Showing posts with label Bass Reeves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bass Reeves. Show all posts

Saturday, August 31, 2024

JULIET MILLS ON JIMMY STEWART, MAUREEN O’HARA, AND ‘THE RARE BREED’, PLUS INSP’S ‘BLUE RIDGE’ FINALE, ‘WILD WEST CHRONICLES’ SEASON 4 PREMIERE, ‘LONE PINE!’

 

JULIET MILLS ON JIMMY STEWART, MAUREEN O’HARA, AND ‘THE RARE BREED’




Jack Elam, Jimmy Stewart, Juliet Mills


“But soft! What light through yonder window breaks? It is the East, and Juliet is the sun!”

Juliet Mills’ sole feature Western is 1966’s The Rare Breed. Maureen O’Hara stars as a recently widowed Englishwoman whose late husband’s dream was to introduce hornless Hereford cattle to the American West, with an eye towards mating them with Texas Longhorns. Maureen’s daughter is Juliet Mills, and the men who variously help and hinder their efforts are cowboy Jimmy Stewart, meat packer David Brian, and rancher Brian Keith. There are a handful of Hereford bulls, and the one with the biggest role is named Vindicator.

I first spoke to Juliet Mills three years ago. I was gathering material to do audio commentary with my constant partner-in-commentary-crime C. Courtney Joyner, for a Blu-ray edition of Mills’ excellent Western, 1966’s The Rare Breed. Atypically, that BluRay still has not been released. This was during COVID time, and nothing was normal. Juliet and husband Maxwell Caulfield had then just celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary, and when I wound up my interview by asking Juliet when we would next see them on the screen, she replied, a bit anxiously, “It's all been very quiet lately. I haven't worked this year at all; neither has my husband, but there's no point worrying about it because there's really not much going on.” What a difference a few years can make. Since our interview, Juliet has appeared in six episodes of Grey’s Anatomy, co-starred with Wendy Mallick – and Maxwell – in the movie 7000 Miles, starred in the fantasy adventure The Primevals, and performed voices in animated features and series including Bigmouth, Human Resources, Ark: The Animated Series, and voiced the whale in Metalocalypse: Army of the Doomstar. Maxwell has been equally busy in multiple episodes of The Bay, numerous movies and TV-movies, and was particularly memorable as Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione in the miniseries Pam and Tommy. And Max played Jacob Marley to Juliet’s Ghost of Christmas Future in the podcast Scrooge: A Christmas Carol.

Terms like “Showbiz Royalty” are tossed around promiscuously, but few families have more clearly earned the “Theatrical Royalty” designation than the Mills family. Juliet’s father, John Mills, had a magnificent 75-year career in film and television here and across the sea, an even longer and finer stage career, and won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar in 1971, in David Lean’s Ryan’s Daughter.  Juliet’s sister, Hayley Mills, was the biggest child movie star of the 1960s, and is still very active. Juliet, with nearly one hundred screen characters to her credit, who will always be beloved for portraying the first title character in the 1970s series The Nanny and the Professor, began her screen career as an infant, in 1942.


“I was brought up watching my father on a film set. My first visit was in In Which We Serve, a (Noel) Coward film that my dad was doing. I was 11 weeks old, so I do hardly remember that, but there were a couple of others, October Man (1947), So Well Remembered (1947), and The History of Mr. Polly (1949). In all of them. I had little scenes, particularly in History of Mr. Polly. I had a little scene with daddy, a rather sweet little scene, but then of course I always visited him. I remember very, very well visiting him on Great Expectations (1946). I suppose I was about five at the time; that was David Lean. A great movie. What I'm really getting at is that on a film set, wherever it is, I always felt at home and relaxed and happy.

HENRY PARKE: You were very busy in British comedies in the 1960s: No, My Darling Daughter, Twice Around the Daffodils, Nurses on Wheels, Carry on Jack. You were so busy; what seduced you to come over to the United States?

JULIET MILLS: Well, as a matter of fact, I was in New York. I did a play called Alfie, with Terence Stamp. It didn't run that long, I think about three months. It was a little before its time, in the sense that (the cast spoke with) very strong cockney accents and the American audience didn't understand half of it. But while I was there, a casting director called Boaty Boatwright, who was very famous in that time -- I hope she's still with us. (Note: She is.)  She saw me in the play, and suggested me for the role in The Rare Breed. And I didn't do a test or anything, come to think of it. I got the part from the theater.

HENRY PARKE: How was filming in the United States different from filming in England?

JULIET MILLS: Well, the actual work, on the set, it's the same really wherever you are, except it was on a grander scale, in the sense of fantastic locations and huge sets and a Western. I'd never dreamed of doing a Western. My father always wanted to do a Western: he was very jealous. (Note: the following year, John Mills got his wish, starring in the short-lived but well-remembered Dundee and the Culhane, as one of a pair of frontier lawyers.)

