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Show Eastwood is back in the saddle again Caulfield Lus Angdts Times Writer Si N VALLLY. Idaho It was the m! of a Clint Udktwuod inoue, but Duty Harry and his Magnum 45 a i re nowhere in sight No sleazy t it 'treets. either And no sign of an uungutan named Clyde here in the rugged mountain wilderness of the sawtooth .National Hccreation Area Lustwuud was back in the saddle By I " 'f X s VH - ? - re ) V ,5 y: ?$ rr V ' -- uh J , - ..gain Since Isastwuod and his east and crew have bten on location filming Hale Rider Ins first estei n since ' The Outlaw Josej Wales in 1075 which he also dll ecu d - " h Comfortable and Proud Kathy Wygle. director of the Laughing Stock Theater Co . recalled that she was contacted about the end of August by a Warner Bros casting director asking "if I would like to assist them in casting some minor roles in a Clint Eastwood movie that would be shooting up here." Wygle ended up in one of the 14 minor roles and seemed comfortable and very proud in her pioneer dress "This is the biggest thing to happen in my life. I've always dreamed of being in a major I still cant believe motion picture - I am1" Eastwood, in full costume (boots, spurs, black vest, gray shirt), moved r btenfaiily jiit Hum smiling f j.' m "Sereendanec 84, "Utah Dance." ongoing video exhibit of Utah dance companies. Salt Lake Art Center. 20 S West Temple. Continues Friday. Utah Ballet, Dance Building Theatre, University of Utah. 8 p.m. Peter Shaffers Amadeus, Pioneer Memorial Theatre. University daily-throug- of Utah, 8pm A. R. Gurney Jr.'s " hat I Did Last Summer, Lab Theater. Performing Arts Building. University of Utah. 8 p m. u - l.iiu-i- v t W.inir'.i - u- Hi' ,ai x 1 utiM-Mc- whult- m hid id ,i W With his trademark hat nd.ng luw over the famous squint Eastwood seemed to have no problem reassure, mg his Western stance after the rune yedr absence "Isnt it beautiful here he asked indicating the surroundings Ninety percent of my last pu. tores have been shot at night Here well only have two night shots Why a Western' Why now" "Two fellows d before iuim to me several years ago with tins idea, and 1 liked it and .ao them some ideas In s odiii d - Western again I" b.iv i b it K.iig l . io-- DISCOUNT ACCEPTED TROLLEY iff TheatrSs 3 TROLLEY ONty SENIOR CITIZENS $2.75 THEATRES. ANYTIME iL Tl7lWlf iMMtlirif It vrre t fjunttv TTtry it put i skni' i - nm- i It.i I . the stort anJ lant till you how many fail' hjve jsked him oi written to ask when ne would do o protest ih nc oil A17 L'M ' M : think tii'tiiml ll .v i mm o i thus v t ,igt f the r d h i e .' ! e tin h u! 'Ae-d- i i i lit to uim, rii' Mane' a k now dpi d Ilia vmi rjn t feel as u. ne w it it Pali- Kidi-o' you w wld with 'm o equ-! Dirts Harry wovs liiM iiu will ben! wus NiiwmhirT Widnt-'ri.