Showing posts with label Bill Tilghman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Tilghman. Show all posts

Thursday, October 10, 2019

‘ULTIMATE COWBOY SHOWDOWN’ PREMIERE, INTERVIEW WITH TRACE ADKINS, PLUS ‘SILVER SPURS’ RED CARPET, LONE PINE FILM FESTIVAL!


‘ULTIMATE COWBOY SHOWDOWN’ PREMIERE




Pull your hat down tight next Monday, October 14, and keep it there all week!  The Ultimate Cowboy Showdown, a competition like none before it (that I’ve seen, anyway), begins on INSP, and runs for six days. A dozen professional cowboys will be going head-to-head in a series of challenges to test their overall cowboying skills, while Trace Adkins and his experts whittle down the field. There’s no show Saturday, but on Sunday night, the last cowpoke standing will win a shiny new belt-buckle – and a fifty-thousand-dollar herd of cattle, not coincidentally, the herd they’ve been working with all week.

The competitors come from all over the country – three from Texas, two from California, and one each from Florida, Utah, Oklahoma, Tennessee, North Dakota, Iowa, and even Washington D.C. – that last fellow describes himself as an urban cowboy. Some are rodeo cowboys, one is a movie stuntman, more are ranchers, more than one wants to win in order to save the family ranch. While the movies have mostly portrayed cowboying as a white man’s activity, the first cowboys were Mexican vaqueros, and after the Civil War there were many black cowboys, and both groups are represented here, as are women.   


Contestant J. Storme

Some challenges are group, and some are individual.  Some are typical, like calf roping, and some are not, like a relay race: the first person saddles and rides a horse, and passes the baton to the next, who has to load 21 bales of hay into a hayloft as fast as he can. The baton passes to the next, who has to change a flat tire on a trailer. The next person has to open the trailer, let out a horse and a calf, climb on the horse, and rope the calf. The final cowboy has to pick up that 200-pound calf and put it back in the trailer!

Although he’s grateful for the various experts’ input, the ultimate judge is three-time CMA Award-winning singer and actor Trace Adkins. I had the opportunity to talk to Trace about the show, and about his Western movies, when he took a brief break from his judging duties.



INTERVIEW WITH TRACE ADKINS



Henry Parke:   I'm very happy to finally meet you, because I'd been on three of your Western sets -- Hickock, Wyatt Earp’s Revenge, and Traded -- but never on days where you were working.

Trace Adkins: Well, let's see. Two of those I got killed in. That director, Timothy Woodward, I worked with on Hickok and Traded, and I just finished doing another western with him too, The Outsider. He kills me in every movie that he puts me in.  (laugh) I don't know what the deal is.

Henry Parke: Well, he must like you though. He kills you, but he keeps bringing you back. What kind of character do you play in it?

Trace Adkins: Well, I was a bad guy, but now I'm seeking redemption and trying to finish my life, doing hopefully something that'll get me into heaven. But my son is a lost cause. (My character’s) seed is bad, and there's just nothing he can to do about it. It's a really interesting role.

Henry Parke:   Well, with the Ultimate Cowboy Showdown, I hear you’re just coming back from an immunity challenge. What's been the most interesting of the challenges that they’ve done so far?
Trace Adkins: I think the team challenges. The immunity challenges are individual things. I tend to like the ones where they team up, and they have to work together and strategize. It's a little more nuanced, as opposed to just the mano a mano of roping or running a horse or something.

Henry Parke:   How did you get involved with the Ultimate Cowboy Showdown?

Trace Adkins: I've known (Producer) Andrew Glassman for a few years, and we talked years ago about trying to do something together. Andrew told me about this project and I just jumped right on it. It just sounded like it'd be something fun to do. I am at that beautiful place in my life and my career where I can make decisions on what I want to do based on the answer to the question, would that be something I would enjoy doing? I was involved from the very beginning, talking about who were the experts he was going to bring in to work with.  It's been a really, really interesting process and a lot of fun.

Henry Parke:   What experts has he brought in that you've enjoyed working with?

Trace Adkins: There’s a guy named Buddy Shnaufer, who owns a huge cattle company. It was interesting to hang out with Buddy and hear his insights on the cattle business. Fred Whitfield came, seven-time World Champion Calf Roper. He's a legend, and I got to spend a day riding next to Fred. I just had a blast, probably my favorite day so far. And then Chuck Tice, who’s former president of the Alabama Cattlemen's Association. I've learned from every expert that’s been on the show so far.


Contestant Hadley Hunting

Henry Parke:   And you're a rancher yourself?

