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Stuart Freeborn dies at 98; ‘Star Wars’ makeup artist

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It was no accident that British makeup artist Stuart Freeborn resembled his most famous movie creation — Yoda, the wrinkled, ancient sage from the “Star Wars” films.

“I looked at myself in the mirror and decided that I was comic, with all these little knobbles. So I built myself in,” he later said, and added a “highly intelligent” flourish by incorporating Albert Einstein’s furrowed face.

A self-taught wizard of greasepaint and gadgets, Freeborn crafted the diminutive Yoda partly out of wire, electronic circuits and bubbly latex skin. He also devised such “Star Wars” creatures as Chewbacca and the Ewoks and built Jabba the Hutt out of a blubbery mass of latex.

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Freeborn, whose pioneering career spanned seven decades, died Tuesday in London from ailments related to old age. He was 98.

In a statement from LucasFilm confirming Freeborn’s death, filmmaker George Lucas said, “Stuart was already a makeup legend when he started on ‘Star Wars.’ ”

“He brought with him not only decades of experience, but boundless creative energy,” Lucas said. “His artistry and craftsmanship will live on forever in the characters he created.”

In the 1960s, Freeborn’s skill was showcased in two Stanley Kubrick films. The makeup artist came up with the three faces of Peter Sellers for the satire “Dr. Strangelove” and the ape-like creatures in “The Dawn of Man” sequence for “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

The six months Freeborn expected to spend on “2001” stretched to two years and resulted in groundbreaking innovations. They included a technique that enabled simian-suited actors to use their facial muscles to move their masks.

The film “catapulted Stuart from ‘distinguished artist’ to ‘deity,’ ” Nick Maley, a former makeup assistant, wrote in an online tribute. “It was the movie that would single him out as a true innovator.”

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Michael Key, editor in chief of Make-Up Artist Magazine, called Freeborn “one of the greatest pioneers of movie makeup.”

“He invented many of the techniques that are standard today,” Key told The Times on Friday. “One reason for Stuart’s great success was that he was a superb problem-solver.”

Born Sept. 5, 1914, in London, Freeborn was the son of an insurance broker who pressured him to go into insurance. Nurtured by “thrice weekly escapes to the picture palace,” young Stuart aspired to a career in movie makeup, he said last year in a BBC documentary.

At 21, he broke into the movie business by impersonating Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie.

The Times of London had reported that Selassie had been seen driving a car around London but it was actually Freeborn in makeup, according to Maley. When the escapade received news coverage, Freeborn sent the reports along with photographs of his work to Britain’s newly established Denham Studios, which hired him.

His first on-screen makeup was for 1936’s “Wings of the Morning,” the first British film shot in full Technicolor.

When World War II broke out, the newly married Freeborn trained to be a fighter pilot but was waylaid by serious illness. He turned to studying engineering and design, and worked on early radio controls for the military.

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After the war, Freeborn gained notoriety, as well as accolades, for his work on the 1948 film “Oliver Twist.”

Because producers wanted to remain true to the “cartoon depictions” in the book by Charles Dickens, Freeborn designed an exaggerated nose for Sir Alec Guinness, who portrayed the Jewish character Fagin in the film.

The oversized nose led to protests against the movie, and as recently as last year, Freeborn expressed regret that something he created also offended people. He also would mention that he was “part Jewish.”

While making the 1957 film “The Bridge on the River Kwai,” Freeborn nearly died when a car in which he and crew members were riding was struck by a truck in Sri Lanka. Thrown from the car, he was the only survivor.

Freeborn’s dozens of movie projects including transforming Tony Randall into Hercule Poirot for “The Alphabet Murders” (1965) and concocting fiberglass and foam-rubber dogs covered in fake fur for “The Omen” (1976). He also worked on four “Superman” films, beginning in 1978.

When a “young fellow” showed up at Freeborn’s workplace, Freeborn later said he thought: “He’s got a lot of nerve.”

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He introduced himself as George Lucas and said, “I’ve written a script for a film called ‘Star Wars,’” Freeborn told the BBC last year. “He was so genuine, I believed in him. I thought I’ll do what I can for him.”

Freeborn’s wife, Kay, and son, Graham, were makeup artists who worked with him on “Star Wars” and other films. Graham’s daughter, Michelle Freeborn, also is a makeup artist.

His wife died in 2012. He also outlived Graham and his two other sons, Roger and Ray.

Freeborn is survived by several grandchildren and a number of great-grandchildren.

valerie.nelson@latimes

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