Tag Archives: strikes

The STAR WARS Holiday Special Strikes Back

AUDIO PODCAST! Celebrating 44 years of the STAR WARS HOLIDAY SPECIAL! Presented on CBS one-time-only on November 17, 1978, this show has become legendary & infamous among STAR WARS fans. We share our memories of the show with Steven Kozak, producer of the upcoming documentary “A Disturbance in The Force”, who joins us to share some interesting and hilarious Holiday Special info. Plus, we’re looking forward to the season finale of ANDOR with rumors and speculation about what we might see (and hear).

#StarWars #RebelForceRadio #RFR #Podcast #Andor #HolidaySpecial

Brought to you by RFR on Patreon!

Official YouTube Video Home for Rebel Force Radio: Star Wars Podcast

#StarWars News, Interviews. comedy and Commentary

Catch new audio podcasts every Friday at www.rebelforceradio.com

Watch Full Show Video, get tons of exclusive bonus podcasts and join a great community at: RFR on Patreon

Rebel Force Radio


 

Sana Starros Strikes Out On Her Own And More

Here’s the latest from: StarWars.Com

Sana Starros can’t catch a break. In the debut of the new Marvel comic miniseries, Star Wars: Sana Starros, the formidable scoundrel heads back to her homeworld and encounters the Empire.

Get your first look below at the debut issue of Star Wars: Sana Starros and other Marvel Star Wars titles coming in February 2023 — including covers and solicits for the flagship Star Wars series, Chapter 8 in the adaptation of The Mandalorian on Disney+, new installments in Star Wars: The High Republic and The Blade, and more!…

Read the Full Article @ The Official Site

John Ratzenberger: The Postman Always Strikes Back

Welcome to a look inside The Holocron. A collection of articles from the archives of *starwars.com no longer directly available.

(*Archived here with Permission utilising The Internet Archive Wayback Machine)

John Ratzenberger: The Postman Always Strikes Back

A Man for All Uniforms

In Decipher’s Star Wars Customizable Card Game, Major Bren Derlin’s card comes with an odd biographical tidbit: “At the Mos Eisley Cantina, everyone knows his name.” If you’re scratching your head over this odd link between the sweltering desert world of Tatooine and the icy planet Hoth, don’t bother looking through your Star Wars novels and comics. It’s a joke — an allusion by Decipher to the fact that John Ratzenberger, a bit player in The Empire Strikes Back, would go on to star for more than a decade in Cheers, one of the most popular TV sitcoms in American history, set in a bar where, as the song goes, everyone knows your name.

Yes, Cliff Clavin, the Boston letter carrier and know-it-all barfly, is in The Empire Strikes Back — at least for a couple of scenes and a couple of lines. It’s the mustachioed Ratzenberger, clad in his snow gear, who regretfully informs Princess Leia that the shield doors of Echo Base must be closed against the Hoth night, even though Han Solo hasn’t returned from his hunt for Luke Skywalker. He can also be glimpsed and briefly heard again in the scene in which Leia gives the Rebel pilots their orders for evacuating the planet and protecting the Alliance’s transports.

Ratzenberger was 32 in the spring of 1979, when he spent about a week on the Echo Base set at Elstree Studios, in a suburb north of London. (Luckily for Ratzenberger, all of Major Derlin’s scenes were interior scenes, meaning the actor didn’t have to endure sub-zero temperatures and constant winter storms atop the Finse Glacier in Norway, where the exterior scenes on Hoth were shot.)

Two decades — and what the actor genially admits are “a lot of cobwebs” — have obscured some of his memories of his time on the set. He says he admired director Irvin Kershner, whom he describes as “an old-school director.” But his memories are crystal clear when he confesses to having his head turned by one particular co-star.

“I remember having an enormous crush on Carrie Fisher,” he says, but adds that under the circumstances, he harbored no illusions about the chances for, well, a princess and a guy like him. “I was living in what pretty much amounted to an abandoned building at the time, so there wasn’t much I could offer,” he says.

By Ratzenberger’s account, he wasn’t exactly swept up in the hysteria of being part of the hotly anticipated sequel to what was then the top-grossing movie of all time. “I really didn’t know it had become this huge thing, [though] I was aware there was a movie out called Star Wars,” he says. “It was a job. I was hired to do a job, I showed to up to do a job, and I went home.”

