Every C-3PO Costume Explained By Anthony Daniels
Released on 04/01/2020
Oh hello!
I'm Anthony Daniels,
and this is every version of C-3PO
from the Star Wars movies.
Plans, what are you talking about?
I'm not getting in there. [laser firing]
[beeping]
I'm going to regret this.
[dramatic music]
You know I am famous for having turned down
the opportunity to be in Star Wars.
Back in 1975, I hadn't wanted to meet a director
called George Lucas, but I did.
But I wasn't interested in this sci-fi movie until I saw
Ralph McQuarrie's conceptual artwork of the character.
He had created this androids figure
that was standing, looking out of the frame towards me.
And it really connected, I fell in love with it.
I slightly think 3PO fell in love with me,
but I'm not sure.
Did you hear that? [beeping]
They shut down the main reactor.
We'll be destroyed for sure.
This is madness!
The concept of the character
was actually based on a film from way back in time,
Metropolis by Fritz Lang and in that film,
the powers that be created a fake human
to try and encourage the workers to behave
and George had Ralph McQuarrie create something similar.
The similarity would be that neither of us,
the original actor or myself,
could actually move in these costumes very well.
When I read the script, I really liked C-3PO
so I was very, very happy to go the next day
to Elstree Studioses in North London
and be cast for the part.
And I don't mean, did I get the part,
no, I mean that I was actually covered in plaster
to make a mold of my body
that would be the frame to make the actual robot suit.
Well, I have to tell you that being cast in plaster
is not something I would recommend,
especially the bit where they shove straws up your nose
so that they can model your head.
Eventually, there in the studio
was my figure in white plaster with very little clothing on.
It wasn't a pretty sight.
But then came along Liz Moore, the sculptor.
Over the next few weeks, Liz began to cover my white body
with gray modeling clay
and she built up the shape
that you eventually see in the finished figure.
All these little lines and curlicues and shapes
were a reference to that Fritz Lang movie.
I'd be in the studio most days
and they would try out a new piece on me,
it might be an arm or a leg or a neck or a head or
a something and sometimes they were paper prototypes,
sometimes they were made of plastic, thin plastic.
The most interesting thing for me
was when it came to 3PO's face.
I remember coming into a room
and there were I think six heads on a kind of high table
and actually, they were all terrific in their gray clay.
There was this one and I said to George,
the only one I don't like is this one at the end,
he said, Oh, that's the one we're using.
[laughs]
In my defense, he didn't look anything like he turned out
because when he turned out in gold,
I felt 3PO
was beautiful.
There's no way 3PO can ever exist without a whole team
and that was right from the beginning.
First of all, of course, George Lucas,
who thought up the idea,
Norman Reynolds and then down to Phil McDonald,
Maxie, my dresser, who was not from the wardrobe department
but from props, 'cause basically, I was a prop.
Maxie and his fellow workers would join in the team
because I needed more than Maxie it turned out.
It was way more complicated to costume than anybody thought.
And so on that first day, I think there was six people
coming in from all angles to dress me up in it.
And I really rely on, always relied on
the kindness of the crew and the people who really care
about making this comfortable as was possible,
which wasn't that much.
But gradually, they built up the team,
under Norman Reynolds
who worked with the plasters department
and the plastics department, all these clever prop makers,
and they came up eventually,
with all the bits and pieces to make a robot.
And I tried it on in the special effects studio at Elstree
and for the first time,
I had that suit in its entirety around me,
it was horrible.
I had completely lost connectivity with my body, the world.
I literally blundered around the studio
because I couldn't really see,
apart from the eyes in the center
and I had no idea what my elbows were doing,
which were way bigger than my elbows,
my shoulders were bigger, my legs were kind of trapped.
After about 15 minutes, we took it off.
What a relief.
I never saw it again until a month later.
There out in a tent in the desert
and there were all the pieces, 17 pieces I think,
laid out and gradually, over a two hour period,
they covered me in this gold.
We started off with black tights
and a black leotard and a black hood.
The next bit would be, well, a slightly more sensitive area,
the front and the back
and these were two pieces of very thin plastic
that had been vacuum formed
and they put these around me and over the corset thing.
Then they took gold tape and stuck that down the side,
so now the two parts, front and back, had become one.
Next, really complicated,
there was the top half of the leg
that was attached to the bottom half, the calf,
with a sort of, well, literally a bungee cord at either side
that stretched down between two nodules.
This allowed the piece to work like that
to keep them locked together with the knee,
which had these kind of interlocking fragments like that.
They came down and to get that on,
Maxie, my dresser and the team
turned it the wrong way,
I put my foot through it all the way down
and then when it was in there,
they turned it round and pinned
the back on so now my leg was locked in there.
Before that, they put on my deck shoe,
a deck shoe being a little rubber-soled canvas thing
with a kind of white rubber round there
and nice blue canvas top,
sort of thing you'd wear if you were out sailing,
but here we weren't, this was mainly the under-shoe,
because the top of 3PO's foot was all the foot there was,
it was just a foot, bang.
