Showing posts with label Common. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Common. Show all posts
Friday, August 9, 2013
‘HELL’ ROLLS IN FOR ROUND 3 SATURDAY NIGHT!
‘HELL ON WHEELS’ Season 3 – Review
Cullen and Elam meet again
‘HELL ON WHEELS’ returns to AMC on Saturday night,
August 10th, with a two-hour, two episode opener, entitled BIG BAD
WOLF and EMINENT DOMAIN. It promises a
season three with even more of the adventure, conflict, depth of character, and
accurate sense of history, that the series’ legions of loyal camp-followers
have come to expect. It is, to put it
mildly, a powerful opening.
Durant connives
For anyone new to the series, it is the story of the
building of the Transcontinental Railroad just after the Civil War, much of it
seen from the point of view of Cullen Bohannon (Anson Mount) a trained engineer
and former Confederate Officer. His
original enlisting with the project was a subterfuge – his wife and child were
murdered by Union soldiers, and his work on the railroad provided both cover
and information to track the men down and exact revenge. But the building of the railroad has become
his salvation, a mission in a life which had lost its driving force with the
loss of his family. The title of the
series refers to the portable town – with offices, dormitories, saloons and
brothels – that travels alongside the ever-advancing track-layers; the town of
Hell On Wheels.
Cullen and book-keeper Sean
The curtain rises on Cullen awakening Rip Van
Winkle-like to find himself in the snow-bound, burnt-out ruins of Hell On
Wheels, which had moved with the construction of the railroad until, at the end
of season two, the understandably intransigent Indians had attacked, killing
all they could, and burning everything to the ground. Finding himself in the company of dead men and
live wolves, Cullen, in a sequence as audacious and self-confident as his
character, sets the story and the locomotive back on its tracks, and as he sets
out for the dueling railroads’ headquarters in New York City, en route we catch
up with the lives of other characters.
Cullen gives reporter Louise 'the Grand Tour' of Hell on Wheels
Elam Ferguson (Common) is a former slave turned
railroad security man, who shares an uneasy alliance with Cullen Bohannon. Elam and his woman, Eva (Robin McLeavy) are
anticipating the birth of their first child.
Railroad magnate Thomas ‘Doc’ Durant (Colm Meany) is, surprisingly,
where he belongs: behind bars – Durant, by the way, was a real man, and every
bit the snake he is portrayed as. Sean McGinnes
(Ben Esler), the young Irishman who had come to Hell on Wheels as a peep-show
operator and then pimp has graduated to be Hell on Wheel’s book-keeper. Ruth (Kasha Kropinski), the daughter of the
disgraced and dead minister is again preaching in his stead. Lily, who with her late husband had surveyed
much of the route for the railroad, and had become important in the lives of
Bohannon and Durant and so many others, was murdered by ‘The Swede’ last
season. Perhaps it is in her stead that
we now see a new young woman, Louise Ellison (Jennifer Ferrin), a reporter
covering the re-started construction of the railroad for Horace Greely’s New York Tribune.
Elam, Eva and baby
And as the story gets underway, she will have many
topics to write about, not all of them pretty, particularly the issue of
eminent domain, the government’s power to seize private property for the
‘greater good’, paying what is often ironically termed ‘fair market
value.’ In this case, the Union Pacific
Railroad has been granted the power to seize land for its right-of-way, and
Cullen, as the Railroad’s point man, must contend with the settlers whose
property it is. The result is a stunning
tragedy, the more so for its utter believability.
Ruth
Eva
While the show certainly does not seek to offend,
neither is it politically correct if that would badly serve the truth behind
the story. You will hear the ‘n-word’ in
circumstances where it would have been naturally used at the time. You’ll hear the prejudices that people held
against the Mormons and the Irish without sugar-coating. Much as I love TV Westerns, they have a weak
history when it comes to history – an attitude that any saddle will do, that
all cowboys were white and American-born, that all Indian tribes are
interchangeable, that any gun but an Uzi is acceptable, and no one ever needs
to re-load. Not on HELL ON WHEELS. Along with the layered and complex
story-telling, there is a clear determination among the dramatists and
directors to get it right, and they usually do.