Trace Adkins: No, I'm not a rancher. I mean, I grew up with horses, and I live on an old farm south of Nashville. I'm just never home; I feel guilty enough leaving my dogs. So, I'm looking forward to that day when I start to slow it down and not travel as much, and get back into having some livestock; right now, I don't have any.

Henry Parke:   Did you develop many cowboy skills when you were growing up?

Trace Adkins: You know, somebody asked me how I thought I would do in this competition. I said well, if you'd have caught me 35 years ago, maybe I'd have given you a run for your money, but at 57, no.  I'm in the perfect spot, standing on the sideline, cheering them on and judging. My participating days are over.

Henry Parke:   What do you think are the qualities and characteristics that add up to being the ultimate cowboy?

Trace Adkins: You know, every one of these contestants are experts at something. But this competition requires them to have some level of proficiency in a lot of different areas. It's the cowboy or cowgirl that has the most experience overall, a cowboying capacity, that's going to win this thing. Because they're being asked to do all kinds of different stuff, so they can't just rely on whatever their forte may be.

Henry Parke:  In your autobiography, TRACE ADKINS: A PERSONAL STAND, you talk about your roughneck work in the petroleum industry. How does that kind of work compare with cowboying?

Trace Adkins: I think the mentality was probably pretty similar. You're going to work 12 hours a day, and you're going to reach and get it all day long. And that's how these cowboys have to work. When it's time to work, you've got to work until the job's done. There's no calling time out, and taking a break. Just going to get it done. That's the way it was working oil fields, you know, we had a saying: it never rains, it never gets hot. And there are no holidays.

Henry Parke:   It's funny, I was just talking to my wife's two brothers who, like you, worked on oil rigs for Global Marine.

Trace Adkins: Oh wow!

Henry Parke:   And they told me that there were three things all successful men in that field have: a diamond pinky ring, a Rolex, and divorce papers. Is that true?

Trace Adkins: Well, I've got a pinky that I got cut off working on the drilling rig. That accounts for the pinky ring. I don't hardly ever wear a watch, but I have a couple of nice ones. And I've got three sets of divorce papers. So I guess I got that going for me.

Henry Parke:   Ever since the days of the singing cowboys like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, there's been a connection between country music and Western movies. Do you feel a personal connection with Western film?

Trace Adkins: Well, I never would have even allowed myself to dream that I would ever be in a Western. And now I've had the opportunity to live that dream. I absolutely love it. As a kid I watched those movies and just idolized those people. Gary Cooper, John Wayne, the list goes on and on, and I thought, wow, that's the best job in the world. To get paid to pretend to be a cowboy and ride a horse all day. That must be fun. And now I've found out it is, it absolutely is. It's just like stealing money. It's just too much fun to get paid for doing it.

Henry Parke:   Which is your favorite of the movies you've done so far?

Trace Adkins: My favorite was not a western. The Lincoln Lawyer, the movie than I did with Matthew McConaughey. But I was a biker, which is just a cowboy on two wheels.

Henry Parke:   I liked your work in The Virginian very much.

Trace Adkins: Thank you. I enjoyed that. That was my first lead. The very first day I was on set, I made the announcement to the entire crew that the director had no idea what he was doing because he hired me as the lead in the movie, which unsettled everybody just a little bit.

Henry Parke:   Besides Matthew McConaughey, any other actors you're particularly pleased to work with?

Trace Adkins: Well, the biggest ones that I've had a chance to work with, Mark Wahlberg and Dennis Quaid, a few others. Without exception, they've been so gracious and kind and giving, and willing to rehearse when they don't have to. Those guys have been really, really kind. And Kris Kristofferson. I did Hickok with him, and what a treat that was.  I'd done a couple of shows with Kris, but I've never had a chance to do a movie with him until then.


Henry Parke:   So I take it you watched a lot of westerns growing up?

Trace Adkins: Oh yeah, my daddy, that's all he loved. Gunsmoke was appointment TV. Whatever we were doing, we can't do that then: Gunsmoke is going to be on. Gunsmoke, Bonanza, all those Westerns we watched growing up, and all those movies. He had prints of John Wayne on the wall. My daddy rodeoed when I was kid. He steer-wrestled. He was a big, tough cowboy. When my second brother came along, my Momma made him quit. But he loved horses and he was a good rider. Good hand. He was good man. I think I really got my love of all things Western from him.

Henry Parke:   Did you go to Rodeos as a kid?

Trace Adkins: Yeah, we always went to the Rodeo. We had that hometown rodeo in Springhill, Louisiana every year. Then we'd go to Shreveport, to the Hirsch Memorial Coliseum when they'd have a big Rodeo during the State Fair. And we a couple of times we went to Houston to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. So yeah, we traveled to go to the rodeo.

