This story was first published on May 16, 2011
Outline:
Message claims that the “Dueling Banjos” scene from the movie “Deliverance” was not part of the original script but showed a real incident caught on film when guitar player Ronnie Cox and a local intellectually disabled boy engaged in a spontaneous musical interaction after the film crew stopped at an isolated gas station.
Brief Analysis:
The claims in the message are untrue. The scene was not spontaneous but very much a planned and scripted part of the movie. The music was composed in 1955 by Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith. The part of the banjo-playing boy in “Deliverance” was played by Billy Redden. Redden could not actually play the banjo. Film director John Boorman hid another, more skilled youngster behind Redden and had him fret the notes with his left hand. Musicians Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandell arranged and performed “Dueling Banjos” on the film soundtrack.
Subject: Dueling banjos–How it Came to Be
At the end of the beautiful piece you realize for sure that the one man sitting up higher has some kind of learning problems going on and won’t actually look at, smile to , or speak to the other guy he was playing with once the music stopped.
Pretty neat story. Read the commentary below. If you saw the film, “Deliverance,” you will recall this scene. A classic.
Then, click on the attachment.
The guy playing the guitar is Ronnie Cox from Portales New Mexico.
Autism? Asperger’s syndrome? Genius primary, social interaction secondary? Serendipity?……..or maybe we just haven’t figured it out yet.
Plumbing the depths of the human mind and spirit is an eternal frontier.
Watch the young mans face not his fingers. Read this before viewing video….
This is an excerpt of the film “Deliverance”. When the filming group of the movie stopped at a gas station somewhere, one of the actors started to play a tune of the film on his guitar.
When a boy who was watching (an autistic) heard the music, he started to respond with notes from his banjo. They started an incredible dialogue of instruments and the autistic boy expressed himself in probably the only form in which he was prepared to communicate.
This is how this remarkable scene, that was included in the movie, was developed and filmed. Look at the expression of the boy. At first, he seems uncertain and waiting but as the intensity of the music progressed, his lost expression was gone and an expression of pleasure and happiness was recovered; thanks to this guitar player who happened to pass by.
After this magic moment passed, the boy returned into himself leaving this part of his externalized beauty in the film. This truly was a memorable part of the movie.
This is a good story. I never knew it was true.
This scene was not a part of the script until the camera man happened to catch it on film…The family was well paid; and beat poverty by accident.
Watch the little boy especially at the end…
Original Source : https://www.hoax-slayer.com/dueling-banjos-hoax.shtml