The Frisco Kid
Brief Synopsis
A rabbi headed West hooks up with an outlaw.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Robert Aldrich
Director
Gene Wilder
Harrison Ford
Ramon Bieri
Val Bisoglio
Roy Kaye
Film Details
Also Known As
Frisco Kid
Genre
Comedy
Action
Western
Release Date
1979
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 59m
Sound
Stereo
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Synopsis
A range-ridin' cowboy takes an immigrant Polish rabbi under his wing on his way to San Francisco.
Director
Robert Aldrich
Director
Cast
Gene Wilder
Harrison Ford
Ramon Bieri
Val Bisoglio
Roy Kaye
Clyde Kusatsu
Tom Lillard
Steffen Zacharias
Jacques Hampton
Richard Dunham
Alex Romero
Shay Duffin
Chip Frye
Karl Lukas
Allan Rich
Frank De Vol
Walter Janowitz
Joseph Massengale
Gloria Hayes
George Barrows
Cliff Pellow
Alvin Greenman
John Steadman
Henry Rowland
Dick Dickinson
Joe Young
Penny Payser
Richard Kennedy
Marty White
Catherine Chase
Brad Briggs
Bret Briggs
Henry F Robinson
Christine Glazier
June Constable
Howard Gudmundson
Robert Padilla
George Dicenzo
Beege Barkette
Linda Stearns
Joe Kapp
Vincent Schiavelli
William Smith
Heidi Stearns
Leo Fuchs
Ian Wolfe
Jack Somack
Crew
Bob Alberti
Music Arranger
Bill Beaird
Key Grip
Peter L Bergquist
Assistant Director
Walter Blake
Titles
Kim Burke
Stunts
Giannina Bush
Makeup
Violet N Cane
Costumes
Baruch Cohon
Other
Lee Crawford
Hair
Frank De Vol
Music
Melvin D Dellar
Associate Producer
Melvin D Dellar
Assistant Director
Michael Elias
Screenplay
Dennis Fill
Costume Supervisor
Les Fresholtz
Sound
Mickey Gilbert
Stunt Coordinator
Walter Goss
Sound
Doris Grau
Script Supervisor
Bill Hart
Stunts
Robert Hauser
Cinematographer
Chuck Hayward
Stunt Coordinator
Rabbi Meyer Heller
Technical Advisor
Robert Herron
Stunts
Jack Horger
Editor
George American Horse
Technical Advisor
John F Kiser
Editor
Howard W. Koch Jr.
Executive Producer
Dennis Lew
Assistant Editor
Richard Liebegott
Other
Marvin March
Set Decorator
Eugene Marks
Music Editor
Terence Marsh
Production Designer
Henry Millar Jr.
Special Effects
Mace Neufeld
Producer
Victor Petrotta
Props
Arthur Piantadosi
Sound
Ida Random
Assistant Art Director
Rabbi Steven Robbins
Technical Advisor
Alex Romero
Choreographer
Irving Rosenblum
Editor
Josan F Russo
Assistant Art Director
John Shannon
Photography
Jack Solomon
Sound
Creative Sound
Sound Editor
Saul Ssaladow
Assistant Editor
Michael St Hilaire
Camera Operator
George Szeptycki
Assistant Art Director
Edward Teets
Unit Production Manager
Bob Terhune
Stunts
Bill Turner
Makeup
Rudy Ugland
Other
Maury Winetrobe
Editor
Al Woodbury
Original Music
Jerry M Young
Wrangler
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Also Known As
Frisco Kid
Genre
Comedy
Action
Western
Release Date
1979
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 59m
Sound
Stereo
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Articles
The Frisco Kid (1979)
The episodic screenplay by Michael Elias and Frank Shaw had been making the rounds in Hollywood for quite some time. Originally entitled No Knife, it was optioned by producer Mace Neufeld in 1975; in the years that followed, various directors including Mike Nichols, Milos Forman, and Bud Yorkin were attached to direct. Finally, veteran director Robert Aldrich came on board -- primarily because the outlaw role was to be played by John Wayne.