The performances and characterizations continue to be solid. The tech credits are commendable. Happily, it’s been long enough since I’ve
read Stephen Ambrose’s book about the building of the Transcontinental
Railroad, NOTHING LIKE IT IN THE WORLD, that I don’t remember what,
historically, is coming next. I can’t wait
to find out – it looks like one Helluvah season on HELL ON WHEELS.
‘KNIGHT OF THE GUN’ IN THE CUTTING ROOM
Director John Graves Warner is still editing his new Western, KNIGHT OF THE GUN, but he’s already assembled a trailer. Check it out!
‘CENTENNIAL’ COMING TO HOME VIDEO IN OCTOBER
Universal will be releasing ‘CENTENNIAL’ in DVD and
BluRay editions this October. Based on
the historical fiction best-seller by James Michener, winner of the Pulitzer
Prize for Fiction and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, this 12 episode
mini-series has rarely been seen since its original 1978-1979 airing. Set in the fictional town of Centennial,
Colorado, it traces the story of generations of characters from the start of
the settlement in 1795 into the 20th century.
The six disk set will feature 26 hours of content
(not sure if that includes special features), and a cast that boasts Raymond
Burr, Richard Chamberlain, Robert Conrad, Barbara Carrera, Sally Kellerman, and
dozens of others, including Western favorites like Brian Keith, Dennis Weaver,
Donald Pleasance, Robert Vaughn, Anthony Zerbe, A Martinez, Michael Ansara, and
Pernell Roberts. I hope to have more
details soon.
RANDOLPH SCOTT IN ‘THE NEVADAN’ COMIC STRIP FINISHES
Late in
the spring I started running a panel-per-day of a comic-book version of THE
NEVADAN, a 1950 Columbia film starring Randolph Scott, Dorothy Malone and
Forrest Tucker. It was featured in 1950s
western movie magazine my daughter had given me. The response was enthusiastic, so in June I
ran the ‘story so far’ in the Round-up (if you missed that, go HERE ).
Having just finished running the conclusion on Facebook, I’m running the
final panels here. If I ever run into
any of these comic strip Westerns, I’ll share ‘em as well.
THE WRAP-UP
I'm posting this Round-up two days early, on Friday instead of Sunday, to give Rounders a chance to read my HELL ON WHEELS review before it airs on Saturday night -- don't miss it!
Okay, this one is early, so I'll apologize in advance that next week's Round-up will probably be a day or two late. Have a great week -- and let me know what you think of the HELL ON WHEELS season opener!
Happy trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright August 2013 by Henry C. Parke - All Rights Reserved
Monday, July 22, 2013
DAY OF THE COWBOY NEXT SATURDAY, PLUS ‘HELL ON WHEELS’ SNEAK PEEK!
It’s just a week until the Ninth Annual National Day of The
Cowboy celebration on Saturday, July 27th, although some folks in
Texas and New Hampshire and Washington State just can’t wait -- I thought all the ‘Sooners’ were from Oklahoma!
On Wednesday, the 17th, the folks in El Paso held their 4th Annual National Day of the Cowboy Celebration, at the El
Paso History Museum. In addition to gunfight reenactments, sack-races, roping
demonstrations and the like, they honored not only the cowboys, but the Harvey
Girls who helped civilize quite a few of them.
On Saturday, July 20th, the
people of Dalton, New Hampshire celebrated The Dalton Gang Annual Day of the
Cowboy at the Dalton Gang Range, an event that featured Cowboy Action Shooting,
with all proceeds going to the Wounded Warrior Project. That same Saturday, Kennewick, Washington
held its 3rd Annual National Day of the Cowboy Celebration, focusing
on cowboy poetry and music, featuring both local talent and cowpoke bards and
musicians from New Mexico and Nevada.
Some multi-day events will begin on
Friday, July 26th, including the three day celebration at Hyatt
Regency Lost Pines Resort in Lost Pines, Texas.
A dizzying array of pioneer and cowboy-themed activities is planned,
from scavenger hunts to leather crafts to wagon rides to face painting. Also,
for fans of a cowboy named Woody, all three TOY STORY movies will be screened.
Another three-day event starts on July 26th in
Dubois, Wyoming, where you’ll be treated to a rodeo, theatrical shoot-outs and
western music. Dubois, Idaho will have a
one-day celebration on that Friday, which will include historical displays, a
parade, and an out-house race!
