Grand Wino wrote:Am I really the first here to mention Batman? He was the original Mr. Freeze and did it much better than Arnold.
I wrote him a fan letter 15 years ago or so and asked him what he thought of Arnold’s take on the role. He wrote me back a nice note (along w/ a signed photo) that said something about how he got $10,000 to play the role and Schwarzenegger got $10,000,000.
Wallach told that story on NPR, the punchline was “I should have worked out more.”
He wasn’t the original Mr. Freeze. That was George Sanders in February 1966, followed by Otto Preminger in November 1966. Wallach was the third Mr. Freeze in March 1967 at the end of Season 2.
My favorite line from him was in The Magnificent Seven, explaining why he had to rob the peasants, saying it might be sacreligious not to: “If God did not want them to be shorn he would not have made them sheep.”
Therefore we sentence you here before us, Tuco Benedicto Pacífico Juan María Ramirez, known as “the Rat,” and any other aliases he may have, to be hanged by the neck until dead, and may God have mercy on your soul. Proceed.
What an actor! I saw him recently in Don Siegel’s 1958 movie The Lineup in which he played a psychopathic hitman called Dancer. It was only his second movie (his first being Baby Doll a couple of years earlier) but he was already a pro, turning in a chilling and unforgettable performance. Astonishing too how much he resembles Joe Pesci in that film in the sort of role that Pesci would make his own some 20 or 30 years down the line.