"Due in part to his muscular frame and height, he was quickly signed to replace
Lex Barker as Tarzan" by producer
Sol Lesser. Lesser had Gordon change his name because "Werschkul" sounded too much like "Weismueller". Scott's Tarzan movies ranged from rather cheap re-edited television pilots to large-scale action films with high production values shot on location in Africa. In his early Tarzan films, he played the character as unworldly and inarticulate, in the mold of
Johnny Weissmuller, an earlier Tarzan portrayer. In Scott's later films, after a change in producers, he played a Tarzan who was educated and spoke perfect English, as in the original
Edgar Rice Burroughs novels. Scott was the only actor to play Tarzan in both styles. Fearing he would become typecast as Tarzan, Scott moved to Italy and became a popular star in epics of the
péplum genre (known in the United States as sword-and-sandal), featuring handsome bodybuilders as various characters from Greek and Roman myth. Scott was a friend of
Steve Reeves, and collaborated with him as
Remus to Reeves's
Romulus in
Duel of the Titans (1961). Scott also played Hercules in a couple of
international co-productions during the mid-1960s. As the
péplum genre faded, Scott starred in
spaghetti Westerns and
Eurospy films. His final film appearance was in
The Tramplers (filmed in 1966; released in the United States in 1968). ==Personal life==