since NBC,
1160
00:59:26,041 --> 00:59:28,291
and he didn't speak
to him again.
1161
00:59:28,333 --> 00:59:30,500
And I didn't speak
to him for years.
1162
00:59:32,375 --> 00:59:34,791
[narrator] After changing
the name to Burman Studios,
1163
00:59:34,833 --> 00:59:36,958
Tom and his team began working
1164
00:59:37,000 --> 00:59:40,416
on some of the greatest
films of the 1970s and 80s.
1165
00:59:41,333 --> 00:59:45,208
It's guys like Tommy who
had the creative juices
1166
00:59:45,250 --> 00:59:49,708
in their hands
and in their brains
that create these pieces.
1167
00:59:51,416 --> 00:59:55,125
We were in survival,
and we just did anything
and everything we could.
1168
00:59:55,166 --> 00:59:57,708
Anything that came past us,
we grabbed onto it.
1169
00:59:58,750 --> 01:00:01,625
[Michael] Tommy's a talent,
he comes from a talented family.
1170
01:00:01,666 --> 01:00:03,083
His brother, his dad.
1171
01:00:03,125 --> 01:00:04,666
You always expected quality.
1172
01:00:06,791 --> 01:00:09,958
[narrator] By the late 1970s,
Burman Studios was one of
the top names
1173
01:00:10,000 --> 01:00:13,708
in the makeup business. At this point, Tom Burman had partnered
1174
01:00:13,750 --> 01:00:16,708
with makeup effects
artist, Stan Winston.
1175
01:00:16,750 --> 01:00:18,291
We just hit it off
right on day one.
1176
01:00:18,333 --> 01:00:19,958
There was something about Stan
1177
01:00:20,000 --> 01:00:22,208
that was tremendously inspiring.
1178
01:00:23,458 --> 01:00:26,125
[Matt] Tom Burman
and my father, Stan Winston,
1179
01:00:26,166 --> 01:00:29,083
were kindred spirits.
1180
01:00:29,125 --> 01:00:35,708
Two incredibly creative,
incredibly goofy individuals
1181
01:00:35,750 --> 01:00:38,708
who happened to love
monsters and monster makeup.
1182
01:00:40,333 --> 01:00:44,833
[Tom] By the end of the 1970s,
I decided to push for
a title I had been using
1183
01:00:44,875 --> 01:00:49,000
called special makeup effects.
Nobody else used it,
the union didn't like it,
1184
01:00:49,041 --> 01:00:53,208
John Chambers didn't like it,
but I didn't find anything
that described what I did
1185
01:00:53,250 --> 01:00:54,875
any better than that title.
1186
01:00:54,916 --> 01:00:57,583
So I started using the title,
1187
01:00:57,625 --> 01:01:00,500
along with Stan Winston was the
only other one who backed me up.
1188
01:01:01,500 --> 01:01:08,125
I also pushed really hard
to create a category for
makeup at the Academy
1189
01:01:08,166 --> 01:01:12,000
because they were very
resistant, but you could see
everywhere that makeup was,
1190
01:01:12,041 --> 01:01:14,875
uh, was very prominent
in so many films.
1191
01:01:14,916 --> 01:01:17,125
[audience applauds]
1192
01:01:19,166 --> 01:01:21,166
[narrator] The first annual
Academy Award for Makeup
1193
01:01:21,208 --> 01:01:23,750
was presented in 1982.
1194
01:01:23,791 --> 01:01:26,708
Because of the importance
ofPlanet of the Apes
on the art form,
1195
01:01:26,750 --> 01:01:29,083
Kim Hunter was chosen
to present the award
1196
01:01:29,125 --> 01:01:31,916
with horror icon, Vincent Price.
1197
01:01:31,958 --> 01:01:33,625
The winner is Rick Baker
1198
01:01:33,666 --> 01:01:35,416
for An American
Werewolf in London.
1199
01:01:35,458 --> 01:01:38,791
[audience applauds]
1200
01:01:38,833 --> 01:01:41,208
In California there
were only three guys.
1201
01:01:41,250 --> 01:01:45,000
I mean, there was Rick Baker,
Stan Winston, and Tom Burman.
1202
01:01:45,041 --> 01:01:48,291
And they were doing
everything and innovating.
1203
01:01:48,333 --> 01:01:49,958
[Mike] Tom is a mainstay
of our industry.
1204
01:01:50,000 --> 01:01:53,125
He is a creative force
that everybody recognizes,
1205
01:01:53,166 --> 01:01:54,916
everybody knows the Burman name.
1206
01:01:54,958 --> 01:01:57,916
He is one of the main
people in our industry
1207
01:01:57,958 --> 01:02:00,375
who gives us material to look at
1208
01:02:00,416 --> 01:02:02,166
and to draw inspiration from.