A gold cover that looked beautiful,
again made out of very thin plastic.
And then we came after the top section,
the front and the back.
[clicking]
I was locked in there,
I wasn't going anywhere without this suit.
Then an arm came up,
I had black cotton gloves on as well
and then a hand and these were strange pieces of just
knuckles and joints and things
glued onto black cotton gloves.
Maxie had glued them on the night before.
The glue had set before we could take them off
and basically we had to [groans]
wrench them off my hands for me to go to sleep that night.
We had two necks,
one was split down the back
and pinned together
and that was for the camera to shoot from the front.
The other one was for the camera to shoot from the back
and that had a split down the front.
I know, stay with me.
I think we'd been two hours doing this,
hour and a half at least,
then came the final torture
which was to take the face and the back,
almost like an Easter egg, cut in half, right,
put them together like that
and here's the clever bit.
Well, it seemed a good idea at the time.
They took the kind of earring thing here
and they pointed it through the hole in the side of the face
which joined to the hole in the back of the head
and then poked it through into a bayonet fitting,
like a light bulb, old fashioned light bulb
in the neck.
Trouble was that this was quite hard on the day
because you had to line up these holes and the pin
and push against something
that pushed away when you pushed it.
After half an hour, I'm not exaggerating,
they finally locked these pins into shape.
And at which point they, [clicks]
the same bayonet type fitting
but far easier, just two pieces.
So we had the whole 3PO look
and that first day, when I walked out into the desert,
nobody had ever seen that shape, that figure before
and through the little pinhole eyes,
I could scan all the people in front of me,
the crew who were standing
as the morning sun rose up over the desert
and their reaction was extraordinary.
They were variously either very charmed or completely crazy,
they just, wow, look at that, sort of thing.
And finally,
3PO was complete apart from one thing
that Maxie put his hand up behind 3PO's back
and under that little back plate,
there's a tiny switch [clicks]
that connected the six batteries within that little box
to a wire that came over inside my head
that had been joined to another wire,
which was connected to the eyes,
so we had a full circuit from those little eyes
and so with a flick of the switch,
suddenly 3PO had become alive for the very first time.
My friend C-3PO, of course, looks fantastic
but there was one thing that, at that point, was missing
because one of 3PO's attributes,
he loves to talk.
He's a translator, fluent in over
six millions forms of communication.
How was this gonna happen?
I'd had six months to think,
I don't know.
I'm only a droid,
I'm not very knowledgeable about such things.
So here was day one and I still didn't know
what was gonna happen, what was I gonna do,
I was there in the desert,
I was hurting, I was pained,
I had learned the words, sort of,
I'd never been in a film,
so the word action
was terrifying.
Quite terrifying. [laughs]
But at that moment, something came to my aid,
some kind of movie magic, some kind of force, whatever,
because at that moment, that precise moment, 3PO came alive.
Why, sir, my first job is programming binary load lifters
very similar to your vaporators in most respects.
Can you speak Bocce?
Of course I can, sir, it's like a second language to me,
I'm as fluent in-- All right, shut up.
Well, I can say it now. [laughs]
I couldn't say it on the day.
I think that my nervousness, my
discombobulation of everything
made me flumble the lines like crazy.
Third time I got it wrong, George kind of
frowned and walked over and stared 3PO in the eye
and therefore me in the eye,
You can say anything you like, don't worry about the voice,
I can fix it later.
I was embarrassed because as an actor,
I like to get the lines right.
So then I carried on and in that case,
on the fourth take, I said
Why sir, my first job was ba-wa-wa-wa-wa.
Perfect, cut.
Of course, George knew
that he could put in a proper voice later.
'cause when your head is inside a bucket,
you don't sound so good.
That sound [mumbles],
you can't possibly use that kind of vocal quality.
Even though the microphones was here
and a little microphones cable was going
all the way down my back into my pants,
those two bits of plastic stuck together,
and the transmitter was shoved somewhere really quite warm,
yes, I was speaking to you all the time out of my butt.
But it's supposed to be freezing.
How we're going to dry off all the clothes,
I really don't know.
[beeping] Oh, switch off!
The huge success of A New Hope
meant that suddenly, we were making a second film,
The Empire Strikes Back, number five,
I know, the math has always confused me a bit
but 3PO was back there again
and now people had had a chance
to kind of study the costume a little more,
some things were changed to make things easier.
For The Empire Strikes Back,
the costume was basically the same
and some of the improvements maybe saved time
but it was still a struggle to,
to be C-3PO. [laughs]
The shoes were one piece,
they were no longer the deck shoes with the cover.
They were opened at the back and my foot went in
and then believe it or not, again with the gold tape,
they were taped up or tied sometimes with shoelaces.
One thing I want to remind you of,
back in the day in Episode Four,
3PO didn't have two gold legs.