HENRY PARKE: I would think the location work for The Rare Breed would have been quite different from what you'd done in England. Was it a physically difficult shoot for you?




Juliet Mills, Maureen O'Hara and Jimmy Stewart

JULIET MILLS: I wouldn't say too physically difficult. I did quite a bit of riding, which I loved, and I did ride anyway. We used to ride in Richmond Park when I was a child. The only slightly difficult part of that shoot was that it was quite hot, which I wasn't used to. We were shooting near Palm Springs, and so it was quite unusually hot for me. But they looked after us beautifully with ice, shammy leather around your wrist and all the rest of it, keeping it cool with umbrellas and stuff. But the only physical… I remember the time, there's a crash, the horses pulling a cart. The stampede. And we did a bit of that. I mean, obviously doubles did a lot of it, but some of it, Maureen (O’Hara) and I did. We were cowering under a huge rock when all these animals went thundering over. That was the only slightly scary bit, I think. But of course, the doubles did all the really dangerous parts.

HENRY PARKE: I've got to say it works. It looks very scary on film.

JULIET MILLS: Yeah, it does; it's very well done. (Director) Andrew McLagan was so experienced in doing that kind of thing, and he was just wonderful. He was one of the tallest men I've ever seen; he was huge. His feet were huge! He was a very, very, very nice guy, very good director. It was a very happy experience for me, as you can imagine. I mean, working with Jimmy Stewart, it was a dream. He was such a lovely guy. He was just as he seemed to be, you know, he was just himself. He was very, very sweet to me, very welcoming. There were three dozen red roses (from him) in my dressing room when I arrived. And he was always very friendly and we stayed friends after the film. And I used to go and see him in his house on Roxbury. I remember he had a huge vegetable garden. Of course now there's a house where his garden was. (I remember) being in a bar with him and the whole crew was after shooting, when we were on location. Because we did a lot at Universal, in the studio, of course. And they built all that whole set in there, that sort of compound area with the house and all that. That was amazing. I'd never been on a set of that size and scale before. But anyway, we were in this bar and I remember he said, “Do you do drink beer, Julia?” I was 22, and I said, “Oh yes, I do. I do have half a pint at home in the pub.” And so he said, “I'm going to order you a yard of beer.”

Maureen and Juliet

You probably know what it is, it's a long glass thing with a ball, a bulb, on the end, so you can't put it down, you have to drink it! That was one of my memories of Jimmy. He was so sweet. And then Maureen, of course I knew anyway. When I was first in New York at the age of 17, doing a play called Five Finger Exercise, which was Peter Schaffer's (Equus, Amadeus) first play actually. She and I did a live TV performance of Mrs. Miniver. So that's when I first met her. And then of course she did The Parent Trap with Hayley, where she played her mother. She actually played my mother twice and Hayley's mother once. So I adored her. I was very, very fond of her. The last time I saw her actually was when she came to Los Angeles for the TCM (Classic Film Festival). They were doing a tribute to her and they showed The Corn is Green. I had tea with her at the Roosevelt Hotel. I think she was 90 then. She was still so beautiful. When I did Rare Breed with her, she was breathtaking. Her skin was like alabaster. She had that wonderful red hair and those huge green eyes. She was an Irish beauty for real.

HENRY PARKE: Yes, absolutely. Someone who didn't look quite as for real was Brian Keith with all that red hair all over him.

Maureen O'Hara and Jimmy Stewart flank Brian Keith
in a horrendous fake wig and beard

JULIET MILLS: (laughs) Oh, he was a sweet guy. I loved him, but I know what you mean. It was rather over the top, all that hair. He really got into that Scottish thing in a big way. He was like a throwback, a Scottish landowner from way back when.

HENRY PARKE: Don Galloway played your romantic interest. He's an actor that I know primarily from from television, from the Ironside (1957-1975) series.

JULIET MILLS: I didn't know him, because having not been living in America, and doing a theater only in New York, I never watched television. I didn't know anything about him. He was a very nice guy and a very good actor. I don't -- what happened to him? I don't remember seeing, I never saw him again personally. And in real life, I'm sure he went on and did lots of things, but, um, did he do anything, any more movies after that?

HENRY PARKE:  He did several Westerns right after The Rare Breed, and years later he was in The Big Chill, but mostly he was a very busy television actor.

JULIET MILLS: We never met again, but that's this strange business we’re in. You're in each other's pockets, kissing each other on the lips, first thing in the morning. And you never see each other again.

HENRY PARKE: You also worked with a great villain, especially in the stampede, Jack Elam.

