Mel Brooks’ Blazing Saddles, released 50 years ago this year, is widely considered one of the funniest movies of all time.
The 1974 Western satire — about a Black sheriff named Black Bart (Cleavon Little) appointed to save a town with the help of the drunken gunslinger the Waco Kid (Gene Wilder) — ridicules Western tropes and bigotry.
It wasn’t easy to make. From fights with studio executives to questions about what 1974 audiences would laugh at, Mel Brooks and his team — including Richard Pryor — had to decide how far they could go.
Here are 12 Blazing Saddles behind the scenes stories, many from Mel Brooks himself.
Blazing Saddles Owes a Debt to Malcolm X
The idea for Blazing Saddles originated with Andrew Bergman, who was only in his twenties at the time. He named his character after Malcolm X, who later took the name el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz.
“I wrote a first draft called Tex-X,” he told Creative Screenwriting in 2016. “Alan Arkin was hired to direct and James Earl Jones was going to play the sheriff. That fell apart as things often do.
“Then I got a call saying, ‘What do you think about Mel Brooks?’ I was 26-years-old and I said, ‘I love Mel Brooks.’ … We spoke and Mel told me that he loved the idea and wanted to use it as a launching point to do a Western. I thought, “Let’s do it. Let’s cook.”
Brooks told Playboy in 1975: “What grabbed me were the possibilities of a modern black man arriving in the traditional West. … We called in Norman Steinberg and Alan Uger, a Jewish comedy team, and Richard Pryor, a black person of outré imagination. Then we turned on the tape recorder and started bulls—-ing. Pryor wrote the Jewish jokes, the Jews wrote the black jokes. Nine months later, we had a finished script.”
The Blazing Saddles Writers ‘Were Either Untested or on the Skids’
After its release in 1974, Blazing Saddles became a huge hit that opened the door to other rapid-fire, irreverent comedies like Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein, and later Airplane, Top Secret and The Naked Gun.
But when Brooks and his co-writers first assembled, none were in demand.
In the 2014 biography Becoming Richard Pryor, by Scott Saul, Saul writes: “Steinberg was a fledging film writer with no film credits; Bergman, a history PhD who had just failed to land an academic job. Brooks felt himself washed up after the disappointments of The Producers and The Twelve Chairs.”
Brooks wrote in his 2020 memoir All About Me!: “The Producers and The Twelve Chairs together didn’t make me enough money to buy a new car.”
The Blazing Saddles Writers ‘Were Either Untested or on the Skids’
Pryor, meanwhile, was in the midst of a career rediscovery.
He was taking large amounts of cocaine after abandoning a middle-of-the-road act often compared to Bill Cosby’s in favor of new, blunt, sometimes surreal routines that didn’t hide from his roots, and took inspiration from the Black Panthers and far-left figures in Berkeley, where he had recently lived.
Blazing Saddles Was Supposed to Be ‘An Esoteric Little Picture’
The writers decided to write what they really wanted to write, without worrying about the mainstream, Brooks told Playboy:
“It was designed as an esoteric little picture. We wrote it for two weirdos in the balcony. For radicals, film nuts, guys who draw on the washroom wall—my kind of people.”
Richard Pryor Had Some Demands
The 2014 biography Becoming Richard Pryor, by Scott Saul, details Richard Pryor’s demands when he traveled from Los Angeles to New York to join Mel Brooks and his team on Blazing Saddles: train fare “and a bottle of brandy waiting for him in the writers’ room.”
When Pryor arrived at the Warner Bros. building at 666 Fifth Avenue, Saul writes, “he settled into his chair in the sixth floor executive conference room. Brooks started to explain how the film was shifting from its original conception. While he listened, Richard pulled out a little locket, opened it, tipped out some coke, and snorted it without missing a beat.”
He offered some to Brooks, who quipped, “Never before lunch.”
Richard Pryor ‘Blessed’ the N-Word, According to Mel Brooks
Scott Saul’s Becoming Richard Pryor details how crucial the standup comedian and budding movie star was to the writing of Blazing Saddles. The film has five credited screenwriters, including Brooks and Pryor, and one of the writers, Andrew Bergman, is quoted saying in the book:
“If you have three Jews in a room, you’re going to be very skittish about writing jokes about a Black man — what’s permissible, what isn’t permissible… Richie gave us license, which was an enormous gift.