The city of Norco, California will celebrate both Saturday
and Sunday, and will feature a parade with the flags of all fifty states, Pony
Express riders, sled races, a cowboy obstacle course, and a celebrity cow-chip
contest. On Saturday, in Malta, Illinois,
they’ll be holding the Northern Illinois Outlaw NDOC Cowboy Shooting Event,
with mounted pistol, rifle and shotgun competitions, as well as cowboy
games. The
good people of Santa Fe, New Mexico will mark the day with team-roping, barrel racing,
arena polo, trick roping and much more.
Sedona, Arizona’s celebration will feature bullwhip-cracking,
gunfights, historical reenactments, music, dance and western art. Flagstaff, Arizona, which in April became the
4th state to make the National Day of the Cowboy a permanent event,
will hold a celebration as well. In Medora,
North Dakota, The National Cowboy Hall of Fame will host their celebration,
which will feature shoot-outs, music, a trick-roping author, and barbecue. In Roswell, New Mexico, they’re holding the National
Day of the Cowboy Fun Run Jackpots, with lots of rodeo events, from the
traditional to goat dressing! In
Victoria, Virginia, there will be The Tom Mix Rangers and other gunfighters,
and an 1800s church service reenactment in full period costume.
The Fort Worth, Texas Stockyards will be the site of another
celebration. Wolcottville, Indiana will
hold Park Your Horse, with campfires provided, and activities like roping,
horse-shoe pitching, a Nerf shooting gallery, and a cap-gun fast-draw
competition. The main event at the
Fallbrook, California celebration will be an obstacle challenge. The event at the Lazy – T Ranch in Manhattan,
Kansas will feature cowboy poetry and music, with a focus on yodeling.
The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma
City will focus on the Lone Ranger, with a look at the Museum’s collection of
Lone Ranger artifacts, and the first 300 guests will receive a Lone Ranger mask!
And at the Autry in Los Angeles, there will be music, a
scavenger hunt, square-dancing, gun-slinging and trick roping, western crafts,
a pair of Gene Autry movies, and the grand opening of the new Gamble Firearms
Gallery.
There are also a couple of purely charitable events as
well. The Evans Feed and Livestock
Supply in both Madera and Porterville, California will sponsor as National Day
Of The Cowboy Blood Drive, with a free cowboy-themed t-shirt for all donors.
I’m just trying to give you a taste of each event, but there
are plenty of details available. This
link -- http://nationaldayofthecowboy.com/wordpress/?post_type=tribe_events&eventDisplay=month
– will connect you to the calendar page of the official National Day of
the Cowboy website. And if you know of
any National Day of the Cowboy events that I’ve missed, please share it as a
comment, or on our FACEBOOK page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Henrys-Western-Round-up/220413291305490?ref=hl
, so we can get the word out!
SNEAK-PEEK AT ‘HELL ON WHEELS’ SEASON 3
Anson Mount and Common
August 10 will see the very welcome return of the Western
series starring Anson Mount, Colm Meaney, and Common, detailing the building of
the building of the Transcontinental Railroad, and the private lives of the men
and women involved. Not much has been
leaked, story-wise, but the show will introduce at least one new character, a
female journalist played by Jennifer Ferrin, who may well become a romantic
interest, since Lily, played by Dominique McElligot, was killed off last
season. Here are some stills from the
new season:
Jennifer Ferrin, Colm Meaney, Anson Mount
Jennifer Ferrin and Robin McLeavy
CONTINUING APPEAL OF WESTERNS, FROM ‘THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH’
The Gateway Film Center in Columbus, Ohio recently held their
third annual DOUBLE BARREL WESTERNS festival, featuring a wide range of Western
films. Columbus Dispatch Weekender
editor Terry Mikesell wrote an article not just about the festival, but about
the viability of Westerns in general, and I was pleased to be interviewed. The festival runs through July 31st,go
here for details: http://www.gatewayfilmcenter.com/spotlight-series/double-barrel/
Here is the article:
THE WRAP-UP
That's it for this week's Round-up! Hope you can get to one of the National Day Of The Cowboy events this coming weekend, and again, if you know of any events we haven't covered, let me know, so we can spread the word.
