Reggie Bannister is best known as the ice cream vendor extraordinaire from one of horror’s best loved franchises, but his story begins way before he captured the hearts and minds of horror fans around the world. This Long Beach, California native got his big break in show business when he met fledgling director Don Coscarelli in the early 1970s. Coscarelli cast Bannister in his directorial debut, ‘Jim, The World’s Greatest’ and again in his next feature ‘Kenny & Company’. The duo became fast friends and would team for a third time for what would become one of the most memorable and beloved horror films of all time, ‘Phantasm’. In the film, Bannister played “Reggie”, a guitar-playing ice cream man who, over the course of four films, would do battle with the forces of the Tall Man, a fleet of deadly of silver spheres, and other assorted demonic forces.
With a career spanning over forty years, Bannister has solidified himself as a legend in the horror industry and even earned the moniker of “The Hardest Working Man in Horror.” Aside from his successful career as a working actor, he runs a successful production company alongside his wife and is also an accomplished musician who has released six albums and fronts ‘The Reggie Bannister Band.’ As you can see, there is no slowing down the “Regman!”
Knowing that 2009 marks the thirtieth anniversary of ‘Phantasm’, Icon Vs. Icon‘s fearless reporter, Steve Johnson, was able to track down this horror icon for an exclusive interview. In the very in-depth interview, the pair discuss all aspects of Bannister’s very unique career in entertainment, his work with young filmmakers, his take on the state of the horror industry, and of course… all things ‘Phantasm!’
Where did you grow up?
Well, I’m not sure I ever grew up exactly. [laughs] I physically became an adult in Long Beach, California.
How did you first get involved in the film industry?
You are best known for your work in the ‘Phantasm’ series, how did you initially become involved with the project?
I had done Don’s first two pictures with him and we became real fast friends. He obviously saw that I was a chameleon [laughs] and had this range of characterization. One of the things he liked about me personally was that I am a very loyal person. So he wrote this character to be every guy’s guy, every man’s friend, the guy that would throw himself on the flames to the door of hell to save a friend. So we took that character and I took it and we talked it over. I kind of blew it out a little bit and made him kind of a characterization of me. That’s the way Reggie was born in the “Phantasm” series.
What did you think of the script when you first laid your hands on it?
What was the atmosphere on the set like during the filming of ‘Phantasm?’
It was fun. For the most part, working with Don is like working with my brother. It’s pretty cool.
‘Phantasm’ is celebrating it’s thirtieth anniversary this year, when you started that project did you think that we would be sitting here years later discussing the impact that it had on fans around the world?
It seems that you and the rest of the cast developed a real bond over the course of the films. How often do you all get a chance to see each other and is it as much of a brotherhood between the cast as it appears to us looking in?
I think we see each other more now and are in communication with each other more now than we were shortly after we finished any one given film. For example, this is the thirtieth year and we’ve done several reunion convention appearances. That’s been a lot of fun. We were just in Seattle at Crypticon. It’s a lot of fun when we get together. When we’re putting these things together, we connect with each other quite a bit as well. So yeah, I have seen everybody more in the last year than probably ever before. We do stay in touch.
How much input did you have in developing the character of Reggie?
Don wrote the framework for Reg and pretty much let me go crazy with it. That particular character is close to me. It’s been terrific the last four or five years. I have been able to stretch into characters that are so far away from the Reg character. It’s been gratifying as an actor to be able to play characters with dialects and actual accents and stuff like that. I have been able to do that and that’s really been terrific. Different looks, you know. Cut your hair and bleach your hair out, beards. It’s been a lot of fun as an actor the last few years. The Reg character is pretty close to me and I understand him. He’s like putting on an old comfortable sweater. I just got him. I got him where he’s at now. That’s another nice thing about the Reg character. He grew from the ice cream man until he comes to the point where he says “I got it, we’re gonna stick a stake through his goddamn heart.” At that point there’s a big change in the Reg character and of course in the second picture, he builds the four barrel and all bets are off at that point. He just gets badder and badder as he goes, which is a lot of fun. One of my favorite genres is action and Reg gets a lot of action these days. [laughs] It’s fun.
You did much of your stunt work for the film, what was that like for you? Was that intimidating starting out?