1209
01:02:03,958 --> 01:02:06,541
[Tom] One of my favorite
directors to work for was
Richard Donner.
1210
01:02:06,583 --> 01:02:10,750
We did, um, Goonies,we did
Scrooged, Lethal Weapon.
1211
01:02:11,666 --> 01:02:13,208
[Richard] Making
a movie is a bitch.
1212
01:02:13,250 --> 01:02:15,750
You run into all kinds of
trials and tribulations.
1213
01:02:15,791 --> 01:02:20,000
Forgetting all that, they
delivered the best, the Burmans.
1214
01:02:20,041 --> 01:02:21,750
They were just
a pleasure to be with.
1215
01:02:23,541 --> 01:02:26,583
Going into the 80s were some
really interesting years
1216
01:02:26,625 --> 01:02:30,125
and that's when I met you, 1980.
1217
01:02:30,166 --> 01:02:32,916
And we did, um, Cat People
together, remember?
1218
01:02:32,958 --> 01:02:35,250
I do remember and it
was very magical.
1219
01:02:35,291 --> 01:02:38,041
And you, you allowed
me the freedom
1220
01:02:38,083 --> 01:02:41,541
to help you design Nastassia
Kinski's transformation,
1221
01:02:41,583 --> 01:02:44,208
and our journey began.
1222
01:02:44,250 --> 01:02:46,666
Yeah, I wanted
a feminine approach,
1223
01:02:46,708 --> 01:02:48,583
not a real masculine
heavy approach.
1224
01:02:48,625 --> 01:02:52,541
That's why I was delighted to
have you there and we've, um--
1225
01:02:52,583 --> 01:02:54,000
We've been collaborating
ever since.
1226
01:02:54,041 --> 01:02:55,750
Yeah, we've been
collaborating ever since.
1227
01:02:55,791 --> 01:02:57,833
You always know
where we're going
1228
01:02:57,875 --> 01:03:00,708
-and I'm a detail fanatic, so.
-You are, you are.
1229
01:03:00,750 --> 01:03:04,375
She loves to get those little
tiny edges, and the little
parts and pieces.
1230
01:03:04,416 --> 01:03:09,250
And, uh, you know, we do our
dance around somebody as we--
1231
01:03:09,291 --> 01:03:11,541
-It's very magical
because we just sort of--
-Yeah.
1232
01:03:11,583 --> 01:03:12,833
When an actor's in our chair,
1233
01:03:12,875 --> 01:03:14,666
we just sort of
know how we work.
1234
01:03:14,708 --> 01:03:17,166
And, you know, you always
know where we're going
1235
01:03:17,208 --> 01:03:19,875
and then I am obsessive
about making sure
1236
01:03:19,916 --> 01:03:21,625
all the details are perfect.
1237
01:03:21,666 --> 01:03:27,625
And it's a blissful marriage,
partnership, and journey.
1238
01:03:27,666 --> 01:03:29,750
It's been, been great.
1239
01:03:29,791 --> 01:03:31,333
I'm giving you a kiss.
1240
01:03:31,375 --> 01:03:32,375
[lips smacking]
1241
01:03:34,625 --> 01:03:37,250
[narrator] In 1988,
on the 20th anniversary
1242
01:03:37,291 --> 01:03:42,083
of its original release,
Fox began discussing a remake
ofPlanet of the Apes.
1243
01:03:42,125 --> 01:03:45,708
But the film would spend over
a decade in development hell
1244
01:03:45,750 --> 01:03:48,708
before director, Tim Burton,
joined the project.
1245
01:03:48,750 --> 01:03:50,333
I need to take a sabbatical,
1246
01:03:50,375 --> 01:03:51,666
I need to get away for a while.
1247
01:03:52,750 --> 01:03:55,000
I get a call from Tim Burton
1248
01:03:55,041 --> 01:03:57,125
saying, "I'm going to do
a Planet of the Apesremake,
1249
01:03:57,166 --> 01:03:58,541
I'd like to talk to you
about doing it."
1250
01:03:58,583 --> 01:04:01,625
And I was like, "Oh, shit."
You know?
1251
01:04:01,666 --> 01:04:03,625
[narrator] Rick Baker
and Stan Winston vied
1252
01:04:03,666 --> 01:04:07,208
for the highly coveted
position of makeup designer.
1253
01:04:07,250 --> 01:04:14,250
My dad wanted so badly to put
his stamp on the franchise.
1254
01:04:14,291 --> 01:04:17,166
And he lobbied for it hard,
1255
01:04:17,208 --> 01:04:19,333
and he and I got
our life cast done,
1256
01:04:19,375 --> 01:04:23,083
and they sculpted these
incredible ape makeups.