JULIET MILLS: Oh yes, he was wonderful, wasn't he? He was such a famous villain, and I'd seen him in so many movies, always playing the baddy, with those amazing eyebrows, and he was wonderful. And the stunt people were amazing too. Hal Needham was the stunt coordinator, and did a lot of stunts in that film. I think he actually played me at one point with a wig on. Jimmy's double, Ted Mapes, he always doubled for him; he was the same height, and he was a great friend of Jimmy's. Everything about that film was a happy memory, I have to say. Actually I saw it maybe a year ago on TCM and it's entertaining; it's good. I remember (stuntwoman) Patty Elder very well. She doubled for me. They were so courageous, those stunt people. They’d do anything on those horses, falls and crashes, oh my goodness. Amazing. Hal Needham, he loved his work. He was so experienced. I think he must have broken every bone in his body by the end of it all. He was always hurting himself. You know, they really do bash themselves up terribly.

HENRY PARKE: He's one of the very few stuntmen I know of who went from stuntman to director. (John Ford was another)

JULIET MILLS: I suppose that was partly his great friendship and association with Burt Reynolds. I think that's how he got into that. I will tell you one little funny story that I just remembered. We did all the location work first, then we went back into the studio. There were lots of horses in that set, that compound area. And when they dumped a load, as it were, the guy came and scooped it up with a shovel, so it wouldn't be in the shot. One time I was just standing around, I wasn't in the scene, and he wasn't around. And they were going “ny-ny, ny-ny, ny-ny,” because that's what they call them, the ones that scoop up the shit. I grabbed a shovel and I went in and scooped it up. And that was a huge joke with the crew. I had a gold charm bracelet that I always wore myself, not in the film. At the end of the shoot, Jimmy gave me a little gold shovel charm because they used to call me ny-ny. That was my nickname on the set.

HENRY PARKE: Any other fond memories of the filming?

JULIET MILLS: One of my favorite scenes that I remember so well. Jimmy was living in a little shack out on the prairie. I rode up on my horse and got off, and we had a scene together. That was wonderful for me, working with him on a one-to-one basis like that. He was such a giving actor, like all the greats. I did the film with Jack Lemmon (Avanti! 1972), and he was the same. Working with great film actors, all you have to do is react, really. You don't have to act at all. They're so generous.

Juliet and Vindicator

One other thing I will tell you. You know Vindicator the bull? We all became very fond of Vindicator and Jimmy especially. Jimmy wanted to make sure that Vindicator would be retired to a lovely life and not carved up or anything. So he actually bought him, and he went and lived out his life on Jimmy's ranch in Idaho.

When I heard that you wanted to talk to me about The Rare Breed, I started to think about it and things just come back, you know? It was the first time I ever worked in Hollywood. It was my film debut in Hollywood. And it was an important time for me in my life. I’d just had my first child. My son was about six months, I think, when we came out to do the film. That was my first husband -- I've been married to Maxwell Caufield for 40 years, so that's almost like another life.

HENRY PARKE: You did a couple of Western TV shows after The Rare Breed. You did A Man Called Shenandoah (1966).

JULIET MILLS: I don't remember much about that show, but I do remember Alias Smith and Jones very well, with Pete Duel. I remember that being on location, I think it was the Fox Ranch. I did a lot of episodic television around that time, and movies for television. Sometimes they were very, very good.

HENRY PARKE: How did you like working on The Man From UNCLE?

JULIET MILLS: Oh, great fun, great fun. Robert Vaughn and David McCallum, lovely, sweet guys. Very happy with their lot, feeling lucky to be in such a hit series. It was a very happy set. Honestly I don't remember much of the plot or my part, but I remember enjoying it very much.

HENRY PARKE: It’s been such a pleasure to talk to you. I've always enjoyed your work. I remember Nanny and the Professor very fondly. But one of your films that I’ve heard so much about, but never seen, is your “possession” thriller, Beyond the Door (1974).

JULIET MILLS: Oh my God, that's a scary movie! I took my son. He was about five, I think. I took him to see it at the Grauman's Chinese. He was so scared that when it was over, he wouldn't walk out with me. He said, “Mommy, I don't want to walk out with you. I don't want anybody to see me with you!” It was a strange.

 

INSP’S ‘BLUE RIDGE’ SUNDAY FINALE IS THE BEST EPISODE YET!

Jonathan Schaech


I’ve been catching a little heat from some friends that I turned on to Blue Ridge. “How can it be the finale?” they ask. “Didn’t it just start in July?” TV seasons have gotten shorter and shorter since the 1950s, when 39 episodes was the average, and I must admit a 6-episode season is a new low, count-wise, but the good news is that season 2 is coming in 2025, and it will have more episodes!

And the more urgent good news is that the Sunday, September 1 season closer is the best written and performed Blue Ridge story yet. One of the biggest strengths of Blue Ridge, movie and series, which separates it from other police dramas, is its rural setting, and its creators’ true understanding of that world, of the sort or crime found in that world, and the realities of underfinanced law-enforcement: it is still the wild west when it comes to self-reliance and teamwork.