But Wayne dropped out shortly before production because of a salary dispute, and the part was offered to Harrison Ford. Aldrich never got over his disappointment. Producer Neufeld later said, "Every time Aldrich directed a scene, in his mind he saw John Wayne. He was dealing mentally with a screen icon -- it did not help Harrison as an actor, and there was enormous pressure being put on him by the director." In his first cut of the film, in fact, Aldrich left much of Ford's performance on the cutting room floor; an angry Neufeld ordered the performance restored. Even so, Variety noted in its review that "Wilder is given too many solo shots."
In truth, The Frisco Kid was an odd vehicle for Aldrich, who remains best known for tough, violent masterpieces like Kiss Me Deadly (1955), The Dirty Dozen (1967), and Ulzana's Raid (1972). He made very few comedies in his career. Perhaps inevitably, he inserted a few violent set pieces into this picture that Variety described as "jarring in their sadistic intensity."
Nonetheless, both Aldrich and comedy master Wilder later said they greatly enjoyed working with each other. "Gene is brilliant," Aldrich told an interviewer near the end of the shoot. "I think it's the best job he's ever done." Wilder recalled that Aldrich "was smart, and he knew exactly what he was doing all the time. Like all of the best directors, he left the doors open for you to surprise him." Wilder also rewrote much of the screenplay, uncredited. Neufeld remembered that "Gene worked very hard on the religious [aspect] of the part. I got two rabbis in as advisors and a cantor who taught him to chant. Gene was very, very serious about that."
A three-month shoot in Colorado and Arizona ended in late 1978, and the picture opened in the summer of 1979, while Ford was already shooting The Empire Strikes Back. Critics were mixed, though most agreed that Ford's talents for sarcasm and wit, shown to such good effect in his portrayal of Han Solo in Star Wars, blossomed in this full-fledged comedy. "Excellent counterpoint in provided by Ford," said Variety, "who finally lives up to the potential he displayed in Star Wars... Ford provides the perfect foil for Wilder's gaffes, and their scenes play wonderfully.
"Wilder," the review continued, "has his best role in years. The manic gleam featured in the early Wilder pix has now turned into a mature twinkle, and this performance is particularly impressive in accumulation of small character details."
The New York Times was less enthusiastic, mainly due to Aldrich's work: "Asking Robert Aldrich to direct a sentimental Jewish comedy on the order of The Frisco Kid is like putting the late Gen. George S. Patton, Jr. in charge of a tap dancing class for tiny tots. Not knowing exactly what to do, he doesn't seem to do very much at all. The result is harmless chaos.... Mr. Aldrich is not most at home in the kind of lovable comedy this film wants to be. The comic timing is always a couple of beats off."
While on location in Rio Rico, Colorado, the film company found another picture shooting there as well: The Villain (1979), with Kirk Douglas, Ann-Margret and Arnold Schwarzenegger. Both productions shared the one hotel in the area, and on July 4th, they threw a big party together.
By Jeremy Arnold
SOURCES:
Garry Jenkins, Harrison Ford
Brian Mednick, Gene Wilder: Funny and Sad
Ethlie Ann Vare, Harrison Ford
Gene Wilder, Kiss Me Like a Stranger
The Frisco Kid (1979)
Between Star Wars (1977) and The Empire Strikes Back (1980), Harrison Ford appeared in six feature films (including two cameos). Among them was The Frisco Kid (1979), a comedy co-starring Gene Wilder that Variety described as "a Jewish western." Wilder plays a Polish rabbi headed across the country in 1850 to San Francisco. Along the way, he forms a friendship with a cynical outlaw played by Ford, who takes him under his wing. (The film bears no relation to the 1935 Frisco Kid starring James Cagney.)