1257
01:04:23,125 --> 01:04:27,083
Dad was an elderly chimp,
I was a young chimp.
1258
01:04:28,833 --> 01:04:31,333
It was a dream for me to be
able to perform with my dad,
1259
01:04:31,375 --> 01:04:33,375
but I know it was
a dream for him
1260
01:04:33,416 --> 01:04:36,541
because he came out to
Los Angeles to be an actor.
1261
01:04:36,583 --> 01:04:38,791
And here was his
opportunity to act again.
1262
01:04:39,791 --> 01:04:41,416
[narrator] Despite
Stan Winston's effort,
1263
01:04:41,458 --> 01:04:44,083
Rick Baker was selected
to create makeups
1264
01:04:44,125 --> 01:04:47,333
for this new vision of
Planet of the Apes.
1265
01:04:47,375 --> 01:04:49,375
I was very pleased with
the makeups that we did,
1266
01:04:49,416 --> 01:04:51,875
and was pleased at the
amount of makeups that we did,
1267
01:04:51,916 --> 01:04:53,750
and the quality of them.
1268
01:04:53,791 --> 01:04:55,291
[dramatic music]
1269
01:04:55,333 --> 01:04:57,458
[narrator] Released in 2001,
1270
01:04:57,500 --> 01:05:00,208
Planet of the Apes
opened to mixed reviews.
1271
01:05:00,250 --> 01:05:02,208
And despite being
a commercial success,
1272
01:05:02,250 --> 01:05:04,083
it was unable to
match the original.
1273
01:05:06,458 --> 01:05:08,875
The big films started going
more to the larger studios
1274
01:05:08,916 --> 01:05:12,541
like Stan Winston's, or
Rick Baker's, or Greg Cannom's.
1275
01:05:12,583 --> 01:05:16,791
And, uh, Barry and I started to
do a segue into television.
1276
01:05:16,833 --> 01:05:18,708
We, we didn't want to leave home
1277
01:05:18,750 --> 01:05:22,083
because we had
a brand new baby, Max,
1278
01:05:22,125 --> 01:05:24,208
and, um, it was perfect for us.
1279
01:05:24,250 --> 01:05:26,875
We did things like
The Tracey Ullman Showwhere
1280
01:05:26,916 --> 01:05:29,791
we only had to work one day
a week, we could prep all week.
1281
01:05:29,833 --> 01:05:32,291
And we did things
like Chicago Hope,
1282
01:05:32,333 --> 01:05:36,208
and we did the pilot for Buffy
the Vampire Slayer, CSI.
1283
01:05:36,250 --> 01:05:39,458
And we eventually wound
up doing Nip/Tuck,
1284
01:05:39,500 --> 01:05:41,291
and we decided at that time,
1285
01:05:41,333 --> 01:05:45,125
we wanted to bring motion
picture quality to television.
1286
01:05:45,166 --> 01:05:49,041
Greer Shephard, Ryan
Murphy's producer, came to us
1287
01:05:49,083 --> 01:05:52,625
and said that the studio
greenlit Nip/Tuck
1288
01:05:52,666 --> 01:05:54,083
because of the work we did.
1289
01:05:55,208 --> 01:05:57,083
There's always a range of people
1290
01:05:57,125 --> 01:05:59,666
that can make something
delicate or expressive.
1291
01:06:00,583 --> 01:06:06,000
You know, uh, and I think that,
uh, Tom could run the gamut
1292
01:06:06,041 --> 01:06:09,500
and make something
that was so naturalistic
1293
01:06:09,541 --> 01:06:11,916
that nobody knows it's makeup.
1294
01:06:12,833 --> 01:06:15,291
I feel that Tom took a,
a different approach
1295
01:06:15,333 --> 01:06:18,000
to a lot of things than
other makeup artists would.
1296
01:06:19,083 --> 01:06:21,958
[Ve] They did so many
fantastic things for TV
1297
01:06:22,000 --> 01:06:24,375
and I'm sure it was like,
you know, hellacious,
1298
01:06:24,416 --> 01:06:26,708
because TV has such
quick turnaround.
1299
01:06:26,750 --> 01:06:31,750
So, he really made it possible
for that to happen on TV.
1300
01:06:32,750 --> 01:06:34,375
The Burmans did an amazing job.
1301
01:06:34,416 --> 01:06:38,333
I think that really laid
the way for a lot of shows.
1302
01:06:41,666 --> 01:06:45,250
[narrator] Throughout his
career, Tom Burman has been
not only an inspiration
1303
01:06:45,291 --> 01:06:48,125
but also a mentor
to makeup artists.
