Showing posts with label Dean Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dean Smith. Show all posts

Sunday, August 3, 2014

COMICS & COWBOYS LUNCHEON, PLUS ‘BOUND FOR GLORY’ AT THE AUTRY!


COMICS & COWBOYS LUNCHEON AT THE AUTRY!

July 16th’s Third-Wednesday-of-the-month Cowboy Lunch at the Autry was great fun, and an eye-opener for many who, like me, had little knowledge of the topic.  Rob Word’s theme this time was COMICS & COWBOYS, and the comics were not the side-kick kind, but the full-color sort.  The program opened with Maxine Hansen of Gene Autry Entertainment paying tribute to actor Dick Jones, who had been under personal contract to Gene, and starred in two series he produced, THE RANGE RIDER and BUFFALO BILL JR.  He was also featured in many comics.



Among the artists discussed was Everett Kinstler, now an official portrait artist to presidents and movie stars, who once drew Zane Grey and Zorro comics.

Kinstler's Zorro



Rob Word and Mark Evanier


Mark Evanier, animation writer and book author, and a guiding light of ComiCon, was a guest speaker.  He discussed working as an assistant to legendary comic artist Jack Kirby, and gave an overview of the comic business in general.  Among the things I learned: that while Dell comics put out many Western comic series, often tied to movies and TV shows – the heyday of western comics and western TV coincided – the work was actually done by an outfit called Western Publishing – the folks who do The Little Golden Books. Western comics always were published under Dell until 1962, when Western decided to do their own publishing, under the Gold Key name. 


A Jack Kirby cover


Dan Spiegle, who would become famous for his comic-book adaptations of Western TV shows, actually got a break when he didn’t get hired to draw a Bozo the Clown strip.  They told him his work was too dark and hard-edged for the clown, but some bright guy realized it would be just right for the Hopalong Cassidy strip they were starting; he drew it from 1949 until it was cancelled in 1955.  He worked on the MAVERICK and SUGARFOOT comic books, which were adapted directly from episode scripts.  He even went on-set to sketch James Garner at work, a pleasure, since Garner was such a nice guy.  An issue with some actors, though not Garner, was that actors had art approval on their drawings, and often expected to be made more attractive than they really were. 

Spiegle's Maverick



Sergio Aragones, the celebrated MAD MAGAZINE artist for more than half a century, was the next guest.  A native of Mexico, his father had worked in Mexican movies, and Sergio told about visiting the set of THE BEAST OF HOLLOW MOUNTAIN, and watching Guy Madison trying to play scenes co-starring a ball on the end of a stick – which would later be replaced by a dinosaur. 


Sergio Aragones' Bat Lash


Sergio would soon create the Western comic BAT LASH.  With his English not so strong at the time – he jokes that it’s still not so great – he tried to tell the stories as visually as possible, with Denny O’Neil writing the words.


Sergio Aragones with a 'Bat Lash' page


Switching to European comics, actor Martin Kove told about how, during his CAGNEY & LACEY days, he almost got to star in the film version of Lieutenant Blueberry which, despite the sound of its title, was a serious and hugely popular adult Western comic-book out of France.  As so often happens, the script that was developed had nothing to do with the comic strip, and the project died in the dust. 


Martin Kove with a painting of Lieutenant Blueberry


The last guest speaker was Olympic athlete and movie stuntman Dean Smith, who was signing his autobiography, COWBOY STUNTMAN.  He credits James Garner for starting him on his 55 year career as a stuntman, and recalled being hired to double Strother Martin in the John Wayne film MCCLINTOCK, and ending up doubling Maureen O’Hara as well!



Dean Smith signing his autobiography


It was a great event, a packed house, including a number of well-known stuntmen, and western stars L.Q. Jones and Morgan Woodward.  On August 20th, the theme of the Cowboy Lunch will be Gene’s Autry’s old headquarters, Melody Ranch.  Be there or be square!


Morgan Woodward, L.Q. Jones & Martin Kove


Looking over this article, it strikes me how often James Garner’s name came up at this event, just a couple of weeks before he died.  I’ve enjoyed his work since I was a kid, on MAVERICK, ROCKFORD, and everything else I saw him do.  There has been so much written about Garner the man and Garner the actor that I really don’t have anything to say that hasn’t been said much better by the people who actually knew and worked with him.  Tom Sellick, who early in his career worked with Garner on ROCKFORD FILES always said that no one wore their stardom better than Garner.  We’ll all miss him.