The episodic screenplay by Michael Elias and Frank Shaw had been making the rounds in Hollywood for quite some time. Originally entitled No Knife, it was optioned by producer Mace Neufeld in 1975; in the years that followed, various directors including Mike Nichols, Milos Forman, and Bud Yorkin were attached to direct. Finally, veteran director Robert Aldrich came on board -- primarily because the outlaw role was to be played by John Wayne.
But Wayne dropped out shortly before production because of a salary dispute, and the part was offered to Harrison Ford. Aldrich never got over his disappointment. Producer Neufeld later said, "Every time Aldrich directed a scene, in his mind he saw John Wayne. He was dealing mentally with a screen icon -- it did not help Harrison as an actor, and there was enormous pressure being put on him by the director." In his first cut of the film, in fact, Aldrich left much of Ford's performance on the cutting room floor; an angry Neufeld ordered the performance restored. Even so, Variety noted in its review that "Wilder is given too many solo shots."
In truth, The Frisco Kid was an odd vehicle for Aldrich, who remains best known for tough, violent masterpieces like Kiss Me Deadly (1955), The Dirty Dozen (1967), and Ulzana's Raid (1972). He made very few comedies in his career. Perhaps inevitably, he inserted a few violent set pieces into this picture that Variety described as "jarring in their sadistic intensity."
Nonetheless, both Aldrich and comedy master Wilder later said they greatly enjoyed working with each other. "Gene is brilliant," Aldrich told an interviewer near the end of the shoot. "I think it's the best job he's ever done." Wilder recalled that Aldrich "was smart, and he knew exactly what he was doing all the time. Like all of the best directors, he left the doors open for you to surprise him." Wilder also rewrote much of the screenplay, uncredited. Neufeld remembered that "Gene worked very hard on the religious [aspect] of the part. I got two rabbis in as advisors and a cantor who taught him to chant. Gene was very, very serious about that."
A three-month shoot in Colorado and Arizona ended in late 1978, and the picture opened in the summer of 1979, while Ford was already shooting The Empire Strikes Back. Critics were mixed, though most agreed that Ford's talents for sarcasm and wit, shown to such good effect in his portrayal of Han Solo in Star Wars, blossomed in this full-fledged comedy. "Excellent counterpoint in provided by Ford," said Variety, "who finally lives up to the potential he displayed in Star Wars... Ford provides the perfect foil for Wilder's gaffes, and their scenes play wonderfully.
"Wilder," the review continued, "has his best role in years. The manic gleam featured in the early Wilder pix has now turned into a mature twinkle, and this performance is particularly impressive in accumulation of small character details."
The New York Times was less enthusiastic, mainly due to Aldrich's work: "Asking Robert Aldrich to direct a sentimental Jewish comedy on the order of The Frisco Kid is like putting the late Gen. George S. Patton, Jr. in charge of a tap dancing class for tiny tots. Not knowing exactly what to do, he doesn't seem to do very much at all. The result is harmless chaos.... Mr. Aldrich is not most at home in the kind of lovable comedy this film wants to be. The comic timing is always a couple of beats off."
While on location in Rio Rico, Colorado, the film company found another picture shooting there as well: The Villain (1979), with Kirk Douglas, Ann-Margret and Arnold Schwarzenegger. Both productions shared the one hotel in the area, and on July 4th, they threw a big party together.
By Jeremy Arnold
SOURCES:
Garry Jenkins, Harrison Ford
Brian Mednick, Gene Wilder: Funny and Sad
Ethlie Ann Vare, Harrison Ford
Gene Wilder, Kiss Me Like a Stranger
Vincent Schiavelli (1948-2005)
He was born on November 10, 1948 in Brooklyn, New York. After he studied acting at New York University's School of the Arts, he quickly landed a role in Milos Foreman's Taking Off (1971), and his career in the movies seldom dropped a beat. Seriously, to not recognize Schiavelli's presence in a movie or television episode for the last 30 years means you don't watch much of either medium, for his tall, gawky physique (a towering 6'6"), droopy eyes, sagging neck skin, and elongated chin made him a casting director's dream for offbeat and eccentric parts.