1304
01:06:48,166 --> 01:06:52,458
I'd been looking for someone to,
um, teach what I knew.
1305
01:06:52,500 --> 01:06:53,916
I mean, it's not like
we didn't have people
1306
01:06:53,958 --> 01:06:55,625
through the years,
a lot of people.
1307
01:06:55,666 --> 01:06:59,583
Vince was insatiable and
he wanted to learn everything.
1308
01:07:02,583 --> 01:07:04,416
I decided to retire.
1309
01:07:05,708 --> 01:07:08,125
Vincent came here at that time.
1310
01:07:08,166 --> 01:07:11,000
It was easy just to
hand it over to him.
1311
01:07:11,041 --> 01:07:13,625
[Vincent] The day that Burman
Studios became B2FX was,
1312
01:07:13,666 --> 01:07:15,500
it was kind of
an emotional day for me,
1313
01:07:15,541 --> 01:07:17,958
because I joke and I often say
1314
01:07:18,000 --> 01:07:19,791
that it was almost like moving
back into your parents' house
1315
01:07:19,833 --> 01:07:21,375
after you moved out.
1316
01:07:21,416 --> 01:07:24,916
I've always wanted to
open up my own studio.
1317
01:07:24,958 --> 01:07:28,041
Taking these steps into
making that happen
1318
01:07:28,083 --> 01:07:32,625
just came full circle into me
renting the space
and being here.
1319
01:07:32,666 --> 01:07:36,250
It was, it was...
it was such an amazing feeling.
1320
01:07:36,291 --> 01:07:38,208
[narrator] Despite
makeup finding a place
1321
01:07:38,250 --> 01:07:40,958
in the hearts of a new
generation of artists,
1322
01:07:41,000 --> 01:07:44,875
the industry began to shift
towards digital effects.
1323
01:07:44,916 --> 01:07:47,750
Ever since I can remember,
there are these naysayers
1324
01:07:47,791 --> 01:07:50,500
about the future of
the motion picture business,
1325
01:07:50,541 --> 01:07:53,791
especially makeup because
of the digital era.
1326
01:07:53,833 --> 01:07:55,750
And, uh, I don't see it.
1327
01:07:55,791 --> 01:07:58,041
I see makeup's just
going to keep growing
1328
01:07:58,083 --> 01:08:00,000
and it's going to keep changing.
1329
01:08:00,041 --> 01:08:02,416
But there's a lot of
fear around that.
1330
01:08:02,458 --> 01:08:07,791
I said, "You know,
eventually they're not going
to need makeup artists."
1331
01:08:07,833 --> 01:08:10,541
He says, "What do you mean?
Oh, you're full of crap."
1332
01:08:10,583 --> 01:08:12,791
I think they're going
to go CGI route.
1333
01:08:12,833 --> 01:08:15,250
I see, basically the end...
1334
01:08:16,541 --> 01:08:18,625
of makeup as we know it today.
1335
01:08:20,833 --> 01:08:25,041
[narrator] Bolstered by the success of digital studios, such as Weta and ILM,
1336
01:08:25,083 --> 01:08:30,041
Fox greenlights a new
Planet of the Apes film.
This time, it's a reboot.
1337
01:08:30,083 --> 01:08:33,666
The new Planet of the Apes,
what we did is that we made
all the apes digital this time.
1338
01:08:33,708 --> 01:08:36,958
And, you know, one of the funny
things is that when we were
doing the first one,
1339
01:08:37,000 --> 01:08:40,125
a lot of my friends from Los
Angeles, you know, heard that
we were gonna be doing it
1340
01:08:40,166 --> 01:08:43,583
and he said, "Oh, fantastic.
You're finally gonna get to work
on a Planet of the Apesfilm.
1341
01:08:43,625 --> 01:08:46,500
So, what kind of prosthetics are
you gonna use and everything?"
1342
01:08:46,541 --> 01:08:50,541
I thought, "Actually,
no prosthetics this time.
It's all going to be digital."
1343
01:08:51,500 --> 01:08:53,416
[Michael] But it's a completely
different approach,
1344
01:08:53,458 --> 01:08:56,333
completely different,
really, type of film.
1345
01:08:57,416 --> 01:09:00,291
[Rick] I wanted to hate
the Planet of the Apes
1346
01:09:00,333 --> 01:09:02,625
that they did when they
did it with all computers,
1347
01:09:02,666 --> 01:09:04,875
but I was actually pretty
blown away by what they did.
1348
01:09:05,916 --> 01:09:08,625
[narrator] By 2018,
three, all digital
1349
01:09:08,666 --> 01:09:11,000
Planet of the Apes
films had been released
1350
01:09:11,041 --> 01:09:14,583
and grossed over
$2 billion at the box office.