No, actually I am a pretty physical guy and I always have been. I always liked hitting the gym. I did that for years and years. I played basketball. I started playing park ball, which is pretty physical. You never know who you are going to play. They knock you on your ass. There’s no rules or no refs out there. [laughs] So, I played a lot of park basketball for years, and years, and years. In fact, I played a little bit this last year, just fooling around a bit. I live in the mountains now, so I do a lot of hiking around. Everything is either up or down here. [laughs] So I go out on six or seven mile hikes. Go around our lake and come back. I’ll do that three to five times a week. So I am pretty physical, always have been, and always have embraced doing stunts. As a matter of fact, there is one stunt I really wanted to do in ‘Phantasm III.’ It’s when we go into my pad and I’ve got the shotgun. There’s somebody sitting in the chair, it turns around, and its Jody. He says a few things to us and then I see a light in the hallway. I turn around with the gun and for some unknown reason I can’t pull the trigger on the tall man. He’s walking right straight towards me. I’m kind of amazed by him, to actually see him. He lifts an eyebrow or whatever and I go flying up into the wall. When I first read it, I went, “I can do this.” I saw the call sheet and it called for this stunt guy named Gunther to do the stunt. John Stewart was our stunt coordinator on that. I was kind of upset and knew I could do that stunt. I walked up to Don and I said, “Don, we’re not going to need Gunther for this shot, I can do this. I can throw myself really hard into that back wall, just give me some back pads.” Don being the consummate director goes, “Oh, you can do it?” [laughs] It’s always nice to be able to sell the gag with your lead actor with his or her face right in the shot. I said, “no I can do it. If I bend my knees, I can throw it into the wall. I know I can. I can probably about get five feet up the wall and slide down.” He goes, “ok, well if you can convince John Stewart.” I said, “sure, I’ll go talk to John.” So I go talk to John and I go, “John, I can do this stunt man.” He looks at me and goes, “Reg, you’re not doing it.” I went, “John, I can do it. I can throw myself up there. I will sell this gag, I guarantee it.” John says, “you’re not doing it Reg.” Of course I say, “why?” He goes, “well what we’re going do, we’re going to use a shock chord.” A shock chord is when they put a harness on the actor and they cut their wardrobe in the back, and a line comes out from that. The line goes up over a pulley twenty feet high and then you get two big grips on the other end. At the right time they yank you backwards. I have worn the shock chord before in the first picture when I touch the two poles and I get jerked back. I kind of understand how it works. It can be very dangerous. For one thing, if you’re going to land on the floor or you’re on a pad, you can’t throw your arms back or you could break your wrists. The natural thing is to want to throw your arms back when you’re being jerked backwards. It turns out that they wanted me to fly like ten feet up onto the wall or twelve if they could get me that high. I went, “really?” He goes, “yeah!” I say, “well you better get Gunther suited up!” [laughs] Anyway, it was Gunther that did that gag because I wasn’t really ready for that one.
Did you hang on to any movie memorabilia from the film?
Don has the guns. He has the stunt and the hero. The stunt gun doesn’t fire. Usually you have two weapons. You have a weapon that your actor carries all the time and then you have one that gets loaded and goes off. You don’t want that being carried all of the time because something could go wrong. He’s got both of those. I kept a couple pieces of wardrobe here and there that I thought were cool and he let me keep them. No I don’t have anything like that from the actual film. So anyway, Don’s got them.
You wife, Gigi, is a special effect artist. How did you two first meet?
You work with many film students and up-and-coming filmmakers. What is it like for you to work alongside these folks?
It’s been a mixed bag Steve. There’s a lot of young filmmakers or first time filmmakers and stuff. If they’re fortunate enough to come up with the money to make a film and they have a great script, they have a great story, they have three dimensional characters. If they have the money to do it and they send me the script, I look at it and if I see myself in the character that they see me in, we start talking. Then we get our financial thing figured out. A lot of times we figure Gigi into the factor because if they don’t have a lot of money, we can do a little package deal. Here’s Reg and Gigi, he’ll do the acting and I’ve even helped her with special effects. I’ve got a couple of special effects credits actually. I’d finish off my character in five days or whatever and then she’d be there for the rest of the shoot, so I’d help her and actually direct the special effects scenes and make sure that the safety was taken care of. We’re very indie minded people. The mixed bag comes in with the director. The director is god, but there are times when god needs to listen to man. [laughs] Sometimes young directors don’t want to listen to me, who has been doing this for forty years. Sometimes they won’t listen. We’ve had one pretty bad experience with one young director, well actually a couple. One of them had to do with the shoot at the time. They didn’t understand rules of the game. You can’t work an actor for sixteen hours, give them a two hour turn around, and expect them to come back and do their deal. That’s just not right. No matter what I could say to this one young director, he just kept doing stuff like that. I actually walked off the set one time and I was the assistant director as well. These are just mistakes of never having done it before and not having your ego under control to the point where you can listen to somebody that may know what they are talking about.