But it wasn't just a striking presence that fueled his career, Schiavelli could deliver the fine performances. Foreman would use him again as one of the mental ward inmates in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975); and he was hilarious as the put-upon science teacher, Mr. Vargas in Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982); worked for Foreman again as Salieri's (F. Murray Abraham's) valet in Amadeus (1984); unforgettable as an embittered subway ghost who taunts Patrick Swayze in Ghost (1990); downright creepy as the brooding organ grinder in Batman Returns (1992); worked with Foreman one last time in The People vs. Larry Flynt (1996); and was a dependable eccentric in Death to Smoochy (2002). Television was no stranger to him either. Although he displayed a gift for comedy playing Latka's (Andy Kaufman) confidant priest, "Reverend Gorky" in a recurring role of Taxi, the actor spent much of his time enlivening shows of the other worldly variety such as Star Trek: The Next Generation, Tales from the Crypt, The X Files, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
In recent years, Schiavelli curtailed the acting, and concentrated on writing. He recently relocated to the Sicilian village of Polizzi Generosa, where his grandparents were raised. He concentrated on his love of cooking and in 2002, wrote a highly praised memoir of his family's history as well as some cooking recipes of his grandfather's titled Many Beautiful Things. He is survived by two children.
by Michael T. Toole
Vincent Schiavelli (1948-2005)
American Actor Vincent Schiavelli, a classic "I know the face but not the name" character player
who had prominent roles in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Nightshift and
Ghost, died at his Sicily home after a long battle with lung cancer on December 26. He was
57.
He was born on November 10, 1948 in Brooklyn, New York. After he studied acting at New York
University's School of the Arts, he quickly landed a role in Milos Foreman's Taking Off
(1971), and his career in the movies seldom dropped a beat. Seriously, to not recognize
Schiavelli's presence in a movie or television episode for the last 30 years means you don't
watch much of either medium, for his tall, gawky physique (a towering 6'6"), droopy eyes, sagging
neck skin, and elongated chin made him a casting director's dream for offbeat and eccentric
parts.
But it wasn't just a striking presence that fueled his career, Schiavelli could deliver the fine
performances. Foreman would use him again as one of the mental ward inmates in One Flew Over
the Cuckoo's Nest (1975); and he was hilarious as the put-upon science teacher, Mr. Vargas in
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982); worked for Foreman again as Salieri's (F. Murray
Abraham's) valet in Amadeus (1984); unforgettable as an embittered subway ghost who taunts
Patrick Swayze in Ghost (1990); downright creepy as the brooding organ grinder in
Batman Returns (1992); worked with Foreman one last time in The People vs. Larry
Flynt (1996); and was a dependable eccentric in Death to Smoochy (2002). Television
was no stranger to him either. Although he displayed a gift for comedy playing Latka's (Andy
Kaufman) confidant priest, "Reverend Gorky" in a recurring role of Taxi, the actor spent
much of his time enlivening shows of the other worldly variety such as Star Trek: The Next
Generation, Tales from the Crypt, The X Files, and Buffy the Vampire
Slayer.
In recent years, Schiavelli curtailed the acting, and concentrated on writing. He recently
relocated to the Sicilian village of Polizzi Generosa, where his grandparents were raised.
He concentrated on his love of cooking and in 2002, wrote a highly praised memoir of his family's
history as well as some cooking recipes of his grandfather's titled Many Beautiful Things.
He is survived by two children.
by Michael T. Toole
Quotes
Come here little chicken. I don't want to hurt you. I just want to eat you.- Avram
I don't want to hurt you! I just want to make you kosher!- Avram
Watch that lady. I think she's a Jewish Indian.- Avram
It says in the Torah to find thyself a teacher. This I have done. There were times, however, when I feared my teacher would find another student.- Avram
You give me the pee-doodles!- Tommy
You, you have a big heart. Not so big as your mouth, but...- Chief Gray Cloud
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States July 1979
Released in United States Summer July 13, 1979
Released in United States July 1979
Released in United States Summer July 13, 1979