He had one silver shin.
A lot of people didn't notice it.
And the reason is it was kind of subtle
and the silver actually reflected the gold of the other leg
and also in the desert,
it reflected the gold of the sand
to such an extent, that John Jay,
the beloved stills photographer,
and he'd been shooting [clicks],
stills all through the shoot,
on the last day in the desert,
he came up to me and said,
Tones, why are you wearing a silver leg today?
and I thought, huh?
A blind cameraman, who knew?
I've got to rest before I fall apart.
My joints are almost frozen.
People still argue, does 3PO have a silver leg?
The point of the silver shin,
that would come to haunt me many years later
in The Force Awakens,
was to say that 3PO had had a bit of a history,
that he'd had some kind of drama before this, you know,
but it was so subtle that hardly anybody noticed.
3PO was there and still fairly mobiles.
I had, in fact, been tap dancing on The Muppet Show
just a few months before
but again, I was younger.
You, you're next!
I certainly don't dance.
No, but this is our big ending!
Oh, all right.
[cheerful music]
For The Empire Strikes Back,
I also had, well, 3PO had new hands.
They still didn't work but they were new.
And they were one piece plastic,
very much looked like the originals
but had been made on a new mold
and split open under here and I would wiggle my hand in,
wearing a black glove to, you know,
wearing plastic on your skin is not nice
so the glove was still essential
just to cover me on the inside.
So now I had these beautiful plastic gloves
that were this shape
and whatever I did, they remained this shape.
It was like Curse of the Plastic Hands.
Nothing we can do.
And my joints are freezing up.
Eventually, they would soften with body heat
and so on so that I could,
with pressure, bend them like this.
If I wanted to point over there,
I would, by the side of my body, curl these fingers around,
hold them against my body with my finger extended
and then at the last minute, on cue go,
Oh, look!
If I'd stay there much longer [clicks], you know,
they were not great, again,
the wrong materials or different,
everyone was trying,
this is not a criticism, it's a list of facts, okay.
Curse my metal body, I wasn't fast enough,
it's all my fault!
The pants section, as we'll call them,
those two originally were in two pieces.
The second film, these were one piece and they were,
we made a little casting of this part of my body, it's,
by now, I was inure to the humiliation and things
actors have to go through to keep a part, you know,
so they made this kind of little mini section statue of me
and then cast that in a kind of heavier, rubbery plastic
which meant that it was one piece
so you couldn't just strap it around me,
I had to wiggle into it
and again, in a rather undignified wiggling motion.
If you study C-3PO close up,
freeze frame and look at various parts of his body,
there are wear marks.
He's machine, I guess you get that anyway,
but if you look here, you'll see that within moments,
the gold finish because it was a paint,
you see there are score marks here
where the paint is totally gone.
So you know it's gray metal, it's aluminum.
Here, this is difficult for the team
because they need to find a gold finish
that would attach to plastic
which was semi-mobiles
so again, you'll see all sorts of flaking
but the overall effect, as the movie sweeps by,
you don't see all this stuff, you don't want to see it,
you're not looking for that,
you're looking for the whole story of the gold character
that's going on these adventures with his friends.
Oh, I...
There were a lot of fun things in The Empire Strikes Back
but the scary thing and the fun thing was
reading on the page, 3PO in Cloud City,
something's going on in this side hall here
so he goes in and you hear him say,
Oh, pardon me, oh, no, don't get up.
[banging]
I was out of a job.
I scurried through the next few pages.
He wasn't dead yet, he wasn't finished.
Chewbacca went and found bits of 3PO
as they headed towards the fiery furnace
of meltdown, one of his great dreads.
Chewbacca was there to drag him
and put him in his bits.
And so now 3PO's performance, my performance,
was in pieces.
Literally, in pieces.
[Han] Stop, stop!
Yes, stop, please, I'm not ready to die!
Peter Mayhew, who was Chewbacca at the time,
had a bag of bits
and I've got to tell you that if you look carefully,
some fan has just discovered
there's an arm and a leg
and a other bit and this and that.
In fact, there were two arms, both right arms.
Props got it wrong [laughs], I love it.
'Cause I had all sorts of spare bits
and they just chucked bits in there
and didn't notice that they had two right arms.
I knew all along, had to be a mistake.
You gotta forgive them.
And the clever thing there was
Chewbacca, Peter Mayhew, he had a blaster
and on this end was a piece of fishing wire
attached through the costume to this, so when he did
that,
my head on the back was being animated by fishing wire,
so it kept the while thing alive.
R2, R2, where have you been?
Wait, turn round, you bully!
[beeping]
Hurry, hurry, we're trying to
save Han from the bounty hunters!
[beeping]
Well, at least you're still in one piece!
The more fun was when he put my head on backwards.
What have you done?
I'm backwards!
