WIN THIS BEAUTIFUL WESTERN CALENDAR!
Last year I said Asgard’s was the most beautiful
Western Calendar I’d ever seen. Well,
they’ve done it again! The 2015 model is
a pip – using Western Pulp covers from 1936 through 1949, and featuring the
kind of florid colors and over-heated action that drew your eye and made you
eagerly plunk down your dime. The format
is big – 11” by 15” – and the pulps featured include TEXAS RANGERS, RANCH
ROMANCES, MASKED RIDER, SPEED WESTERN and THRILLING WESTERN. They’re printed on high-quality heavy stock,
and perforated to become a 12-piece print collection when the year is
finished. There’s also a smaller
desk-top version. It retails for
$21.95. HERE is the link to Asgard Press,
who have many other beautiful calendars as well.
BUT IF YOU’D LIKE TO TRY AND WIN YOUR CALENDAR
instead of buying, here’s your chance!
Answer these three questions about three great Western writers who
started out in the pulps and other magazines:
1.) Max
Brand, under his own name and five pseudonyms, wrote more than 500 novels and
about as many short stories. He died
young, in 1944 when, as a Harper’s
Magazine war correspondent in Italy, he was killed by shrapnel. Although best known for his cowboy stories,
his most famous character was in another profession, featured in a hugely
successful series of MGM features in the 1930s and 1940s, and on TV in the
1960s. Name the character.
2.) Writer
Frederick Dilley Glidden is my favorite Western writer, because every line of
dialogue he wrote sounded like Randolph Scott said it. In fact, two of his novels were adapted into
Randolph Scott movies – CORONER CREEK and ALBUQUERQUE. RAMROD and BLOOD ON THE MOON were also based
on his novels. Name his nom de plume, borrowed from a real Old West gunfighter and
Tombstone and Dodge City regular.
3.) Once
a dentist (like Doc Holliday), Zane Grey’s many novels include RIDERS OF THE
PURPLE SAGE, THE VANISHING AMERICAN, and have been filmed over a hundred
times. Always athletic, he went to college
on a baseball scholarship, but in later life his interest turned to a far
different sport, one more commonly associated with Ernest Hemingway and John
Steinbeck. Name the sport.
Send your answers to swansongmail@sbcglobal.net , and
please put WESTERN CALENDAR CONTEST in the subject line! On Friday I’ll put on a mask – not the Masked
Rider or Lone Ranger kind, but one I can’t
see through – pick a winner from among all correct entries, and I’ll put it in
the mail on Saturday! Good luck!
NEW SPAGHETTI WESTERN ‘6 BULLETS TO HELL’ PREMIERES
IN L.A. THURSDAY!
On Thursday, January 15th at 7 p.m., ‘6
BULLETS TO HELL’ will have its Hollywood premiere at the Chinese Theatre #4, as
part of the monthly HollyShorts Screening
Series. If you’re a Round-up regular, you’ve been
hearing about 6 BULLETS since they first rolled camera in July of 2013.
An outgrowth of friendships formed at the Almeria Western Film Festival, this homage
to oeuvre of Sergio Leone was filmed in Tabernas, Almeria Spain, at
MiniHollywood and at Fort Bravo, the fabled stomping grounds of Clint Eastwood,
Lee Van Cleef, Jack Palance, Franco Nero – really everyone involved with the roughly
800 Spaghetti Westerns produced in the 1960s and 1970s.
It’s the story of former lawman-turned-farmer Billy
Rogers (Crispian Belfrage), who once again straps on his guns to avenge the
brutal murder of his wife by ruthless bandit Bobby Durango (Tanner Beard) and
his despicable gang.
It’s co-directed by
Tanner Beard, who previously directed the excellent LEGEND OF HELL’S GATE, and Russell Quinn Cummings who co-starred in HELL’S
GATE, and plays Sheriff Morris in 6 GUNS.
Also in the cast is Spaghetti Western veteran Antonio Mayans (TOWN
CALLED HELL, MORE DOLLARS FOR THE MAGREGGORS), and Aaron Stielstra, who gave a
chilling performance in the recent THE SCARLET WORM. Members of the cast and crew are expected to
attend. To reserve your ticket, go HERE.