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright July 2013 by Henry C. Parke - All Rights Reserved
Sunday, August 12, 2012
ANSON MOUNT INTERVIEW -- ‘HELL ON WHEELS’ SEASON 2
On Sunday, August 12th, at 9 p.m., HELL ON
WHEELS, AMC’s smash Western series from last year, returns for Season 2. If you missed any of Season 1, or want to
refresh your memory, AMC is running all ten Season 1 episodes starting Sunday
morning at 11 a.m. And if you’re one of
those unfortunate DISH customers who no longer have AMC, go to the AMC website
and you can stream HELL ON WHEELS on your computer!
The title HELL ON WHEELS refers to the movable town that
crossed the nation during the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad,
its saloon-keepers, prostitutes and gamblers servicing the construction
crew. The protagonist is Cullen Bohannon,
a Confederate veteran with no prospects who hires on, considered to be a
valuable man because, as a former slave owner, he knows how to ‘work with’
black people. But he has his own
unspoken agenda: his wife and child were murdered by a group of Union soldiers,
and it is his mission to identify, track down, and kill them all. His work for the railroad provides an
excellent cover.
Cullen Bohannon is portrayed by Tennessee-born, Columbia University educated Anson Mount, who has
made a tremendous impression in the role.
He previously starred in the series CONVICTION, THE MOUNTAIN and LINE OF
FIRE, and his features include the recent STRAW DOGS remake, BURNING PALMS, and
the upcoming SUPREMACY and CODE NAME: GERONIMO.
On Wednesday morning I had
the opportunity to talk with Anson about his new season in Hell (On
Wheels). Anson says that whereas Season
1 was mostly plot-driven, Season 2 will be character-driven, and the stories
will revolve around the keyword to the Season, ‘ambition’.
When discussing the challenges of continuing a series over
multiple seasons, his frequent touchstone is BREAKING BAD, which he calls, “The
best show that’s ever been made for television.”
Anson Mount & Common
We’ll continue to see interplay between Cullen and Elam Ferguson,
the ex-slave played by rapper-turned-actor Common. “I think it’s becoming the most interesting
relationship in the series. From the
very beginning, Common and myself and the writers were very adamant; we were
not going to allow this to become Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder. (laughs)
You know – ‘the black guy and the white guy are gonna be buddies! And everybody’s gonna love each other!’ We wanted to be very true to the tropes, the
stereotypes and the conflicts at that time.
Particularly between a former slave and a former Confederate. And yet allow them to meet in situations
where they have to meet on equal footing.
And I think we did a really good job of that in the first season; I
think we’ve done an even better job of that in the second season.”
Memorably, Season 1 ended with Cullen killing the wrong
man. “I decided long before Harper was
going to turn out to be the wrong man, when Cullen does get to put his hands
around the throat of someone, when he completes the deed, it’s not going to be
the release or relief that he thought it was going to be: it’s a deeper
hollowing out of himself. He finds that
there’s actually nothing there.”
Henry – Your character is consumed with rage, and on a quest
for revenge. Was that hard to walk away
from at the end of a shooting day? And
is it hard to return to it after the hiatus?
Anson – No (laughs), not at all. Sometimes I feel like I’m launching a one-man
campaign to change people’s minds about what we do as actors. I think there’s a big misconception that
actors are these shamans who channel characters and notions, and that we are
somehow mortally affected by our work.
And I think that there are a lot of actors that play into that, because
it makes them and their work seem more important. It’s not the case at all. We play make-believe. I think it’s a process of playing
intelligently, and playing well, but it’s a process of play. And if I’m doing anything else, I’m not doing
my job, and I need to spend time in the loony-bin. It’s an enormous amount of fun for me, and I
continue to have a great time this season.
And I’ve been having a good time finding ways of lightening Cullen up a
bit, because I think we need to see different facets of him.
Henry – Did you grow up with westerns? Do you have favorites, either past or recent?
Anson – Oh yeah, absolutely!
I’m a big Sergio Leone fan. I
really liked the remake of 3:10 TO YUMA . It certainly is a helluvah lot better than
the original. I know some people had a
problem with it but I thought it was a fantastic film.
Henry – In what ways do you think it was better?
Anson – (incredulous) 3:10 TO YUMA ?