The only way to do it was to take a CP0 head,
cut out the back of the head
so his face was here, looking that way,
my face was sticking out of the back
which, from the side, is a bit difficult
because this bit's longer, especially this bit
so this bit kept peeking out of the side.
So they stuck gold tape on it
and I promise you, if you freeze-frame in that bit on
Chewbacca's knee, you will see for a moment
a kind of thing here and that is my nose.
Something's not right.
Not everything is perfect in Stars Wars,
not everything is photoshopped out, there's little moments.
But then there were other moments
that I would be on the floor
with my arm up through the 3PO chest into the face,
so that I could animate it a bit like
an old ventriloquist puppet
as I spoke the lines so I could animate as I spoke.
And when you put them together,
the audience believes it's one phenomenon.
The scariest bit for me was when 3PO
is standing in the middle of the fork in corridor
and he's holding a limb.
You haven't finished with me yet!
You don't know how to fix the hyperdrive.
Chewbacca can do it!
Down there, the leg is missing.
Now, these days, you do it with green screen technology,
or just clever computer stuff.
Then, no, it was me standing on one leg
with my other leg curled up behind me,
so in line with the camera so you couldn't see it
and holding this and balancing and speaking
and shouting I'm standing here in pieces
and you have delusions of grandeur!
[beeping]
I manage not to fall over but it was kind of scary
because falling in that costume is not good.
So a sitting down moment was even more fun
because there's a point later on
where 3PO is sitting on a box and R2's there
and he's got a foot and a welding torch
and he, in my book, he was saying,
and I'm saying, where do you think it goes?
But 3PO's legs are sticking straight
pretty much out towards camera,
so how did we do that?
How did we have me sitting footless on a box,
discussing how to attach my foot?
Yeah, you're right, I wasn't sitting on the box,
I was kneeling on the floor through the box
with my feet coming out of the side.
Magic.
Going to execute Master Luke
and if we're not careful, us too!
[beeping]
Hmm, I wish I had your confidence!
Pretty much, it is me always in the 3PO suit,
although young Jim was the one
who actually fell off the cliff
when the sand person attacked Luke Skywalker.
Jim was a member of the props department.
Apparently, he was dispensable because if I'd hurt myself,
filming would've come to a halt for a while,
whereas Jim wearing bits of my costume, nobody cared.
Bang.
I could've done it, it was easy,
just [clicks] out of camera onto a mattress.
A bigger stunt was in Return of the Jedi
where we are on Jabba's barge
and by now, 3PO's eye is hanging out,
Salacious Crumb has pulled it there
and I am edging towards the top of the handrail,
the handrail was missing on Jabba's barge
and I'm blindly, I mean,
I'm now seeing one-eyed with restricted vision.
Think about it.
And I'm about 60 feet up
and as we get to the rail, they'd say cut,
because I had stood as though as I was gonna fall over
and R2's behind me, the motorized R2 is nudging me forward,
that's part of the film,
so we get to my fall position, cut,
and then I relax and then Tracey Eddon, stunt person,
came in and she was wearing a rubber suit,
heaven knows what it felt like,
and she stood there and I showed her my hand position
and she took it,
she stood there and they said action
and she went forward and when you watch,
she twists round in the air and falls out of shot.
A few feet with mattresses
and underneath the mattresses are piles of cardboard boxes
and what they do is absorb the shock,
a bit like the front of your car
and she was absolutely fine, of course, she's a pro,
she was wonderful.
Here's a thing you don't know maybe.
A couple of hours later, she was back up on deck,
she'd taken off the rubber suit,
she was no longer 3PO, she was Princess Leia
and she is the one who sweeps across
to the barge over there to the skiff.
Wonderful skilled woman.
Did I hear someone mention my name?
This is really him!
Well, it's a real pleasure to meet you,
I've seen all your movies.
Of course, not all Star Wars is in the movies, right?
Some of the most amazing spin-offs
have been a great joy to me
and the chief one, Star Tours.
[beeping]
[Presenter] Now, in a kingdom very, very near.
[C-3PO] R2, do hurry, the passengers are boarding.
[beeping]
[Presenter] Now open at Disneyland.
Now, if you haven't ever ridden Star Tours
at one of the Disney parks,
I suggest you stop watching this video and go right now
because it is a superb rendition of the story,
in a way that involves you.
3PO is there to welcome you in the space board at Disney.
[Boy] 3PO looks real busy.
Well, we better not bother him.
He's there with R2, R2's mending, repairing the ship
and of course, getting it totally wrong
and then it blows up and it's all very exciting.
But to do this, they needed an animatronic C-3PO
so Tom Fitzgerald, the producer,
the head of the design team of Imagineers at Disney,
got me into his studio and said,
well, he told me the whole story
and I was sold from the moment I heard it.
And then he said, and our idea
is for you to come in this little mock-up set
and stand just in your jeans and a shirt
and play the scene C-3PO.