‘BOUND FOR GLORY’ AUGUST 9TH AT THE AUTRY




As part of their ‘What is a Western?’ series, and in conjunction with their ROUTE 66 exhibition, the Autry will present ‘BOUND FOR GLORY’, starring David Carradine as folk-singer and political activist Woody Guthrie.  Directed by Hal Ashby, scripted by Robert Getchell from Guthrie’s autobiography, the film won the Best Cinematography Oscar for Haskell Wexler, and Best Musical Score for Leonard Rosenman.  The film, free with museum admission, screens in the Wells Fargo Theatre at 1:30, and will be introduced by Jeffrey Richardson, Gamble Curator of Western History, Popular Culture, and Firearms.    


I SPY – The Complete Series – A Review



The success of the James Bond films, based on the Ian Fleming novels, created a vogue for spy TV series, commencing with THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. and SECRET AGENT in 1964, I SPY, THE AVENGERS (it really started in ’61 but wasn’t shown in the U.S. until ’64), the spoof GET SMART and the western version WILD WILD WEST in 1965, and MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE in 1966.  They were all delightful in their time, but in my opinion, I SPY has aged better than the others, so it’s great news that Timeless Media has released the entire three-season, 82 episode run on DVD as I SPY – THE COMPLETE SERIES.    

I SPY seemed more grounded in reality than the competition.  While most of the other spy series aped the Bond films’ fondness for gimmickry – walkie-talkies hidden in pens (“Open channel D”), shoe-phones, and cameras, radios, hats and what-have-yous that converted into guns, Robert Culp as Kelly Robinson, and Bill Cosby as Alexander Scott, had guns that looked like guns, and that killed people when nothing else was going to work.  While most other shows pitted their agents against a succession of hard-to-distinguish Fu Manchu/Moriarty/Dr. No-like criminal masterminds, or a seemingly endless collection of neo-Nazi organizations, Robinson and Scott were usually up against the Soviet Union, or other recognizable and seemingly real enemies. 

And while the other shows made often obvious studio back-lots stand in for foreign countries, I SPY went all over the world for real.  Episodes were shot in Hong Kong, Japan, Turkey, Mexico and much of Latin America – and that’s just in season one!   Their cover was ingenious, and made all of the travel logical.  Kelly, a former Princeton law student, was a top-seeded tennis pro, traveling the world to play in international tournaments.  Alexander was his trainer, as well as a Rhodes Scholar.  (In a remarkable example of life imitating art, Eugene Fodor, one of the great travel-writers, would reveal that since 1936 he had been using his travel-writing as a cover for his secret work for the OSS and CIA.)

Famous for the amusing banter between the leads, the characters took themselves lightly, but their work seriously, often following orders they did not agree with or fully understand, when necessary.   One of the crucial differences between I SPY and the other espionage shows is that while the others were plot -- or ‘mission’ – driven, I SPY was largely character-driven.  Should an arrogant black American athlete who’d defected to Russia, and now wanted to come back, be helped, or was he more trouble than he was worth?  Should one of Kelly’s mentors in spying, now considered a double agent, be killed without a hearing?  Will an incompetent senior agent doom Scotty and Alexander’s mission to failure?  In one of my favorites, the agents must safeguard scientist Boris Karloff, who has created a formula of international importance, but whose ancient brain keeps drifting off to his obsession with Don Quixote.  In many ways, the series resembles an international spy version of classic ‘guys on the road’ series ROUTE 66.   


with Boris Karloff


The series was created and produced by writing partners Martin S. Fine and David Freidkin, who had worked together on series like THE VIRGINIAN and THE ALFRED HITCHCOCK HOUR.  The Executive Producer was Sheldon Leonard, who started out as an actor, his unmistakable Brooklyn accent making him famous as the Racing Tout on Jack Benny’s radio show.  He’s probably best-remembered as Nick the impatient bartender in IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE: “We serve hard drinks in here for men who want to get drunk fast.  And we don’t need any characters around to give the joint atmosphere.”   He’d already had tremendous success as a TV producer, with comedies like MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY, THE DICK VAN DYKE SHOW, THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW and GOMER PYLE, U.S.M.C., when he decided to switch to drama with I SPY.  He also shook up the industry by casting Bill Cosby – the first time an African American had ever been cast as a lead in a TV series. 

Leonard also went along on the foreign sojourns, directing much of the on-location footage: the exteriors were shot all around the globe, while the generic interiors were shot in L.A.  The tone of the series was freewheeling and hard to pigeonhole; Sheldon Leonard was EMMY-nominated for Best Director in a Drama Series in the first season, and next year the prolific Earl Bellamy (who also directed my first film, SPEEDTRAP) was nominated for Best Director in a Comedy Series. 

