David Paul (actor)
David Paul (March 8, 1957 – March 6, 2020) was an American actor and bodybuilder. He and his twin brother Peter were born in Hartford, Connecticut and grew up in Rhode Island. The death of David was confirmed by his twin brother Peter. David died just two days before the twins' 63rd birthday.
David Paul | |
---|---|
Born | Hartford, Connecticut, U.S. | March 8, 1957
Died | March 6, 2020 62) | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Background and Film Career
Paul and his fraternal twin, Peter Paul, were high school wrestlers and bodybuilders who opened a gym in Narragansett, Rhode Island in the 1970s. They were encouraged to move to California in 1979 to see if they could break into show business and have success attained by bodybuilders-turned-actors including Arnold Schwarzenegger and Lou Ferrigno. The brothers were together known as "The Barbarian Brothers" and "The Barbarians" and were branded as "The World's Strongest Twins"[1] in personal appearances.
In 1982, David and Peter Paul were featured in magazines including Powerlifting USA, Muscle & Fitness, and a high-profile, 8-page Sports Illustrated article [2] along with a segment on Showtime's What’s Up, America?. This led to David and Peter Paul's role in 1983's D.C. Cab as muscular cab drivers appearing with Mr. T. They appeared in supporting cameo roles in films including films such as The Flamingo Kid playing beefy lifeguards and on television in an episode of Knight Rider entitled "Knight of the Drones"[3] and a 1985 episode of Hollywood Beat alongside star John Matuszak.
The Pauls would continue to do live appearances, TV show interviews, and were featured in a July 1986 photo spread in Playgirl magazine.[4] The pair wrote a comedic spec script about their lives called Better Than One and shopped it to Cannon Films' Menahem Golan in 1986.[5] Golan signed the pair to a two-picture deal but decided to place the pair in a film called The Barbarians, released in 1987 trying to cash in on the success of Schwarzenegger's Conan the Barbarian franchise. Neither the sequel nor the spec script for Better Than One were ever produced and the pair's contract with Cannon was considered completed. The pair made news by being the first nominees to attend the Golden Raspberry Awards in which they were nominated for a Razzie in the category of "Worst New Star" though losing to David Mendenhall for his work in Over the Top.[6]
Motion Picture Corporation of America signed the brothers to a two-picture deal which they completed with 1990's Think Big and 1992's Double Trouble. David and Peter were filmed for a small part in Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers in which they are in a bodybuilding public gym milieu being interviewed by Robert Downey Jr.'s character; but the scene was edited out. Their part can be found on the director's cut of the film, in which director Stone says of the excised Barbarian Brothers scene, "They're overacting; and it's my fault."[7]
The brothers' father, Leonard Paul, proposed a Barbarians theme park in 1993 that was never built.[8] The last feature film featuring the Barbarians characters was the 1994 comedy Twin Sitters. The soundtrack featured three songs by the brothers and was later released as a CD soundtrack in 2006 by Worldblend Music. The Pauls would spend the next part of their careers doing personal appearances and trying to make it in the music industry. They rapped at clubs and were featured on The Midnight Hour, a music-centric talk show with Steve Dahl and Gary Meier. They found their biggest success on live stages in Hawaii.
The pair continued to make personal appearances including a 2006 appearance at the Alamo Drafthouse in support of repertory screenings of The Barbarians and Double Trouble in Austin. The pair signed on to make a film titled Souled Out with Gary Busey in 2004, which was pre-sold in the international film marketplace, but never completed.
David Paul relocated to Rhode Island where his last film would be in the 2013 video, Faith Street Corner Tavern, which featured David and Peter as themselves and focused on Peter’s mental health issues. David Paul would become a furniture maker and a photographer before passing away in March of 2020.
