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The most repulsive villain of the saga takes shape... |
Starting work circa October 1981 and into January 1982, Stuart Freeborn and his team have the epic task of bringing the mighty leader of scum and villainy to challenging life within their busy workshop at Elstree Studios, London. He recalled to
Star Wars Insider in 2005: “I got the carpenters to build a framework first, but even so, I had to pour four tons of clay over the framework and then model it into Jabba. After I took plaster casts of it, which made great big molds, I had a whole room converted into an oven to run Jabba’s foam skin.”
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Jabba's face frame construction and testing. |
Once Freeborn has cast the foam rubber
pieces and seamed them together, he will go
on to mount the entire skin onto a
lightweight framework to support it’s shape
and articulate the creature. It is planned that
two puppeteers, whom Freeborn would refer
to as “the Astronauts”, will sit inside Jabba’s
head and together they will manipulate the
cables that will make his eyes blink, tongue
loll and mouth open.
Jabba’s tail will also have a life of its own
and so it is planned that an operator will be
inside that part of the build as well. Freeborn
continues to Insider: “The tail had to be
able to come up, swing, and knock people
over, so to make it move I had a lot of rods
going through the centre and little round
pieces to create the shape, which required a
lot of strength to make it work.” The
operator would be sat on “a little seat
halfway up the tail, just underneath the foam
rubber. The tail was controlled by what I call
“saucepan lids” which were two discs with
eight cords that made it go up, down, left
and right.” When the operator pulls the
proper cable to one saucepan lid, it pulled
the second saucepan lid to the opposite
direction, so the tail would make an “S”
bend and knock people over if necessary.”
Despite early behind the scenes worries in the first week of January 1982 that the final mega puppet would not be ready in time, the incredible prop, to be primarily operated within by Dave Barclay and Toby Philpot, and in its tale, Mike Edmonds, would prove an on set marvel to the cast and crew for its grotesque beauty. Respectful dues are certainly handled out to Freeborn and his dedicated team for their impressive beyond words work.
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Stuart Freeborn with an early Jabba mock-up to show the core production team. |
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The unpainted face awaiting the eyes. |
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Creating the eyes and the mechanics operating them. |
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Coming together grossly. |
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Feeling the chill in the cold winter environs of Elstree's workshop, a hatted Freeborn liaises with his team. |
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Early days on the body's ultimate creation at Elstree. |
With the mighty Jabba ultimately delivered
onto the set for his first
days of filming in January, 1982, he had been created in
sections over a three
month period because of the creature's huge expanse, and at a cost of
nearly $2 million dollars. Weighing more than
200lbs, three operators
will be inside the creature
tasked with the job of
bringing it to realistic life - one would be in the tail (Mike Edmonds, having previously played
an Ewok, the actor specially picked for
this new assignment by
Robert Watts), of which two
would be made –one
being kind of curled up
and one which can
undulate like a lizard’s, and two others
(Dave Barclay and Toby
Philpott) being in the
front manipulating the
head and the arms. TV
monitors would be placed
inside Jabba. The
shooting camera would be connected to a video
camera feeding into these
monitors, giving the
operators instant
feedback on their
performance with the
various parts of the
creature, whilst two
additional operators
outside the creature operate the eyes
by remote control from
the studio floor. For the
filming, the voice of
Jabba would primarily be provided
by operator Dave
Barclay.
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Jabba's operating schematic. |
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The primary internal mechanics are worked out using Action Man dolls... |
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... and practically tested. |
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Near completed and ready for painting. |
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More 'body' shots of Jabba at Elstree. |
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We assume that this is some kind of later reference model for the full size build? |
Saturday 16th January, 1982 would see a full dress rehearsal takes place on the
Jabba’s Palace Throne room Stage 8 set for
all of the alien characters, before principal photography commences there from January 25th. To everyone’s
relief, the fully operational Jabba the Hutt
puppet is delivered to the stage on time for the rehearsal by an exhausted Stuart
Freeborn.
Even after all the months of work, however, Freeborn isn’t entirely happy with the end result: “I tried to run the whole gamut of emotions with him, except being a nice character-that he never was and never could be. Jabba was my biggest headache, and unfortunately I didn’t get much time to see him on screen. I think we just about made him work.”