My Fed Ex guy, [laughs] who delivers to my place here in the mountains said “hey, me and some friends wrote this script.” I read it and it is really good. It’s called ‘Floaters.’ It’s about out of body experience and stuff like that. They wanted to come and meet with me to get my take on it. I gave them my take on it, my positive criticism, and what it would take to get it off the ground. Don’t you know that just today, Danny came to my door and he didn’t have any Fed Ex with him. He wanted to talk to me because they got up some money and they want to shoot a two to three minute trailer. They want me involved in it. It’s exciting to think that after all of these years they’re still on it. These are like hounds from hell. Independent filmmakers, the hounds of hell. They do not give up and this is a perfect example. So we are probably going to shoot that in August and I am looking forward to it. I am talking to some other guys right now that are young, good, independent filmmakers. We’re going to be shooting probably between September and maybe August. In the spring and summer of next year we’re going to be shooting probably three films. Two with this one group of young filmmakers and one with another group. It’s a joy. In the end, it’s a joy. It’s a mixed bag sometimes, but out of all of the experiences I have had with first time filmmakers, there’s only been a couple that I was kind of disappointed in the end result.
You mentioned special effects. Which do you prefer, old school make-up and blood or CG?
What is your feeling on this latest trend in Hollywood of remaking movies and how do you feel about the modern day horror film?
Lets go to the beginning. One of the first films that was ever shot was ‘Nosferatu,’ which was 1909 or 1912, somewhere in there. It’s a vampire film. Horror was really a foundational genre and concept in film making, period. In the 30’s and 40’s, Universal Studios was going down the tubes. What saved their ass? Horror. ‘Dracula’ and ‘Frankenstein,’ they captured the imagination of the world, that these creatures could actually exist and you could see them on the screen. Wow! How cool is that! Saved Universal’s ass! Having said that, the big studios have always treated horror like a stepchild. Like it wasn’t really a legitimate genre or like it wasn’t really legitimate pictures. They can’t deny how much money a particular franchise has made. ‘The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,’ ‘The Hills Have Eyes,’ whatever. Name something that has been remade. They can’t deny that and at the same time they understand a particular truth. With every decade you have new, young consciousness that has never seen the original of almost anything. So their idea is that if the original stone in the quiet pool created this kind of a ripple effect and made this kind of money, let’s take that original stone and put some kids in it and capture this new audience and then we’ll start off with more sequels from there.
‘Phantasm V’ is obviously on the minds of all the fans of the series. What can you tell us about that?
Thirty years into the franchise, we feel positive about some stuff that has been thrown around today. There has been talk of possibly doing something this year with the series. That would be really great. At this point, I really have nothing to report. We would love to give it a send up and I think we need to do it sooner than later, for some obvious reasons. I can’t really report on anything today.
What can fans your fans catch you in next?
I did a really wacky picture with Joe Estevez. Joe and I are good friends and when we get together on camera, it’s a pretty special time. It was called ‘Doctor Spine.’ It’s just a wacky story about a guy who fixes backs and how he ends up being a serial killer. Joe and I exist in his mind. I exist as a character that he read about when he was a boy in an adventure series. I wear an eye patch and I have an English accent. I am this adventurous guy. Joe plays his deceased father who is also a serial killer. I don’t want to tell you too much about it because hopefully it will get out and everybody will have fun with it and not know too much about it before they go into the theater. It’s funny stuff. So yeah, I’ve got some stuff that’s kind of in the tube. This year or early next year should be happening. There’s another thing I did this year for Mary Lambert from ‘Pet Sematary’ and Elizabeth Stanley, who is the producer. She’s got this thing called ‘The Dark Path Chronicles’ already on the internet. They are really smart, young vampire story kind of things put to music. I don’t think there is any one that is more than about five or six minutes. They’re really kind of like vampire music video things. Very smart story. She wanted to expand it into more like thirty minute segments and/or possible shoot a feature on it. So I did about a fifteen or twenty minute segment with her. My character organizes the vampires in L.A. I am kind of like the godfather of the vampires, which was a fun part because I’ve never got to play a vampire. She really let me have my way with him. So that was a lot of fun. You can look for that. You can go see what she’s already got up over on fearnet.com.
