âThe Alamoâ mission
Harvey Weinstein has nothing on Chill Wills.
Weinstein, long considered the king of the Oscar campaign blitz, might well have taken a page from the 1961 playbook of the veteran character actorâs publicist.
Hollywood at that time had never seen anything like the crusade Willsâ publicity agent launched to get his client the supporting actor Oscar for the 1960 John Wayne epic âThe Alamo.â
The Texas-born Wills had been performing since he was a kid and was the leading member of the Avalon Boys singing group. At 26, the group disbanded, and Wills, who possessed a distinctive, gravelly Texas drawl, rebranded himself as an actor in the 1930s.
His career took off, and he became much in demand, appearing in such classics as 1940âs âBoom Townâ and âThe Westerner,â 1944âs âMeet Me in St. Louis,â 1946âs âThe Harvey Girlsâ and âThe Yearling,â and 1956âs âGiant,â in which he played the warmhearted Uncle Bawley. He was perhaps best known, though, as the voice of the cynical talking mule Francis, playing opposite Donald OâConnor in a series of popular comedies in the 1950s.
Though the three-hour-plus âThe Alamo,â which marked Wayneâs directorial debut, got mixed notices, Willsâ performance as Davy Crockettâs friend Beekeeper earned him enthusiastic reviews and a supporting actor Oscar nomination.
Wills hired veteran press agent W.S. âBow-Wowâ Wojciechowicz to run an ad campaign in pursuit of the Oscar. Bow-Wow took campaigning to the extreme.
One of his ads ran the name of every academy member alphabetically with a picture of Wills that read: âWin, lose or draw, youâre all my cousins and I love you all.â
Groucho Marx replied with his own ad: âDear Mr. Chill Wills: I am delighted to be your cousin but I voted for Sal Mineo.â (Mineo had been nominated in the supporting actor category for his role in âExodus.â)
Ironically, the same day the Hollywood Reporter ran Marxâs rebuttal ad, another Bow-Wow special appeared on the opposite page.
This ad featured a photo of the cast of âThe Alamoâ with a picture of Wills in his buckskin breeches superimposed over them. The ad line proclaimed: âWe of the âAlamoâ cast are praying harder -- than the real Texans prayed for their lives in the Alamo -- for Chill Wills to win the Oscar as best supporting actor. Cousin Chillâs acting was great. Your Alamo cousins.â
Though Variety refused to run the cast ad, it did publish Wayneâs rebuke letter, which stated that he and the cast and crew of the movie had no advance knowledge of the ad:
âNo one in the Batjac [his production company] or in the Russell Birdwell office [his publicist] had been a party to his trade paper advertising. I refrain from using stronger language because I am sure his intentions are not as bad as his taste,â the ad proclaimed.
(Of course, Birdwell was no shrinking violet when it came to obtaining ink for âThe Alamo,â getting seven states to declare an âAlamo Dayâ before the film was even released.)
Bow-Wow acknowledged that Wills didnât know about the Reporter ad and apologized for having run it. But the damage was done. Wills fired him and went on the offensive in the press, talking about how Bow-Wow had hurt his good reputation.
Not only did Wills lose the Oscar to Peter Ustinov for his work in âSpartacus,â the $12-million âAlamo,â which had been nominated for seven Academy Awards, including best picture, went home with just one Oscar -- for best sound.
It wasnât long after the Chill Wills- Bow Wow campaign lowpoint that the studios took over the responsibility for marketing the âfor your considerationâ award ads.
As for Wills, he continued to act until his death in 1978 at the age of 76, appearing in such films as âMcLintock!â with Wayne, âThe Roundersâ and Sam Peckinpahâs âPat Garrett & Billy the Kid.â
He never did win an Oscar.