Henry Parke:   Does doing The Ultimate Cowboy Showdown bring back memories?

Trace Adkins: Absolutely. It just reminds me of so many of my friends back home, too. People that do team roping and cutting. It just feels very familiar to me to be hanging out with these guys and these ladies. Good people, and always a good day spending the day with them. It's been a great experience so far.


LONE PINE FILM FESTIVAL THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY!


The 30th Annual Lone Pine Film Festival will be held from Thursday, October 10 through Sunday, October 13, headquartered at the Museum of Western Film History. About 800 movies have been filmed in the general area, 400 in the Alabama Hills just outside of Lone Pine. For three decades, folks who love the look of the area, and love movies, and Westerns in particular, have gathered around Columbus Day to celebrate the place’s unique history in filmmaking.

There are many tours and talks over the three days, highlighting topics such as the films that Randolph Scott and William “Hopalong Cassidy” Boyd made there. The locations of many shoots can be visited, including not just Westerns, but the biggest-budget film for its time shot there, Gunga Din.

Many films and TV shows that were filmed there will be screened, featuring stars like Tex Ritter, Roy Rogers, Sunset Carson, Allan “Rocky” Lane, Gene Autry, Bob Steele, Tim Holt, John Wayne, Joel McCrea, and Randolph Scott.

Western Historian Rob Word will be moderating a number of panel discussions, and guests taking part, and introducing films, will include Bill Wellman Jr.; Wyatt McCrea, grandson of Joel McCrea and Frances Dee; Jay Dee Whitney, son of Western director William Whitney; Patrick Wayne, actor and son of John Wayne; and Cheryl Rogers, daughter of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans.

Of particular interest, The Cowboys, the classic 1972 John Wayne film, will be presented with a Q&A featuring one of the picture’s stars, Robert Carradine, as well as Patrick Wayne and Richard Farnsworth’s son, Diamond Farnsworth.  Robert Carradine and Darby Hinton will do a Q&A with the brand-spanking-new Western that they co-star in, Bill Tilghman and The Outlaws.
Follow the link below to find out details and buy tickets. And don’t dawdle – many events are already sold out!

‘BILL TILGHMAN & THE OUTLAWS’ WINS SEVEN AWARDS AT WILD BUNCH FILM FESTIVAL!


The Wild Bunch Film Festival has just wrapped up, and director Wayne Shipley and screenwriter Dan Searles are still doing their victory dance, and with good reason. I heard from one of the film’s stars, Darby Hinton, that they won seven awards: Best 1st Time Screen Writer – Dan Searles, Best Stunts – Ken Arnold, Best Child Actor - Noah Deavers, Best Ensemble Cast,  The Wild Bunch Award (for Best Screenplay That Exemplifies The Spirt Of The West) - Dan Searles, Best Western Songwriting Competition – Dan Searles and his mother, and Best Supporting Actor – Darby Hinton.  Dan Searles tells me the film is now available to rent from Amazon Prime.

ON THE RED CARPET AT THE ‘SILVER SPUR’ AWARDS!

On Friday, September 20th, the Reel Cowboys held their 22nd annual Silver Spur Awards. For a change, it was held not at the Sportmen’s Lodge, which was recently levelled, but the Equestrian Center in Burbank, which has an appropriately Western atmosphere. Julie Anne Ream once again ran the event with Reel Cowboys President Robert Lanthier, this year in part as a benefit for The Gary Sinise Foundation.

I spoke to a number of attendees on the red carpet. I’m working with a new, tiny digital recorder, which works very well but, with a fuzzy wind-cover over the mic, startled some of my subjects.

Julia Rogers Pomilia took this picture
of me with my fuzzy recorder


JULIA ROGERS POMILIA
Granddaughter of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans



Julie Rogers:  Oh, I thought you were holding a hamster. What is that?

Henry Parke:   It’s my strange digital recorder. Well now, you're one of how many grandchildren of Roy and Dale?

Julie Rogers:   They had 16 and one passed away suddenly years ago. So we have 15. Lots of grandchildren and great grandchildren and great, greats.

Henry Parke:   What was Roy Rogers like as a grandfather?

Julie Rogers:   He was just so sweet and he loved kids. He would put us on Trigger. He would play with us in the pool. We'd play chicken and get up on his back. We'd watched The Roy Rogers Show with him on Saturday morning, and be crawling all over his back, and wrestling around on the floor, and he'd stop and say, "Go, Roy, go!" And we'd say, "Yeah, go get him!" And as far as I knew, every kid had a grandpa that had a TV show. I just thought that was normal because that's what was normal to me, you know? They were just so accessible and so loving. They never missed a birthday or a school play, even though they were so busy. They could be at the White House one night, and then at our house playing old maid with me on the floor the next night. They were wonderful.