They have PLENTY of reasons to be scared!

Sunday night’s story concerns not only very real human relationships under life-and-death pressures, but eminent domain, problems faced by some of our returning military, impenetrable government bureaucracy – and I won’t say any more. It’s too good to start telegraphing. If you missed my July article on Blue Ridge, you can click HEREor just scroll down a little.

‘WILD WEST CHRONICLES’ SEASON 4 PREMIERE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4TH!

Director Jim Orr watching Byron Preston Jackson
as Bass Reeves

Since Bat Masterson is a superhero to western historians and western movie- and TV-fans alike, what could be more appropriate than to begin season 4 of INSP’s Wild West Chronicles with a ‘superhero origin story’ for Bat? And because we are in the 21st century, what could be more relevant than the fact that it’s not a ‘creation’ story, but a ‘reinvention’ story, the tale of how Bat, elegantly portrayed by Jack Elliot, redefined himself from lawman to journalist.

A familiar western street to Chronicles viewers.

A few months back I had the rare privilege to visit the Peppertree Ranch Studios in Acton, California, to witness a bit of the filming of two INSP Western series, Wild West Chronicles, and Elkhorn. Roaming the Western movie sets, I felt a connection not only with the West, but with the movie-making west of the early 20th century, when two movie crews would be shooting on opposite ends of a Western street, and care had to be taken so they didn’t film each other!

Jim Orr directing Byron Preston Jackson

I was particularly happy to be present for some of the filming for what will be episode 2, Bass Reeves: A Father’s Justice, with Byron Preston Jackson as the legendary lawman. When I’d attended an early screening of the first episodes of the Paramount + series Lawmen: Bass Reeves, I’d spoken to the show’s creator, Chad Feehan, and I was amazed when he told me that they wouldn’t be including the most dramatically personal manhunt of Reeves’ career: when he set out to capture his own son for murder. Feehan told me they hadn’t dramatized that story because they wanted an upbeat tone to the piece. I understood, but I’m delighted that Wild West Chronicles is tackling that story.

 

‘RENDEZVOUS WITH A WRITER’ PODCAST CELEBRATES 101ST EPISODE THIS THURSDAY WITH C. COURTNEY JOYNER AND ME!

 


On Thursday, September 5th, filmmaker, screenwriter, novelist, and film historian C. Courtney Joyner, writer of the brand-new horror movie Quadrant, and Henry C. Parke (that’s me!), author of the new book The Greatest Westerns Ever Made and the People Who Made Them, will be the guests of Bobbi Jean Bell and Jim Bell on Rendezvous with a Writer #101! And you need not wait! You can see Quadrant right now on Tubi and Prime Video, and you can buy Greatest Westerns right HERE.


I GUESTED ON THE EXCELLENT ‘HOW THE WEST WAS ‘CAST’ PODCAST

I’m going to be putting up links to all of the podcasts I’ve done recently, and How the West Was ‘Cast is exceptionally good – even the episodes that I’m not on! Hosts Andrew Patrick Nelson and Matthew Chernov have tremendous passion for and knowledge of the genre, and I’m sure you’ll enjoy it! Here’s a link to my episode, where we discussed – you guessed it – The Greatest Westerns Ever Made, and the People Who Made Them! https://westernpodcast.buzzsprout.com/884218/14709372?fbclid=IwY2xjawFANGRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHdoHIKZRoiYQZ5xeIPlyWDvp8MaQS0fmRqZTjZCq5vCsfY2YkDV3_3O7eA_aem_M-rkJIE359PPFdpdvpC3RA

LONE PINE FILM FESTIVAL OCTOBER 10 – 13!


The Lone Pine 34th Annual Film Festival is right around the corner, and the link below will take you to the official website, where you can learn all about the films you can see, the tours of the spectacular Alabama Hills – the locations of the movies you’ll have just seen, and all of the notable guests who will be attending. https://lonepinefilmfestival.org/

 


On Friday morning, October 11th, I’ve have the pleasure of interviewing Sandra Slepski, niece of Western star Tom Tyler, about his later years, spent with her family. This will be followed by a screening of Tom Tyler’s 1936 Western boxing film, Rip Roarin’ Buckaroo, which was shot all around Lone Pine, in the Hills and in town, and later in the day there will be a tour of the film’s locations. I’ll also be signing and selling my book, The Greatest Westerns Ever Made and the People Who Made Them. Keep an eye of our Facebook page, because I’ll have A LOT more info on Lone Pine as the date gets closer!

 

…AND THAT’S A WRAP!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright August 31, 2024 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

 


 [HP1]

Thursday, May 6, 2021

‘WILD WEST CHRONICLES’ PRODUCERS TELL ALL, TCM FEST STARTS TONIGHT! PLUS DUELING BILLY THE KIDS!