Have you ever seen the
original?
Henry – I know them both very well. I like ‘em both.
Anson – The original plays out in very few locations; it’s
very staid. It plays almost like a
teleplay, or a ‘play’ play. And I think
the plot demanded those action sequences that happened in the second film, that
weren’t really played out that well in the first. I just liked the pacing and the rhythm and
the style; I thought the performances were fantastic.
Henry – If you could give yourself the lead in any western
film of the past, what would it be?
Anson – I would love to have played the (Schofield) Kid in
UNFORGIVEN. Jaimz Woolvett did such a great
job; wonderful.
Henry – How do you feel about horses and guns? Any experience with either prior to HELL ON
WHEELS?
Anson – Oh man! Yes,
it’s the best part of the job, getting to ride a horse. I grew up in the rural South, so I’m
comfortable on a horse, but I’ve never operated a horse around a camera, which
is a whole different skill-set. Luckily
we have really good, experienced wranglers who are able to teach me the ins and
outs of that. And the guns – we have an
amazing armorer named Brian Kent, who has a wonderful antique gun collection
himself – he can tell you anything you want to know about guns of the 19th
century – so we’re blessed with that.
Henry – What is that pistol you usually handle?
Anson – The one from the first season was a Griswold, which
was a Confederate issue sidearm; and this season I lose that, and I end up
having to use a Union issue sidearm, which was the 1857 Remington .45
caliber.
Henry – Which do you prefer, a studio kind of picture, or
one where you’re outside and away from civilization?
Anson – I prefer where we’re shooting (outdoors). You know, we’ve got a studio here, because we
don’t have a lot of darkness, and sometimes we need to go into the studio for
that. But I think we’ve only used the
studio five or six days the entire season, so far, and I think the next two
episodes are pretty-much going to be entirely shot on location. I prefer being out; even though it’s a
commute -- it’s almost an hour each way -- but it’s so gorgeous where we are
this year, and you can’t build what we have out there. It’s 40,000 usable acres of ready-to-go
set. And there’s so much that the
weather gives you, that the land gives you.
And I just like being removed from civilization when I’m doing a
western.
We’re in Alberta . Our location is about an hour southeast of Calgary . We started earlier this year (than
last). We thought we were going to be
doing the first two or three episodes with snow on the ground. It ended up not happening that way: they
didn’t have any spring snows. Quite
dry. So it was a bit chilly at first,
but we didn’t have to deal with the torrential downpours and hip-deep mud we
had last year. And we’ve had
hail-storms. We’ve had a couple of days
where we had to stop because of that.
But we’re lucky, and we’ve got a brilliant director of photography,
Marvin Rush, who somehow manages to make the light match, even though there are
days when we’ll start in sunshine, then we’ll have cloud cover, then it’ll
rain, it’ll hail, then the sun’ll come out, then it’ll go back in. (laughs) Somehow he manages to make it all
work.
Henry – I was wondering if your story was going to cross any
more than it has with Eddie Spears’ character, Joseph Black Moon.
Anson – You know, we’re actually talking about that. I haven’t really had a lot of interaction
with Eddie’s character so far this season, but there’s about to be a bit in
number 9, which we’re about to shoot.
And Eddie’s character, Joseph, is continuing to question his place in
this world. Because his adopted father
has taken to the bottle again, his ongoing affections for his adopted sister
are newly brought into question, and he wonders if this is the right move to
make, to be in this white man’s world.
Henry – Looks like you’ll be more involved with Colm Meany’s
character – is that correct?
Anson – Well, Colm character is running the business that I
end up working for, and he and I have two very different ideas about leading,
and so by necessity we have a lot more head-butting this season.
Henry – How many seasons do you see the show running?Anson – I’ve heard five thrown out there; I wouldn’t mind six. When you add together all the outlying projects that had to be completed when the rails were connected, it was a six year engagement.
Henry – So you see the series as actually paralleling the
construction of the railroad.
Anson – I would like to. I know you don’t necessarily need to, but I would like to. There’s never been talk about getting into the Central Pacific side of the story; the whole contest between the two companies; the involvement of the Asian-American work-force. You just can’t tell the entire story without getting the Central Pacific, and that opens up a whole new bag of worms in terms of story-telling. And we haven’t even started drilling through the
Henry – It sounds like you’re passionately interested in the actual history.