- PASSES NO tom apart b BE WILL temptation. kept apart by prkte but broieK ti ACCEPTED NO PUTT OR TROLIFy TICKETS EVENINGS 6 00, 8 00 tOOO, 1 Eastwood was matttr-uf-- f ai t about his rapid directorial style which actor Richard Kiel figuied came from his woi k w nil Sergio Leone in spaghetti Western days "Actually he Leone) is slower than am," Eastwood sdid with a grin "I give a lot of the credit to Don Siegel (who directed Eastwood in "Two Mules for Sister Sara," "The " ' Dirty Harry" dnd ' EsBeguiled cape From Alcatraz") He was always organized for speed " He pondered it for a second, then added. "But you learn from everyone you work with I'm surrounded by the best crew around, dnd we all like to move at the same tempo I think if the director is slow and ponderous it can hurt the final product The mov ie might not be as satisfying and. besides he shrugged. I d get bored muih-discusse- s vX. v 1 &' . Clint Eastwood currently is in Idaho directing and acting in Pale Rider, his first western since Outlaw Josie Wales. quietly about setting up the ldst shots of what had been a long week of days Accompanying him was his son Kyle, visiting for the weekend Eastwood moved fiom actor to actor. giving dn ections for the next scene As the larueias rolled Eastwood and Mu hael Moriarty began to methodically smash a huge boulder with heavy sledgehammers soon to be joined by other miners Alter about 10 strokes, the director stopped, wiped his brow and said calmly, "Well, that's enough of that Eastwoodese for "Cut" Pam Morris, editor of the local weekly, the Idaho Mountain Express and Guide, and news editor David Proctor talked about their frustration with the "Pale Rider production over breakfast one morning Security around the sets was tight and access by the media forbidden Denied There Was a Mov ie "When the story first started coming out, I called Warner Bios and was directed to Marco Barla (Eastwood's publicist)." Proctor explained "He refused to tell me that there was even a movie being " planned Barla. said mattcr-of-factl'Everybody wants to interview Clint -he's the biggest star in the world. If he spent all his time doing interviews, the movie wouldnt get made " - y box-offic- e The atmosphere surrounding the actual filming may have been calm and steady, but several miles away, on the set where the cast and crew wuuld move in a week, the pace Wds breakneck The construction crew had been at work for a month, building a small Western town fiom scratch. This was not to be just a town either, the build ings would be used inside and out Elusive Target Production designer Edward moving quickly in and out of the various locations, was an elusive target He finally was located in the set s dry goods store inspecting the picks, sledgehammers, mining pans and everything else that a 1850 minfulse-facdd- e Car-fagn- ing town would carry-li- appeared unruffled by the impending deadline. "We'll get it done in time." he said calmly, "but w e actually needed more like five or six weeks " Although a sign 100 yards down the road advised sightseers to keep out. no less than three different groups of locals circled the site in an hour. One contingent, a tiny troop of Cub Scouts, hiked up behind one of the buildings, and speculated whether "Clint's" limousine would be able to make the eight-mil- e trip up the rutted dirt road. Eastwood chuckled when told of ALL Whats Happening Today Robert Ward's The Crucible," Brigham Young University Music Theatre, do Jong Concert Hall. Harris Fine Arts Center. BYU, Provo, 8 Tribune I ,t ' oiii re t Pooh-Poohe- A WORLD WIDE PICTURES RELEASE JESSICA LANGE Jewell iv SAM SHEPARD