It was kind of funny, we had a camera and
I had a sandbag over one foot
and when I asked why, he said,
Well, that's where all the engineering
for the animatronics comes up into the frame that is C-3PO
and animates his actions
so we need to,
if you wouldn't mind to keep still on that leg
and we filmed the scene,
they recorded my voice and my actions so
R2, test the iron cannons
and here, I had a console
and I was poking buttons and R2 was helping things blow up
and they were using this as a guide.
He also asked me to look at the audience who were coming in,
the passengers who were coming down the space board,
around, around, around
and they would be, at this point,
about, I don't know, six feet, eight feet below me
looking up as they went by.
I turn from the console and
look to people
and then carried on what I was doing.
And of course, the inevitable happened.
When I stood there alone in the space board
before we opened, whilst re-rehearsing stuff,
I stood looking up at 3PO,
thinking just how brilliant Disney had been
in making a real robot out of a fake robot.
And at that point, as I was kind of admiring, he turned
and looked straight at me.
I'm getting goosebumps right now.
Where is Master Anakin?
[beeping]
Many years had passed after Return of the Jedi
and I actually thought Star Wars
was never gonna happen again,
I'd got on with life.
It was okay.
And then a phones call,
would I go and meet George Lucas
at Leavesden Studioses in North London?
Of course.
And we had a meeting about this new film and he said
You're created by Anakin.
You're built by Anakin, he's a kid.
Come on, I'll show you 3PO.
I just thought that was brilliant,
to have the sweetest character pretty much in the universe
to be made by one of the archest villains ever
so that was cool.
How it was achieved was a puppet
and the puppet was built at ILM Industrial Light and Magic
by Michael Lynch, one of the prop makers and designers.
[beeping] R2-D2 so beautifully put it,
naked.
[beeping]
My parts are showing, my!
It was exquisite, it was totally believable
as the insides of this.
And they didn't actually offer me
the option of puppeteering it,
Michael knew how it worked and it was his thing.
I gotta say I was disappointed,
I would've liked to have had a go
so basically, I was there as the voice,
often trying to match movements
that weren't particularly mine
but as George said,
He's just been made by a kid, what do you expect?
Fair point, fair point
but it was a total different dynamic, physical dynamic.
I accepted it, I had no choice
and I was fascinated by the puppet
which was really heavy and,
although they tried to take out as much heavy material,
but it still weighed, not a ton but intellectually, a ton
and, of course, was extremely realistic,
you could totally believe this was the inside.
So there we had the first film
and obviously, if you're making a prequel,
you're making number two the prequel
and at this point, I said,
Well, you know,
I'd feel better if you'd let me try and puppeteer it
because, kind of, it's my head,
my brain, my thought process.
Be careful what you wish for.
There I was with Don Bies, my new team head leader
and Justin Dix who would come back into the story
dressing up
as Puppet 3PO.
Now there's a Japanese art form,
theatrical art form called Bunraku
where you have the most beautiful puppets
and they are animated by performers
who are dressed in black
and you, the audience, accept they're not there.
It's fine, it's called suspension of disbelief
and so this creature was attached to my feet
so his heels were attached to my toes,
his knees to my knees, his waist to my waist, et cetera
and the arms were on the end of sticks at his elbow,
so that I could animate to some extent,
where he was touching things.
The head attached to my head to a helmet, like that.
The only trouble was, of course,
that his face was in front of my face
so I couldn't see, I had to guess who I was looking at.
Another challenge.
The whole thing pretty much rested on a heavy harness,
like a Steadicam harness that can take a lot of weight
and distribute it around your frame
and I rehearsed for days in creatures shop at Australia
and could walk pretty well in it
and all that kind of thing
and I was absolutely ready for my first shot,
having the most touching conversation with Padme Amidala
who, in the middle of the night,
because she couldn't sleep
was talking calmly and kindly with 3PO
and asking him if he was happy there and he said,
Well, I'm not unhappy, the people are lovely
but being like this...
Like what?
Naked, if you pardon the expression.
It wasn't easy for him
and in this scene, you suddenly had the inner mind
of this beloved droid who'd suffered for 18 years
for his nakedness.
And of course she, being Padme, being very clever, said
But there's a box of coverings right here.
My, I never noticed.
Truly one of the worst lines and I wrote it.
When you came back, there's Natalie Portman
holding the face of 3PO
and meantime, Don Bies had stuck the back of the head on me
and around here, had put fridge magnets.
I also had the lights, 3PO's eyes,
on a special rig that Don had made, a bit like spectacles,
so just the eyes and Natalie, [laughs]
on action had to maneuver this face.
[Padme] There.
Not quite.
I think about the third take, she did it
and there was 3PO,
whole as the shape of 3PO for the first time
and everybody was exquisitely happy, especially 3PO.
So, right from the beginning of the film,
we re-shot the 3PO scenes that had been puppets,
and we shot them on blue screen, green scene, any screen,
with a gold suit that Justin Dix
had done a wonderful paint job on to make it look rusty.
