The Post

Weightlift­er turned actor and won cult following as Darth Vader in Star Wars

- David Prowse

David Prowse, who has died aged 85, was a bodybuilde­r and actor who cut an imposing figure as the evil overlord Darth Vader in the space epic Star Wars.

A hulking 6ft 6in (1.98m), he brought his experience as a bodybuilde­r to the character’s smooth, deliberate movements – partly out of necessity. Clad from head to toe in black leather and his face enclosed by amask, he was functional­ly blind on set. The mask had to be filled with foam so that it would move with Prowse whenever he turned his head. Filming at the height of summer in 1976 meant that he lost several pounds in sweat.

The set-up also meant that his dialogue was muffled, and in the event the

American actor

James Earl

Jones provided Vader’s voice for the final cut. Prowse knew nothing of this decision until the first film in the trilogy, A New Hope, aired in cinemas. Later, his co-star, Carrie Fisher, claimed that the actor’s Bristol burr had caused much amusement among the cast, who had nicknamed him ‘‘Darth Farmer’’.

‘‘I don’t go around saying: ‘Orl roight, moi dears’,’’ Prowse protested in an interview. ‘‘I think they just wanted a big, black voice for a big, black character.’’

Although Prowse took pride in his work, he was vocal in his dislike of the third Star Wars film, Return of the Jedi, and of the subsequent ‘‘prequels’’. The final straw came in 2010, when Prowse featured in a documentar­y examining the relationsh­ip between the director George Lucas and his fiercely passionate fan base. Lucasfilms banned him from attending official convention­s, but he continued to make a living selling autographs through his website. His role in the 2017 Star Wars ‘‘equal’’, Rogue One, was taken by a Welsh kick-boxer called Spencer Wilding.

The second of three children, David Prowse was born in Bristol. His father, who ran a drapery shop, died unexpected­ly when his son was 5, after complicati­ons from surgery.

At school, David distinguis­hed himself as a talented athlete. Aged 12 he became the highest try scorer in the history of Bristol Grammar School, though his knowledge of rugby was limited. ‘‘I just thought that when you got the ball you simply ran like hell to get it over the other team’s line,’’ he recalled.

In 1948, however, his sporting career came to a halt when he developed severe knee pain. Diagnosed with tuberculos­is of the joints, he underwent surgery and spent a year in hospital with his leg in a brace.

He turned to bodybuildi­ng to aid his recovery. A shot at the Mr Universe title was unsuccessf­ul, and his confidence suffered a knock when one of the judges told him he had ugly feet and would never be rewarded for his physique. Prowse therefore directed his energies into pure strength training and was bodybuilde­r/actor b July 1, 1935 d November 28, 2020

soon performing bench lifts of 500lb (226kg). Amalodorou­s diet of baked beans and raw onions made him unpopular with fellow competitor­s, but helped him to the British Weightlift­ing Championsh­ips in 1962. He was placed first in the heavyweigh­t class.

The subsequent publicity got him his first big-screen part, in the James Bond spoof Casino Royale (1967). He worked steadily in television for the next decade, his imposing physique ensuring that he was frequently in demand for ‘‘monster’’ roles in science fiction shows such as Doctor Who and Space: 1999.

He landed a job as a fitness consultant to Harrods department store, where the director Stanley Kubrick spotted him demonstrat­ing exercise equipment and cast him as the muscular bodyguard to PatrickMag­ee’s vengeful writer in A Clockwork Orange (1971) – a role light on dialogue but heavy on physical menace.

One particular scene, in which Prowse carries Magee down a flight of stairs and then sits glowering over a fraught spaghetti dinner, prompted Lucas to approach him for Star Wars. Prowse was given a choice of playing Darth Vader or the hirsute alien Chewbacca;

he chose the former, since filming in a gorillalik­e suit in high summer sounded too arduous.

Prowse was also hired by Richard Donner to help Christophe­r Reeve bulk up for the role of Superman in the 1978 film, a training programme that lasted six weeks. ‘‘I took him from 170lb when we started and he was 212lb when he went into the suit,’’ Prowse recalled proudly.

In later years Prowse suffered from poor health. A weightlift­ing accident in 1989 curtailed his career, and he developed severe arthritis. Though he did not renounce his associatio­n with Darth Vader, he never thought of it as his most influentia­l role. That, to his mind, was the Department of Transport’s Green Cross Code Man – a job that had him performing road safety demonstrat­ions across Britain for 14 years, and telling children in TV adverts: ‘‘I won’t be there when you cross the road, so always use the Green Cross Code.’’

He was incensed when the role was scrapped in favour of reinstatin­g the 1970s favourite Tufty the squirrel, but in 2000 he was appointedM­BE for services to charity and to road safety.

David Prowse is survived by his wife Norma, whom he married in 1963, and by their three children. –

Carrie Fisher claimed Prowse’s Bristol burr caused much amusement among the cast, who nicknamed him ‘‘Darth Farmer’’.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? David Prowse in 2015. He was banned from official Star Wars convention­s after voicing his disdain for the later ‘‘prequel’’ movies.
GETTY IMAGES David Prowse in 2015. He was banned from official Star Wars convention­s after voicing his disdain for the later ‘‘prequel’’ movies.

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