1351
01:09:14,625 --> 01:09:18,958
Entertainment is evolving
faster than we can imagine.
1352
01:09:19,000 --> 01:09:20,625
And digital
technology is the vein
1353
01:09:20,666 --> 01:09:23,500
through which that life
blood is going to flow.
1354
01:09:23,541 --> 01:09:25,625
There's no-- We can bang our
heads against the wall
1355
01:09:25,666 --> 01:09:27,541
and say, "No, there'll always
be prosthetic makeups.
1356
01:09:27,583 --> 01:09:29,250
We know it's better
to blend the two."
1357
01:09:29,291 --> 01:09:31,708
We can bang our heads and
we can do whatever we want,
1358
01:09:31,750 --> 01:09:33,083
but it's coming.
1359
01:09:33,125 --> 01:09:35,000
[Greg] I love CGI,
I'm all for it.
1360
01:09:35,041 --> 01:09:37,291
If I do an age makeup,
trying to do it every day,
1361
01:09:37,333 --> 01:09:39,750
you're going to make
mistakes, little things.
1362
01:09:39,791 --> 01:09:44,083
I think a lot of people
are so afraid of CGI,
and things taking over,
1363
01:09:44,125 --> 01:09:46,208
and the makeup effects world
being this dying art form
1364
01:09:46,250 --> 01:09:48,541
that will, you know,
just go down.
1365
01:09:48,583 --> 01:09:50,083
I just don't see any
of that happening.
1366
01:09:50,125 --> 01:09:52,541
I see it as busy as it
has ever been right now.
1367
01:09:54,041 --> 01:09:56,833
[Tom] Artists like
Vincent are our future
1368
01:09:56,875 --> 01:09:59,458
because he appreciates the past.
1369
01:09:59,500 --> 01:10:03,916
Most makeup artists that I know,
they always refer back to
the originals, the classics,
1370
01:10:03,958 --> 01:10:06,000
which Planet of
the Apesof course is.
1371
01:10:07,000 --> 01:10:11,166
Tom, this is the first time
we've talked in 48 years.
1372
01:10:11,208 --> 01:10:13,541
-Wow.
-And I'm still mad at you.
1373
01:10:13,583 --> 01:10:16,333
Yeah, should be, you should be.
1374
01:10:16,375 --> 01:10:18,333
-Yeah, it seems like yesterday.
-[Lou] I know.
1375
01:10:18,375 --> 01:10:20,541
[Tom] Part of me,
just seems like I can go back
1376
01:10:20,583 --> 01:10:23,875
and visit that moment, and get
all excited all over again.
1377
01:10:26,041 --> 01:10:28,541
[Vincent] When the conversation
first came up of putting
Lou Wagner
1378
01:10:28,583 --> 01:10:31,000
back into
a Planet of the Apeslook,
1379
01:10:31,041 --> 01:10:33,375
that was a very
exciting phone call.
1380
01:10:37,625 --> 01:10:39,250
It's a once in
a lifetime opportunity
1381
01:10:39,291 --> 01:10:42,333
to be able to take
somebody from that film,
1382
01:10:42,375 --> 01:10:46,583
this many years later,
and transform him into a,
1383
01:10:46,625 --> 01:10:49,083
what really got me,
is into his character now.
1384
01:10:49,125 --> 01:10:52,208
[dramatic music]
1385
01:12:13,958 --> 01:12:19,291
Seeing Lou in his old age
ape makeup after 50 years
1386
01:12:19,333 --> 01:12:23,000
brought back a lot of memories
of John and our falling out.
1387
01:12:23,875 --> 01:12:27,833
Those years when I tried to
contact him and couldn't,
1388
01:12:27,875 --> 01:12:30,000
didn't know where he was.
1389
01:12:30,041 --> 01:12:31,541
And then I heard he had a stroke
1390
01:12:31,583 --> 01:12:33,875
and he was in
the Motion Picture Home.
1391
01:12:33,916 --> 01:12:36,583
I was fortunate to
meet John Chambers.
1392
01:12:36,625 --> 01:12:40,416
Kind of felt like he was in
the witness relocation program,
from my perspective,
1393
01:12:40,458 --> 01:12:43,708
for a while. It was like he
disappeared, and he was
completely off the radar.
1394
01:12:43,750 --> 01:12:47,750
And then I heard that he was
at the Motion Picture Home.
1395
01:12:47,791 --> 01:12:49,708
[Scott] I said, "What if we do
a party for John?"
1396
01:12:49,750 --> 01:12:53,333
Because it's been,
at that time, 30 years
1397
01:12:53,375 --> 01:12:54,916
since he worked on
Planet of the Apes.