Henry Parke:  And was Dale's personality really pretty much like the character she played?

Julie Rogers:   Oh my, you know, neither one of them were acting. When I see them on their shows, I don't mean this to sound negative, but I don't think they're very good actors, because they're just being themselves. So I don't ever see them act. And she was a hoot. She was so outgoing, she could never just fly under the radar when she came a room, and she didn't mean to. She just was. And grandpa was very quiet, just totally the opposite. So they were a cute couple.

Henry Parke:   Now, you said that he would put you on Trigger. Was this visiting on a set?

Julie Rogers:   No, no, no. After they were done with the show, he kept Trigger at the ranch where they lived in Chatsworth. So when we'd come over, we'd sometimes go down to the barn and pet him or feed him or sit on him and he'd ride us around. It was good memories.

Henry Parke:   How about Bullet?

Julie Rogers:   Bullet was one of their house dogs. They had six dogs, and they'd all come running out to greet us when we drove up. It was just magical. I didn't appreciate it as much growing up, until I look back on it and go, wow! I mean, I knew it was fun, but I really appreciate it now so much more.

Henry Parke:   Was Pat Brady around? Was he a friend?

Julie Rogers:   Yeah, he was around, but I was one of the last ones born, so he wasn't around a lot when I was. (Note: Pat Brady died in 1972) I didn't know him, but my sisters did. They said he was a really wonderful man. Funny, and just a really good friend of Grandpa's and Grandma's.

Henry Parke:   Now when you say that Roy and Dale weren't that great actors, or rather, that they didn’t get much of a chance to act, did you ever see Roy in Mackintosh and TJ (1975)? I thought he was wonderful in that.

Julie Rogers:   You know what? I need to see that. Somebody just sent me a copy of it, because you can't find it very easily, and I have never seen it, so I should look. But I mean back then, back in the 40s and 50s, he was just being himself and I bet that would be a whole different take on him.

Henry Parke:   Oh, it really is. It's a wonderful performance.  When I saw it I said, wow, I wish he'd been given more challenging roles more often. He really does so well.

Julie Rogers:   And he never aspired to be an actor. That was the last thing he probably thought he was going to be. But he was one of those that just sort of fell into it. Whereas grandma, she was born wanting to be an actress, and she would dance in front of the mirror, and think someday she was gonna marry Tom Mix and be an actress. And she did it.

Henry Parke:   She sure did. And she learned to ride very well.

Julie Rogers:   Yes, yes. Roy said that the first time she rode, he'd never seen so much sky between a woman's rear-end and a horse in his life. So she kind of bluffed her way in there and said she knew how to ride when she didn't. So she basically learned from him, on-set.

Henry Parke:   I think it's remarkable how accessible The Roy Rogers Show is now. It's on TV three times a day.

Julie Rogers:  I know. That's kind of fun.

Henry Parke:   Do you know if are younger people are watching it?

Julie Rogers:   No, that's a tough one, because with all of that computerized stuff and all the electronics and the special effects, there's not a whole lot of interest in those old westerns anymore. We're working on a musical (about Roy and Dale) coming out next year, opening in Atlanta. We're gonna see how that goes, and we're hoping to get his name out there a little bit more to the next generation.  Because kids don't like watching black and white. My kids were the same way. They didn't even want to watch their great grandpa because it’s black and white.  I teach kindergarten in Castaic.  I've talked about my grandparents to all my classes and show them little clips. It helps a little bit. Every little bit helps.

JOHN SCHNEIDER

Best remembered as Bo Duke on The Dukes of Hazzard, in1986, John Schneider co-starred in a remake of 1939’s Stagecoach, as the coach driver, co-starring with Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, and Kris Kristofferson.


Demonstrating how he held the reins
driving a six-up in Stagecoach


John Schneider:  Hi. What a nice dog.

Henry Parke:   Thank you for petting him. I've got to say, of all the men who played the stagecoach driver in the films of Stagecoach, you could not be less like Andy Devine or Slim Pickens.

