Background
Williams"s father, George Williams, was a Montana cowboy and his mother Paris Williams was a world-champion trick rider on the rodeo circuit and a movie stuntwoman.
Williams"s father, George Williams, was a Montana cowboy and his mother Paris Williams was a world-champion trick rider on the rodeo circuit and a movie stuntwoman.
The Williams family moved to Burbank, California during Jack"s childhood years. Williams performed his first motion picture stunt on a horse at age 4, being tossed from one rider to another in The Flaming Forest a 1926 silent film. Attending the University of Southern California, Williams was a polo player and returned to motion picture stuntwork in 1936 for Daniel Boone and The Charge of the Light Brigade.
World World War II interrupted his Hollywood career when he served as an officer in the United States Coast Guard that included service as a navigator on a Landing Ship, Tank in the Invasion of Okinawa.
Williams returned to Hollywood after the war where for six decades he doubled for or worked with many Errol Flynn, John Wayne, Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, Ronald Reagan, James Stewart, Gary Cooper, Fess Parker, Audie Murphy, Richard Widmark, Robert Taylor, Yul Brynner, Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, Lee Marvin, Glenn Ford, Charlton Heston, Gregory Peck, Clint Eastwood, William Holden and Kirk Douglas. Williams also doubled for actresses including Olivia de Havilland, Julie Adams, Greer Garson, Sophia Loren, Lucille Ball, Claudia Cardinale and Angie Dickinson.
On television Williams worked on The Roy Rogers Show, Maverick, Rawhide, Bonanza, Daniel Boone, Laredo and The High Chaparral. Williams owed his success to his horse Coco.
"Coco bought the ranch," he said, referring to the horse he rode in many of his most famous scenes.
Williams was best known for having trained his horse to fall dramatically on cue at a given spot as if it had taken a bullet or arrow. Williams was inspired by his father, George Williams, a Montana cowboy who could train a horse to fall on cue. Jack recalled, "There was probably no feat I could have imagined that was as fascinating as that.
So I took the technique and perfected lieutenant"
"He was the top falling-horse stuntman in the business," said stuntman Bob Hoy, who first worked with Williams in 1950.
"He had a great horse called Coco, and they were inseparable. The horse had an instinct.
A lot of horses will fight you when you get to the spot where they"ll make the fall and won"t go there. But Coco went there. She was just so great."
Said stuntman Joe Canutt: "You can get great falls a lot of times out of horses, but when you"re attacking the Alamo, for example, and you"ve got bombs and cannons going official. some of them don"t work at all.
That mare consistently got spectacular falls."
But beyond doing the falling-horse stunt, Hoy said, "Jack drove stagecoaches, he wrecked wagons, he could transfer from the horse to the train -- he could do anything pertaining to horse work."
Coco died at age 33 and was buried on Williams" California ranch.
"As a stuntman, life"s an adventure," he said. "lieutenant"s marvelous, but so fragile. You remember in "The War Wagon" where they"ve got the dynamite shaking and it could go off any second? That"s the way life is.".
Quotations: "As a stuntman, life"s an adventure," he said. "lieutenant"s marvelous, but so fragile. You remember in "The War Wagon" where they"ve got the dynamite shaking and it could go off any second? That"s the way life is.".