We’ve seen you at a lot of conventions. Do you enjoy getting out and meeting your fans?
Yeah! Like I said, that all really started in ’93 or ’94 when I met Gigi. What I said about ‘Phantasm III’ started to become the rule of law with horror films. Unless the studios were behind them and spent millions and millions of dollars on them, they just kind of showed up. You didn’t hear about them, unless it is like ‘The Orphan.’ They’re really promoting that now and I am sure there was a lot of money spent on that, and there was a big studio behind that. That’s why it’s out there. I’ll go and see it and we can talk about it later. [laughs] There’s a lot more stuff that goes direct to video and a lot of stuff I have done over the years has been in that bag. ‘Song of the Dead’ got a limited theatrical release. ‘Gangs of the Dead’ has been all over cable. ‘Fallen Angel’ got a limited theatrical release and has been on cable. Most of everything just ends up on video store shelves or on Amazon. Mostly on the internet is where people get their stuff now. You have to get out there and talk about it or people are not going to know about it. They’re just not. So, I am dedicated to that. I am an unabashed p.r. guy for my own stuff because I think it is good stuff and if I didn’t think it was good stuff, I wouldn’t talk about it. The conventions are not only opportunities for me to talk about the stuff that’s out there that I am involved in, it’s also an opportunity for me to meet the fans. Like I said before about the icon trip. If somebody loves my stuff so much that they’ll pay to come and see me at a convention, then I want to sit and talk to them. I treat everybody like family and they dig that. So they’re going to go out when I tell them I’ve got this going on and I’ve got this going on, they’re going to check it out. So I am just kind of like a one man p.r. machine.
How did music first come into your life?
Like I said before, I always knew I was going to be a musician and an actor. I just always knew. Having said that, I have the same emotions as every normal human being. I wanted to have a family. I wanted to have love in my life. I just wanted all of that. I grew up with “Leave it to Beaver” and stuff like that. [laughs] I always knew that that was going to happen too. If you look at where I started year-wise in film and how much film I did at certain times, you’ll see that there are periods of time where I couldn’t do a lot of films. I couldn’t get myself out there to audition or do a lot of stuff like that because I had to take care of my family. I had to raise my children and stuff like that. So, I had to do a lot of day jobs. I did everything from drive a taxi in Long Beach to being a mason’s tender in Orange County area of California. Mason’s tender by the way is a brutal job. I was in sales and marketing for night reuters newspapers for several years. I was a shipping manager in charge of a shipping department for a high end furniture store for a lot of years. Having said that, music has been a constant thread through my life. For one thing, it was the thing that made me a lot of money early on in my life. All of the way through college I was in musical groups. I was in choirs. We did everything from classic Bach and Beethoven, to gospel, to Americana. At about fifteen years old I picked up a guitar and learned how to play guitar to accompany myself. I was a singer, but I always figured if I wanted to sing something that somebody didn’t know, that would be a drag. I wouldn’t be able to do it, so I knew I had to defend my voice. So, I picked up guitar. It was totally out of self defense.
I auditioned for a group called The Young Americans shortly after I picked up guitar and knew about three chords. I was a founding member of The Young Americans. We went out and I did that for probably a year. We went out and did TV stuff and live appearances. We did a Bing Crosby special back in ’62, I guess. I started playing folk clubs around Long Beach and started making a few bucks doing that because The Young Americans didn’t really pay anything. It was kind of a volunteer thing, you just showed up and did your deal. Then a friend of mine that I was playing music with, Tom Robbins, who’s nephew is Tim Robbins, knew some guys that I had always admired and I had seen in the coffee house circuit. A couple of guys named Carson and Van Dyke Parks. They were called the Steeltown Two. I always loved them and never really knew them that well, but Tom knew them pretty well. They were starting a group for a record company. They already had the guarantee that if they put this large folk group together because the Christy Minstrels had just come out and had a very popular start to their career. Cap Records in New York wanted to put a big folk group together and they trusted this guy named Terry Gilkyson. He used to write music for Disney. He was a folk writer. They trusted him and he trusted Carson and Van Dyke to put a group together from L.A. They put out a very specific call through certain people that they knew. One of them was Tom. They wanted to get people in to look at this music and sing it down and see how they felt about this guy, that guy, or that guy. I had been in choir so I could read music pretty well. They liked me. They liked my voice. I loved them. They liked Tom. So Tom and I became founding members of The Greenwood County Singers. We did an album within a couple of weeks of deciding who was going to be in the group. There were six of us. There were a couple of chicks and four guys. We did a piece of music called “The New Frankie and Johnny,” which was a ragtime piece that a guy who used to illustrate for Playboy magazine wrote with another guy named Bob Gibson. We put that song on the album and released it as a single and it was a big hit. It went to like number four on the Billboard Top 10.