So here's a clue, if you ever go up to the rusty 3PO,
just scratch a bit and you see his gold skin underneath.
The big difference here was that,
because he always started off shiny,
there George is saying,
No, he needs to be dirtied down and
kind of made to look grungy and stuff.
So he was always a bit grungy, a bit oil-covered
and covered, indeed,
not so much in oil but in shoe polish and table wax.
In the script, I really didn't have much to do,
it was really concentrating on the decline and fall
of my creator, Anakin Skywalker.
I mean, it was tragic, not that 3PO would ever find out
and he still doesn't know so, you know, keep the secret.
Oh, a battle!
Oh, there's been some terrible mistake!
I'm programmed for etiquette, not destruction!
3PO's look is, of course, iconic, gold.
A dirty gold to begin with
and then bright shiny gold for Episode Three.
But then came a bit of a twist on this.
A clever piece of scripting.
3PO suffers an accident in some kind of robot factory
and he ends up with the body of a battle droid.
Ooh!
Oh, I'm so confused!
And to do it, what we did was in fact,
film me in full 3PO costume
and then they animated a suit around me.
I had a blaster, but again, 3PO's hands
were so difficult to manipulate
that they actually had to wire the gun onto me
so I could hold it right.
And I learned a fun thing.
As I came towards the camera,
the line was Die, Jedi dogs, die!
What did I say?
I will admit, those weren't the precise words I said
because I wanted to get a laugh
but what was interesting is I found that you couldn't go
Die, Jedi dogs, die or whatever words,
without going [imitates gunfire].
You've got to make the thing live for you, you know,
and that was kind of exciting and totally daft, actually.
3PO has no memory of it, so it's cool.
Oh, dear, I'm terribly sorry about all this!
For Revenge of the Sith,
which was obviously gonna be the final film,
they had made the collar, the neck a little bigger
so that it grated on me rather less
and sort of didn't constrict my Adam's apple all day.
It wasn't nice to wear but in a rather softer way,
they'd changed the process of the corset into a silicone
which was lighter and not exactly breathable
but it was more pleasant than
the thick rubber thing that I had on before.
So all the time, people were making little adjustments
for my safety and welfare and I'm very grateful.
And you have a special standby painter
who would come and dorb the costume
just to take the shine off it.
The camera department had another trick, they go,
Hold your breath, Tones
and [blowing]
like hairspray in the face, but it was dulling spray
'cause you don't want that costume to be too shiny
because it reflects everything.
Here I was, magnificent in shine.
Eventually, I would be at ILM
and see somebody watching frame by frame by frame
every moment that I made
and in Photoshop, replacing the green with gold.
Oh, my dear friend, how I've missed you.
How amazing that I had thought that after Episode Six,
that was it.
Return of the Jedi, end.
No, we had the prequels
and it worked for us all.
One, two, three,
four, five, six, that was it.
Wrong.
Hopelessly wrong.
Because of course, the phones call,
would I care to work with J.J. Abrams?
He asked me, Would you just like to do the voice?
and I said No, but I would like a new suit.
Of course.
That's J.J.
Goodness, Han Solo!
It is I, C-3PO!
David Merryweather, a total genius
in the special effects arts department,
constrided a suit for photographs
and any material he could get,
anything I could help him with,
and he came out with the whole suit exploded
on his computer, I was, miraculous, absolutely miraculous.
A lot of it was the same.
New material for the middle piece, for the
pants section,
the amazing thing he did was to
insert some pieces here and here
that stopped me being snapped by the,
the meeting of these two joints
but the big thing, this half hour [clicking]
screw here, screw here
became a back, a [clicks] and a [clicks]
[clicks]
After all these years, magic.
After each shot, take it off.
[panting]
Put it back on.
[clicking]
Take it off.
[clicks]
Transformed my life filming.
Adored working on that film.
Adored it apart from
one
argument.
Right at the beginning with the director, with J.J.
You probably don't recognize me because of the red arm.
Look who it is!
Did you see who...
Oh!
What's with the red arm?
It shows some history.
You mean like the silver shin
in the first film, A New Hope?
Yeah, exactly.
But that was too subtle to notice.
Exactly, that's why it's red.
[laughs]
I did not like the red arm, okay?
I thought it was too big, too overt, too clumsy a gesture
so every day on the set, I would say to J.J.,
No forgiveness, ever.
He would laugh.
Sorry.
Come along BB-8, quickly.
[beeping]
Yes, I must get my proper arm reinstalled.
I so persecuted J.J. on the set
of The Force Awakens about the red arm.
I gave him no order at all.
And we finished and that was it and
then I go to see the premiere
and I'm looking at this shot,
yeah, there's the Falcon now rising through special effects
and there is 3PO, waving at the Falcon
with a gold arm.
J.J. had given me a final gift. [laughs]
He changed the color in post production.
