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View Full Version : Aviator/Actor and our first EAA Young Eagles Chairman Cliff Robertson passes away.



RV8505
09-10-2011, 07:00 PM
NEW YORK — Cliff Robertson, the handsome movie actor who played John F. Kennedy in "PT-109," won an Oscar for "Charly". He was 88.
His secretary of 53 years, Evelyn Christel, said he died in Stony Brook of natural causes a day after his 88th birthday.

Robertson's funeral is set for Friday in East Hampton.

. Robertson's love of aircraft and flying far predate his involvement in acting (which led to an Oscar for the film Charly in 1968).
Robertson was born in La Jolla, Calif., in 1925, the scion of a prosperous California ranching family. As a boy of about 13, he'd hop on his bike to make the 13-mile ride to Speer Airport in San Diego (no longer in existence), just to watch the planes take off and land. He was a self-described "airport rat," one of a group of like-minded boys whose imaginations took flight in easier, lazier times.
"In the summer, I'd ride my bike there six days a week and volunteer to clean planes and grease engines for zero money," Robertson remembered from his home near Southampton, Long Island. "The payoff came once a week, when the chief pilot would take me up in a little Taylor Cub for a fifteen-minute ride. That made it all worthwhile. I never dreamed of one day owning a plane."
Make that four planes, actually, and that represents a downsizing, considering the "Robertson air force" formerly included a Spitfire Mark 9 and three Tiger Moths, all of which have been sold. The current fleet includes a French Stampe, a Messerschmitt, a Grob Astir glider and a Beech Baron. If these names all read like high-flying Greek, a few words of explanation about each will be of help:

French Stampe - This is a biplane that is actually Belgian in origin. It first flew in 1933 as a training airplane, but after World War II its construction was taken over by France and the "Societee Nationale de Construction Aeronautique du Nord" (SNCAN). About 700 were made. It's one of those rare airplanes that was rarely "junked," but bought and lovingly restored by collectors like Robertson.
Messerschmitt 108 - A four-seater executive liaison military aircraft, developed in the 1930's by the Germans for the Luftwaffe (German Air Force). The plane was advanced for its time, with retractable landing gear, an enclosed cockpit and cantilevered wings. It was used to transport high-ranking German military brass. A cousin craft, the 109, was a one-seater, short-range fighter plane.
Grob Astir - This is a two-place (two-person) fiberglass glider -- no engine! One has to be towed for takeoff and, without the benefit of jet propulsion or internal combustion, a pilot must be shrewd and skilled to fly one. Robertson is both. In fact, he holds the distance soaring record in Nevada for that class of plane, having glided 240 miles in the '90s -- with a 6'4" passenger aboard!
Beech Baron - This isn't a vintage aircraft at all, but it is one of Robertson's favorite toys. "I fly it along the East Coast to get to speaking engagements, scouting locations, that sort of thing," he said. The Baron is a modern, executive propeller plane, with leather seats and twin fuel-injected engines. Robertson keeps his in a nearby hanger on Long Island, where he can hop in and take off.
The aircraft Robertson once owned but has since sold include:

Supermarine Spitfire Mark IX - The most famous military aircraft of all time and one of the most beautiful ever built. It went up against the vaunted Messerschmitt during World War II and beat back the German threat in the Battle of Britain. By the time production ceased in 1949, over 22,000 Spitfires (and Seafires) had been made. Robertson sold his after getting "an offer I couldn't refuse."
Tiger Moth - The designer of this British, two-seater biplane -- Sir Geoffrey de Havilland -- was an entomologist and named several of his aircraft designs after moths. The first Tiger Moth was tested in 1934. When World War II broke out, it proved invaluable as a trainer. One heart-stopping feature: no brakes! The tail component had a skid, which slowed it down in grass training fields.
In 1969, Charles Lindbergh flew one of Robertson's Tiger Moths at Santa Paula (Calif.) Airport, where Robertson keeps another hanger (there's a third one as well, in Creve Coeur, Mo.). "He made his flight log entry that day, just like an ordinary pilot," he said. Robertson later narrated a film shown at the Smithsonian Institute commemorating the anniversary of Lindbergh's historic flight.
"Flying is freedom," Robertson once said. "It's the essence of the good life." But, he added, "There's synergism in an activity like aviation. You must give back what you take out." And those aren't just words. In 1969, when a civil war was raging in Nigeria, Robertson helped organize an effort to fly food and medical supplies into Biafran, which was caught in the middle of the conflict.
Then, in 1978, when a famine hit Ethiopia, Robertson organized flights of supplies to this ravaged country. Four years later, he received the L.P. Sharples Award from the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association for his many contributions to aviation. He's been honored by the U.S. Air Force, the National Soaring Museum and the National Aviation Club. He often speaks at aviation programs.
In the '80s, Robertson decided to put to test the legend of Gustave Whitehead, the German immigrant who supposedly built and flew an airplane in Bridgeport, Conn., in 1901 -- two years before the Wright Brothers. Robertson rebuilt Whitehead's craft and piloted it himself down a runway in Bridgeport. It lifted off the trailer holding it and briefly took flight, lending credence to the story.
"We'll never take away the rightful role of the Wright Brothers," Robertson said, "but if this poor little German immigrant did indeed get an airplane to go up and fly one day, then let's give him the recognition he deserves." These remarks are consistent with Robertson's on-screen persona. He's often depicted as solid-looking, intense and earnest; an intelligent and reliable 'Everyman.'
But acting wasn't an early ambition. "I acted in class plays to get out of having to do after-school chores," he confessed. When he enrolled at Antioch College in Ohio, it was to pursue writing. He got a job on the town paper, where someone said his writing style would be better suited for the theatre. Robertson liked the idea, but all plans were put on hold with the outbreak of World War II.
Robertson figured he'd be a natural as a Navy pilot, but when one of his eyes tested at less than 20-20, he was forced to take another route. He joined the maritime service -- the Merchant Marine -- and saw action in the South Pacific, the Mediterranean, the North Atlantic and France. "It was a dangerous way to spend the war," he said, "but I'm still here. Not everybody was so lucky."
Back in civilian life, Robertson went to New York to pursue his dream of writing for the theatre. He fell into acting "because it was there and it was something I could do." He got a break in 1950 when he joined a national touring company for the play "Mister Roberts." That lasted two years. Then, he was cast on Broadway in Joshua Logan's "The Wisteria Trees," with Helen Hayes.
In 1955, Robertson made his screen debut in the Logan-directed movie version of "Picnic." That same year he drew praise as Joan Crawford's schizophrenic boyfriend in "Autumn Leaves." In 1963 he was hand-picked by then-President Kennedy to portray him in the World War II action bio-pic "PT 109." In 1965, Robertson earned an Emmy award for his role in the TV play "The Game."
Robertson copped acting's highest prize in 1968 when he won an Oscar for the lead role in "Charly," in which he played a retarded adult who is given temporary intellectual powers following a scientific experiment. In all, he's been in about 70 movies, recently as Tobey Maguire's Uncle Ben in "Spiderman" (he'll also be in the sequel). He just finished work on Stephen King's "Riding the Bullet."

