STUNT
MAN, RACER, BIKE COLLECTOR, LEGEND
If you know your way around the
streets of North Hollywood, chances are you can find
11027 Weddington. There's no real sign on the front of
the white one-story building, but there is a an old
burned-out neon logo hanging in a window that says "Bud." For all I know, it might have been part
of a Budweiser sign at one time.
This is your only clue that you've
found Bud Ekins' shop.
For those who don't know, sit down
and learn something. Bud Ekins was a great movie stunt
man for over three decades, a fantastic racer who
dominated in the desert when people rode real bikes, and
a collector/restorer of old bikes.
Bud's claim to fame is that he's
the man who performed the stunt that many credit to Steve
McQueen in the movie, The Great Escape. Yep, the Triumph
that sailed over the fence of the German prisoner-of-war
camp, was piloted by Bud, not Steve McQueen. We talked
with Bud about that incredible jump:
Bud: It was the first thousand
dollar stunt ever in the movie industry. It was done in
1962, and that was considered huge money back in those
days.
Rick: Who's idea was it to have you
do the stunt?
Bud: McQueen. We were friends and
he wanted me to do it.
Rick : How long was the actual jump
and how high was it?
Bud: It was about 12 feet from the
bottom of the wheels to the ground, and about 65 feet
long.
Rick: Tell us about the bike.
Bud: It was a '62 Triumph; nothing
special. Nothing was done to the suspension.
Rick: You jumped a stocker?
Bud: Yes. Girlings in the back, no
sidecars springs in the forks, nothing. It was completely
stock other than a lighter earlier model front wheel.
Rick: You jumped over 65 feet on a
400 pound motorcycle! What was the landing like?
Bud: Hard! It just went bang and
then it bounced.
Rick: Did you land on a down-hill
grade to ease the landing, like a ski jumper?
Bud: Nope. I landed on an uphill.
You gotta think about it a bit. I launch off the ground
and my bike is 12 feet in the air. By landing on an
upgrade, my bike didn't have to fall 12 feet; the actual
drop was about six feet, and that's quite a difference. I
made the jump on the first pass. I jumped. They filmed
it. That was that.
Rick: Actually, you have two of the
most famous bike stunts ever done in the movies. You laid
that bike down in Bullit, right in front of the sliding
truck.
Bud: That was easy. But most people
don't know that I did the driving in that Mustang, too.
Rick: How and when did you start
stunt work?
Bud: McQueen wanted me to double
for him. For that Great Escape jump, they just bleached
my hair and cut it like his. I was a good five inches
taller than Steve, but when you're wearing the same
clothes and you have the same kind of build and hair
style, it works.
Rick: You had a background in
racing, obviously, having won most of the great desert
races, but did you ever have any serious injuries doing
stunt work?
Bud: Nah. Twisted my wrist or ankle
a few times. That was it.
Rick: Were there any stunts that
really scared you before you had to do them?
Bud: Most of them. Davey Sharp once
said to me: "Any S.O.B. who gets hurt doing stunts
is stupid!" I don't think he ever got hurt.
Rick: Have you ever turned a stunt
down?
Bud: Yeah. Some of 'em were even
too stupid to consider. One of them I passed, and the guy
who tried it got killed and the other guy who tried it
after him got maimed bad.
Rick: Why does this shop exist? It
doesn't look like you're exactly scrambling for business.
Bud: I sold my motorcycle business
in 1972 and worked in movie stunt stuff up until about
two years ago. I get a pension from that movie work now.
I opened up this place to help me fiddle around with my
hobby, messing around with old motorcycles. I've been
into old bikes since 1950. I don't even try to make any
money here at all.
Rick: How did you get into racing?
Bud: By cow trailing up in the
hills. That's what people did in those days. Then one day
the people I rode with said: "Let's go ride a Hare
and Hound." I asked what that was and they said it
was a desert race, so I started riding desert races.
Rick: You have this shop here now,
and pretty much do what you want to do ...
Bud: It's usually nothing.
Rick: If a customer walks in and
ask you to restore a bike for him, will you do it?
Bud: Nope.
Rick: Do you do any business at all
out of here?
Bud: Yes, but only as favors to
people. For example, if they need something I've got, and
I've got enough of the thing, I'll help 'em out.
Rick: So, effectively, this huge
shop is nothing more than a hobby?
Bud: It's just a place to hang
around.
Rick: Nothing wrong with that.
Bud: I'm here every day, seven days
a week, but only about five or six hours a day.
(Editor's note: during the day I
spent at Bud's shop, a number of his friends stopped by,
to swap stories, exchange details on bikes of the past,
and in general, to have a good time.)
Rick: As I look around this shop
loaded with bikes, which ones - street and dirt - would
be your favorites of all time?
Bud: The old Cyclone would be my
street choice, and for the dirt, maybe a twin-piper CZ,
or an early 250 Husky.
Rick: What if you had to ride a
vintage bike from here to Florida, what would you pick?