1398
01:12:54,958 --> 01:12:56,625
And I'll bring in
people he worked with,
1399
01:12:56,666 --> 01:12:59,666
but he'll also meet people
he's never met before,
1400
01:12:59,708 --> 01:13:04,083
people who were influenced by
what he did in those movies
in terms of their makeup.
1401
01:13:05,833 --> 01:13:07,875
[crowd] Surprise!
1402
01:13:07,916 --> 01:13:10,708
-[crowd applauds]
-[John Chambers laughing]
1403
01:13:19,458 --> 01:13:26,250
-Oh boy. When an Irishman hasn't
got words to say anything...
-[crowd laughs]
1404
01:13:26,291 --> 01:13:29,750
[Scott] And it just so happened
that it was the day
before his 75th birthday.
1405
01:13:29,791 --> 01:13:32,375
♪ Happy birthday to you
1406
01:13:32,416 --> 01:13:35,458
[Scott] He was pretty impressed
that we had all
those people there,
1407
01:13:35,500 --> 01:13:36,958
because it was
a lot of his friends,
1408
01:13:37,000 --> 01:13:39,083
and colleagues, and peers.
1409
01:13:39,125 --> 01:13:42,958
You sparked the imagination
of an army of kids
1410
01:13:43,000 --> 01:13:46,666
who are now the eminent
and renowned of your field.
1411
01:13:48,125 --> 01:13:51,625
I'm afraid that you have
to settle for the reality
1412
01:13:51,666 --> 01:13:53,875
that you are an icon.
1413
01:13:53,916 --> 01:13:56,708
[all applauding]
1414
01:13:56,750 --> 01:14:00,875
Dr. Zira, I believe
Chambers would like a kiss.
1415
01:14:00,916 --> 01:14:03,291
[all laughing]
1416
01:14:03,333 --> 01:14:06,083
[all applauding]
1417
01:14:06,125 --> 01:14:09,083
[Michael] You probably couldn't
predict this, but there was a
great thing that happened
1418
01:14:09,125 --> 01:14:11,708
for our industry that day,
is there were a lot of folks
1419
01:14:11,750 --> 01:14:14,750
who hadn't seen each
other in a long time.
1420
01:14:14,791 --> 01:14:19,708
And maybe some old grudges
were left behind that day.
1421
01:14:19,750 --> 01:14:21,333
I think it was
a good healing time,
1422
01:14:21,375 --> 01:14:22,500
I think, for the industry.
1423
01:14:24,416 --> 01:14:26,333
[calm music]
1424
01:14:34,291 --> 01:14:36,083
[Tom] After
Scott Essman called me
1425
01:14:36,125 --> 01:14:39,583
and told me that they were
throwing a 75th birthday party
1426
01:14:39,625 --> 01:14:43,708
for John Chambers, I was
a little ambivalent about going
1427
01:14:43,750 --> 01:14:46,291
because I had a lot of
unfinished business with John.
1428
01:14:46,333 --> 01:14:48,166
We had kind of
separated in a way
1429
01:14:48,208 --> 01:14:50,625
that I hadn't spoken
to him for years.
1430
01:14:50,666 --> 01:14:54,208
I had tried to get in
touch with him many times.
1431
01:14:54,250 --> 01:14:55,541
I never got an answer.
1432
01:14:55,583 --> 01:14:57,666
So, I went.
1433
01:14:58,708 --> 01:15:01,541
But to see him in
a wheelchair...
1434
01:15:03,791 --> 01:15:05,583
was pretty moving for me.
1435
01:15:05,625 --> 01:15:10,083
All of a sudden... I, I saw
him in a whole other light.
1436
01:15:10,125 --> 01:15:15,291
He didn't have that
bombastic presence any longer.
1437
01:15:15,333 --> 01:15:17,791
You, you could see that
he'd had a stroke,
1438
01:15:17,833 --> 01:15:21,125
and you could see that one side
of him was somewhat paralyzed.
1439
01:15:21,166 --> 01:15:25,666
And it was, um... I kind of
stayed in the back,
1440
01:15:25,708 --> 01:15:29,041
and watched everybody as,
as they congratulated him,
1441
01:15:29,083 --> 01:15:31,875
and people filed by
and they shook his hand,
1442
01:15:31,916 --> 01:15:34,458
and they got their
picture taken with him.
1443
01:15:34,500 --> 01:15:35,541
And, uh...
1444
01:15:38,500 --> 01:15:42,500
It was-- after, after a while,
he, he looked over
and he saw me.
1445
01:15:44,250 --> 01:15:45,125
And, uh...
