Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Bill Moseley Chop Top Interview Tobe Hooper Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Bill Moseley Chop Top Interview Tobe Hooper Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Bill Moseley Chop Top Interview Tobe Hooper Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Bill Moseley Chop Top Interview Tobe Hooper Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Bill Moseley Chop Top Interview Tobe Hooper

On February 12, 1999 my year-long search for the phenomenal actor who gave me one more reason to love chainsaw movies ended! After viewing Bill Moseley's comments in the guestbook here, I decided to pester him into giving an Interview via email for Arachnia's Den of the Deceived. Not only did he comply, but he complied with kindness (more than can be said for Bruce Campbell. Does this guy really think people would give a damn about him had he not appeared in the Evil Dead Trilogy?).
To the seasoned Horror fan, Mr. Moseley needs no introduction, but for those who aren't familiar with his work, you can catch him in the absolutely amazing Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 as "Chop Top", the loveable maniac who enjoys nothing more than a little head cheese and carving himself up like a turkey. Of course, he's also made notable appearances in other Horror greats such as: Night of the Living Dead '90, Silent Night Deadly Night III, and The Blob. This is by no means his full repetoire, but I could spend all day talking about this man. I'd rather you read the Interview, you've 'read' enough of me at this point :).
Most people will list the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre as being one of their most memorable film experiences ever. Did this factor come into play at all in terms of feeling like you had some big shoes to fill with TCM 2? Or was it viewed amongst cast & crew as being something entirely different and separate from the original concept (which I actually think it ended up being, quite effectively)?
Did the original "chainsaw" make for big shoes to fill for "Saw 2"? Definitely. We were all excited about carrying on the tradition; I think the idea of ":Saw 2" fired up the morale of the cast & crew, but it never overpowered or cowed us. Can you imagine a more FUN job? Tobe Hooper at the helm, Kit Carson at the typewriter, Tom "King of splatter" Savini and his henchmen (Mitch DeVane, john Vulich, Gabe Bartolos, Gino Crognale (sp?), Sean McEnroe (sp?)) there to greet you every morning before dawn with cold glue and rubber appliances? No, you just can't beat fun at the old Chainsaw factory!
In my own personal opinion, the Leatherface we are introduced to in TCM 2 actually surpasses Gunnar Hansen in overall creepiness. Do you have any thoughts on this yourself, or any comments about the transition we saw the leatherface character make from the original film to it's sequel? (He seemed to go from a supressed cross-dresser to 'product of brother and sister sleeping together' chansaw-wielding romantic-freak)
I never worked with Gunnar Hansen,but I loved everything about him in Saw 1, his fretting, his violence, the wide wide turns he made with smoking saw, his authority with the sledge. Bill Johnson was my Bubba, and we bonded like brothers on the set and off. The first nine days on the set for us, we sat in his or my little trailer cubby playing gin rummy. nine days in full makeup and wardrobe, and they NEVER used us! We got to be pretty good friends, and pretty good gin sharps. Bill lived in austin, a "local hire," married, worked as a bartender- you can see him for a second or two in the opening of "D.O.A."- he's the desk cop. anywho, what he did in the radio station with Stretch was one of the creepiest seductions I've ever seen- and man, that boy could really use his tongue! My idea of "Saw 3"- conceived about a week after I'd gotten back to New york City from "Saw 2"- had Leatherface and Stretch married, living in New york, Stretch pushing a bone baby carriage with a baby in a cute little leather mask. Bubba had gotten "discovered" by the artsy fartsy crowd for his "sculptures," the Cook was chef of the best Tex-Mex chili parlour in town, and ChopTop had made it big as a rapper ("he-he-he-head cheese!") after a stint pushing a hot dog cart in Central Park. Whoops, I'm getting off the subject. Bill Johnson gave Bubba soul- and as his older brother, I deep down appreciated that he "turn traitor for a piece of tail."
Along the same lines, what was the basis for the Chop Top character in TCM 2? Is he the same person we were introduced to in the first film (the "hitch-hiker" with an affliction for self-inflicted injuries) or is it another Sawyer brother that's just been locked in the attic until this movie was shot? If in fact, it's the same character, to what extent did you study Edwyn Neal's protrayal of the role? For what it's worth, I think a tremendous job was done on your part in carrying on the same basic character type (i.e. mannerisms, disposition, etc.) if in fact this was the objective.
ChopTop was Hitchhiker's twin brother who'd been fighting for his country in VietNam while Saw 1 was taking place. Thanks to a lucky head wound, courtesy of "a gook with a machete," I got a big payout from Uncle Sam, more than enough to bankroll the family chili business, buy the "Rolling Grille a go go," our cool pickup truck and some gasoline and oil for Bubba's chainsaws. Not only did i come back with a plate in my head, an itchy one at that, I came back with an attitude. Used to be that Drayton, the oldest brother, ran the family. but seeing as how I was bankrolling the operation, I got some big ideas about realizing MY dream, Namland! Vietnam theme park! Hell, we were already living beneath Texas Battleland- Namland would have been a snap to pull off!