3PO's got a gold arm there. [laughs]
For The Force Awakens and indeed, for The Last Jedi,
3PO was 3D printed
and of course, it makes it easier to prototype
because it's all on a computer and you go,
mm, it's not quite right, et cetera.
That was fine, still weighed a surprising amount, actually.
But the pants section was made of a different material,
a kind of new material
that was fine and it was paintable and it moved.
Gradually, it stiffened up,
the material didn't react well with the atmosphere
but gradually, as we got towards the end of filming,
I was realizing how difficult this was
and there was nothing I could do about it,
try to fudge it, try to trick
so you don't notice it so much.
Course, you will now, won't you?
I shouldn't have said anything, jeez.
[laser fires]
[dramatic music]
Part of the wonder of 3PO's look when he's that bright gold
is that he doesn't start off that way at all,
he starts off with just
an ordinary plastic-y looking thing,
white in this case.
But then the vacuum plate, a silver finish onto it,
so you put it in a vacuum chamber with silver foil
and it sticks to it.
But then the clever thing, so you've got a silver droid.
So then the paint department, the art department,
take various colored lacquers
that cover the silver but make it gold
and the silver gives it lift and life and brightness
and you need that, if you started with solid gold,
it kind of would be a little dead
so they thought this out and he looked magnificent,
once the red arm had gone, of course.
Scarif?
They're going to Scarif?
Why does nobody ever tell me anything, R2?
[beeping]
What joy to be asked to be in Rogue One as 3PO.
In just one scene, walk through like Alfred Hitchcock.
Who was that droid?
Yes, I was there.
It was the same suit, of course.
But it just shone out of that very dark and forbidding set
and there was 3PO and I did a little trick.
I got fully dressed in my little tent, my E-Z UP tent,
and when I was ready, they opened the entrance
and I walked out, nobody knew I was gonna be there,
it was a huge secret that 3PO was in this shot.
It was a really good moment
but it was soon over.
Well, I'm quite certain I would remember
if I had a best friend.
And so we come to The Rise of Skywalker.
What it's all been about,
where we were heading.
And here was 3PO again, minus the red arm.
J.J. was indeed forgiven.
What a brilliant film.
I wholeheartedly agree.
But there were issues with the suit.
Still, the [clicks] fixing was great, the arms,
the hands, for the first time, they made hands
that actually were jointed like my own fingers.
This is brilliant, it meant that if I
wanted to pick something up, [clicks] I could do.
And that was so good in the first sequence,
in the sand tunnels with the dagger.
[clicks]
Oh, it's one of those.
Oh, the locations of the Wayfinder
has been inscribed upon this dagger.
I cannot tell you what it felt like,
it was total freedom.
Back in the day, it would be,
sorry, you know, I would've dropped it.
Here, I was clutching it, looking at it.
There were other changes that were not so good.
By now, the section that we know what we call it,
that material really had stiffened up.
It was like wearing concrete underpants.
I had a wonderful part in that film,
I adored being in it
but I had a lot of movement to do,
a lot of running about, a lot of strange terrain.
[Finn] Do not want to know what made these tunnels.
Judging by the circumference of the tunnel walls,
there are-- I said I do not
want to know.
And so gradually, towards the end when it became
almost impossible to move in that middle section,
we found ways round it.
Thank goodness for ILM because
we were able to do all sorts of sequences
that I couldn't do wearing the full middle of the suit
and indeed, when I was climbing
up to Ochi's freighter, up that rock face,
that was me but I was wearing only the,
as it were, girdle part of the middle section.
The rest of me, from there down,
was covered in red dots
and for other sequences, it was the same,
when something was impossible,
we took away that bit of the costume,
stuck red dots down my legs as reference for ILM
and they drew in 3PO's missing limbs.
Absolute magic.
First day on The Rise of Skywalker,
it was awful. [laughs]
I was delighted to be there with the crew
and Daisy and Oscar and John and, of course, J.J.
But boy, what a set.
Because the sand tunnels was a very enclosed set,
it had to be, it was a tunnel, a tube
and it was very hot.
It was hot because we had lamps in there
and also, there was atmosphere,
a bit of smoke to make the lighting look really cool,
as opposed to the hotness that it was.
And it was real perspiration time
and one of the magic things they done
was to give me a little vest, very thin material,
but onto it was sewn fine plastic tubes,
little thin plastic tubes that circled,
like an underfloor heating system,
except it wasn't a heating system,
it was the cooling system.
And what happened at the end of a take
was they would attach me to a black bag, very smart,
but in it was water with lumps of ice
and in the bag, onto a tube, was a circulating fan
so it would shoot water up the tubes,
down the tubes, up the tubes,
all around my chest and back.
It was fantastic, it was immediate.
It felt like a heart attack, it was really weird.
But it did keep me cool
but I could only take it for so long,
Yeah, I'm cool now.
I'm cool, totally cool.
Disconnect me. [laughs]
[Poe] Babu?
Yep, droid is ready.