Anson – Oh yeah. I’ve been doing my research.
Henry – Would you be interested in doing another Western?
Anson – Yes. In about another ten years I want to play (abolitionist) John Brown. I think that’s a story that’s waiting to be made. Now watch – somebody’ll pick up on this and they’ll hire Willem Dafoe to do it.
WANT TO HELP FINISH A WESTERN 29 YEARS IN THE MAKING?
In 1983, nearly three decades ago, Rick Groat and his family
and friends set out to make an old-fashioned black & white western. In a vintage interview on ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT, Rick brags that his $15,000 movie will look like it cost a half
million!
Sadly, after a successful film-festival work-print
screening, the movie, THE SHOOTING, was never seen again. Now, filmmaker Rick Groat, who acted in 2010's 6 GUNS, is trying through
KICKSTARTER to raise the $9,500 he needs to complete the film. If you know the Kickstarter system, you know
that the project will only be funded if all the money is committed within a
limited time. As I write, Rick has only
eight days to go, and only $650 of his $9,500 committed.
I was going to write about this project next week, but I
figured it might be of more use to Rick if I did it right now, while there’s
still time. To learn more, visit HERE,
where you can read more about the film, and see Rick’s presentation.
That’s it for tonight, pardners. I wanted to make sure you had a chance to
read the Anson Mount interview before Season 2 of HELL ON WHEELS starts. Next week I’ll have another ‘rush’ story
about the Museum of the San Fernando Valley . And if you want to visit it, you’ll have to
be quick, because it’s closing at the end of the month!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright August 2012 by Henry C.
Parke – All Rights Reserved
Monday, July 30, 2012
HELL ON WHEELS Season 2 Is Almost Here!
On Sunday, August 12th, HELL ON WHEELS, AMC’s
blockbuster Western series will return for a second ten episode season. The series continues to revolve around a
group of people engaged in building the
transcontinental railroad, and ‘Hell On Wheels’ refers to the portable town
that follows along the tracks, servicing the workers. The central figure from season one was former
Confederate soldier Cullen Bohannon (Anson Mount), and the ‘cover’ of his railroad
job as a means to track down and kill the Union soldiers who murdered his wife
and son, a story that was concluded with the end of the season.
While I have promised AMC not to reveal too much (not
wanting to have Colm Meany send Common to ‘handle’ the situation), I can safely
say that everyone who didn’t die in season one is back for season two, although
there have been changes. Cullen Bohannon
is back, but no longer works for the railroad, and Mr. Durant (Colm
Meany). The Swede (Christopher Heyerdahl),
last seen being tarred and feathered, has returned, and is again with the
railroad, but working in a far different capacity.
Elam Ferguson (Common) is working his way up in the
railroad, but his romance with Eva (Robin McLeavy) has derailed. Lily Bell (Dominique McElligot), beautiful
widow of the railroad’s original surveyor, is determined to keep in the
game. Reverend Cole’s (Tom Noonan)
daughter Ruth (Kasha Kropinski – allowed to look much more attractive this
season) continues to be drawn to Cheyenne Christian convert Joseph Black Moon
(Eddie Spears). And the increasingly
cocky Irish McGinnes brothers (Phil Burke and Ben Esler) are determined to
subvert railroad construction to their own goals.
In addition to their frequent nemesises, the Indians trying
to discourage the relentless progress of the iron horse, the railroaders are
faced with a new enemy: train robbers!
The first episode of the new season, ‘Viva La Mexico ,’ written by the series
creators, Tony and Joe Gayton, is a particularly strong entry to return with,
well-directed by David Von Ancken. Gustavo
Santaolalla’s theme music has deservedly been nominated for an Emmy. Marvin Rush continues as cinematographer on
the most strikingly filmed series on television, and it’s completely
inexplicable to me that his work last season wasn’t Emmy-nominated, ditto the
Laytons’ writing.
Here’s a teaser trailer to get you in the mood.