SHORELINE VILLAGE HOLDS 1ST ANNUAL ‘BUCKAROO
DAYS’
SAT. & SUN. JAN 17&18
Shoreline Village in Long Beach, a place better
known for fishing than fast-draws, will celebrate the first of what’s planned
as an annual free event, BUCKAROO DAYS. The
fun starts at one p.m. both days, and run ‘til 6 on Saturday and 4:30 on Sunday
– don’t miss the ‘Farewell Shoot-out’ at 4 pm!
Among the activities and entertainments will be black-smithing, gold panning,
Faro playing, shootouts (they often
follows Faro playing), line-dancing, swearing-in of junior deputies,
gun-slinging, trick roping, and music by The Fiddle and Pine Band, and the
BillHillys – who’ll give your kids lessons for playing on a washboard! There’ll be a rope-maker working in front of RainDance, the American Indian store, and
the Kids’ Corral, with games and such for the youngins’, will be open all day,
both days.
Shoreline Village is located at 401-435 Shoreline
Village Drive, Long Beach, CA 90802.
562-435-2668. Or visit them at www.shorelinevillage.com
‘TRUE GRIT’ – THE
WAYNE ONE – SATURDAY AT THE AUTRY!
Saturday, January 16th, at 1:30 pm in the
Wells Fargo Theatre, The Autry will
screen TRUE GRIT (1969) as part of their ‘What is a Western?’ series. It’s easy to think the glory days of American
Westerns were over by 1969, but that was also the year of THE WILD BUNCH, BUTCH
CASSIDY, THE UNDEFEATED, and MACKENNA’S GOLD.
Guys like Wayne were getting old, but they knew their stuff, as did
director Henry Hathaway. When the Coen
Brothers did their excellent remake forty years later, the original was widely
dis’d and dismissed by folks who had clearly not seen it in years, and recalled
it as corny. Nonsense: TRUE GRIT is a
very tough movie, beautifully shot by Lucien Ballard, with a wonderful score by
Elmer Bernstein, and directed with the unflinching guts that only a tough old bastard
(and I mean that in the most respectful way) like Hathaway could muster. The wonderful cast, in addition to the
Oscar-winning performance by Wayne, includes Robert Duvall, Jeremy Slate,
Dennis Hopper, and Strother Martin – who was also in both WILD BUNCH and BUTCH
CASSIDY: what a year he had! Glen
Campbell, a great musician but untrained actor, was always sheepish about his
performance, but he did just fine. And Kim
Darby, as Mattie Ross, the bossy little gal who hires Wayne to catch her dad’s
killer, gives the performance of her career.
With the remake, much was said, by the Coen brothers
among others, about it not being a remake, but a return to the original
novel. That’s a load of crap, because it
implies that the Hathaway version strayed far from the Charles Portis book. The only major difference plot-wise, is that
the Coens used the original Portis ending.
But the fact is Portis, who was on-set for the 1969 film, thought he
could come up with a better ending than he’d written in the novel, and he certainly
did. SPOILER ALERT! Incidentally, I have it on good authority
that when word got out that the Coens were going with the novel’s ending,
featuring an old Addie Ross, Kim Darby
very much wanted to play that role.
Elizabeth Marvel did an admirable job in the part. But it would have meant so much more if Kim
Darby had played it.
TRUE GRIT will be introduced with a discussion led by
Jeffrey Richardson, curator of Popular Culture and of the Gamble Firearms
Collection.
THAT’S A WRAP!
Sorry
I’m posting a day late! I thought it would be Sunday, but I had to finish reading a
novel and writing a cover blurb, had to steam wallpaper off the dining room
walls, and when I came home had to help an elderly neighbor who was calling –
“Help! I’ve fallen, and I can’t get up!” Honest! I’ve just read a wonderful book, KNOTT’S
PRESERVED, about the fabled California theme park Knott’s Berry Farm. I interviewed one of its authors, J. Eric
Lynxwiler, last week, and will have my review and interview in the next week or
two.
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright
January 2015 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
That gives me goosebumps thinking about Kim Darby playing the older Mattie Ross. That would have been something to see I'll tell you what.
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