 

THE TCM CLASSIC FILM FESTIVAL IS ON RIGHT NOW!

The TCM Festival began today, Thursday, May 6th, at 5 pm Pacific time, 8 pm Eastern time, with West Side Story.  The real one, not the one that hasn’t opened yet.  For the second year in a row the Festival is, of necessity, virtual.  They have a terrific line-up of films, both on TCM itself, and on HBO Max.  HBO Max is doing it as a so-called ‘hub’, which apparently means that they list all of their programming, and you can watch any of it whenever you wish, not just during the four days of the festival, but for the entire month of May.   

Following West Side Story, TCM has gathered three of the film’s stars for a reunion: Rita Moreno, who appeared in a lot of Westerns TV series in the 1960s, often playing an Indian; George Chakiris; and Russ Tamblyn, who of course starred in Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, as well as the Spaghetti Western Son of a Gunfighter. 



The Western offerings are a little light this year.  Friday morning at 8:45 Pacific time, TCM is premiering a 4K restoration of Irving Berlin’s musical Annie Get Your Gun, from the original Technicolor negative.   It should look great, but it’s a rather stagey musical, and while poor Betty Hutton, the rushed replacement after Judy Garland was fired, works like crazy to please, it’s pretty disappointing.   


Saturday morning at 7, Pacific time, it’s arguably Sam Peckinpah’s finest Western, Ride The High Country, starring Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea, and introducing Mariette Hartley. (Mariette was such a wonderful discovery that two years later, Alfred Hitchcock would also introduce her in Marnie.) The ideal supporting cast includes James Drury, LQ. Jones, Warren Oates, John Davis Chandler, John Anderson, R. G. Armstrong, and Edgar Buchanan.  HBO Max will be featuring John Ford’s The Searchers, which will include a discussion by Ben Mankiewicz and Bruce Springsteen.  That’s it for Westerns.  For the whole TCM Festival schedule, go HERE.

 

‘WILD WEST CHRONICLES’ PRODUCERS TELL ALL!


Every couple of years, a cable channel announces a new series with a title like Old New True Legendary Outlaws Lawmen Gunfights of the Old West.  They’re usually okay; they throw a little income to western movie-town operators, reenactors, and historians.  They’re also interchangeable and forgettable.  When producers Craig Miller of the INSP Network, and Gary Tarpinian of MorningStar Entertainment got together, men who specialize in documentaries and reality shows, they might have done something awfully similar.  In fact, they meant to.  Gary calls it, “How we went from non-fiction to fiction in three shows.”

They were well into preparing just such a show, Craig recalls, “When Gary sent over a short list of the expert historians and authors that he wanted to use.  And these people are great, literally the world's greatest experts on the West.  But you know what? I've seen them in three or four other series already. So why do we want to do this? Is there a way to not use talking head experts, and still do a docu-drama?”

Byron Preston Jackson plays Bass Reeves

Another concern was, “we needed to stay on-brand for INSP, which means to not leave the 1800s.”  Craig explains, “Our viewers like to surf into INSP and get lost in the old West. And every time you put a talking-head historian in there, you're snapping them right out. So I called Gary and I said, what if we had a frontier reporter? And instead of talking-head experts, they're interviewing eye-witnesses to the West's most notorious events?”

Gary liked the idea, even though, “We were going to shoot (our experts) in about a week at The Autry. My partner thought I'd lost my mind when I said to her, we've been wanting to get into ‘scripted’ (shows) for a long time.”


From The Real Lone Star Ranger

Craig remembers, “Gary, a stickler for accuracy and truly an expert on the West, came back with was the solution.  He said, ‘there was a real guy who did this. His name was Bat Masterson.’”

What they’ve created with Wild West Chronicles is a lot less like those previous documentary series, and a lot more like the half-hour Western anthology series of the 1960s, like Zane Grey Theatre and Death Valley Days.  Actually a good deal like Stories of the Century was meant to be, had it stuck closer to the actual history. 

“I knew we would be pretty good at it,” Gary says.  “We are very well equipped to tell a story that's based on a true story, with real people, in a certain time period, faithfully reproduced, based on our research, and tell the story accurately. Because when you're doing non-fiction, that's what you do.  We've taken creative liberties, no doubt about it. We weren't there, so we're putting words in their mouths. But other than that, we're trying to tell the stories accurately and to show how much we love this world and these people, these characters.”


In Wild Bill Hickok and the First Quick-Draw Duel,
flirtation, and a gold watch... 

Another problem they avoided while moving away from the standard talking-heads docudramas was to not be a ‘greatest hits’ show: so far at least, they are NOT doing Jesse James and Billy the Kid and the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.  “I'll let you in on a little inside baseball,” Craig shares. “When we first created the concept, we actually focus-tested three of the episodes and almost unanimously, the respondents said what they were interested in were stories they had never heard, about little-known characters of the West. Or if we were going to tell the story of a famous character, they wanted it to be a little-known story about that famous character. We intentionally kept our format to a half an hour. Because we don't want to do a birth-to-death biography of each character. We just wanted to take one slice of life, one story. And then that also allows us to do multiple episodes with the same characters.”