How did you first assemble The Reggie Bannister Band?
That was kind of a trip. All of my bands have been a trip. It was like, talk to a friend and they would go, “hey man, I know this guy that’s really, really good and I think you guys would sound good together.” All of a sudden then I had The Good Band. With Dennis DeCastro, I was running this music club in Long Beach down in Belmont Shore. It was called the West Coast Bodega. This was in the 70’s. I had guys like Vince Gill coming in on the open mic nights, then I’d hire him to come in during the rest of the week. I’d be playing there as well. Vince was living in Huntington Beach or Hermosa Beach or something. He was just kind of starting to find himself and figure out who he was. Gene Taylor from Canned Heat would come in and bang on the keyboards. Steve Gillette would come in. That’s the kind of atmosphere it was. There was another little bar just a few doors down. I think it was called the Bayshore Saloon. Somebody said, “hey man, you gotta go see this guy Dennis DeCastro. He’s fucking great!” I went, “ok.” So I would take a break and I would run down to the Bayshore Saloon. I’d sit there and listen to Dennis and kind of sing with him from my stool at the bar, and realized that we would sound great together. I approached him and we started DeCastro and Bannister, which lasted for like four years. This is all by way of saying, I’m sitting on my deck one day in 2004, 2005, 2006. Somewhere in there. [laughs] I come out here in the summer to study scripts. I was looking at a script. I was looking at a character and I was working it, and stuff like that. I had the door open to the house. Our office is upstairs and Gigi comes down the stairs and says, “hey Reg!” I go, “yeah, yeah.” She goes, “I just had this weird phone call. It’s this guy in Pittsburgh and his name is Scarfo.” I go, ok.” She goes, “he’d like you to come out to Pittsburgh. He has a music bar called The Smiling Moose in Pittsburgh. He’d like you to come out this October. He’s a drummer and he’s got a bunch of musician friends. He’d like you to come out and play and get to know ya. He’ll pay for you to come out and if you want to make a few bucks on the side, you can sell some merch and stuff like that.” I went, “what did you say his name was?” She goes, “Scarfo.” I said, “what did you say the name of the club was.” She goes, “The Smiling Moose.” I said, “call him and work it out!” [laughs] I couldn’t resist. I think I first asked her if we had anything going on during that weekend or whatever. So I went out there and I met Mike Scarfo. He’s a great guy and a great drummer. He comes out of metal and scatter-punk and stuff like that. Then I met one of his friends who plays bass and came out of the same bag, Paul Miser. We got together and played. I ran down some of the stuff that I like to play and they dug it. So it just kind of happened like that Steve. It was just kind of a weird experience, like all of my putting band together experiences are. We just decided to call it the Reggie Bannister Band. It seemed simple and to the point. Of course they were into scatter-punk and metal, so I decided to do an acoustic album with them. [laughs] It turned out great. So the “Naked Truth” was born. I just went crazy with the album. I did an eight panel digipak. I decided to do a DVD as well since I had the eight panel digipak. The DVD has “Love That’s Gone,” the video I was telling you about. The buffalo video. It is very tough to watch by the way, but everybody needs to see it because it’s a slaughter going on in Montana of the buffalo or the American bison. So that’s on the DVD. Some behind the scenes stuff is on the DVD. It’s really good stuff. If anybody wants to check it out, they can check it out on cdbaby.com. Both of my albums are on cdbaby.
For those who might not have had the chance to check out your music, how would you best describe it?
