M is for Mace Windu: I love Mace Windu. He made the Jedi more than just stoic philosophers or evil cyborgs. He made the Jedi cool. I also love Samuel L. Jackson, a guy who is not only extremely suave, but also extremely open in interviews. I read a lot about Jackson’s role as Windu, but discovered that all the pieces hadn’t really been assembled into a coherent story. Even Wikipedia and Wookiepedia only had part of the story. So here’s the full story of how Samuel L. Jackson lived the dream of going from just another fan to a Jedi on the big-screen. Samuel L. Jackson was a huge Star Wars fan, all the way back to 1977 when he sat in one of the first audiences to see A New Hope A few months later, Jackson was pleasantly surprised when Lucasarts called to tell him they had a role for him. Jackson didn’t even ask what the part was, just agreed to fly to London to shoot. Jackson didn’t realize until they showed him his costume that he would be playing a Jedi. They brought him a metal case of lightsaber hilts and asked him to pick one. Two were missing, Ewan McGregor and Liam Neeson having had first crack, so Jackson chose his. And yes, Jackson admits that he spent some time in his dressing room striking dramatic poses in the mirror before he went onto the set. Jackson, of course, ended up playing Jedi Master Mace Windu. Windu was a name that George Lucas had been toying with since he conceived of Star Wars. In fact, in the first draft, Mace Windu was the name of the narrator. The name bounced around in different drafts, assigned to different characters like Leia’s brother, until it ended up in The Phantom Menace Lucas was so impressed by Jackson’s performance that he wrote a larger part for Mace Windu in Attack of the Clones Jackson knew since the beginning that Mace Windu would have to die, because he didn’t appear in the original trilogy with Yoda and Obi-wan. But Jackson reportedly told Lucas that he didn’t want his character to, as he put it, “go out like some punk.” Lucas honored his request in Revenge of the Sith After the movie wrapped, the prop department presented Jackson with Windu’s lightsaber hilt to take home. They had carved the initials “BMF” into it, a reference to his character’s wallet in Pulp Fiction Sources: Wikipedia: Mace Windu Wookiepedia: Mace Windu IMDB: Samuel L. Jackson |
This post is “M” is for “Mace Windu,” part of the “A-Z Blogging Challenge.” We’ll be posting something on our blog every day in April except for Sundays. The challenge is hosted by Arlee Bird , Jeffrey Beesler, Alex J. Cavanaugh, Jen Daiker, Candace Ganger, Karen
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Most STAR WARS fans dislike Mace Windu, because they think he was disrespectful to Anakin Skywalker. Yes, I'm deadly serious. This is how low fanboys can sink.