John Schneider: (a screech-perfect imitation of Devine) "Not like Andy Devine?" Well you know, it was a great honor to be in that movie, especially considering Johnny (Cash) and I became best friends after that. I lived with John and June after we did Stagecoach because at that time, I had the number one album in the country. People don't necessarily remember that. My beard, they remember. That was my beard. But I so enjoyed Stagecoach, and working out there in Mescal (the Western movie town), and Old Tucson, before it burned down.  I've been there since. It's beautiful. It's actually, I think, much better for having burned down. Not the Hollywood way, where the Laramie Street burns down, so they build a parking lot. I'm glad that Old Tucson's back and thriving and beautiful. That was a great time for me and I actually drove the six-up. (Note: a stagecoach pulled by a team of six horses)

Henry Parke:   Really?

John Schneider:  Yeah. And I'm told that Ben Johnson and I were the only ones (who could). Ben was an amazing actor, but Ben was a cowboy. So I may be the only non-professional cowboy actor to actually drive a six-up on camera and I'm pretty damn proud of that.

Henry Parke:  Did you already know how to do that?

John Schneider:  I did not. I was taught.  There was a guy named Red, a red-haired cowboy that worked at Old Tucson.  I drove the stagecoach tours in Old Tucson for two days. It was a four-up. And then he would take me out after, and add the other team. You would have the lead team, and the wheel team. The swing team, the team in the middle, you would add.  Whenever I talk about Stagecoach, I do this – (he holds his hands up, separating his fingers) – because that's what you had to do. I mean, three sets of leather reins in your hands, with horses that would much rather run abreast. So, I loved it. I loved Dr. Quinn – Medicine Woman. I loved Guns of Paradise.

Henry Parke:   That's right. You've done all of the better TV westerns of the period.

John Schneider:  Thank you. And you know, in my heart and soul, I'm a seven-year-old who's watching the Sons of Katie Elder and McClintock and Cahill and wanting to be John Wayne. So one of these days, I guess by the time I get to be John Wayne, maybe I'll be playing him and that's okay.

Henry Parke:   That would be fine.

John Schneider:  I would love it. We share a name.

Henry Parke:   Now with Stagecoach, I was told that was originally going to be a full musical.

John Schneider:  I heard that too. I don't think that's true. What we were going to do is all of us had written songs. And the only one they wound up using was the "stagecoach, stagecoach, rolling on to glory, stagecoach," which was Willie's song. But they were going to put that music in there, and the music that we had written was going to be our individual themes. We weren't actually going to break out in "trouble in River City."  It wasn't going to be Paint Your Wagon, but there was gonna be a lot of music from all of us in it. Somehow that turned into just Willie's song. Well, I wrote this song, I don't remember what the song was, but I wrote, cause we all wrote. We had a lot of time there and we wrote.

KATHY GARVER

Kathy Garver is best remembered as Cissy, the oldest child being raised by Uncle Bill (Brian Keith) on Family Affair.



Henry Parke:   I was surprised when I checked IMDB to realize how many westerns you've done.

Kathy Garver: I started out doing Westerns. One of my first roles was in Sheriff of Cochise, and then (slipping into a French accent) in The Adventures of Jim Bowie, I played a little French girl. Merci. It's interesting to look back at some of the DVDs that some fans have sent me and see. Oh my gosh, I was so little!  But I just did a presentation yesterday of Ex Child Stars on the Western Frontiers. It's about a 45 minute presentation I do with PowerPoint. So I have profiled Johnny Crawford, and Jimmy Hawkins from Annie Oakley and there was Lee Aaker from Rin Tin Tin, and Darby Hinton from Daniel Boone. So they're all my friends and I worked with them when I was little. And you know what, I'm still doing Westerns.

Henry Parke:  I’d love to see your presentation.

Kathy Garver: I'm doing it in Oklahoma if you want to go out there. But I was thinking it would be good to do with the Gene Autry Museum. I think that would be a wonderful place to present this. I have a retirement home where I'm going to present it.

Henry Parke: This morning I was watching your former co-star, Johnny Whitaker on an episode of Lancer. I didn't remember that he had done Westerns.

Kathy Garver: I didn't either. And I'm doing two adult westerns. One is Grace, which is a lovely Western, and the other one's Eli Elder. So we're getting those together. And here's a bit of news. I just finished filming my new series called Aunt Sissy, and that's kind of a wink and a nod to Family Affair. It's not a sequel.  It's a standalone kind of sitcom. So that went very, very well.


WYATT MCCREA

Producer Wyatt McCrea is the grandson of Joel McCrea and Frances Dee, and the son of Jody McCrea. He lives on the ranch that his grandparents built.  The Johnny Crawford that we discuss starred in the series The Rifleman as Chuck Connor’s son, Mark McCain.



Henry Parke:   I hear that you just had a wonderful event at your ranch for Johnny Crawford.

Wyatt McCrea:  We did. It was a lot of fun. We were trying to do what we could to help Johnny out. We screened the last movie he was in, Bill Tilghman and The Outlaws. We had a good crowd and hopefully we raised a little money for him.

