Sylvester Stallone told cinemagoers in Cannes on Friday that he never expected to make it in the film industry due to an accident at birth that caused him to slur his words – now one of his more celebrated trademarks.
The U.S. actor, 72, rocketed to fame in 1976 with his Oscar-winning boxing movie “Rocky” and went on to become one of Hollywood’s biggest action stars through the “Rocky” and “Rambo” and film franchises.
But Stallone said that when he was starting out, his speech impediment had stumped filmmakers and fellow actors like “Terminator” star Arnold Schwarzenegger.
“I didn’t think I was going to (have a career in film),” Stallone said during the Cannes Film Festival, where he was invited to speak in a celebration of his career.
“When I would try to get jobs in commercials, the director would go, ‘What are you saying, what language is that?’
“I knew it was bad when Arnold Schwarzenegger said, ‘You have an accent’,” Stallone added. “I go, ‘I have an accent? Excuse me, what?’ It’s true. Arnold and I should open up a school for speech lessons. It would be perfect.”