[electrical bang]
For sitting there in that terrifying scene
with the red eyes,
sitting down in that costume is not possible
so we went for the full bikini section of that,
yes, I was wearing this amazing codpiece,
the rest of the suit was cut away so I could sit down.
And you don't see it,
you don't expect to see it, you don't see it.
Maybe if you can freeze-frame and come in,
zoom in if you're that serious about it,
you'll see the difference
but of course, we also had the red eyes.
When I first looked in a mirror
at me, 3PO, with red eyes,
I got to tell you, it was quite shocking.
'Cause he'd never been like that before.
We had eyes of different
intensities.
Sometimes, they were actually operated by radio
from the electric system over here.
That if I was in very bright light, ambient light,
then they would need to make the eyes bright,
so they were show up.
If it was in a gloomy cave, for instance,
they would dim the lights so they weren't too piercing.
So all the time, you've got a crew behind me
adding to 3PO's value as a character.
Quite amazing.
But the teamwork that goes into making bits of 3PO work
on the whole for the better,
can I actually take this moment to say, thank you guys.
Thank you, all of you.
Did we lose 'em?
Looks like it.
Excellent job, sir!
[laser fires]
Terrible job, sir!
I love remembering how Tracey Eddon
played C-3PO falling off Jabba's barge
and then how she played Princess Leia
sweeping across to the little skiff over there and
stunt people actually are undervalued, frankly.
I wanted there to be an Academy Award for them
but it hasn't happened yet.
Films like the ones we're talking about
really depend on the stunt people so many time,
time after time.
So I was
very, very glad to have a stunt person of my own.
Michael Byrch, he was my stunt double.
But when we were talking about the
wonderful speeder sequence in Jordan,
in Pasaana, the desert,
magic.
There were sequences that were shot
on very fast running vehicles
and Mike was there being 3PO in the distance
running at so many miles an hour
and in case the car crashed,
he was not allowed to be roped on,
he had to have the ability to free fall off the vehicle.
Can you imagine standing upright in a crazy rubber suit
in the wind and the heat and everything
at so many miles an hour
wondering if you're gonna die?
Whereas I, when I was on the real rig,
which was like this wonderful fairground ride
that kind of shot us around,
it was just, it was brilliant fun.
But there I was, wired on to various bits of the scenery,
so that with a certain latitude,
I couldn't go further than that
so I was totally safe.
I had the best time ever.
What are you doing there, 3PO?
Taking one last look, sir,
at my friends.
There we are, thanks for listening to me
talking about C-3PO, not so much today as a character
but as a costume and of course,
as such, I'm the actor who wears
something that's been created and maintained
and fixed and fiddled with and cared for and loved
by a whole team of people
who have made this character look so good
and so convincing in all the Star Wars films
and both I and 3PO are saying,
really guys and gals,
thank you.
Starring: Anthony Daniels
Every Overwatch Hero Explained by Blizzard’s Michael Chu
Every Video Game in 'Ready Player One' Explained By Author Ernest Cline
Every Dinosaur In 'Jurassic Park' Series Explained
Every Hero in 'Avengers: Infinity War'
Every Spider-Man Movie & TV Show Explained By Kevin Smith
Every Character in Mortal Kombat 11 Explained
Every Legend in Apex Legends Explained
Every Toy in Toy Story Explained
Every Major Movie Reference in Stranger Things
Every Rainbow Six Siege Operator Explained
Every Top Toy of the Last 50 Years
Every Stormtrooper in Star Wars Explained
Every Starfighter in Star Wars Explained
Every Top Video Game in the Last 40 Years
Every Dog Breed Explained (Part 1)
Every Star Trek: Picard Easter Egg Explained
Every C-3PO Costume Explained By Anthony Daniels
Every Dog Breed Explained (Part 2)
Every Hidden Reference to Future Pixar Movies Explained
Every Batmobiles From Movies & TV Explained
Every Job Homer Simpson's Ever Had
Every Transformers Generation Explained
Every Job Homer Simpson's Ever Had (Part 2)
Every Style of Beer Explained
Every Mortal Kombat 11 Ultimate Friendship Explained By Ed Boon
Every Starfighter From Star Wars: Squadrons Explained
Every Superpower From Zack Snyder's Justice League Explained
Every Ape in Planet of the Apes Explained
Every James Bond Car Explained
Trauma Surgeon Breaks Down Every Home Alone Injury
Every Batman Movie Villain Explained
Food Scientist Breaks Down Every Plant-Based Milk
Marvel vs Norse Mythology: Every Norse God in Thor Explained
How PlayStation 5 Was Built
Every Spider-Man Suit From Marvel's Spider-Man: Miles Morales & Spider-Man Explained
Every Champion in League of Legends Explained
Every Jedi & Sith From Star Wars Explained By Kevin Smith
Every Bone in the Human Body Explained Using John Wick
Fighter Pilot Breaks Down Every Fighter Jet From Top Gun: Maverick