AN INTERVIEW WITH ONE OF JOHN WAYNE’S ‘COWBOYS’ – NICOLAS
BEAUVY
Actor/director/writer and general wunderkind Mark Rydell had
gone from directing GUNSMOKE to the D.H. Lawrence story THE FOX, to the
good-naturedly nutty Steve McQueen period starrer THE REIVERS, and would soon
go on to do the wonderful CINDERELLA LIBERTY and later the triple Oscar winner
ON GOLDEN POND. But in 1972 he had
optioned – with the approval of his mother – a not-yet-published novel, THE
COWBOYS, by William Dale Jennings.
Rydell did not want John Wayne in the lead, but eventually
the powers at Warner Brothers, and Duke himself, convinced the left-leaning
director. Although overshadowed by TRUE
GRIT, Wayne’s Oscar winner, and THE SHOOTIST, his last, THE COWBOYS is
certainly the equal of those fine films, and Wayne told director Rydell that it was his
own favorite performance.
John Wayne plays a cattleman who loses his crew to a local
gold strike, and must hire schoolboys to move his herd. As he tells the boys, drawing a rough map on
the classroom blackboard, “Here’s the Double O.
This is Belle Fourche . In between is four hundred miles of the
meanest country in the west.” The cast
includes Roscoe Lee Brown, Bruce Dern, Colleen Dewhurst, Slim Pickens, and
eleven boys from about twelve to sixteen, about half of them professional
actors, and the other half professional rodeo riders.
One of the professional actors was Nicolas Beauvy. Nicolas had played King Arthur as a boy in
CAMELOT, Trampas (Doug McClure) as a boy in a VIRGINIAN episode, and appeared
with Gregory Peck in the Western SHOOT OUT, and an episode of BONANZA. In THE COWBOYS, Nicolas plays Dan, the cowboy
with glasses. (In some of the
promotional material his character is called ‘Four Eyes,’ but no one in the
movie ever calls him that.)
All the young actors have plenty to do, and acquit
themselves well, but Nicolas’ role is one of the most demanding. In addition to all of the riding and roping,
(SPOILER ALERT!) Dan is the boy kidnapped from the others by Bruce Dern,
terrorized and damned near drowned. He
keeps the secret from Wayne and the others that they’re being followed. And he has the trauma and guilt of losing a
friend when the other boy tries to retrieve Dan’s dropped glasses, and ends up
killed in a stampede.
As part of the National Day of The Cowboy festivities, Belle Fourche , South
Dakota is celebrating with their CRAZY DAYS, Friday
the 27th and Saturday the 28th. And since it’s also the 40th
anniversary of the release of THE COWBOYS, it was announced that there would be
a screening, attended by several of the boys from the cast. I caught up with Nicolas, now a successful
real estate agent in Pacific Palisades (“I got out of acting when I was 21
years old,”), before he headed to South Dakota.
I asked him who else was attending.
NICOLAS BEAUVY: Al Barker Jr. (Fats), Steven Hudis (Charlie
Schwartz), and Sean Kelly (Stuttering Bob); I know they’ll definitely be
there. They’re picking up on the name
Belle Feurche because that’s the name we used in the movie, but we did not
shoot in South Dakota . My understanding is that some of the kids –
like Al Barker Jr. – have been back there six or seven times. They’ve asked me to go in the past but it
just hadn’t worked out with my schedule; but this year it did, and I’m excited
to go back!
HENRY PARKE: Where did you actually shoot?
N: We shot two months in Santa Fe , New Mexico . And one month in Durango , Colorado . And one month on the sound stages of Warner
Brothers.
H: How did you get the part of Dan?
N: Well, as a working actor – I was an actor from age six –
you went out for the interview, and we had seven or eight callbacks. And they probably interviewed a thousand
kids. Then they narrow it down to five
hundred, to one hundred, to fifty -
that’s how they typically do these things. And I was the one they chose, so I got very
lucky.
H: How old were you?
N: Thirteen.
H: Then you were very well aware who John Wayne was at that
time.
N: Absolutely. Oh, it was wonderful! He was a father-figure on the set. Very nice.
A little bit reserved, but I had some nice scenes with him. We had a good time.
H: What memories do you have of other actor in the show?
N: Bruce Dern! Bruce
Dern was the gentleman that I did a lot of scenes with; he played the bad guy,
and he and I had a real good rapport. In
fact, I was a real big sports fan and so was he, so even after the movie was
finished, he’d invite me to a few Lakers games – we saw a few basketball games
in Los Angeles . He was a great guy.