With the puppet inside and ready to exude his evil charms, Richard Marquand and his camera crew go through a series of tests with Jabba and his operators. Marquand recalls: “Before we started shooting the throne room scene, with Jabba’s tongue and his arms and eyes, one of the toughest problems that we had to deal with, were in place, we had to discuss, rediscuss, what the eyes had to do; where they would go; how they should operate; the range of different emotions he could express during the course of the sequence and how these would be done with the eyes. There were times when I would say, “turn the head, look down, look up, look more around, move around, look left, wave your arm, throw the mug,” and if I hadn’t, the people inside wouldn’t really have been able to function properly.” As well as Jabba, the majority of the other alien creatures are also put through their paces-with any difficulties being ironed out that weekend.
The Tech of the Jabba the Hutt Puppet
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Adding some extra slime to Jabba's mighty tongue! |
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Attending to Jabba whilst positioning his Hookah pipe. |
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Enjoying a snack between evildoing. |
Stuart Freeborn is aware of the difficulties of operating the creature during filming, recalling to S
tar Wars Insider magazine in 2005: “One man couldn’t do it all, so the two of them sitting next to each other in the head and neck did all the movements together. Their own arms went into Jabba’s foam arms so they could really make him move around and toss the frogs and things into his mouth, because he was eating and drinking all the time. Jabba ate real expensive live frogs, so I made two tubes in his throat-one for the frogs and one for the rubbish, and each astronaut (operator) had their own throats. When one guy used the phony arm to open the bug bowel of water and picked a frog out and tossed it into the side of his mouth, it went down into a bucket of water. The other guy tossed the rubbishy stuff into the side of his mouth and it went into the rubbish bucket. That way, when they shot it again, all they had to do was take the frogs out of the one bucket and put them back in the water bowl. We spent weeks rehearsing all of this until we got it just right.”
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An alien snack to be eaten by Jabba during later second unit work at ILM. |
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Additional filming of Jabba grabbing a snack filmed at ILM in 1982, with David Carson. |
Freeborn would also recall the frog problems to
Star Wars - The UK Magazine: “He (Jabba) was supposed to be taking frogs out of a big bowl and eating them but then he was smoking with this hookah, so we had to create different openings in the costume so the frogs didn’t go into the same place as the smoke, or we would have suffocated them all! We had everything worked out, so we knew exactly how we would reach in to the bowl, take out a frog and stuff it into his mouth. On the first day we got everything into place and the director Richard Marquand looked at it and said, “I think we should move this bowl over here.” I said, “Oh my god, we can’t do that!” we had to set it all up very carefully, and there was no way we could change it at the very last minute just so the bowl would look better in another place.”
With the filming of Jabba’s frog scenes comes many funny out-takes, as Toby Philpott recalls to T’BONE’S STARWARZ UNIVERSE: “Getting that slippery rubber frog into the mouth was fairly hilarious. It started with a live frog (with his keeper) in the tank, and the frog didn’t like it so it would leap OUT of the glass bowl and create havoc hopping around the set (it was BIG). Once we had gotten that in the can, we moved on to the rubber frog. I hate to disillusion anyone – but at least no animals were injured in the making of this movie.” “I had to grab it with my left hand in the three-finger grip (imagine the Vulcan "live long and prosper" finger shape) through fat rubber gloves, and then stuff it into the mouth, which I could only just reach. As I was bringing it to the mouth I was tilting the head with my right hand, then had to quickly switch, as Dave chewed, to sliding my right hand into the tongue to lick the lips. Dave had to open the mouth at the right time, and I had to get the frog right inside. So far, so good. Now they add the slime around the mouth, and by the third take the frog is really slippery so when they hand it to me and it squirts out of my grasp, and leaps across the set all the panic starts again (and this isn’t even the live frog!)” “In one unused take the legs were left sticking out and Dave started chewing and I carried on poking the wriggling legs in, and we heard the groan and the shout of "CUT!" as it was considered too gross. At least our stuff was mostly done via close-ups, so when they shouted "Cut!" we usually hadn’t upset too many other performers.”
Look carefully at where Jabba sits and you’ll see that he also has a sidearm prop for his protection, which was a dressed up German air pistol that could fire tiny pellets. Proud of his now on-set creation,
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Members of the UK Elstree operating team for Jabba assemble for a group photo on the Throne Room set in 1982. |
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