(Page 4 of 4)
So I take it you didn't like The Shawshank Redemption.
It was so ridiculous. Remember when the captain beats the guy to death in front of all those guys? I'm saying, come on now, this is a state prison in New England getting away with this stuff.
The worst movie, and my name is in the credits, is Murder in the First. I worked with Kevin Bacon. It's so ridiculous, it almost made me throw up. People thought it was so real. We were constantly beating them in that movie. The way I remember it, it was just a bunch of guys trying to do a job.
And Birdman of Alcatraz?
The portrayal by Burt Lancaster—I got mad at the movie because it sympathetically showed Stroud. But after seeing it a few more times, I liked it. I just disregarded the truth, then I enjoyed it.
In Shawshank, one inmate had a hard time leaving because he was so used to the conditions inside. Did you find that to be the case?
That's not an exaggeration, that's true. One inmate who was there for 15 years, going on beyond that, he was getting ready to be released. He was so nervous. Some of these guys could con a doctor into giving them sleeping pills. They gave him some sleeping pills. He was highly nervous about getting out. He didn't know how he'd be.
Is it true that everyone inside thinks he's innocent?
Yes, to a certain extent. I don't know whether they conned themselves into thinking they were innocent. Alcatraz was unique, because those suckers have so many raps against them. Some of them did try to convince me.
What is it about Alcatraz that the public finds so fascinating?
Where could you find a place that has so much notoriety? This is starting way back when it began with Al Capone being one of our first inmates, in August 1934. It's in the middle of the bay; at nighttime, when it's foggy, you see the lighthouse going around. All that conjures up, what's going on is so mysterious, and it was kept that way deliberately. All the mystery that surrounded it. If it was a prison on land, I don't think it'd have half the mystique it has.
It caught the public's imagination. We will be dead and gone for years, and people will still be saying, coming off the boat: "That's Alcatraz."


Comments
My mother just recently passed away at the age of 95. As one of her sons the task has been given to me to find out some information. My parents have the only one of a kind dinning room table, china cabinet, and buffet that was make by the prisoners of Alcatraz back in the 30's. All of the pieces are stamped with Alcatraz under each piece. The back of the chairs form an "A". Every thing is in excellent condition. My father worked for the Federal Prison service for 35 years and retired at La Tuna Federal Prison in Anthony, TX. I have been searching the Internet for pictures of thw Wardens house and the furniture but it only shows the structure after it burned. My father worked at La Tuna when Alcatraz closed and bought it around 1963. Do you have any pictures, a value, or know of someone interested in buy a piece of History. Dennis Ellis dennis.ellis@urgwda.org
Posted by Dennis Ellis on December 18,2007 | 03:12PM
Hi! I just visited Alcatraz and am interested in your furniture. Can you send me pics? Thanks!
Posted by MJLinder on January 2,2008 | 05:33PM
Awsome I M doing a report on Alcatraz and this realy helped! Thanks!
Posted by SP on October 25,2009 | 12:00PM