The Commercial Appeal

‘Empire’ revisited: Mark Hamill shares exclusive photos

- Brian Truitt USA TODAY

Around the same time Luke Skywalker was floored by the greatest parenting reveal in cinematic history, Mark Hamill became a dad.

“The Empire Strikes Back,” the second “Star Wars” installmen­t in the Skywalker Saga, which premiered 40 years ago Thursday, shocked moviegoers when Darth Vader told an injured Luke, “I am your father.” Over the years, “Empire” (streaming now on Disney Plus) has become many fans’ favorite film in the pop-culture franchise, and it’s beloved for Hamill as a movie but also as an experience: The actor’s son Nathan was born during the shoot.

In George Lucas’ original 1977 “Star Wars,” Luke was introduced as “sort of this naive boy and had grown into a young man with great responsibi­lity and a bit more gravitas,” says Hamill. He also recalls “Empire” as a “make or break” for the nascent “Star Wars” galaxy.

“This one was challengin­g in a way the first one was not – more cerebral, more intellectu­al, more spiritual. The Force always had an element of spirituali­ty, but this just deepened those themes and explored them,” says Hamill, 68, calling from home during “the unexpected vacation” of coronaviru­s quarantine. (“I’ve never forgotten what day of the week it is more than than these last couple of weeks, but I’m as well as can be expected.”)

Hamill last saw “Empire” in theaters in 1997 when his grown children – Nathan, 40; Griffin, 37; and Chelsea, 31 – wanted to watch the “Star Wars” re-releases. Now, with everybody in self-isolation, Hamill Zooms, Facetimes and emails with all three. On Mother’s Day, the family hung outside at Hamill’s house “more than 6 feet apart.”

In honor of the “Empire” anniversar­y, Hamill shares never-seen exclusive shots from the production with USA TODAY.

Mark Hamill enjoyed getting plastered for ‘Empire Strikes Back’

Even back in 1979, Hamill had some experience in isolation. During filming, Hamill had his hand cast in plaster – since Vader slices off Luke’s in their lightsaber duel – and also endured a full over-the-head cast and a whole body mold for other “Empire” sequences. “They had straws in your nose and you have to sort of just Zen out and zone out, and it was kind of a peaceful experience,” Hamill says. “Some people react negatively and get claustroph­obic, but as the mold sets it gets very warm, and I found it kind of soothing.”

Han and Luke got a surprise visitor in Norway

Freezing Finse, Norway, was the locale for the opening shoot on the ice planet Hoth, and even though she wasn’t scheduled to be there, Carrie Fisher showed up to hang with co-stars Hamill and Harrison Ford. A key scene – in which Ford’s Han Solo saves Luke (after he’s attacked by a nasty wampa) by sticking him in the warm, sliced-open guts of a dead tauntaun – was filmed 200 yards from their hotel. “If you turn the cameras around from that scene, there’s people out on their balcony, sipping cocoa watching us,” Hamill says.

There was actually even more heat to that Luke/leia kiss

It was a warmer environmen­t inside when filming the now-infamous scene in the Rebel base on Hoth, where Fisher’s Princess Leia kisses a recovering Luke to spite Han – which is made a little weirder one movie later when Luke and Leia learn they’re siblings in “Return of the Jedi.” Hamill says the situation was even steamier in a deleted scene just before the big kiss, in which Luke tries to work up the courage “to tell her how I feel about her” and droid C-3PO interrupts a potential smooch.

“That was trimmed just for time,” Hamill says. “That’s the greatest good news, bad news joke ever: The good news is there’s a very attractive woman in the galaxy, in which you don’t see too many women at all. And the bad news is she’s your sister.”

Luke was fighting AT-ATS the day his first son was born

Hamill married Marilou York in 1978, three months before “Empire” production started, and his wife was pregnant and “really popping there”: She stayed warm and comfortabl­e in a Norwegian lodge while Hamill worked. They were filming in London when Nathan was born at St. John’s Wood Hospital on June 25, 1979. “Looking back now, I think, ‘Geez, how did I do all that?’ You just handle whatever they throw at you.”

He negotiated a day off for when the baby came, but getting home at dawn after the birth, a weary Hamill got called in for a shot where Luke runs, shoots a grappling hook up toward an Imperial Walker, then jumps out of the way. During the last take, Hamill sprained his thumb, badly enough that some of Luke and Vader’s lightsaber duel had to be reschedule­d. “It would have been better off if they’d just let me not come in,” he says.

Like the Force, Luke will always be with Hamill

WALLACE THE BRAVE

 ?? GEORGE WHITEAR/LUCASFILM ?? Mark Hamill was newly married and a father-to-be when he started work on “The Empire Strikes Back” in 1979.
GEORGE WHITEAR/LUCASFILM Mark Hamill was newly married and a father-to-be when he started work on “The Empire Strikes Back” in 1979.

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