RV8505
09-10-2011, 07:04 PM
I liked Cliff he was a great guy. Clear blue skies my friend and I will look west for you tonight.

Mike Switzer
09-10-2011, 07:16 PM
Wow - talk about weird timing, PT109 was on the Military channel last night (and again tonite)

rosiejerryrosie
09-11-2011, 07:12 AM
If he was born in 1925, how can he be 88 years old?

PaulDow
09-11-2011, 08:31 AM
According to http://www.cliffrobertson.info/, he was born September 9, 1923, not 1925.

One of the things I try to do at Oshkosh is to hear the presentations of some of our senior members. I'm glad I was able to attend Mr. Robertson's talk at the museum in 2010. He was certainly a person I'm proud to say I'm a member of the same organization as him. I believe he was also a significant contributor to the development of our Air Academy.

One of Mr. Robertson's Tiger Moth planes is now owned by a group in East Windsor, CT. About three years ago, the plane had an engine problem on takeoff. The pilot settled the plane into some trees, and there were no injuries. They're rebuilding it, and are trying to see if it's possible to know if this was the plane Mr. Lindbergh had flown.

I know it's early, but I'll forget later... How about 633 Squadron (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057811/) at the Fly-In Theater next year?

FlyingRon
09-11-2011, 10:53 AM
Cliff walked up and shook my hand and started up a conversation with me at Oshkosh. I don't know how he remembered me but I had talked to him at an NAA event a couple of years earlier. He was moving slowly but he was still all there.

RV8505
09-11-2011, 05:58 PM
I would like to pay my respects along with fellow EAA friends if we could. Ciff was one of us.! I also hope he is able to have a fly over at his grave site.

anelon
09-13-2011, 05:57 PM
I ran into Cliff Robertson a few times but the thing I remember most about him was his ability to make even a nobody pilot feel like he was the only other person there. Even beyond that, you got the notion that he had been waiting all that intervening time for you to show up. "Hya Pal" was what he'd say. A little conversation later and I'd swear he remembered the last time we met. When we exchanged a few notes after he put the Stampe up for sale, he wrote "We pull a long bow", which was his way of saying we went back a long way. Not to sail under false colors, we had met a few times over 30-ish years, didn't really know each other, but he sure made people feel special - especially pilots. Miss you, Pal.

CarlOrton
09-19-2011, 11:53 AM
Turner Classic Movies is running nothing but Cliff Robertson movies today. OK, I'll admit it just to get it out of the way: I never really watched any of his movies, but that doesn't denigrate my respect for all he's done with and for aviation. My wife attended all of his sessions for each of the AirVentures she has attended, so she felt a special kinship with him - as so many others have written about his ability to make you feel at ease.

Anyway, the real reason for the post, is how I've noticed so many aviation tie-ins in the movies. They just finished showing "Gidget" in which he played surfer dude The Big Kahuna. Right at the end, Kahuna throws off his shirt and out pops a Trans-States Airlines pilots ID badge.

Then, the basis of the following movie, "Sunday in New York" is all about a pilot who pops into town for the weekend.

Just thought it was interesting about the aviation trivia buried in there.