iv Git ivy Ivy QUMtTVj IvXn.H'I'JnI f sMi American . A SEATS SHOWS n 2r 4 MAIN Ten Garr - Peter WeMer ,pg ui eyuhncs "FIRST BORN" LOVELINES" (Pfi) EVENNGS7;15 g15 THUUJAY Mf Him tV r1 to hjklt IS KAJEA1L WD 35E 700.935J UdjFH TUt a coiuua piif jMts Suggestion d Eastwood any suggestion that the major studios outlawed Westerns in recent years because pooh-poohe- d e bombs they were deemed and offered his own theory on why there appeared to be so many Western projects cropping up at once (Columbia. Paramount and several independent filmmakers have Westerns in the works) THE. box-offic- Its probably just Karate ;' ' D Kid TONIGHT a 45 4 -- FRIDAY EARLY SHOW 4.45 TiftSI B0RN(P6 131 7 t(V KUS the wokaa in rlo t3) IVININGS 9 20 CVUitMGS a cycle of there's nothing resembling a Western shooting, somebody writes one." s'o-rie- 1PM UNI. 3.VC FT THURSDAY! s When AISLM (R) "TERROR IN THE ENOS EVENINGS 10-1-P- LUS 'SCARFACE (R) EVENINGS Back in Hollywood. Eastwoods longtime producer Fritz Manes taking time away from location to help with the trailer for "City Heat" (the Eastwood-Bur- t Reynolds release for Christmas time', the videocas-settof "Tightrope" and the TV version of "Sudden Impact" - offered a few thoughts of his ow n on ' Pale Rider" and Westerns rune uil 8 00. 9 yr , v j not 3 II I I V i 5 30 JO m Ji 9W (PG) JUHHII AMS TONIGHT TOM CONTI 9 C 7 American Six million J 3) ?a mis OlFFlRtNCLS" (P adventures 'j AM Aiu DREAMER; dollars says they won t find Harry by midnight 645 7 BANZAI PAUL MCCARTNEYS more urgency as far as filming went, $ Vi 4M 4y THE N e.M -- . RA20Q fvtNiws THURSDAY EVLM1NG5 H a h'hi : L.M-- TUI R)CONC4lAftU ! -- e "Weve been sitting on Pale Rider' since 78 or 79," he said. "There were other things we thought required -- TuilDcnAY FOR BEFORE rr.??945 DREAMER TOM CONTI ; V. P w '.ill aU hi Good Light didn t know ex.ntiy when wed the sun shoot, but 1 do like fall low and the light s good ' irnni-series- Plains Drifter," an allegorical Western in which Eastwood's nameless cnaracter represented the devil. But this lime the allegory casts Eastwood as an avenging angel of God Spending money and creating jobs during a normally sluggish time of vear. Eastwood and company must have seemed like angels of mercy themselves to this small community of 12 000. The locals here call the ecobreak nomically lean three-montbetween the end of summer and the " beginning of ski season "slack time in NI 1 ' Clint to get out of town ") Some cast members described Pale Rider" us the flip side of "High ivu.iii'itd ini e they ii vfi ' 100-plu- s Pale Rider takes place during the California gold rush in 1850 I.astwood plays a nameless stranger, clad m preachers t lot lung, who comes to the aid of a small eommuni t of independent miners threatened h an industrial mining concern Good and Bad Guvs Among the good guys' are Mi-- i huel Moriurty, Carrie Snodgres and Sidney Penns (she was Megan as a teen-age- r in "The Thorn Bird Leading the 'bad guys' are Chris Penn and Richard Kiel, best recalled for Ins Jdws in two James Bond movies C This is a dream come true. Penn confessed "I ve seen every Clint Kdstwood film there is and have wanted to do a Western since I was a kid " That day, Penn enjoyed a particularly satisfying experience. He ' explained with a grin. I had to tell he i brux 'In not to the iubs during j lunn next day ' I m ll e guv whe use briios' i7 - 1 ENDS PURPLE RAIN (R) EVENINGS 9 1 5 - PLUS RECKLESS" (R) EVENINGS 7 - THURSDAY 25 x AlLOFME SETi Valley Playhouse, 132 S State. 