When 'Star Wars' actor evaded police at Oscars
'Star Wars' episodes IV in 1977 clinched 10 Oscars nominations
Anthony Daniel, who famously portrayed C-3PO in Star Wars, was once nearly nabbed by the police at the Oscars.
In his book I Am C-3PO: The Inside Story, the actor revealed he headed to the bar after getting out of his droid suit and leaving the entrance batch of the award ceremony.
“My personal guard reluctantly let me go off by myself. I left him to watch all my stuff, including the rather unappealing badge they’d given me. It looked like some kind of radiation alarm and certainly didn’t go with my smart clothes.”
When Daniels exited the elevator, he found the boot of “a fully weaponised police officer” blocking his path.
However, they thought he was a gate-crasher without the golden suit and wanted to arrest him.
“Time stopped. My future life flashed in front of me. I’d be hand-cuffed, fingerprinted, imprisoned with who-knew-who, my professional life over, left a laughing stock,” Daniel wrote.
Daniel further added the officer's attention diverted to some other place, and he instantly seized the moment.
“Without even looking, I stepped neatly backward [into the elevator] and pushed a button. When he turned around, it was too late for his boot to stop my escape. By the time he’d raced up the stairs to the next level,
I was clinging gratefully to my personal minder and flashing my badge at everyone.”
Meanwhile, Daniels attended the Academy Awards several times with his popular Star Wars outfit.
-
Hailee Steinfeld spills her 'no-phone' rule with husband Josh Allen
-
Bowen Yang gets honest about post SNL life: 'It’s an adjustment'
-
Charlize Theron delivers strong message at 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony
-
Lil Jon reacts to son Nathan Smith's death: 'Devastated'
-
Bianca Censori reveals where she and Kanye West stand on having children together
-
Taylor Swift hypes Olympic athletes in surprise video message
-
Timothy Busfield charged with four counts of child sexual abuse
-
Amy Schumer explains why her sudden photo surge is ‘not a cry for help’