1446
01:15:48,291 --> 01:15:49,333
he...
1447
01:15:50,625 --> 01:15:52,458
he called me to his side.
1448
01:15:54,041 --> 01:15:54,916
And...
1449
01:15:56,125 --> 01:15:57,083
And he said...
1450
01:15:58,375 --> 01:16:00,416
"You're the one
I'm most proud of, Tommy."
1451
01:16:04,666 --> 01:16:05,541
And...
1452
01:16:06,708 --> 01:16:09,041
and we looked into
each other's eyes
1453
01:16:09,083 --> 01:16:11,250
and both of us had tears.
1454
01:16:16,000 --> 01:16:17,000
And it was over.
1455
01:16:18,583 --> 01:16:23,916
The anguish, the past...
it was gone, finished.
1456
01:16:27,333 --> 01:16:30,791
[narrator] John Chambers
died in August of 2001,
1457
01:16:30,833 --> 01:16:32,333
at the age of 78.
1458
01:16:34,750 --> 01:16:35,916
Johnny. Hm.
1459
01:16:36,791 --> 01:16:38,916
[sniffling]
1460
01:16:47,583 --> 01:16:48,958
[whispers] Just a minute.
1461
01:16:49,000 --> 01:16:50,416
I loved him like a brother.
1462
01:16:53,208 --> 01:16:55,000
And at times,
I got so damn mad at him,
1463
01:16:55,041 --> 01:16:56,250
I could've killed him.
1464
01:16:57,666 --> 01:16:59,166
[Tom] He was like
a father to me.
1465
01:17:00,958 --> 01:17:04,291
He was my teacher,
he taught me about life,
he taught me about people,
1466
01:17:04,333 --> 01:17:09,458
he taught me the skills that I
needed, the entrepreneurial
skills I needed to be on my own.
1467
01:17:09,500 --> 01:17:11,875
He made a huge
difference in my world.
1468
01:17:14,291 --> 01:17:16,750
[light jazzy music]
1469
01:17:37,291 --> 01:17:38,625
[horn honking]
1470
01:17:38,666 --> 01:17:40,583
[Tom] The one thing
we never expected
1471
01:17:40,625 --> 01:17:42,666
when we were working
on Planet of the Apes
1472
01:17:42,708 --> 01:17:44,541
was the huge fanbase.
1473
01:17:44,583 --> 01:17:47,041
-[uplifting music]
-Hello!
1474
01:17:47,083 --> 01:17:49,500
I'm still shocked and surprised
1475
01:17:49,541 --> 01:17:54,500
that there are
such avid... fans.
1476
01:17:55,500 --> 01:17:59,083
If you're a fan of
Planet of the Apes,
1477
01:17:59,125 --> 01:18:02,041
you're a dyed in the wool fan.
1478
01:18:02,083 --> 01:18:05,416
[Scott] If you go to conventions
like Monsterpalooza,
1479
01:18:05,458 --> 01:18:07,625
you always see Planet
of the Apescharacters.
1480
01:18:07,666 --> 01:18:09,541
And the fans don't
spare any expense.
1481
01:18:09,583 --> 01:18:12,416
They have the shoes
with the, the ape paw print,
1482
01:18:12,458 --> 01:18:15,208
and they have the,
the full head to toe costume,
1483
01:18:15,250 --> 01:18:17,250
mostly they make themselves.
1484
01:18:17,291 --> 01:18:19,750
I've been a fan ever
since I was a child.
1485
01:18:19,791 --> 01:18:24,375
When I hear the opening music,
it's just like I'm, you know,
11 years old again.
1486
01:18:24,416 --> 01:18:29,708
We pretty much did everything
ourselves, I mean down to making
our own shoes, our own costumes,
1487
01:18:29,750 --> 01:18:31,375
doing our own makeup.
1488
01:18:31,416 --> 01:18:33,666
This is why I love,
uh, science fiction
1489
01:18:33,708 --> 01:18:34,916
and horror movies so much.
1490
01:18:34,958 --> 01:18:36,208
It's all Planet of the Apes.
1491
01:18:37,958 --> 01:18:40,500
If the Planet of the Apes
franchise didn't have
1492
01:18:40,541 --> 01:18:44,333
an absolutely committed
and dedicated fanbase,
1493
01:18:44,375 --> 01:18:48,500
it wouldn't have sustained
itself for the 50 years
that it has.
1494
01:18:48,541 --> 01:18:52,833
Um, Star Trekhas been around
nearly as long, uh,
Star Warsfans,
1495
01:18:52,875 --> 01:18:55,750
they're all extremely dedicated
1496
01:18:55,791 --> 01:18:57,875
to that particular franchise.