Bud: A Harley, a '36. Because it
was the best one they ever built. A '36 VL had 80 cubic
inches, a four-speed gearbox, and it would cruise at 80
miles an hour easy. I got one right over there (points to
the corner) that I took to the Great American Race with a
sidecar. They had a choice of a three-speed or a
four-speed, so I put a four-speed in it, so places like
that big climb going to Vegas from Baker, I could pop
that thing back into third to make that ten mile grade.
Well, I got to the top of that
grade before I realized that it was there. I stayed in
fourth the whole climb. Those old antique cars with us,
they were down in second gear, boiling and steaming and
chugging.
Rick: So other than being a great
place to hang around, and maybe a project or two gets
worked on when you feel like it, very little business
gets done here?
Bud: Actually, Mark Anderson here
specializes in restoring early Japanese bikes. He's
really into the late '60s and early '70s Kawasakis.
Mark: We do work on Kawasakis from
'59 up to '72 or so, and some Honda stuff, in addition to
the Kawasakis. Most of the Honda stuff I do is from '59
through '63 or '64. We've even found parts for CBXs and
do a lot on Z1 and Z1-R models. Most of the work is on
the two-stroke triples. It's getting real hard to find
parts for them now.
Rick: It's been said that the
Japanese manufacturers copied most of the ideas of the
British bike builders from the '50s and '60s. Any
comments on that?
Bud: In the beginning they did,
then they got smart real quick and changed all that about
the second year they were building them. The Japanese
built a bike called a Cabdon. It was a dead copy of an
Ariel Red Hunter. Nothing would inter-change, but it was
a ringer of a Red Hunter. If they tried as hard as they
could, they couldn't have picked a worse bike to copy.
Because that Ariel Red Hunter was not a good motorcycle.
That bike, in the late '50s, the parts were
interchangeable with what they built in the '30s! The
design was that ancient. It was an early '30s design.
The cams would wear out in about
300 or 400 miles; they'd get big flat spots in them. They
couldn't have copied anything worse! Then the next bike
they copied was that BSA twin. With a plain main bearing
in it! A 650 cc machine with a plain main bearing in it!
They even had the low pressure oil pump failures the BSA
had.
So they wised up after copying the
two worst motorcycles possible. If they'd copied a
Triumph, they'd have been OK. They got smart quick and
started designing their own stuff.
Rick: Your shop is loaded with
bikes. Are there any you'd like to sell?
Bud: No, I don't want to sell any
more. I had 135 bikes and I'm down to about 20 keepers,
and that's it.
Rick: Hmmm. I see what looks like
75 or 80 bikes in here.
Bud: All that Jap junk doesn't
belong to me. That's Mark's stuff.
Rick: What's in your current
collection?
Bud: I have two G-50 CSRs, and they
were garaged for 25 years. They only made 25 of them.
They're sitting right over there. I've got number 10 and
number 25. I paid $15,000 apiece for them from some guy
who just walked into my place. They're worth about
$25,000 to $30,000 right now.
I've got a 1937 Excelsior Manxman,
which doesn't sound too unusual, except that this one is
a 500 cc, which they only made about three or four a year
for about four years. There's only about 12 that exist.
Over there's a 1915 Indian. That
belongs to a friend of mine who's working on it.
There's a Monark made in New York.
It's about a 1912. It's a twin-cylinder, about a 1200 cc.
As far as I know, it's the only one in the world.
And then there's the '13 Flying
Merkel, and a '12 Emblem Twin and a 1913 Polk and a '12
Emblem Single. Then there's a 1912 Schickle, and I think
there are only two of those in existence. It's a
two-stroke single.
Rick: Did you actively hunt for
these bikes? How did you find them?
Bud: Once I started collecting,
they came to me. People started bringing them in. And
then I bought a lot of them from other collectors.
Rick: Right now, I'm staring at a
virtually priceless collection.
Bud: Well, it was, when I had a 135
of 'em. Once, I had 54 different American-made makes. And
they were all pre-1916.
Rick: Do you ever get a wild hair
and want to put some gas in one of these old classics and
take it out for a ride?
Bud: Oh sure. I used to do it all
the time until a few years ago. They have these old bike
tours, where you get about 75 pre-1916 motorcycles out,
but I haven't ridden 'em lately.
Rick: Most of these bikes here look
startable and capable of being ridden.
Bud: Oh, they'll all run! Every one
of them.
Late in the afternoon, I
reluctantly left Bud's shop. Two or three more of his
friends showed up and were looking forward to a game of
pool. You see, there's a pool table right in the middle
of the shop.
So, the Cheney Matchless that
someone had been working on got covered up.
At Bud's shop, there are no
schedules, no pressures and no real deadlines to meet.
Projects are started when it seems like the right thing
to do, and finished when ... well, when you get around to
it.
In many respects, Bud Ekins has
escaped from the normal day-to-day things that drive so
many of us nuts. He spends his time with his beloved
vintage bikes and treasured friends.
In 1962, he was part of The Great
Escape.
In 1998, he has accomplished the
Great Escape. |