Herbert Coward

Herbert Lee "Cowboy" Coward (born August 21, 1938) is an American actor. He played one of two sadistic mountain men in John Boorman's 1972 film Deliverance (with Bill McKinney), and several of his lines became infamous in pop culture.

Herbert Lee Coward
Born
Herbert Lee Coward

(1938-08-21) August 21, 1938
OccupationActor
Years active1972-2013

Early life

Coward was born in 1938 in Haywood County, North Carolina, the ninth child of Fred and Moody Parker Coward.[1] His mother died at a young age, so he left school and began working a variety of itinerant labor jobs to help support the family, including at an orchard and operating heavy machinery. After getting married in the early 1960s and briefly living in Raleigh, he moved back to the mountains with his wife when she became homesick.

Career

After returning home, a friend offered Coward a job as an outlaw gunfighter at an Old West ghost town amusement park in Maggie Valley. While performing at the park with an assortment of acting school students working over their summer break, locals, and professional actors, an accident with a prop pistol resulted in two of his front teeth being knocked out.[2] Known actors, including Dan Blocker who starred on Bonanza, performed at the park, and one summer, based on his appearances on Gunsmoke, Burt Reynolds appeared there.[3][4] During this time, Reynolds and Coward became friends.[1] In 1970, when Deliverance began filming in Rabun County, Georgia, Blocker mentioned to producers that Coward would be an ideal person for a role in the film; they were unable to locate him, so wrote his name on a potential cast board as "Cowboy Coward". Reynolds saw this and called Coward to recruit him for the role, telling the producers "...he can’t write or anything, but I’m telling ya, if we can get him, we got something special. Let me bring him in. His name’s Cowboy, and he’ll just talk to you, and you see if you like him."[1] Coward was subsequently cast as "Toothless Man", one of the two sadistic mountain men encountered in the woods by Reynolds and the film's other protagonists. Like the others in the film, Coward performed his own stunts, including being lowered off a cliff into a river.[2] Upon the film's release he became infamous for his often repeated line "He’s got a real pretty mouth, ain’t he?"[1]

After appearing in the film, Coward worked at the BASF factory in Asheville for 27 years. He also appeared in one other film, Ghost Town: The Movie (2007), and on television's Hillbilly Blood in 2013.[2]

Legacy

Coward's performance and physical appearance in Deliverance has provided inspiration for other media, most notably the main character from Primus video My Name Is Mud, which also sampled lines from the film.[5]

gollark: What does it do now and what do you want it to do?
gollark: It's great for managing Discord alts.
gollark: And it really *shouldn't* be so permissive, but it is because it got stuck that way.
gollark: It can do basically no styling, so i don't see how that's relevant.
gollark: CSS is great in that it can do some tasks *really well*, but horrible in that when you step slightly outside of the range the people who wrote the standards considered everything breaks.

References

  1. Vaillancourt, Cory (September 18, 2009). ""Deliverance" villain Cowboy Coward is not what he seems". Smoky Mountain News. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  2. Matheny, Jim (August 31, 2017). "Deliverance actor quite a character 45 years later". wbir.com. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  3. Appalachian Journal. 26: 18. 1998. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. Kalsi, Dan (September 7, 2018). "WNC native who played villain in 'Deliverance' remembers longtime friend, Burt Reynolds". Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  5. Hollingsworth, Chauncey (July 27, 1995). "TALENT-LADEN PRIMUS STRIKES AN ADMIRABLY GOOFY POSE AT UIC PAVILION". Retrieved 16 December 2019.
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