Henry Parke:  That's terrific.

Wyatt McCrea:  Well, Johnny's a great guy, and he's done a lot for a lot of people over the course of his lifetime, so it was the least we can do to pay him back a little bit.

Henry Parke:   That's great. Tell me, are you getting an award or presenting one tonight?

Wyatt McCrea:  I'm presenting to Mariette Hartley, which will be a lot of fun. Her first movie was with my grandfather.

Henry Parke:   Of course, Ride the High Country.

Wyatt McCrea:  Yeah. So it was fitting that I was allowed to do it, and I’m so happy to do it. She's a great lady.

Henry Parke:   Yes, she is. I recently interviewed her for a True West article, and she was talking all about the good advice that your granddad gave her.  He said before he does a scene, he always read --

Wyatt McCrea:  -- read the scene before.

Henry Parke:   Exactly, which I thought was extremely smart, and should be obvious, but I've never heard anyone else say it.

Wyatt McCrea:  No, it's true. It should be obvious, but there are people that don't do it, you know.

Henry Parke:   As you can tell when you see their films.


AND THAT’S A WRAP!

In the next week or two I'll have a new Round-up, and look at the 70th birthday celebration of the Lone Ranger TV series, the travel series Travels with Darly, the new Western Soldiers' Heart, and much more. 

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Content Copyright October 2019 by Parke -- All Rights Reserved


Wednesday, December 4, 2013

BEST OF THE WEST 1898-1938 FROM NAT. FILM PRES. FOUNDATION!



TREASURES 5 – THE WEST, 1898-1938 – Video Review


Cavalry & Indians at Little Big Horn


The wonderful, dedicated folks at the National Film Preservation Foundation, who brought you LOST & FOUND – AMERICAN TREASURES FROM THE NEW ZEALAND FILM ARCHIVES (if you missed my review, HERE is the link . ) have outdone themselves for Western fans, and just in time for Christmas. 

TREASURES 5 – THE WEST, a three disk set, plus a 110 page book, runs for more than ten hours, and contains forty films, from one-minute newsreel clips to several full-length features.  From slapstick to melodrama, from documentary to real drama, they offer a kaleidoscopic view of the American West from a vast range of perspectives.  Additionally, each film has an optional audio commentary, from experts in Western history, filmmaking, and film preservation.  It’s wonderfully entertaining, highly informative, and I cannot recommend it highly enough. 

Nearly every important film company of the era is represented – Biograph, Selig, Nestor, Kalem, Essanay, Vitagraph, Thomas Ince, Famous Players – Lasky (later Paramount).  The stars featured include Tom Mix, Clara Bow, Richard Dix, Bronco Billy Anderson and Mabel Normand.  The directors include D.W. Griffith, Victor Fleming, Gregory La Cava, Mack Sennett and W. S. Van Dyke.  The story sources include authors Bret Harte and Sinclair Lewis. 

Among the unexpected delights are every-day events filmmakers recorded nearly a century ago. HOW THE COWBOY MAKES HIS LARIAT (1917), though only three minutes, shows the entire process, starting with culling the hair from his horse’s tail; it’s probably the only in-depth recording of the all-but-lost process ever made.  LIFE ON THE CIRCLE RANCH (1912), presents typical daily ranch work convincingly.  But wait until you watch it again with the commentary, and realize how much of it was staged for the camera, and all of the rules of ranching that were broken in the process!

from OVER SILENT PATHS


On D. W. Griffith’s very first trip to make films out west, in 1910, he filmed OVER SILENT PATHS: A STORY OF THE AMERICAN DESERT.  Starring Marion Leonard and Dell Henderson, the barren desert also stars; it was an unusual film locale at such a time, when most Westerns were shot in and around lush East-coast forests.  Marion and her prospector father W. Chrystie Miller are a set to pack it in and go to civilization, when her father gets robbed and killed by unsuccessful prospector Henderson.  When she, desperate, meets up with Henderson, she has no idea he killed her father.  Can you see the romance coming?  Shot by the great Billy Bitzer, using the then-ruined and abandoned San Fernando Mission as a location, it’s as emotionally affecting as you expect with Griffith.  And fast?  It was shot in two days the first week in April, and released in May.  And the previous week he’d shot RAMONA, with Mary Pickford, at the ranch where Helen Hunt Jackson had set her story.

