With the 3rd Annual Fred Ward Memorial Tribute free night at the movies featuring “Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins” at The Cliftex Theatre in Clifton Oct. 15, the Bosque Film Society spotlights the life & career of the actor known as Freddie Joe Ward to Valley Mills High School’s Class of 1960
By SIMONE WICHERS-VOSS
Bosque Film Society Founding Board Member
For more than three decades, actor Fred Ward worked with the biggest names in Hollywood and appeared in box office hits and award-winning films. When he passed away in 2022 at the age of 79, tributes poured in from throughout the entertainment industry and around the world.
But as well-known as his face became during his Hollywood career, few seem to remember his name. And shockingly, Ward became one the glaring omissions from the 95th Annual Academy Awards In Memoriam segment in 2023. The In Memoriam segment paid tribute to filmmakers and actors with a touching segment as Lenny Kravitz took to the stage to play a tear-jerking version of “Calling All Angels” as names and images of celebrated filmmakers swiped across the screen.
Arguable leaving a significant mark on Hollywood, Ward’s lengthy and notable career included a surprising number of major award contenders. Although he was never nominated for an Oscar himself, Ward starred in The Right Stuff (1983), which was nominated for eight Oscars and won four of them, and The Player (1992), which was nominated for three Academy Awards, along with playing a major role in Escape from Alcatraz (1979), which has become one of the greatest prison break movies of all time.
Interestingly, due to a lack of personal historical background available, Ward arrived in Hollywood seemingly out of nowhere. In fact, Freddie Joe Ward established a strong connection to Bosque County in his youth that has remained mostly hidden from the public eye, until now. For several local residents, Ward’s passing became a personal loss connected through friendships from years ago. Though not widely known, Freddie Joe Ward lived in Bosque County in the 1950s and graduated from Valley Mills High School in the Class of 1960.
Because of that local connection, the Bosque Film Society will be presenting the Third Annual Fred Ward Memorial Tribute Tuesday, Oct. 15 at 7 p.m. at the historic Cliftex Theatre in Clifton. The free night at the movies features Ward starring as “Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins” – the 1985 action-adventure film directed by Guy Williams. With free admission on a first-come, first-serve basis, the box office will open at 6 p.m., and the Cliftex Theatre concessions will be open and available at regular prices.
At the time the film was released, Ward appeared poised for major stardom when he took on his first lead role in the action movie styled as an American version of James Bond. Based on The Destroyer pulp paperback series by Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir, the film also stars Joel Grey, J. A. Preston, Wilford Brimley and Kate Mulgrew. Even though Ward had been signed for three pictures, the movie failed at the box office and the sequels never materialized.
Ward plays Sam Makin, a tough Brooklyn, New York City street cop and Vietnam-era Marine Corps veteran unwillingly recruited as an assassin for a secret United States organization, CURE. Recruited through a bizarre method, Makin’s death is faked and he is given a new face and a new name. Rechristened “Remo Williams” after the name and location of the manufacturer of the bedpan in Makin’s hospital room, his face is surgically altered and he is trained to be a human killing machine by his aged, derisive and impassive Korean martial arts master Chiun.
“Fred Ward’s contribution to film merits local celebration and honor,” Bosque Film Society founder and board president Brett Voss said. “Long before I moved to Bosque County, I was a fan of Fred Ward and the films he was in. He was a man’s man, and so were the characters he played. It’s hard to imagine that the Academy Awards could have overlooked someone like Fred Ward when putting together their In Memoriam in 2023. But then again, it wasn’t the first time people overlooked his contributions to film. But we hope to do something about that.”
During the memorial tribute, Bosque Film Society historian and founding board member Bryan Davis along with Voss will present information regarding Ward’s career. Along with an introduction of the movie, the BFS will share information on a documentary being developed in association with DigiWerke Media and Southern Cross Creative and produced by Cool Cowdawg Productions. Entitled “Out of Nowhere: The Untold Story of Freddie Joe Ward,” the documentary includes the little-known fact that the acclaimed actor spent his formative years growing up in Valley Mills with an aunt and uncle.
The Bosque Film Society first began exploring ways to honor Ward over three years ago, hoping to bring the actor – still living at the time – back home to Bosque County. Davis, who also grew up in Valley Mills and knew of Ward’s background, spoke to fellow board members about Ward’s local roots. Like so many others, while board members admired Ward’s film work, they had no idea he once called Bosque County home.
With that began the attempt to honor the local celebrity by producing a documentary about his years growing up in Valley Mills with hopes of Ward possibly being present for a retrospective of his film career. Those plans changed in May 2022 when Ward died in San Diego. But the BFS decided to move forward with their documentary plans.
Davis spent several months researching and writing the script for the documentary on Ward’s career, completing it last October. Taking the research and story Davis wrote, Voss developed it into a screenplay for an hour-long documentary. Filming interviews with six of Ward’s former Valley Mills school mates conducted by Voss, Davis and fellow BFS founding board member and filmmaker-in-residence William Godby commenced shortly after. The trio expect to complete the documentary by the end of 2024.
