Bidding
goodbye to the gold robot after almost 30 years, Anthony Daniels shed
a nostalgic tear for the mechanical manservant who changed his life.
"Oh
yes, it was with moisture. This was very much a fond farewell,"
Daniels said of his last scene as C-3PO, the android who became an
icon in the "Star Wars" movies.
His
last scene in the sixth and final film was hardly the heady stuff
of magic for Daniels. Digital effects saw to that.
"I
finished filming on the last film last week. For the final shot I
walked along a blue corridor with a blue background behind me talking
to someone who wasn't there." he said.
"Revenge
of the Sith" is due out next May and completes a trilogy of pre-quels,
which tell the back story of the original movie about a battle between
good and evil in a distant galaxy.
Daniels
makes no secret about his favorite of the six.
"The
first film spoke to everyone on the planet. It still works as a funny,
bright movie. It still has legs," he said of the films by U.S.
director George Lucas.
When
Lucas returned to the pre-quels, Daniels was not so sure.
"George's
devotion to digital effects over-balanced the films. Too many digital
funky characters become a little bit wearing. The storytelling always
gets subsumed."
STRANGE
IMMORTALITY
For
the 58-year-old Daniels, playing a fastidious robot who sounds like
a prissy English butler transformed his career.
"He
(C-3PO) gave me that lead into a strange kind of immortality. People
are very fond of him. His image has haunted me around the planet,"
he said.
There was also an undeniable sense of achievement from the self-deprecating
British actor as he reflected on the squirming discomfort of clunking
around the Tunisian desert in searing heat to make film history.
"He
has been a best friend for me. He is going to live forever in the
ether," he told Reuters in an interview.
Critics
may have admired his on-screen chemistry with fellow robot R2-D2 but
Daniels said: "I was talking to myself all the time. It was a
very lonely experience. I was locked inside a box and had a friend
who didn't speak to me."
The
English stage actor was initially reluctant to audition for the part
and even risked "losing his voice" to Hollywood star Richard
Dreyfuss as Lucas contemplated dubbing him over.
"Now
I have the honor of being the only person to have appeared in all
of the movies and I have become the principal spokesman for them,"
he said.
For
there is plenty of life left in the "Star Wars" phenomenon
with the worldwide DVD launch of the first three movies on Sept. 20.
Just
listening to Daniels' schedule is exhausting.
There
is the Paris "Star Wars" convention, the "Star Wars"
exhibition in Osaka, being inducted into the Robot Hall of Fame in
Pittsburgh, joining forces with storm troopers in London to launch
the DVD.
Then
comes all the razzmatazz of the final pre-quel.
But
nothing will erase his treasured memory of the first time he saw a
sketch of the android he was to play.
"When
I saw the painting by the design artist, the eyes of the character
looked deep into my soul. He was a very forlorn figure with an abandoned
air. He really did look into my soul. We made this tremendous contact."