from THE TOURISTS


TOURISTS (1912) was also shot by the Biograph Company, by a small ‘B’ unit following the bigger Griffith unit.  Slight but fast and amusing, this one’s directed by Mack Sennett shortly before he left Biograph to start his Keystone company.  Shot entirely in the Santa Fe Train Station in Albuquerque, using the exteriors of Fred Harvey’s (as in THE HARVEY GIRL) Indian Building, and clearly improvised, it stars Mabel Normand as a tourist who gets in trouble with local Indians when she and her friends miss their train, and the chief takes a liking to Mabel.  And going against the not-yet-established Hollywood tradition, many Indians are played by Indians.  Speaking of Fred Harvey, also included is the 1926 film THE INDIAN DETOUR, a how-to film as well as a travelogue, featuring the wonders of ancient New Mexico as seen from modern Harvey trains and buses.  This film helped Harvey introduce and popularize the concept of cultural tourism.
Some sponsored films are more subtle than others.  SUNSHINE GATHERERS (1921), in often stunning color, shows and tells the story of Father Serra bringing Christianity to the beautiful new world of California.  Only gradually do we realize that the ultimate master plan is to make the riches of California available to the world through Del Monte canned fruit.  I felt positively noble eating my canned peaches while watching this with breakfast! 

Many of the fictional films make great use of their exotic locations.  A prime example is THE SERGEANT: TOLD IN THE YOSEMITE VALLEY (1910).  Part of the great treasure-trove of American films discovered in the New Zealand Film Archive, SERGEANT is a Selig-Polyscope film, starring one of the screen’s first great leading men Hobart Bosworth as the title character, trying to rescue his kidnapped  beloved.  Taking full advantage of Yosemite’s remarkable features, the film’s inter-titles both advance the story, and identify where each sequence is shot.  Similarly, SALOMY JANE, A STORY OF THE DAYS OF ’49, PRODUCED IN THE CALIFORNIA REDWOODS (1914), opens with the title gal emerging from a cut in a redwood.  Made by the once-thriving California Motion Picture Corporation of Northern California, it’s the only one of their films known to survive. 


Clara Bow


Among the more unexpected pleasures of this set are a pair of sophisticated comedy features with western settings, MANTRAP (1926), starring Clara Bow, directed by Victor Fleming and lensed by James Wong Howe; and WOMANHANDLED (1925), starring Richard Dix and Esther Ralston, and directed by Gregory La Cava.   When New Yorkers Dix and Ralston meet, she tells him she’s tired of prissy city-men – metrosexuals before the term was coined – and Dix sets out to become the westerner she wants.  Not only does he remodel himself to please her, finding the West she longs for to be gone, his does his best to recreate it.  In MANTRAP, big-city manicurist Clara Bow marries backwoodsman Ernest Torrence, but devoted as they are she soon becomes bored with his life, and falls for his unlikely friend, big-city divorce lawyer Percy Marmont.  It’s set in Canada, but shot around Lake Arrowhead.  And Clara Bow is an absolute delight, playing a woman so independent and naughty and lacking in guilt that she could only exist in Hollywood in the pre-Code days.

BRONCO BILLY AND THE SCHOOLMISTRESS


In fact, one notable feature of many of these westerns is that the women are so plucky and strong.  In BRONCO BILLY AND THE SCHOOLMISTRESS (1912), Billy’s romantic pursuit of the new teacher puts him at odds with every other man in town.  His judgment is so clouded that he nearly gets himself killed – and guess rescues the cowboy hero?  In the similar LEGAL ADVICE (1916), Tom Mix, who wrote, directed and starred in the film, tries to get himself into legal trouble in order to make time with the new lady lawyer!

THE BETTER MAN


Of course, it’s not all hijinks and hilarity.   In THE BETTER MAN (1912), a Vitagraph film shot in Santa Monica, the heroine and her sick child are alone as the worthless husband goes off to drink and gamble.  An Mexican outlaw with a price on his head comes to the house to get food, and is about to make his escape when the plight of the mother and child touches his heart, and he goes out seeking the doctor, not guessing that the erring husband is looking for the outlaw, and a quick reward.

LADY OF THE DUGOUT - Al & Frank Jennings 
question a lawman


Made six years later, the feature THE LADY OF THE DUGOUT (1918) has a similar plot to THE BETTER MAN, but with a remarkable twist: some of the actors are playing themselves!  Ten years earlier, former U.S. Marshal Bill Tilghman, whom, with fellow Marshals Chris Madsen and Heck Thomas rode for Judge Parker, and were known as The Three Guardsmen, decided to make a western movie.  Called THE BANK ROBBERY (not a part of this set), it starred himself, Heck Thomas, Quanah Parker, and bank and train robber Al Jennings.  Jennings found he loved the movie business, at least in part because he could rewrite his own history.  His film BEATING BACK (1904), which is considered lost, set the pattern for films about outlaw do-gooders. 

