Calgary Herald

Tom Laughlin, 82, set standard for indie films with Billy Jack

- HILLEL ITALIE

NEWYORK— Actor-writer-director Tom Laughlin, whose production and marketing of Billy Jack set a standard for breaking the rules on and off screen, has died.

Laughlin’s daughter told The Associated Press that he died Thursday at age 82 at Los Robles Hospital and Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, Calif.

Teresa Laughlin, who acted in the Billy Jack movies, said the cause of death was complicati­ons from pneumonia.

Billy Jack was released in 1971 after a long struggle by Laughlin to gain control of the low-budget, self-financed movie, a model for guerrilla filmmaking.

He wrote, directed and produced Billy Jack and starred as the ex-Green Beret who defends a progressiv­e school against the racists of a conservati­ve Western community. The film became a countercul­ture favourite and the theme song, One Tin Soldier, was a hit single for the rock group Coven.

Laughlin was in his mid-30s when he created Billy Jack with his wife and collaborat­or, Delores Taylor. Billy Jack was half-white, half Native American, a Vietnam veteran and practition­er of martial arts who had come to hate war.

Billy Jack was first seen in the 1968 biker movie Born Losers, but became widely known after Billy Jack, the second of four films Laughlin made about him (only three made it to theatres).

Billy Jack was completed in 1969, but its release was delayed for two years as Laughlin struggled to find studio backing. He eventually successful­ly sued Warner Bros. to retain rights and — with no support from Hollywood or from theatre chains — Laughlin made a radical decision: Distribute the movie himself and rent theatres to show it in.

He also was among the first to advertise on television and to immediatel­y open a movie nationwide, rather than release it gradually.

Billy Jack initially flopped at the box office, but generated an undergroun­d following and became a substantia­l commercial success and inspiratio­n to independen­t filmmakers. The title character has been cited as a forerunner for such screen avengers as Rambo.

Laughlin was born in 1931 and grew up in Milwaukee. He played football for the University of South Dakota (where he met his future wife) and Marquette University, but decided he wanted to become an actor after seeing a stage production of A Streetcar Named Desire.

“He was profoundly affected by the poverty he saw on the Indian reservatio­ns near the University of South Dakota,” Teresa Laughlin said. “I think the seeds of the Billy Jack character started there.”

His early film credits included South Pacific, Gidget and Robert Altman’s The Delinquent­s. Laughlin was interested in directing and writing and by 1960 had directed, written and starred in The Young Sinner.

 ?? Jon-Pierre Lasseigne/Associated Press ?? Actor Tom “Billy Jack” Laughlin produced and marketed the 1971 movie Billy Jack.
Jon-Pierre Lasseigne/Associated Press Actor Tom “Billy Jack” Laughlin produced and marketed the 1971 movie Billy Jack.

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