Paul Mantz “Flight of the Phoenix” accident

Born in Alameda, California, on August 8th, 1903, Paul Mantz first learned to fly when he was 17. After spending several years barnstorming, and washing out of Army Flight School in 1927 for buzzing a railroad car filled with officers, Mantz returned to California and started his own charter air service. He eventually moved into movie stunt flying. He really became noticed by Hollywood were he flew as a stunt pilot for the Howard Hughes war epic, “Hell’s Angels”. Although Mantz performed many aerial stunts, he specialized in flying through buildings. In the 1932 movie “Air Mail”, he guided a Stearman plane through a 45-foot-wide aircraft.

He developed a number of camera and aeronautical innovations to improve aerial photography, and continued as a stunt flyer (he once flew under the Golden Gate Bridge for the movie “This is Cinerama”), a director of aerial photography, and a supplier of aircraft and pilots for the movies for two decades after the war.

He formed a company, with legendary pilot Frank Tallman, named Tallmantz Aviation in 1961 based at Orange County Airport (now John Wayne Airport) in Southern California. Together, they provided pilots, camera planes, and a small fleet of antique and historic aircraft for movie and television productions. Mantz loved restoring and rebuilding rare aircraft, such as a copy of Lindbergh’s “Spirit of Saint Louis”.

However, Mantz and Tallman’s collaboration did not last long. In 1965, the two men were working on the movie “Flight of the Phoenix” when Tallman, who was supposed to fly a sequence for the film, shattered his kneecap during a fall at home pushing his son’s go-kart, and Mantz, covering for his injured partner, readily took his place.

The plane, originally a C-82, was designed by Otto Timm (Charles Lindbergh’s first flight instructor, and whom regularly worked with Mantz and Tallman), and was built by Tallmantz Aviation. With a wingspan of 45 feet, and a length of 42 feet, the “Phoenix” was powered by a Pratt & Whitney R-1340 nine-cylinder radial engine, taken from a North American T-6 as were the wheels and several other parts.

The wings were from a Beech C-45, and the wing, tail, and undercarriage wire bracing was made out of clothesline, and was intentionally made to look flimsy, although it was actually quite sturdy. The fuselage and empennage were all hand-built from scratch, using plywood over a wooden frame. The cockpit was shallow and makeshift. The pilot would sit down, while another person stood behind him, strapped to a stringer. It was registered with the Federal Aviation Administration as tail number N93082.

The site of the filming was Buttercup Valley, a remote desert spot nearly twenty miles from Yuma in Arizona. Early on the morning of July 8th, 1965, the production team placed cameras at each end of the valley. Mantz, a pilot with over 25,000 hours of flight experience, and his co-pilot, 64 year-old Bobby Rose, were to fly the “Phoenix” and try to get it down on the ground near the first camera position, and then pull up by the time they reached the second position. Mantz’ first pass was a little long in landing, and he overshot the first camera. The high temperatures were taking their toll on the improvised plane, and it was not easily controlled.

While not perfect, this first pass was good enough for the movie. But the director asked for another pass, probably as “insurance”.

On the second pass of one of the final shots of the film, one of the landings skids of the improvised aircraft caught a hard patch of ground, and started to lose control. Mantz kicked the engine’s throttle to full, and broke free of the dirt, but the plane was already stressed to breaking point. At over 90 MPH, the plane snapped apart and, momentarily, the two crewmembers flipped forward and hung out of the cockpit. As the break apart continued, the wings turned under the plane’s main body, and toppled on top of the two men, throwing Rose clear of the crash, but pinning Mantz.

The cameras were still rolling, capturing the entire sordid event on celluloid.

People rushed towards the crash site, in an effort to see what could be done. Both crew members were expedited to the hospital in Yuma.

Mantz was killed instantly, and the crash broke the pelvis and left shoulder of Bobby Rose. Unfortunately, Mantz might have survived the mishap, as the cockpit portion of the aircraft was unharmed, but instead of a crash helmet like he would normally wear in an open cockpit, he was requested to wear a soft-brim hat that actor James Stewart also wore in the film.

The Federal Aviation Administration determined that Mantz misjudged his altitude, and in the inadvertent touchdown, the airframe failed due to overload stresses. The investigators also stated the Mantz’ alcohol consumption prior to the flight contributed to the accident by impairing his “efficiency and judgment”.