Brooks added: “I said, ‘I can’t say the N-word. I need him — he has to bless it. I need a Black guy to bless that word.”
Brooks said on the 40th anniversary Blu-ray release of the film in 2014: “When I thought it was getting to be too much, Richard said, ‘No, we are writing a story of racial prejudice. That’s the word, the only word. It’s profound, it’s real, and the more we use it from the rednecks, the more the victory of the black sheriff will resonate.'”
But Pryor Didn’t Just Write About Race
In Becoming Richard Pryor, Saul quotes Brooks saying Pryor was especially interested in the Mongo character played by Alex Karras.
“He came up with crazy stuff like, ‘Mongo only pawn in game of life,” Brooks said.
Madeline Kahn Didn’t Want to Show Her Legs in Her Audition for the Role of Lili Von Shtupp
Brooks said in the Blu-ray that when he asked Madline Kahn to see her legs, she replied, “So it’s that kind of an audition?”
He added: “I explained that I was a happily married man and that I needed someone who could straddle a chair with her legs like Marlene Dietrich in Destry Rides Again. So she lifted her skirt and said, ‘No touching.’ ”
She got the part.
Richard Pryor Wasn’t Allowed to Play Black Bart Because of His Reputation for Abusing Cocaine
Mel Brooks explained 20 years after the film’s release that Warner Bros. refused to give Pryor the role of Black Bart — which Pryor had written for himself — because “he was a known sniffer,” according to Saul’s Becoming Richard Pryor.
Bergman elaborates in the book: “Warner Bros. wouldn’t touch him with a ten-foot pole because his reputation was so dubious in terms of reliability.”
Saul notes that Pryor had recently experienced what the author calls a “coke-fueled crackup” on the set of Michael Campus’ crime drama The Mack, and it is likely that studio executives had gotten word of it.
The role went to Cleavon Little (above right, with Gene Wilder), who was great. And three years later, Pryor would pair with Little’s on-screen partner, Gene Wilder, in Silver Streak, the first of Pryor and Wilder’s four on-screen film pairings.
Blazing Saddles Almost Wasn’t Released
“When we screened it for executives, there were few laughs,” Brooks said in the Blu-ray. He added that Warner Bros. executives opined, “It’s simply too vulgar for the American people. Let’s dump it and take a loss.”
But Brooks said that studio president John Calley decided to open it in three cities — New York, Los Angeles and Chicago — as a trial, and “it became the studio’s top moneymaker that summer.”
A Warner Bros. Executive Ordered the Removal of the N-Word and Flatulence Sound Effects
Brooks also said in the Blu-ray edition that, following a sneak preview, Warner Bros. chairman Ted Ashley called for several cuts, including of the racial slur, and the flatulence noises.
“When he left, I crumpled up all of my notes and threw the wad into a wastebasket . . . I didn’t cut a sentence or a word or even an expression on anybody’s face,” Brooks said.
Mel Brooks Considers Blazing Saddles the Funniest Movie Ever Made
The American Film Institute ranks Blazing Saddles as the sixth-funniest movie of all time, but Mel Brooks disagrees: “I love Some Like It Hot, but we have the funniest movie ever made,” Brooks told Vanity Fair in 2016.
The five films that landed ahead of Blazing Saddles on AFI’s list were, from first to fifth, Some Like It Hot, Tootsie, Dr. Strangelove, Annie Hall, and Duck Soup.
It Led Directly to Young Frankenstein
Brooks wrote in his terrific 2020 memoir, All About Me!:
“One day on the Western town set of Blazing Saddles, when we broke for lunch I noticed Gene Wilder leaning against the sheriff’s office and scribbling something on a pad propped up on his knees. I said “Gene, how ’bout lunch?” He said, “In a minute I have to finish a thought I have.” … He handed me the pad and at the top had written the words ‘Young Frankenstein.’
Wilder said he wanted Brooks to write the movie with him, and direct. And that’s exactly what happened. They worked on the Young Frankenstein script together at night after shooting on Blazing Saddles finished — which is how they released two different comedy classics in the same year, 1974.
You can read more about this in our list of 12 Young Frankenstein Behind the Scenes Stories.
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May we also recommend, finally, this list of 12 Behind the Scenes Stories from Spaceballs, another beloved Mel Brooks film?
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