“We wanted to do this right,” said Voss. “We want this to be something Fred’s family and old friends will be proud of in the way it honors his memory. It would have been great to have it ready to present at the first memorial tribute double feature. But there are still some very key and special moving parts we did not want to sacrifice for the sake of completing it now.”
Like Ward, Davis grew up in Valley Mills and would return home to serve as editor of the local newspaper for two years in the early 1980s. He became aware of Ward’s career as it reached mainstream success, and Davis personally knew the aunt and uncle who raised the 13-year-old Ward after his mother died.
“His aunt was very proud of Fred and his career,” Davis said. “Everyone knows Fred Ward’s face, but not so much the name – even around here.”
Several recall Ward wanting to be an actor one day, and most had little doubt his dreams would come true. In addition to former school mates and family, the actor’s son Django Ward and actor Kevin Bacon, who appeared alongside Ward in the cult classic “Tremors” (1990), have been approached to participate in the documentary.
Born in San Diego, California on Dec. 30, 1942, Freddie Joe’s mother, the former Juanita Flemister, was from Texas, while his father, Fred Frazier Ward was from Tennessee. The two were married in Texas in 1947, but Ward’s father was troubled, and the couple split when their son was three. Ward spent time with his Texas family while his mother found work and remarried in Louisiana. The couple returned to California with Ward and added a daughter to the family.
In 1955, Ward’s mother died at the age of 36 leaving him an orphan at 13. His mother’s sister and family, Jack and Oleta Martin of Valley Mills, took in their nephew to raise him with their own two children, Perry and Sherry. In Valley Mills, Ward was known for being handsome and well-dressed, a good athlete, hard-working and popular with his classmates.
When Ward graduated from Valley Mills High School in 1960, he enlisted with the U.S. Air Force, where he spent three years before landing a variety of jobs around the country from cook to lumberjack. He attended acting school in New York City and eventually ended up in Italy, where he dubbed Italian films into English. Ward wound up in Hollywood in the early 1970s and began landing small roles in film, married and had his son before his breakout role co-starring with Clint Eastwood in the 1979 hit, “Escape from Alcatraz.”
Following that major release feature film, Ward’s career took off with supporting roles in a series of high profile, big budget films alongside Hollywood’s biggest stars. He would be at the top of his professional game throughout the 1980s and mid-1990s.
In 1983, Ward appeared in the ensemble film that remains one of his most acclaimed performances, that of doomed astronaut Gus Grissom in “The Right Stuff.” Grissom was one of the original NASA Mercury Seven astronauts in the first days of the US space program. The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, winning four Oscars.
That same year, Ward played opposite Meryl Streep in “Silkwood.” In 1984, he had a co-starring role in the World War II drama “Swing Shift,” with Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell before getting the lead in “Remo Williams.”
Despite the failure of “Remo Williams,” Ward’s career kept flourishing, and he was featured in several big films, including the 1988 comedy “Big Business” starring Lily Tomlin and Bette Midler. Then in 1990, Ward landed the role for which is perhaps most recognized, Earl Bassett, in the cult classic monster horror comedy, “Tremors,” co-starring Kevin Bacon and country music star Reba McEntire.
Next up for Ward would be his starring turn as the writer Henry Miller in the controversial 1990 film, “Henry and June,” co-starring Uma Thurman. The movie was the first to be given the NC-17 rating, or no one under 17 admitted.
Over the next decade, Ward appeared in several popular big-budget films including “Bob Roberts” and “The Player” in 1992, “Short Cuts” in 1993, “Naked Gun 33 1/3” in 1994, “Joe Dirt” and “Corky Romano” in 2001,” and his last big screen success, “Sweet Home Alabama” playing Reese Witherspoon’s father. Most of Ward’s work during the last two decades of his life was in television. His last big screen credit came in the 2013 cop buddy movie “2 Guns,” starring Denzel Washington and Mark Walberg.
“But for me, the story I love most is how Fred survived a tough childhood to find a loving home with his Texas family. It was those Valley Mills roots, I believe, that set Fred Ward on the right path to stability and success in Hollywood.”
The Bosque Film Society will continue to honor Ward and work to ensure his memory, his face and above all his name remains alive and remembered through the documentary film project and future plans to introduce and reacquaint audiences to Ward’s talents through his memorable film roles.
Screenings already planned in the near future will be “Southern Comfort” (1981) with Powers Boothe and Keith Carradine, “Uncommon Valor” (1983) with Gene Hackman and Patrick Swayze, Robert Altman’s “The Player” (1992) featuring an all-star ensemble cast, and Ward in the starring role of the cult sci-fi western film “Timerider: The Adventures of Kyle Swann” (1982) written, produced and music by Michael Nesmith of The Monkees. And of course, Davis and Voss plan to premiere their documentary “Out of Nowhere: The Untold Story of Freddie Joe Ward” in The Cliftex Theatre as a part of the 4th Annual Fred Ward Memorial Tribute in 2025.
“I’m sorry that we didn’t get started sooner making Fred Ward’s local connections known,” said Davis of the documentary project. “I wish he were here to see how his friends back home remember him and were proud of his career and success.”
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