Al robs the bank


Produced and co-written by Jennings, and starring himself and his brother Frank, and Corinne Grant, LADY OF THE DUGOUT is directed by the great W.S. ‘One-take-Woody’ Van Dyke, and is one of the greatest treasures of this collection.  The plot is much like that of BETTER MAN; a pair of outlaws robs a bank, and when they run short of food, they come upon a woman living in a dugout house on the prairie, she and her child starving as they wait for worthless dad to come home with some food.  The outlaws are so moved that they get provisions and bring them back, endangering themselves.  Director Van Dyke, who would go on to direct TARZAN OF THE APES, the THIN MAN MOVIES, and so many more, is a wonderful visual storyteller, and his use of reflections and night-for-night photography is memorable.  But it’s his collaboration with Jennings that shows off the startling authenticity of the criminal behavior.  There’s a chilling naturalness to a gunman’s stance while shooting away; removing a bullet from a shoulder room is shown unflinchingly by the camera, born indifferently by the wounded man.  Incidentally, the little starving boy grew up to be Ben Alexander, Jack Webb’s first DRAGNET partner.

Lawman in the dust, Al & Frank
make their getaway


Of course, Jennings spins the story his own way.  The criminals are so noble, and the law so venal that when a train is reported robbed, it’s assumed that the sheriff is behind the crime.  Poor real lawman Bill Tilghman must have concluded that he’d created a monster, and he produced and starred in PASSING OF THE OKLAHOMA OUTLAW (1915) as a response to the glorification of the bad guy.  Though not complete, it’s a satisfying chunk of film detailing the apprehension of many of the Oklahoma Territory’s most infamous bandits, and the lawmen are in many cases played by the very men who did the deed: again Bill Tilghman and Heck Thomas, as well as Arkansas Tom Jones.

The travelogues are stunning, some going as far back as 1898, and featuring railroads, Yosemite, Yellowstone, and Hot Springs, Arizona.  Among the remarkable finds is an 8 minutes segment from the feature-length FROM THE GOLDEN WEST, an amateur film made by an unknown Easterner for club screenings.  It’s ‘L.A. as seen from a blimp’ footage is delightful.

Soundstages seen from a blimp in
THE GOLDEN WEST


Newsreel clips are included, some celebrating the American Indian, others patronizing him, and one sequence features 7th Cavalrymen and Lakota and Cheyenne warriors ‘burying the hatchet’ at The Little Big Horn fifty years to the day after the event. 

In DESCHUTES DRIFTWOOD (1918) we get a travelogue of Oregon trains and waterways from the point-of-view of a hobo who’s been sprung from jail to do the honors.  Eighteen years later, in a Hearst newsreel, we see THE PROMISED LAND BARRED TO HOBOES (1936), showing roadblocks set up in California to keep the unemployed out.   

Made during the Mexican Revolution, MEXICAN FILIBUSTERS (1911) is a romantic tale about gun-smuggling.  AMMUNITION SMUGGLING ON THE MEXICAN BORDER (1914), is also about gun-smuggling, but stars a sheriff re-enacting his own kidnapping and his deputy’s murder, just weeks after it had actually happened. 

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power produced ROMANCE OF WATER (1931), about getting water from the Owens Valley.  It’s followed by a Hearst newsreel clip, A NEW MIRACLE IN THE DESERT (1935), and no matter how loudly you turn up the sound on these two, you can still hear John Huston and Jack Nicholson talking in the back of your head.

I know that I’ve just brushed the surface of this terrific collection – I haven’t even mentioned a great Thomas H. Ince feature, THE LAST OF THE LINE, but hopefully I’ve given you a sense of the wonders to be found in this set.  And I should mention that each of the forty films has an original music score.  I heartily recommend it as a gift for anyone on your list with a love of Western movies or Western history, or American history in general.  At more than ten hours – twice that with the commentary – this is not a set to be consumed at a sitting, but to be savored over days or weeks or months.  Then again, if you’re a binge watcher, have at it!

Although it lists for $59, you can buy it from Amazon for $32 HERE

THAT’S A WRAP! 

I apologize again, for the Round-up being several days late again.  I’m still getting over this bug I’ve had for nearly two weeks.  I’m very touched by all the get-well wishes I’ve received.  I don’t want to give the impression that something serious is wrong – it’s just an upper respiratory infection; not even the real flu!
Anyway, I’d better get well soon, as I’ve got a bunch of book and movie reviews coming up, and some very cool giveaways just in time for Christmas! 

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright December 2013 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved