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Hollywood Stunt Performers Credit Chiropractic
Hollywood stunt performers who depend on their physical abilities are
giving credit to chiropractic for their ability to be at their best.
Recently in an article in the 06/20/2001 issue of USA Today Health,
appeared a report from the World Stunt Awards, where many of Hollywood's
top stunt people credited chiropractic with their ability to continue on.
One stunt person,
Jill Brown, the winner for best fall said, "I'd like to thank my
chiropractor. I'm not joking. I couldn't do what I do without
him."
Hal Needham, known as the "king of stuntmen", (pictured
right) also chimed in by saying, " Just about everybody I know has
been or regularly goes to the chiropractor. Nowadays, everybody
takes care of their bodies better than we used to
— they're in excellent physical shape." Needham has broken 56
bones in a career that has spanned 310 films and more than 4,500 TV
episodes. Actor Burt Reynolds, also a chiropractic supporter, praised
Needham's ability by saying, "Nothing stops him — there is only one
Hal Needham. I'm just not sure how many pieces of him are
left."
"Stunt work is incredibly taxing on the body," says Dr. Bruce
Hall, a chiropractor who practices in North Hollywood. "And there's
an unwritten rule that if you get hurt doing a stunt, you take care of it
yourself — so I treat stunt men and women every day in my office."
"I go every week or at the very least twice a month," says
Jeannie Epper-Kimack, who at 60 still performs stunts and can be seen in
the upcoming films Spiderman and Rush Hour 2. After
performing stunts for 51 years, Epper-Kimack, who was Lynda Carter's
double on Wonder Woman, is in remarkable shape and partially
credits chiropractic. "I've gotten some stitches, but I haven't
broken a bone yet," Epper-Kimack says. "I'm not sure if it was
luck, talent or God, but staying fit and aligned is certainly part of
it."
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