Ed Neal rules. I met him at Universal
Studios, LA, when he and the Saw 1 bunch were inducted into the Horror Hall of Fame. What
he did as hitchhiker will forever blow my mind. for me, the first thing I found as Chop
Top (originally named Platehead- but I think there was already a Masters of the Universe
character registered by that name) was that VOICE. then when I came down to austin and
they SHAVED MY HEAD, the twitching began. I was fully willing and able to be a geek for
the two-plus months we shot Saw 2. I had a beautiful girlfriend at the time (the mother of
my now 11-year-old daughter), so I didn't sweat the girls all running in the opposite
direction. Baldness
runs in the family, so I found it cool to be Mr. cueball, knowing (and hoping) that my
hair would indeed grow back.
I worked so many hours a day- four hours of makeup each morning, hour and a half to remove it, hour to and from the set, plus working time-that my brain just melted somewhere along the way. i never BECAME ChopTop off the set- I didn't slash anyone, stomp kittens, etc. but I've always loved him.
One of the things that influenced my opinion of TCM 2 was the fact that it put a different spin on the "damsel in distress" situation. Caroline Williams (Stretch) wasn't the stereotypical "screaming beauty" we've been exposed to in the past (PJ Soles immediately comes to mind). On the contrary, she was brave (but not to the point of being blatantly stupid), tough as nails, and when she screamed, you didn't just feel the hair on the back of your neck stand up, you felt it right in your gut. Now that's a Scream Queen! Was this "new approach" to the woman in danger aspect of the film intentional, or an I just imagining it because Ms. Williams did such a great job with the role? (Also loved her in Leprechaun 4)
Caroline williams was so a blast to work
with. she was a local hire out of Dallas. She told me for for her audition, she ran
screaming into the office where toby and Kit were waiting for her, slammed the door behind
her and piled
up all the furniture in the room against the door! We've been great good friends since Saw
2, live in the same town, still keep working as actors, talk as often as we can. I stay in
touch with tobe and Jim Siedow, too.
I've often wondered, does an actor have to be equally as twisted to do a good job with a slasher role as the people who enjoy watching the performance, or does it only seem that way? I mean, am I wrong in assuming that you must have felt just a little different about yourself, carried yourself a bit differently, after hacking the Hell out of L.G. in the radio station lobby? *laughs* In a nutshell, does it help to be just a little bit looney?
Yes, i am a bit looney. I've always loved
horror films, monsters, dinosaurs, space travel. when I was a kid of 8 or 9, I founded the
Hairy monsters club in my hometown of Barrington, Illinois, still have my membership card!
I loved Famous monster of Filmland, disobeying my parents and sneaking into the library
long after I'd been put to bed to watch Boris Karloff on our black & white TV-
in chicago we had "Shock theater." I loved making faces of sheer terror in the
bathroom mirror. and I always fwelt an obligation when I acted in horror films to give the
audience the real deal, no fake stuff, because as a young horror fan, the real stuff was
what gave me the four-star chills. I guess fear was my first drug of choice- right,
sigmund? I loved throwing snowballs at passing cars, getting them to stop and maybe, gasp,
chase me and my little pals. Making a living being a monster was for me a dream come true!
You just can't beat fun at the old boneyard!
You mentionned when you signed the guestbook here that Mr. Hooper and yourself are
in the midst of discussing a possible comeback for the guy who's plate we'd all love to
lick. Is this for real? Anything you can say about it, is it under wraps, or still just a
vague semblance of an idea? Would Chop Top get the floor to himself or be spazzing it up
once again with Leatherface and the gang? (By the way, I absolutely ADORE Jim Sideow, I
hope he'll make it back for a new installment in the series if there is to be one)
Tobe and I are talking about doing something
together. I just did a Chop Top cameo for his son, Tony's 10-minute digital video called
"the All-American Chainsaw Massacre." ChopTop as an older man, with flashbacks
using a ChopTop lookalike named Tod Bates. Hell, I'm not that old, but Tod was willing to
work for the thrill of it, and I'm getting used to money. I'm not sure what the story will
be with tobe, but I'll keep you posted as things progress. It will focus on ChopTop, or
whatever his name will be to keep us legal and independent. I just got back from Haiti,
and down there i was sketching out some ideas that are fun, scary and very very
weird.
Finally, pant, pant, I just want to say that Jim Siedow is god. He's old as the hills, so
i'm not sure what his future holds in terms of feature films, but I'd love to fly down to
Houston and shoot some home movies of him and wife
Ruth kicking back in their hammocks or lawn chairs or whatever they do down there in
the cactus belt. When I first got to Austin, full of excitement and fear in equal parts,
just seeing Jim walking around the motel was so uplifting, such a psych that it gave me
LOVE for Chop Top and Chainsaw. The only other time I've had that feeling was when I
happened to see Muhammad Ali walking through chicago's O'Hare airport one time. Without
thinking, I gushed, "It's the champ!" He looked up and smiled at me as he
passed. Same feeling seeing Jim Siedow. My heart leaped up. And hell, he's a dirty old man
with some sick jokes and a great sense of humor.
Well, my fingers are bleeding and my morning
coffee's starting to wear off. My kid's still sleeping (day off for Lincoln's Birthday)
and in the distance I hear what may well be a chainsaw laboring through a tree (a human
body?). So I'll say ta-ta, and for all you fans, LICK MY PLATE, YOU DOG DICKS!!!!
Bill Moseley
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