“Exactly,” Gary agrees. “And we think the audience is going to love it, because we're going to have the same actors play those people. For example, one episode we have a coming up is on the death of Dora Hand, in Dodge City, at the hand of Spike Kenedy. And one of the guys in the posse is Bat's deputy Bill Tilghman. And later on, Bill Tilghman's one of the Three Guardsmen (of Oklahoma), going after Bill Doolin. So it's the same actor.  And Bass Reeves -- there are so many great stories we can do with him, how we used his head to capture people, the story of him going after his own son, who was involved in domestic violence.  It has been particularly enjoyable working with INSP. Diversity is very important to us at Morningstar; my partner is not only a woman, she's Chinese. We met in film school at Loyola Marymount here in LA, and we’ve always felt that it's important to send a proper message and that just meshed perfectly with what the network wanted to do. That same focus group (said) we'd like to hear more about black cowboys, and women.   In season one we've been able to do Bass Reeves, Stagecoach Mary.  We're doing Elfego Bacca, probably the most famous Mexican-American law man. (Pioneer doctor) Susan Anderson.”

...lead to a showdown.

Craig adds, “This sense of diversity also includes the types of stories.  Because this is an anthology series, it allows us to do a wider spectrum of stories from the West. For instance, the last episode this season is on Charles M. Russell, the cowboy artist, and probably not something you're going to see in a traditional series that’s all Jesse James and Billy the Kid. It allows us to paint, no pun intended, a more accurate picture of what the West was like.”

Wild West Chronicles stars Jack Elliot, who doesn’t look or dress much like Gene Barry (who starred in Bat Masterson from 1956 to 1961), but looks a lot like the photographs of the real lawman-turned-journalist.  The episode Dr. Susan Anderson – Frontier Medicine Woman, airs Friday at 9 p.m., Pacific Time.  On Sunday at 2:30 p.m., Pacific Time, Bat Masterson & The Dodge City Deadline, Part 1, premieres.

Jack Elliot as Bat Masterson

If you’d like to read some of Bat Masterson’s actual writing, his collection, Famous Gunfighters of the Western Frontier is available from Dover Books, and other publishers.

 

JUST ONE MORE THING...

COMING SOON – DUELING BILLY THE KIDS!


Emilio Estevez, who was unforgettable as Billy the Kid in 1988’s Young Guns, and 1990’s Young Guns II, has spread the word that he’s coming back!  Screenwriter John Fusco, who wrote both Young Guns films, is hard at work on Guns 3: Alias Billy the Kid, which Estevez will direct as well as star in.  And this week the Epix Channel announced an 8-part limited series about Billy, to be written and produced by Michael Hirst, of The Tudors and Vikings fame.  Updates on both projects coming soon!

AND THAT’S A WRAP!


And please check out the May issue of True West, on newsstands now. It features my interview with author Paulette Jiles, whose News of the World is the basis for what many – including me – consider the best film of the year!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright May 2021 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

Monday, November 18, 2019

‘WESTERN PORTRAITS’ CELEBRATION AT AUTRY TUES. 11/19, PLUS ‘IT ALL BEGINS WITH A SONG’ DOC, GETS DISTRIB., PLUS NOVEL ‘LEGENDS OF THE WEST’ REVIEWED!


WESTERN PORTRAITS – STEVE CARVER’S 23-YEAR LABOR OF LOVE IS A TRIUMPH!



At 11 a.m. on Tuesday, November 19, 2019, lovers of Western film will converge at The Autry’s Wells Fargo Theatre for Rob Word's A Word on Westerns, and an event more than two decades in the making, the publishing of Western Portraits – The Unsung Heroes & Villains of the Silver Screen. Twenty-three years ago, Steve Carver began shooting portraits of Western character actors, beginning with the legendary R. G. Armstrong, veteran of Peckinpah films and TV Westerns, and whom Steve had directed seven times. Next was L.Q. Jones (four times), then David Carradine (four times).

Steve Carver is, in fact, much better known to the general public as a director of action films like Capone (1975), An Eye For An Eye (1981), and Lone Wolf McQuade (1983), than he is as a photographer.  As a child, “Actually I was more into art, and wanted to become a cartoonist. Then my father bought for me my first camera when I was eight years old. It was a Brownie box camera. It had two lenses, the top one you look down upon the viewfinder, and the bottom lens was the shutter lens that actually took the picture. Cameras were like magic.”  He grew up in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and in the summers would attend camp, “And they had dark rooms. So, I was able to actually process the film, and print the negatives that I shot.  So, from age eight, 10, all the way up to 12 years old when I became a counselor, I was in a dark room and I was a photographer.


