Texarkana Gazette

Loren Janes, prolific movie stuntman, dies

- By Steve Marble

LOS ANGELES—In film after film, Loren Janes leaped from speeding trains, jumped from towering cliffs and roared through city streets in gravitycar chases.

That’s him flying headlong into a saguaro cactus in “How the West Was Won.” That’s him tumbling down a staircase alongside a drunken John Wayne in “McLintock.” And that’s him—not Steve McQueen—fishtailin­g down Tyler Street in San Francisco at 90 mph in “Bullitt.”

In a career that spanned decades and with a resume that included westerns, thrillers, comedies, dramas and science fiction, Janes was the person the studio could count on when the script called for someone to be thrown from a window, dropped into the ocean or shot dead outside a saloon.

“There is a certain idiot element with some stunt people, but Loren was just the opposite,” said Mark Evanier, a Los Angeles-based comic book and television writer. “He took his work seriously and, remarkably, he never broke a bone.”

A lifelong Los Angeles resident, Janes died June 24 at 85. He had Alzheimer’s disease. He outlived many of the actors he was hired to double in scenes deemed too risky for a highly paid celebrity.

When a script called for Esther Williams to leap from an 80-foot cliff in “Jupiter’s Darling,” Janes pulled on a wig, the appropriat­e swimming attire and jumped into the ocean. He did the same for McQueen, a temperamen­tal actor who liked to do his own stunt work and seemed put out when the director told him he wanted Janes to do the dirty work in a particular­ly tricky escape scene in “Wanted Dead or Alive.”

“So I ran and dove through the window, turned a complete somersault, landed on my feet, ran, hit the corner of that wooden walkway and vaulted over two horses, cleared them totally, lit on the third horse, which was Steve’s, in the saddle and grabbed it and off and around the corner.”

McQueen was so impressed with the deftness of the stunt, Janes told National Public Radio in a 2001 interview, that he agreeably deferred stunt work to Janes thereafter. The two went on to work together for 21 years.

Janes was born in Sierra Madre Oct. 1, 1931, and attended Pasadena City College and then California State University, San Luis Obispo, before joining the Marines during the Korean War. He taught math and science at a private high school in San Fernando and made the U.S. Olympic team in 1956 and again in 1964, both times competing in the pentathlon.

He was still teaching when he heard that MGM was looking for a stuntman to fill in for Williams during the cliff-jumping scene. The shot was to be filmed nearby on Catalina Island and, being an experience­d swimmer and diver, he thought it seemed like easy enough work, so he took the assignment. Within six months, he’d done stunt work on seven movies.

“The principal finally called me in and said, ‘You either teach school or work in the pictures.’ I said, ‘I’ll see you later,’” he told The Los Angeles Times in 2002.

Though his name was largely known only in the industry, he appeared—however briefly, and however violently— “Spartacus,” the “Magnificen­t Seven,” “The Ten Commandmen­ts,” “How the West Was Won,” “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World,” “The Dirty Dozen,” “The Graduate,” “Planet of the Apes,” “The Poseidon Adventure,” “Back to the Future,” “To Live and Die in L.A.,” “Spider-Man,” and hundreds of movies and television shows.

He doubled for Jack Nicholson, Paul Newman, Frank Sinatra, Charles Bronson, John Wayne, Debbie Reynolds, Yul Brenner and McQueen over and over again.

The car chase scene in “Bullitt”—a jarring 10-minute adrenaline rush across the streets of San Francisco— became such a classic that it spawned its own subculture, websites, Google forums on where the scenes were shot, and an overlay for Google Maps that lets motorists retrace the chase route. In 2011, the Wall Street Journal even rented a Ford Mustang—albeit not the 1968 Ford Mustang GT used in the film—and took Janes on a slow-speed reenactmen­t of the chase.

“Steve was a great driver, but he was only behind the wheel for about 10 percent of what you see on screen,” Janes confided during the reenactmen­t. “He drove in scenes that required close-ups—but not in the ones that could kill him.”

Sometimes Janes went to extraordin­ary lengths to eliminate, of at least soften, the risk of injury.

When a director on “How the West Was Won” explained a nearly suicidal train-jumping scene to Janes, he took it all in without speaking.

“I’d like to have you get shot up here, spin and leap off and hit that cactus and go over the cliff,” the director said, adding “you figure it out.”

There has to be an easier way to die, he told himself. But he also went to work to make the scene happen.

Using a blowtorch, he burned off the needles on one flank of the cactus and cut the plant’s root so that the saguaro would sway when he hit it, rather than fling him back into the train, which he estimated would be going 25 to 30 mph.

“The problem was, if I missed the cactus, I’d have gone 40 feet into the rocks,” he said. “You have to do it right the first time.”

The stunt worked and the scene became another entry in a career filled with eye-catching but nearly anonymous performanc­es.

Though he did land several small speaking parts during his career, it was generally Janes’ body, not his face, that was served to audiences. In perhaps his easiest stunt, he was asked to play the role of Norman Chaney on the television series “L.A. Law.” In the opening scene of the show’s first episode, Chaney is found dead, never to appear again.

Later in life, Janes would lecture on the art of stunt work, and the selfless qualities body doubles must possess. He was as a board member of the Screen Actors Guild and was national chair of the guild’s stunt and safety committee. He was also a co-founder of the Stuntman’s Associatio­n of Motion Pictures and Television. For decades he was active with the Museum of Western Film History in Lone Pine, Calif., where he was a regular speaker. In 2001, he received a Golden Boot Award, given to actors for their contributi­on to westerns.

In 2016, Janes and his wife, Jan, lost their Canyon County home in the Sand fire. The blaze destroyed much of the memorabili­a he’d collected during his career.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States