![]() I pulled him out of the car, and he was in my arms when he died, his head fell over. I never stop thinking of those memories." In another interview with James Dean expert Warren Beath, Hickman is quoted as saying "We were about two or three minutes behind him. We had a running joke, I'd call him Little Bastard and he'd call me Big Bastard. If he had lived he might have become a champion driver. I had been teaching him things like how to put a car in a four-wheel drift, but he had plenty of skill of his own. Bill spent some of his earlier days as driver and friend to James Dean, driving Dean's Ford station wagon towing his famed 550 spyder nicknamed “Little Bastard”, and often helping and advising him with his driving technique, he was driving the Ford station wagon and trailer following Dean on the day of his fatal accident and was first on the scene.Ī rare personal quote from Bill on his friendship with Dean: "In those final days, racing was what he cared about most. Hickman played a major role in terms of development and execution in three of the greatest movie car chase sequences of all time.īill Hickman spent most of his career as a stunt driver, and was involved in the now legendary car chase scenes from " Bullitt", " The French Connection" and " The Seven-Ups". ![]() ![]() Stunt driver/actor from the 1950s through to the late 1970s. William "Bill" Hickman ( 25 January 1921 – 24 February 1986).
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