Big Footsteps to Follow - Los Angeles Times
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Big Footsteps to Follow

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If Tim Sampson’s acting career should fall in his father’s shadow, it’s a big shadow: Not only was the late Will Sampson 6-feet-7, he was the most visible American Indian actor of his generation after his portrayal of Chief Bromden in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest†(1975).

Tim Sampson, 6-feet-2 and about to turn 33, makes his film debut in the just-released “War Party.†A full-blooded Creek raised in Oklahoma--and an expert horseman--he’s been a movie and TV stunt man since he was 18. Venturing now into speaking parts, he readily acknowledges a debt to his father.

“I was really proud of him,†said Sampson, who, until his father’s death in 1987, lived with him in a cabin (“lots of horsesâ€) in the Angeles National Forest. “As far as following in his footsteps, sure I’ll follow him. He really helped out a lot. Not just me--he opened doors for a lot of Native Americans.â€

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“War Party,†shot two years ago in Montana, is an action-drama about three Indian and part-Indian pals (Billy Wirth, Kevin Dillon and Sampson) who high-tail it on horseback into the wilderness after they are inadvertently involved in the killing of a local white man during a re-enactment of a 100-year-old massacre of Blackfeet, staged for tourists. The hysteria and bloody manhunt that follows becomes a metaphor for the plight of Indians at the hands of genocide-minded whites throughout history. Franc Roddam directed.

Sampson, who landed the part through the American Indian Talent Registry, called his first acting experience “fun, but a lot more work than I expected.â€

A non-actor when cast for “Cuckoo’s Nest,†Will Sampson “really didn’t care too much for Hollywood and movies because of the way they portrayed Indians,†Tim said. “That’s changed some, it’s making a turnaround. There’s talk of Westerns making a comeback--hopefully showing the Indian point of view, in a positive way.â€

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He just finished shooting a small part in HBO’s upcoming ranching drama “Montana,†but he is realistic about future acting opportunities.

“It beats the hell out of herding sheep,†he joked. “If I can stay busy at it, I’d love to build a career. Meantime, I’ll keep doing stunts.â€

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