In one word. It’s eclectic. I have been doing this, it’s been my life for a long time. I have been influenced by everything that’s happened since we did Bach. That guy died 360 years ago or something like that, but I was influenced by that. The folk thing influenced me incredibly. That was my first really professional experience in music. That turned into more like a folk rock, which kind of went into country rock. You get into The Eagles, then you get into other facets of that and various artists. There’s various things that I have really enjoyed throughout. I had a lot of fun with funk at one point. On my first album, I’ve got a song called “She Does It Real Good,” that’s just funky as hell. Some of this stuff is making it’s way into the movies that I have been doing. There’s a movie called ‘The Quiet Ones'” that they’re still in post on. There’s a couple of my tunes that they wanted in that. I mentioned ‘Text.’ There’s a couple of my tunes that they wanted in that. So I’d say it’s eclectic. The “Naked Truth” is really all acoustic, but it get very rocky and folky. Most of the songs on both of my albums is stuff that I wrote. I’ve got a song on my first album and a song on my second album that Dennis DeCastro wrote. I just love his stuff. There’s a song on my second album called ‘Love at the Five and Dime.’ It’s a Nanci Griffith song. This artist named Kathy Mattea had a hit on it in ’93. It’s just a great story. It’s kind of a folk, country thing. If you go to cdbaby.com, you can listen to snippets of stuff. You can buy downloads of stuff or you can by albums themselves. You can see where my head is at musically. It’s a rich musical history that I have drawn from and that’s what I write. I think people will dig it.
What is the typical songwriting process like for you?
I don’t really have a typical songwriting process, unless I am constrained to compose something for a film. If that’s the case, I sit down and I submerge myself in the story. If I am going to portray a particular character, like a lead character in a film, I will tune into their personality or their character quality. I just let it happen. I start playing and I just let it happen. I get a concept and then I just start playing. The music usually makes the words happen. Once I am into it, it happens really fast.
You are a busy man, how often do you get to perform live?
That’s a trip. With my band, it hard because we are almost bi-coastal. They came out for my 4th of July thing. We try and offer up the band when we are dealing with a convention or a film festival. For example, I had the band in Seattle for Crypticon. That was great. We played at Fango last year in L.A. That was great. So anytime I have a live appearance, we offer up the band. The next time we play is not going to be until The Eerie Horror Film Festival in Pennsylvania.
What is the best piece of advice you could give to those who are just starting out and considering making a career in the music industry?
Is there anything else you want to add or say to your fans?
Just hang in there and keep your fingers crossed for another ‘Phantasm’ episode, if we can call them episodes. They are kind of like earthquakes, they show up when you least expect them. [laughs] Keep your eye out for that. Keep an eye out for my stuff. If you need to know what I am doing, imdb.com is a pretty good source. There’s some stuff on there that’s bullshit. There’s stuff on my page that Gigi and I both have tried to get rid of to no avail. For the most part, ninety eight percent is real stuff and keep an eye out for that stuff. Keep looking for me. I am out there working, doing it. Don’t be afraid to search out my stuff on the internet. That’s the best way to find me. Look for these releases. Look for ‘Small Town Saturday Night.’ Look for ‘Walking Distance,’ ‘Satan Hates You.’ These things are going to be coming at you and I want you to see them if you dig what I do.
Thanks for your time, Reggie! All the best to you!
My pleasure!
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For all the latest information on all things Reggie Bannister, visit his official website at www.reggiebannister.com.
Don’t forget to swing by the official site of the Phantasm franchise at www.phantasm.com.
This is the definitive Reggie Bannister interview. Excellent work and a fantastic read, Steve!
It is hard to believe that Phantasm is turning thirty already. I think that it still stands the test of time and hopefully they do get to Part V!
I was also able to catch Regman playing at a recent convention in my area, he was great and it made for a very special evening.
Reggie is a truly a one of horror’s most valuable players. Thanks again for this! Great interview!
Claws –
We hit a lot of conventions too and you are right about the special evenings that erupt when the stars come out to perform. Chiller has always been the best for that… however it seems that it has gotten a little out of hand the last few outings (just to much going on on stage).
The best was when Andrew Bryniarski made it to the stage about 5 years ago to do his rendition of “War Pigs”… I wish cameraphone video was more prevalent back then so it would have been captured on film.
Awesome interview! Reggie is the best!
PHANTASM V has to happen!!!