Duration : 0:2:44


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25 Responses

  1. catNdawg Says:

    eject eject ! haha
    eject eject ! haha

  2. equarg Says:

    That is what I call …
    That is what I call Irony. I way the old movie flight of the phoenix. They showed the plane flying over a dune and that is it… later you see the men running over the dune (the actors) all happy. They did not show that crash but they did do a large memorial for him at the end. They don’t do that anymore.

  3. dannylerch Says:

    what are you gay? …
    what are you gay? vag is awesome!

  4. Helismoke Says:

    Thaks for the video …
    Thaks for the video, I grew up near Santa Paula in the ’50’s when Mantz,Frank Tallman, Mira Slovak, Art Scholl and others flew in and out of the airport. Lots of history there, but never saw this video before.

  5. MadDogDucati Says:

    The main cause was …
    The main cause was the fuselage broke on touch down!

  6. 6fender6 Says:

    Look closely at : …
    Look closely at : 40 secs. He”s thrown into that steel “pyramid” over the cockpit. Killed instantly? More than likely. Crushed skull, or broken neck at least! R.I.P. Paul

  7. michaelwright999 Says:

    booze is ruining my …
    booze is ruining my life, but Im going out happy in my bar.

  8. TisMyIsland Says:

    The 50’s version of …
    The 50’s version of “destroyed in seconds”

  9. Ragnaroek5 Says:

    i don´t know, what …
    i don´t know, what you have seen, try glasses!

  10. NVanWendy Says:

    Was it that far …
    Was it that far back? I suppose you’re right, then. I guess the world was desperate to move forward and build washing machines and vacuum cleaners and forget all that war hardware. Still a real shame, though…

  11. K4rt80y Says:

    Remember, when they …
    Remember, when they filmed 12 O’Clock High, B-17s were only three to five years old. Not much nostalgia for surplus after WWII.

  12. Videoshocker Says:

    0:40 you see matz …
    0:40 you see matz fall out of it and the plane land on him… ouch

  13. 7855waldo Says:

    Well, how about …
    Well, how about that – my father (d. 12/26/67) & Mantz may have been born on the same day!

    Sorry to hear that booze was a contributing factor; my dad let it ruin his otherwise eventful life.

    Mantz had transiting Mars Square Neptune on the day of his demise, which does corroborate the investigative conclusion.

  14. DerKauz402 Says:

    so true
    so true

  15. Hendo56 Says:

    The main cause was, …
    The main cause was, of all things, one of the wheels rolled into a prairie dog hole. That caused the plane to nose over.

  16. NVanWendy Says:

    A great pilot, but …
    A great pilot, but did they have to crack up several flying B-17s for 12 O’clock High? It may have been long before CG effects, but had they not heard of scale models then?
    What a waste!

  17. NVanWendy Says:

    You got that right! …
    You got that right! All it took was one bounce – makeshift airplane indeed.

  18. Dajida Says:

    Airframes do tend …
    Airframes do tend to crack when, as the sidebar description notes, overloaded with stress. Haven’t read anywhere about the P-1 being a POS. It was made to look that way. Don’t think the FAA would have certified the P-1 if it wasn’t airworthy.

    Martha Marchak claimed Paul hadn’t had anything to drink that morning, but also admits he was drinking the night before. Paul was known to have heavy bouts with the sauce. The autopsy report indicated a BAC of 0.13

  19. OuchTatHurtz Says:

    I don’t know about …
    I don’t know about alcohol being the main cause. Maybe it was the fact that this plane was a POS and cracked in half.

  20. OuchTatHurtz Says:

    I thought I was …
    I thought I was going to get rickrolled when someone linked me to this, I’m surprised this footage exists.

  21. Dajida Says:

    Don’t drink and fly …
    Don’t drink and fly…

  22. gmcjetpilot Says:

    Great old footage, …
    Great old footage, tanks for posting.

  23. killercrabman Says:

    SORRY, IT WAS ON …
    SORRY, IT WAS ON MUTE

  24. EXPRESSACTION Says:

    The 3 Beauforts …
    The 3 Beauforts Bombers wow…

  25. FriedChickenAndCrime Says:

    We spend the first …
    We spend the first 9 months of our lives trying to get out of the pussy. And the rest of our lives trying to get back in.

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