1497
01:18:57,916 --> 01:19:04,375
And the Apes fans, I find,
are enormously... intelligent.
1498
01:19:05,708 --> 01:19:08,875
[narrator] Original memorabilia
from thePlanet of
the Apes franchise,
1499
01:19:08,916 --> 01:19:11,833
including prosthetics,
costumes, and props,
1500
01:19:11,875 --> 01:19:13,875
have become relics
among collectors.
1501
01:19:15,041 --> 01:19:17,000
[Joe] Collecting film artifacts
1502
01:19:17,041 --> 01:19:19,791
and television artifacts
has grown exponentially.
1503
01:19:19,833 --> 01:19:23,666
I've been very fortunate because
I've saved a big chunk of the
history of Hollywood, right?
1504
01:19:23,708 --> 01:19:26,750
In my career, I've probably
handled almost everything
1505
01:19:26,791 --> 01:19:28,500
that survived from
Planet of the Apes,
1506
01:19:28,541 --> 01:19:31,125
to whether it's the Lawgiver,
the bleeding Lawgiver.
1507
01:19:31,166 --> 01:19:33,875
I've had every costume
of every principal actor,
1508
01:19:33,916 --> 01:19:37,166
you know, makeup heads,
background apes, prosthetics.
1509
01:19:37,208 --> 01:19:39,583
I don't think there's
something we haven't had.
1510
01:19:41,083 --> 01:19:43,083
[solemn music]
1511
01:19:45,083 --> 01:19:48,250
[Alessandro] The 50th
anniversary exhibit that we have
here on display at
1512
01:19:48,291 --> 01:19:52,791
the School of Cinematic Arts
is an attempt to
really bring together
1513
01:19:52,833 --> 01:19:56,291
as many facets of the Planet
of the Apesuniverse, really,
1514
01:19:56,333 --> 01:20:00,708
as we can, to show and
celebrate the original films,
1515
01:20:00,750 --> 01:20:02,541
alongside the amazing
achievements
1516
01:20:02,583 --> 01:20:04,041
of the contemporary films.
1517
01:20:10,291 --> 01:20:12,250
[Howard] I think the work that
Tom and John did
1518
01:20:12,291 --> 01:20:15,750
on Planet of the Apeswas
absolutely a turning point
1519
01:20:15,791 --> 01:20:17,416
in film history.
1520
01:20:22,541 --> 01:20:27,416
When people say they don't
have influences, they're lying.
1521
01:20:27,458 --> 01:20:31,000
Because everything you
see influences you.
1522
01:20:31,041 --> 01:20:33,958
And I know that I took something
from Planet of the Apes.
1523
01:20:34,958 --> 01:20:38,458
It's a very successful
tale well-told.
1524
01:20:38,500 --> 01:20:40,291
[dramatic music]
1525
01:20:40,333 --> 01:20:42,291
[Richard] It's that
world of fantasy.
1526
01:20:42,333 --> 01:20:46,875
It seems to hold an audience
for generations to come.
1527
01:20:49,125 --> 01:20:52,333
[Maurice] If I'm ever asked
what some of my favorite
projects are,
1528
01:20:52,375 --> 01:20:55,750
I would always come up
with the very first one
1529
01:20:55,791 --> 01:20:58,375
that almost everybody in
the world knows about.
1530
01:20:58,416 --> 01:21:00,375
It was the original
Planet of the Apes.
1531
01:21:01,333 --> 01:21:04,208
[Lou] It was singularly
the best film
1532
01:21:04,250 --> 01:21:07,208
I was lucky enough to do.
1533
01:21:07,250 --> 01:21:11,666
It's the proudest
I am in my 50 year career.
1534
01:21:13,958 --> 01:21:18,791
I hope that 50 years from now
that people will look
upon our sequence of films
1535
01:21:18,833 --> 01:21:21,708
with the same
amount of respect and...
1536
01:21:23,291 --> 01:21:24,166
nostalgia.
1537
01:21:26,958 --> 01:21:30,750
I'm honored that people love
the movies I've worked on,
1538
01:21:30,791 --> 01:21:32,375
and I've worked on hundreds.
1539
01:21:34,000 --> 01:21:36,500
But when I look back,
the greatest moment
1540
01:21:36,541 --> 01:21:40,208
in my career was
John and I standing
1541
01:21:40,250 --> 01:21:44,166
at that marble top
table making apes.
1542
01:21:44,208 --> 01:21:46,791
[dramatic music]
1543
01:21:57,166 --> 01:21:59,958
[uplifting music]
1544
01:23:10,000 --> 01:23:12,166
[solemn music]
1545
01:24:35,750 --> 01:24:37,750
[dramatic music]
122017
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