Henry Silva

“My whole family encouraged the arts, and encouraged me to go to The High School of Music and Art, which was in Harlem, in the middle of CCNY (City College of New York).  I had to travel an hour and a half on subway to go to school every day, and an hour and a half back.”  He traveled for his college education. “When I went to graduate school at Washington University in St Louis, I was  (studying with) all of the Life and National Geographic photographers that were working in the Midwest. Clifton Edom, who was the father of photojournalism, was teaching at the University of Missouri.” 

His focus began to change, “When I did my graduate thesis. I did a film that incorporated a lot of my photography. I made the transition from still pictures that were telling stories, to motion pictures that told a whole story. A story that allowed me to not only earn my degree, but to put the story into perspective. And to have a greater audience than one that would come and only see my artwork and my photographs hanging on a wall. To actually enjoy a film, and to applaud, and then get reviews and have people come back, and want to see the film again and have reviewers write about it.”


Robert Forster

He applied for, and won, a fellowship to The American Film Institute.  “I had some great teachers:  Frantisek Daniel, and Tony Villani were my main teachers. I had four mentors that (A.F.I Director) George Stevens, Jr. gave me, which I was very proud of: Gregory Peck, and Charlton Heston.  And my two director mentors were George Stevens, Sr., and George Seaton. Those were the people that I had their home phone numbers, and I could call them up anytime.”

He rubbed elbows with other greats as well. “I found Alfred Hitchcock in the library at the American Film Institute after his lecture. I cornered him and asked, ‘Can you tell me how do you prepare a film?’ And he said, ‘Let me teach you. He sat down with me at the table and took a piece of paper and showed me how to do a storyboard, drew these little stick figures, and actually showed me the single, the two-shot, say the master shot. I played dumb. I knew it already, but he was really great, putting it down for me.” 

At a screening of his second AFI film, his adaptation of Poe’s The Tell-Tale Heart, starring Sam Jaffe and Alex Cord, Roger Corman, no stranger to Poe, “Tapped me on the shoulder and said, ‘How would you like to come and work for me?’” Carver cut trailers for Corman, and got his chance to direct a feature when Corman assigned him to direct a female gladiator movie, The Arena, in Rome. “Actually, the first place he sent me was Israel, to (producer) Menahem Golan's house. I started to do a storyboard. Menahem looked at me and said, ‘Who taught you that?’ I said Alfred Hitchcock. He looked at me like, what?”


John Savage

In Rome, making The Arena at Cinecitta Studios, his neighbor at the next stage was Federico Fellini. “I would watch him shoot  Amarcord.  And Federico would come and sit next to me, watch the girls. He would speak in broken English, how he loved gladiators with big tits.”

Carver was so busy directing that he hadn’t touched a still camera in twenty years, until he was directing 1996’s The Wolves, in Russia.  “I was in Red Square and a gypsy came up to me with a very rare camera that photojournalists use. It was stolen, and he was trying to sell it to me for 50 bucks, American dollars. I wanted this camera, and my body guard, who was a KGB agent, got this camera for me in a very unusual manner. He took the guy behind a kiosk, knocked the guy out, took my money.”  Carver returned to California and, ready for a break from filmmaking, built a darkroom in Venice called, appropriately, The Darkroom.  Calling on his years of experience in labs, his knowledge skills and painstaking perfectionism – Carver often spends six hours on a single print -- he became in-demand for collectors, museums and archives, making new copies from 19th and early 20th century negatives, shot by master photographers.


L.Q. Jones

Fascinated by the work of great photographers like Steichen, Weston, Stieglitz, and especially Edward Sheriff Curtis, famous for his portraits of American Indians, “I decided to make my own, and to create sets. I was using homeless people that were walking by my lab at night. I would offer them food and money to sit and to mimic these old pictures.

“And I would create my own negatives and my own photographs in order to learn how to do these. Well, these people weren’t working out because they couldn't stay still. These are all time-exposures, because in the old days, the film was real slow. So everybody had to stay very still for several minutes, and they had metal gadgets that held the person very still when they were taking a picture.”  Carver’s next move was to ask actor friends to pose, and the project was born.  His pool-shooting buddy R.G. Armstrong was his first to pose, and Armstrong encouraged Carver to make it into a book.  He even gave Carver the book’s original title. “The first title was not Unsung Heroes. It was called The Dying Breed. When I started to approach some of the actors, The Dying Breed was a big turnoff.”