Nor was it even a particularly out-of-the-ordinary job for the young actor. At the time, he recalls, he was one of several American actors living in London who would get the call whenever a movie shot in the area called for an American in uniform. Ratzenberger’s early work, indeed, is a tale of bit parts and changing ranks: He played lieutenants in A Bridge Too Far and Gandhi, a corporal in Yanks, a chief in Firefox, a sergeant in Hanover Street, and also donned government gear for Superman and Superman II. Under those circumstances, one can see how Bren Derlin was just another major – albeit one from a galaxy far, far away.

Still, Ratzenberger got to that galaxy along an unusual route. Before he headed for London in 1971, his resumé included such jobs as an apprentice blacksmith in northern Vermont and a deckhand on an oyster boat off the coast of his native New England. It was a tax refund from his stint as a deckhand, in fact, that sent him across the pond. As Ratzenberger recalls, the check happened to be the exact same amount as a ticket on a charter flight to England that he saw in a newspaper. He had a friend in London, so he left on a lark for a three-week visit — never suspecting he would stay 10 years.

It wasn’t long before Ratzenberger and friend Ray Hassett began achieving considerable renown as Sal’s Meat Market, an improv duo whose freewheeling 90-minute shows would cast each of them in as many as 20 characters apiece. The two were veterans by the time an agent approached them and asked if they’d thought about movies. Ratzenberger’s screen debut came in 1976’s The Ritz, directed by Richard Lester (A Hard Day’s Night), who would later direct him in Superman II.

Familiar Voices

Besides his stints as an American in uniform, Ratzenberger also did extensive voice work, providing English dubs for foreign films — a key addition to what he calls “my bag of tricks.” That work spotlights what the actor sees as an advantage of having learned his craft in England: “They don’t pigeonhole you over there,” he says. “As a journeyman actor, you were expected to do everything.”

It’s a matter-of-fact approach that Ratzenberger traces back to having grown up working with his hands. It also meant that for the young actor playing Major Derlin, Harrison Ford was someone to watch. Ford, like Ratzenberger, was a self-taught actor without formal training. And like Ratzenberger, he’d worked as a carpenter — though Ratzenberger notes that Ford was a fine carpenter who worked on finishing and other jobs, while Ratzenberger himself was (and is) a house framer more used to working with two-by-fours. Nonetheless, Ratzenberger remembers watching Ford succeed and being inspired.

“I remember thinking, ‘Wow, that’s pretty cool,'” he says. “if he could do it, I could do it.” Indeed he could: beginning in 1982, Ratzenberger would become a fixture on TV wearing another uniform — this time for the postal service-on Cheers. That role sprung from a failed audition that Ratzenberger turned into a success by drawing on the oldest trick in his bag — his years of improv.

“What I do well is just improvise within the situation,” he says. “Drop me into the situation and I’ll do fine.”

Ratzenberger says he originally read for a non-descript character for Cheers — an approach that was too stilted for him to shine. He was walking out the door when he asked Cheers’ creative team if their show had a certain character he felt was needed.

“Being a New Englander, I knew that in every bar I’ve ever been in, there’s a bar know-it-all,” Ratzenberger says. After piquing the group’s interest, he began to improvise just such a part, using anything at hand — such as people’s clothes and last names — as his material. He left the group laughing and eventually was called back and asked to become the bar know-it-all he’d quickly invented — the character that would become Cliff Clavin.

Having won the job with improv, Ratzenberger would use the skill to create any number of off-the-cuff lines for Cliff during Cheers’ 11 -year run-and then for the computer-generated characters to whom he lent voices in three blockbuster Pixar films, including A Bug’s Life and both of the Toy Story movies, in which he plays the talking pig toy, Hamm.

Ratzenberger has also embraced a growing role with a good cause. He’s the chairman of an online charity called childrenwithdiabetes.com, offering children who have diabetes and their families everything from medical advice to a place to chat with other children and families.

Childrenwithdiabetes.com sprung from his desire to find a way to connect researchers working (sometimes in ignorance of each other’s efforts) to find a cure for the disease. “They don’t talk to each other,” Ratzenberger says. “I thought, in the age of the Internet, that’s stupid.”

