After serving as a
Navy diver in the late 1950s, Rondell dabbled as a film extra before branching out into stunt work, eventually serving as a stunt double for several TV actors, including
David Janssen,
Robert Horton and
Doug McClure. In 1970, Rondell co-founded Stunts Unlimited, an organization of top-rated stunt performers, with fellow daredevils
Hal Needham and Glenn Wilder. The photograph was taken at
Warner Bros. Studios in
California, known at the time as
The Burbank Studios. While the first fourteen takes were successful, Rondell suffered minor burns when the wind changed direction on the fifteenth, singeing his moustache He recounted the event in the 2012 documentary
The Story of Wish You Were Here. In 1985, Rondell's 22-year-old son, Reid Rondell, was killed in a helicopter crash near Los Angeles while working as a stunt double for actor
Jan-Michael Vincent on the TV series
Airwolf. Rondell performed stunts for some of the top action films of the late 1980s and early 1990s, including
Lethal Weapon,
Thelma & Louise and
Speed. During that period, he also directed his first and only action film,
No Safe Haven, starring
Wings Hauser, and served as a second unit director on such films as
The Two Jakes,
The Mighty Ducks and
Captain Ron. In 2003, he came out of retirement to appear in a complex
car chase scene in
The Matrix Reloaded, teaming up with his son,
Ronald A. Rondell, the film's stunt coordinator. ==Death==