R.G. Armstrong

One of the odd things that can happen with time-exposures is anomalies, or ‘ghosting’.  Some are easy to explain, and some are not. When Carver shot L.Q. Jones, “Bobby Zinner (project historian and wardrobe man) brought an 1893 Winchester lever rifle that had killed 22.  You know, and you touch the gun, and it has that vibe, a killer vibe. So L.Q. sat in a chair, and the gun was against the wall and we shot the picture.  Bobby took the gun back.” On another day, “We shot Buddy Hackett.  We used the same set, just redressed it, and we shot Buddy’s picture. In the background, off to the left, there’s a ghost image of the same rifle.  We didn't have that rifle.”


Buddy Hackett 

The first session with Denver Pyle was even more strange. “The first shooting, Denver was in horrible shape.  We dressed him up, and he had a tank of oxygen behind him and tubes running out of him. He was on chemo and we just propped him up and I shot him with 36 exposures, and he just barely got through the session. When I processed the film, his face was purely white. No eyes, no mouth, no nose. Just white. He was a ghost. I was horrified. I didn't have a shot of Denver. I called his wife Tippi and I said, Tippi, is it any way possible that I can get Denver to come back? I need to shoot him again. She said, I'll ask Denver. Denver calls me back and says, I'll be back. No problem. He comes the next day, spitting vinegar. He comes back with his tank, everything. We dress him up again, put the badge on him. I shoot him again. He’s totally different. I mean, lots of energy. The pictures are great. His face is there. His energy is all there.” Denver Pyle died a couple of weeks later.  It’s one of the best portraits in the book, and that is saying a lot. 

With this two-decade project finished, Carver is eager to leave the darkroom, and return to directing.  “What I dread is that the publisher will want a volume two. I have a lot of actors like Robert Fuller writing me and saying, when are you gonna call us?  I have a couple of film projects in mind. We’ll see. I’ve got to get out of here first. I’ve got to get another dog.”

The book begins with a forward by Roger Corman, a preface by Kim Weston, and an introduction by Steve Carver. There are eighty-two photographic subjects in the book, many of whom you’ve seen a hundred times, and each accompanied by an illuminating essay and/or interview by C. Courtney Joyner.  Joyner also wrote the closing essay, Carved on Film: Western Movies and the Faces that Made Them.  The book ends with detailed filmographies of all of the participants, and acknowledgements.  Western Portraits is published by Edition Olms Zurich. 
The list price is $50. It can be purchased at Dark Delicacies, the Autry Gift Shop, and of course, Barnes & Noble and Amazon.


‘IT ALL BEGINS WITH A SONG’ RECEIVES WORLD DISTRIBUTION & U.S. JAN 2020 RELEASE DATE



The documentary, which celebrates the unsung heroes of Nashville, its songwriters. Directed by Chusy Haney-Jardine, the 82-minute film will be handled throughout the world by Tri-Coast.  Among the songwriters interviewed are Rodney Crowell, Bill Anderson, Bob DiPiero, Shane McAnally, Brett James, Caitlyn Smith, Brandy Clark, busbee, Desmond Child, and Jeffrey Steele.



LEGENDS OF THE WEST – A DEPUTY MARSHAL BASS REEVES WESTERN



By Michael A. Black
Published by Five Star – Hardcover, $25.95  238 pages

In 1879, in The Indian Territory which will one day be Arkansas, and pieces of a few other states, Bass Reeves, legendary former slave turned Deputy Marshall for Judge Parker’s court at Fort Smith, has a direct assignment from the Hanging Judge: investigate the activities of a band called The Cherokeos. He agrees, and with his trusty companion, a Lighthorse Indian Policeman known David Walks as Bear, they are on the trails of one Donavan, an Irish immigrant turned criminal mastermind who has left a long and bloody string of crimes in his wake, and has an even more ambitious misdeed in mind.

Michael A. Black, a retired policeman who has written thirty novels in various genres, keeps the telling lively as he cuts back and forth between hunter and quarry, peppered with humor, some of it pretty raunchy. He even provides an alternate story-teller, a character named Stutley, fresh from the east and hoping to be the next Ned Buntline, who is bullied into turning the despicable Donavan into The Rob Roy of The West.

While author Black does not endorse the currently popular theory that The Lone Ranger was based on Bass Reeves, but turned Caucasian, he runs with the idea in this year, the 70th anniversary of the Clayton Moore and Jay Silverheels TV series. There are masks, and five ambushed Texas Rangers, and even a faithful Indian companion who keeps calling Bass “Gimoozabie.” 


‘LONE RANGER AND THE LOST CITY OF GOLD’ SCREENS SAT. 11/23 AT THE AUTRY!

Celebrating the 70th anniversary of the Lone Ranger TV series, the second Lone Ranger theatrical feature, starring Clayton Moore and Jay Silverheels, will screen at the Wells Fargo Theatre.  The film will be introduced by Native actor & writer Jason Grasl (Blackfeet).  It will be followed with an interview with Clayton Moore’s daughter, Dawn Moore, conducted by Leonard Maltin.

AND THAT’S A WRAP!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Material Copyright November 2019 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved