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Hal Needham, stuntman, was born March 6, 1931 in Memphis, Tennessee. He was raised in Arkansas and Missouri. Needham was a paratrooper during the Korean War, worked as a treetopper, and was a billboard model for Viceroy Cigarettes while beginning a career in Hollywood as a motion picture stuntman. Needham's first break was as the stunt double for actor Richard Boone on the popular TV western Have Gun, Will Travel. Needham trained under John Wayne's stunt double Chuck Robertson and quickly became one of the top stuntman of the 1960's on such films as How the West Was Won, McLintock, The War Lord, and Little Big Man. He doubled regularly for Clint Walker and Burt Reynolds. Needham moved into stunt coordinating and directing second unit action, while designing and introducing air bags and other innovative equipment to the industry. In 1970 he and fellow stuntmen Glenn Wilder, Ronnie Rondell, Jr., and Robert Tessier created Stunts Unlimited. Needham had written a screenplay titled Smokey and the Bandit and his friend Reynolds offered him the chance to direct. The film was a huge hit, and the two followed it with the popular Hooper and The Cannonball Run. Needham moved out of stuntwork, focusing his energy on designing a rocket car driven by stuntman Stan Barrett that broke the sound barrier in 1979. He received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Taurus World Stunt Awards,
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