Bodybuilding
David and Peter Paul were high-profile fitness celebrities despite never being part of the International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness (IFBB). They opened P (Paul) & D's (David's) House of Iron in 1977 in Rhode Island. They met fitness celebrities there, including Pete Grymkowski and Joe Weider, and received encouragement to move to California for better opportunities. Weider is sometimes given credit for nicknaming them "Barbarians" because of their wild fitness regime.[9] They were often referred as "outlaws" and "bad boys" of bodybuilding promoting counter-conventional, freestyle weight training practices that some said were barbaric.[10]
In California, they were regulars at Gold's Gym in Venice and demonstrated unusual techniques including David's call to his brother, "Hit me.... hit me" which was followed by slapping to psych up David. Among David's feats of strength was a 500-pound reverse-grip bench press, which he demonstrated on the 1980s television series Hour Magazine with Gary Collins[11] and a 550-pound feat on a Japanese television series. They created a workout videotape, Barbarian Psyche Tape, that was sold in Muscle & Fitness magazine.
Their diet was said to comprise 36 eggs daily, dozens of amino acid capsules, and chocolate milk.[12] They made personal appearances at various gyms, bodybuilding competitions as celebrity judges or autograph sessions, and at high profile locations including Disneyland. Articles in the Los Angeles Times, Sports Illustrated, and a wide array of bodybuilding magazine paved the way for their acting careers. Gold's Gym sent them around North America in select grand openings for new locations. In later years, David would photograph bodybuilding contests and demonstrations as part of his photography pursuits.
Selected filmography
Film | Role | Year |
---|---|---|
D.C. Cab | Buzzy (as David Barbarian) | 1983 |
The Flamingo Kid | Turk (uncredited) | 1984 |
The Barbarians | Gore | 1987 |
The Road Raiders | Black | 1989 |
Ghost Writer | Marco | 1989 |
Think Big | Victor | 1990 |
Double Trouble | David Jade | 1992 |
Natural Born Killers | Norman Hun (scenes deleted) | 1994 |
Twin Sitters | David Falcone | 1994 |
Souled Out | Ace Stevens | 2004/5 - Not produced |
Faith Street Corner Tavern | Himself | 2013 |
References
- "World's Strongest Twins to give demonstration," News Chronicle (Thousands Oaks, CA), 29 October 1982, p. 13; Whitbeck, Doris. "Twin Ambitions Drive Them." Hartford Courant, 14 October 1983, p. E16; and "Meet the Barbarian Brothers," News Chronicle (Thousands Oaks, CA), 28 October 1982, p. 16.
- Ottum, Bob. "Honin' The Barbarians," Sports Illustrated, 28 June 1982 accessed online at https://vault.si.com/vault/1982/06/28/honin-the-barbarians
- "PopCult Magazine/Barbarian Brothers". Archived from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved October 23, 2013.
- ”Celebrity Centerfold: The Barbarian Brothers.” Playgirl, July 1986, p. 61-2.
- Scott, Vernon. "Beefy Twins Make Sly Look Shy." Miami Herald, 24 June 1987, p. 1.
- "Fruits of Cosby's Labor: Raspberry Award," The Press (Atlantic City, NJ), 12 April 1988, p. 8.
- ""Natural Born Killers Director's Cut" Now Available In Its Original Unrated Version On Blu-Ray From Warner Home Video October 13". Warner Brothers. Archived from the original on June 20, 2018. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
- Swift, Mike. "Latest Idea for downtown puts barbarians at gate of theme park." Hartford Courant, p. 21.
- "Bodybuilding world mourns loss of one half of the "Barbarian Brothers." South China Daily Post, 10 March 2020 accessed online at https://www.scmp.com/sport/outdoor/health-fitness/article/3074357/bodybuilding-world-mourns-loss-one-half-barbarian
- Ross, Bob. "Body-builders featured in film." Tampa Tribune. 31 July 1987, p. F1.
- David Paul claimed that the feat was a world record. see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajgldCPgZdE
- Whitbeck, Doris. "Twin Ambitions Drive Them." Hartford Courant, 14 October 1983, p. E1.