H: How about Robert Carradine?
N: All the kids get along with everyone. Robert Carradine was a little older than me,
so he wasn’t hangin’ with me or anything.
He was 18, 19 when he did that movie – maybe twenty. But he got along with everybody. A Martinez
the same way. Good guy.
H: And Colleen Dewhurst?
N: You know I really didn’t have any scenes with Colleen
Dewhurst. I got along with her very
nicely, and we did talk a lot off the set.
And she’s the one who happened to recommend me, along with Mark Rydell,
to George C. Scott; she was married, of course, to Scott. Because the film I did right after THE
COWBOYS was RAGE (directed by and starring Scott).
H: What did you think of director Mark Rydell?
N: Wonderful director; worked beautifully with all the
kids. A pleasure to work with. Just was a class, class man.
H: You had a wonderful script by Irving Ravetch and Harriet
Frank Jr., who also wrote HUD, HOMBRE and NORMA RAE..
N: Yes – great people worked on that movie. John Williams did the music. And Robert Surtees did the cinematography;
two heavyweights there.
H: In 1972, now it’s clear in hind-sight that this was
getting to be the end of the Western cycle for a while, but I don’t think that
anyone sensed it then. Were Westerns
something special to you, or was it just another acting job?
N: Oh no; it’s very special, because you’re twelve or
thirteen years old. Other roles you’re
just playing a normal kid in everyday life.
But here we are playing cowboys, and we get to wear cowboy outfits, and
ride horses, and have guns in our holster.
It was a dream: it was living a dream.
H: How much preparation time was there?
N: I want to say, if my memory’s correct, about four to six
weeks. We would go to a little stable in
Burbank , and we
would practice three hours every day after school; on the weekends about six,
seven hours.
H: And what did they have you practicing?
N: Just riding; riding a horse, holding a rope while you’re
riding, just riding. Just making us look
as comfortable and natural and experienced as we could look.
We’ll have more about Nicolas’ acting career in the near
future.
LOS ENCINOS MARKS SALVATION WITH LIVING HISTORY CELEBRATION
On Sunday, July 15th, the Docents of Los Encinos
Park in Encino celebrated their one-year reprieve with a living history
day. On the list of seventy parks slated
for closure due to lack of funds, they were saved when an anonymous donor gave
the park $150,000, their annual operating budget. They celebrated with cake and punch, and a
day of old-fashioned games, tours of the Rancho buildings, demonstrations of
blacksmithing, music and other activities.
With the attraction of its natural spring, which brings many
breeds of ducks, geese and other birds on their migrations, it has seen human
settlement for thousands of years, first with the Tongva people; it was taken
over by the San Fernando Mission in 1797, and has passed through many hands
since then – you can read about it’s rich history here: http://historicparks.org/data/park-history
Howard Harrelson, a docent who made a PSA for the park, was
shooting interview ‘sound-bites’ at the event.
He told me, “I’m working on a ‘school tour’ video. As you know, an anonymous donor donated
enough money to keep the park open for this year. But we want to get school groups and field trips
here to the park, to keep it alive, and open, and green.” Los Encinos has a Living History Day on the
third Sunday of every month.
R.G. ARMSTRONG DIES AT 95
Birmingham, Alabama-born character actor Robert Golden
Armstrong has died at his home in Studio
City , California . An imposing figure, he played frequently in
crime and horror stories, but is best remembered for his Western characters,
especially preachers with feet of clay. He
was long associated with director Sam Peckinpah, who cast him in THE
SHARPSHOOTER (1956), an episode of ZANE
GREY THEATRE
which would be a pilot for THE RIFLEMAN.
Peckinpah subsequently directed R.G. in two RIFLEMAN episodes, a
WESTERNER episode, then RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY, MAJOR DUNDEE, THE BALLAD OF
CABLE HOGUE and PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID.
He also starred with John Wayne in Howard Hawks’ EL DORADO .
With nearly 200 screen credits, his last Western and second-to-last
screen performance was in the TV movie PURGATORY (1999). Services are pending.
Well pardners, that's a wrap for tonight! Have a great week!
Happy trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright July 2012 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved
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