7 50 p m Neil Simon's "The Star Spangld A Girl," Little Bowery Theatre, upstairs, Promised Valley Playhouse, 132 S. State. 7 30 p ni "When Stars Came Down to of the Pawnee Indians," lecture by Von Del Chamberlain, Hansen Planetarium. 15 S. State, 8pm Free Tracy and Hepburn, "Pat and Mike," (1952). Chapman Library. 577 S. 9th West, 4 and 7pm Free "Once Upon a Starry Night." star 15 S show. Hansen Planetarium. a m . 2, 4 30 and 7 p ni State. -- Cyys UHlVf yt xr APl( A&At. 1:30,4:15 4:50,7:10. 9:30 Thumas Hcggen and Joshua Logan's "Mister Roberts," Promised STEREO DOLBY ;Mv J AT 7 FRIDAY AT (Ut A . 3) (PG-- 20 1245. IA tNUi tVLHWS9 35 PIUS Moscow cm tm huosow" iR) 7 EVINiMGS THURSDAY! X The truth is a story you won t forget. $2 75 Soldier's A DAILY IN DOLBY STEREO ,f 2:30,4:45, 7:00, 9:15 12:15, 'V-.-QUEEN KARATE KID AM. I ; TEACHERS-- I WJSTTRS i I w TMf RAZOR S EDGE" MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FIRST SHOW 3 JO 5 30 7 30 30 is 2J0 7:00, 9:45 FRIDAY MATINEES GHOST 12 I08MGWT S(,rt . 'Ji IMi tHflNlUN' lei TONIGHT AT KARATE KID (PG) Moa ntlOAYAT 445 ll 1 1 TOMIGHT PLAC'I.S IN 1HI. HLAK BROAD STREET Earth-Starlor- 3 1 ASf Mi) V. Story t Hitt " . S l ..A stunning motion picture! - Bob 1 homas, Av'ocialcd Press LEY 'cSmREDWOOD PM. OPEN Well 'ft. THE KARATE M 00 ALL DAY TUESDAY Erclurting "Amadeus" KID &. 7 Isnt it your 74iz z a BODY DOUBLE and "HARDBODIES Amadeus" (PG) Mon In Sun - Sit 4 turn to build? CFUCKj6ucjsouMtlffi e s 0 The Razor's Edge" ih, 2b2 VA.'t bZIS V VIMI Ml'PHflY I n mu t tR 30.3 45.6 00.8 7 (PG-13- 1 ME irei TERMINATOR (R) 1:15. 3.30, 5.50,7.50,9.50 Rl'Hi si) ,i "Irtaconcilabla DiMetencs" (PG) 20. 5 10. 9 00 1 h 1 ij "The Woman ROMANCING , Jl .RCADE ANYTIME' H VO FLASHPOINT (R) 7 OO, 8 45 I i l 'H IV IMOMI THE STONE plus "RHINESTONE" (PG) "hrst 1 Born" 40. 9 50 tPG-13- ) 45, 3 50. 5 55, 8 00. 10 Enter The Punch UO oo-s- In "l.miano The Heart" (PG) 3 05, 5 10. 7 25. 9 40 30, 3 30, 5 30. 7 30, 9 30 20, 3 20, 5 20, 7 20, 9 20 1 hedwooohd 54THS0 ) Love Lines" (R) 1 "Terminator" (R) 7 (R) In Dolby 40. 9 50 "American Dreamer" (PG) In The Aisles (R) 50, 3.40, 5.30. 7 20.9 10 10. 3 20, 5 30. as at 5th so "Love Lines" (R) 1 Terror 1 , 00, 969 6266 1 W 5 00 8 00 3 30. 5 30. 7 228 4711 i In Red" (PG 3) 3 30, 7 20 30. Places Body Double" (R) 2 55, 5 05. 7 25. 9 45 278 471 'ALL OF t "Teachers" ) AUtO! 14 AMERICAN DREAMER" (PG) 500 J 00 '163 6266 00, 9 30 COTTONWOOD 12-4- tK 05. 10 00 12 45, 2 35. 4.15, 6.00. 7 50, 9 45 asmSim 2.00, 4 30, if PLACES IN THE HEART So No $1.00 Day 500 800 ed O iherwise f '045 8.50 lownt UtY 10 05-- 'rT AllofMe nKHnrt snvt & rANDKRtJLL"(ixo CM.U.D. es DREAMER the: heart vl EVENINGS 7 Si THIEF OF HEARTS the '!?.?) American tv EVENINGS 7088 'and ") THl i 1 30. 3 30. 5 30. 7 30, 9 30 "Body Double (R) 00, 3 15 5 30. 7 45JO-0- "Indiana Jones & The Temple 2 00. 4 30. 7 00, 01 Doom" & Crunch Hawaiian Trip Giveaway Courtesy 01 Beehive Tours & Travel. Inc. |