Between that work and his ongoing acting, Ratzenberger may not have a lot of time to look back at what was a very brief tour of duty on Hoth 20 years ago. Nor, by his account, does he get much fan mail for his Star Wars work. But for this journeyman-actor-turned-master, the body of work he has put together is proof enough.

Indeed, whether they’re fans of George Lucas’ saga, a beloved bar in Boston, Pixar’s pioneering productions, or all three, everybody knows John Ratzenberger’s name.

By Jason Fry

The Ronin Strikes Back In Star Wars: Visions #1

Here’s the latest from: StarWars.Com

The prequel comic to the “The Duel” arrives next week.
StarWars.com Team

Lucasfilm’s critically acclaimed Disney+ anime anthology series, Star Wars: Visions, introduced the world to the mysterious Ronin and his loyal droid, R5-D56. As seen in Kamikaze Douga’s “The Duel,” the Ronin saved a sleepy village from a menacing Sith — yet he himself wields a crimson lightsaber, raising questions about his past and true nature. Now, we’ll learn even more about this enigmatic wanderer….

Read the Full Article @ StarWars.Com

Everything I Love About The Empire Strikes Back

Here is everything I think is great about Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back! One of the best Star Wars movies that exists. Nay, one of the best MOVIES ever made! Let’s celebrate it!

Subscribe for more Star Wars videos every day!

Join this channel to get access to perks:
JOIN

Support the channel: Star Wars Explained @ Patreon

Daily videos about the Star Wars universe covering the movies, shows, video games, books, comics, and more!

Star Wars Explained


The Empire Strikes Back: Theatrical Trailer #2

This theatrical trailer for The Empire Strikes Back features early looks at many sequences from the film. The trailer shows glimpses of Luke Skywalker’s duel with Darth Vader on Bespin (in which lighstaber effects had yet to be added, making both Luke and Vader’s weapons appear to have white blades), Han Solo shooting at Vader on Cloud City, and the Hoth battle (including AT-ATs and snowspeeders). The format of the trailer then shifts, showcasing each hero individually: Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Princess Leia, Lando Calrissian, C-3PO, R2-D2, and Chewbacca, and various scenes in which they are featured. The trailer features no narration except for the end, and is driven primarily by John Williams’ end credits music as well as the “The Imperial March,” a classic Star Wars theme that would make its debut in The Empire Strikes Back. Tellingly, Boba Fett is nowhere to be seen in this trailer, but the official logo for The Empire Strikes Back does make its first on-screen appearance here.

Visit Star Wars at http://www.starwars.com
Subscribe to Star Wars on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/starwars
Like Star Wars on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/starwars
Follow Star Wars on X at http://x.com/starwars
Follow Star Wars on Instagram at http://www.instagram.com/starwars

Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back | Trailer

Watch The Empire Strikes Back theatrical trailer, which debuted in fall 1979 and gave audiences their first look at the sequel to Star Wars. In addition to a sampling of scenes taken from the entire movie, the trailer surprisingly features footage that was cut from the final film, including a kiss between Luke and Leia, C-3PO removing a warning sticket from a door in the Rebel base on Hoth, and more. Most interesting, however, is the voiceover — provided by none other than Harrison Ford himself.

Visit Star Wars at http://www.starwars.com
Subscribe to Star Wars on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/starwars
Like Star Wars on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/starwars
Follow Star Wars on X at http://x.com/starwars
Follow Star Wars on Instagram at http://www.instagram.com/starwars

Star Wars Video


The Empire Strikes Back: Teaser Trailer

Watch the original teaser trailer for The Empire Strikes Back, which is notable for solely featuring concept art by Ralph McQuarrie but no film footage. Among the McQuarrie paintings seen are the Rebel hangar on Hoth, Luke on a tauntaun, Darth Vader aboard a Star Destroyer, Cloud City, an Imperial probe droid, and Luke’s final duel with Darth Vader.

Visit Star Wars at http://www.starwars.com
Subscribe to Star Wars on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/starwars
Like Star Wars on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/starwars
Follow Star Wars on X at http://x.com/starwars
Follow Star Wars on Instagram at http://www.instagram.com/starwars

Star Wars Video