The show’s accolades were many.  Eartha Kitt won an EMMY for her guest performance.  Robert Culp and Bill Cosby were both nominated for Best Actor every year the series was on, and ironically, all three years, Culp lost to his best friend, Cosby.  When Culp died unexpectedly in 2010, Cosby told Greg Braxton of the L.A. Times that they were so close, they practically had their own language.  “Bob was the actor and I was the entertainer. The day after each of those awards, I went to work with a feeling of guilt and darn near embarrassment. As soon as Bob appeared at work, he would come and say, ‘How you feeling?’ I said, ‘OK.’ The next thing I knew, I had forgotten all about the Emmy.”



Culp was active behind the scenes as well.  He directed one episode, and one of the seven he wrote – more than any single author except the show’s creators – was Emmy-nominated.  The guest casts were full of big stars and familiar character actors.  Because so many shows were set in Asia, every Asian actor who was ever in a CHARLIE CHAN movie, or who would soon be in HAWAII FIVE-0 was represented.  So were much of the soon-to-be casts of MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE and STAR TREK. 

I know I SPY is an odd series to review in The Round-up, even though Bill Cosby starred in MAN AND BOY, and Culp had a long career in the western genre, from starring in the series TRACKDOWN, and features like HANNIE CAULDER, to his work and close friendship with Sam Peckinpah.  But sometimes you need to ‘cleanse the pallet’ with a non-Western, and I SPY – THE COMPLETE SERIES is a terrific way to do it.   


EDITH HEAD FILM SERIES STARTS AUG 8TH AT UCLA!



Edith Head, the Hollywood costume designer with more than 400 movies to her credit, will be th subject of a retrospective of her work entitled WHAT I REALLY DO IS MAGIC: EDITH HEAD AND HOLLYWOOD COSTUME DESIGN, from August 8th through September 27th at The Billy Wilder Theatre.  Among the many Westerns she designed costumes for were THE LIFE AND TIMES OF JUDGE ROY BEAN, TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE, BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID, CHUKA, EL DORADO, THE SONS OF KATIE ELDER, THE HALLELUJAH TRAIL, ROUSTABOUT, THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERY VALANCE, HELLER IN PINK TIGHTS, THE LAST TRAIN FROM GUN HILL, THE TIN STAR, GUNFIGHT AT THE O.K. CORRAL, all the way back to THE TEXAS RANGERS in 1936.  



While none of her Westerns are being screened, some terrific non-westerns are, including SUNSET BLVD., THE LADY EVE, SHE DONE HIM WRONG, and others, many with guest speakers.  Friday night’s opening program will feature DEAD MEN DON’T WEAR PLAID, introduced by director Carl Reiner and costume designer Deborah Nadoolman.  Learn more here: http://www.cinema.ucla.edu/events/2014-08-08/what-i-really-do-magic-edith-head-and-hollywood-costume-design

THAT’S A WRAP!



I’m finishing the Round-up around nine tonight – three hours earlier than usual – to prepare for my big adventure of the week: acting! I’ll have a small bit in a turn-of-the-20th-century western called BOONVILLE REDEMPTION – the picture shows me in costume (my dog, Dodger, isn’t in he movie).  I’ll be playing a man whose leg gets busted in the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake, so go ahead and tell me to break a leg!  I’ll have much more about this movie soon in the Round-up!  

Happy Trails,

Henry


All Original Contents Copyright August 2014 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

Monday, July 14, 2014

WESTERN WRITERS CON. PT. 2, PLUS COMIC COWBOY LUNCH, FREE CONCERT TICKETS!


WESTERN WRITERS OF AMERICA CONVENTION Part 2




On Saturday morning, June 28th, the last day of the Western Writers of America Convention began (if you missed my coverage of part 1, go HERE ) with three panel discussions.  Monty McCord, author of MUNDY’S LAW, moderated Steps to Successful Book Marketing.  He shared the stage with H. Alan Day, who co-wrote the best-selling memoir LAZY B. with his sister, Sandra Day O’Connor; literary agent and publicist Krista Soukup, owner of the Blue Cottage Agency; and Lynn Wiese Sneyd, author, and founder of LWS Literary Services, which handles editing and publicity as well as ghost-writing.   



Next up was Other People’s Lives: Writing Biography Right, moderated by JOHN MUIR: MAGNIFICENT TRAMP author Rod Miller.  One of the delightful admissions came from “THAT FIEND IN HELL”: SOAPY SMITH author Catherine Spude who announced that much of what she has written is riddled with lies!  She gave the example of writing her father’s obituary and, under pressure from her insistent mother, neglected to mention his previous marriage.  It’s worth remembering that when we’re fighting to get the testimony of people who were ‘there’, wherever ‘there’ happens to be, that just like all of us, primary sources have a tendency to improve stories, to skip over embarrassing elements, and to simply remember things incorrectly, even when doing their damndest to be honest.  Washington State University Press editor-in-chief Bob Clark attacked one of my personal peeves in alleged non-fiction: invented dialogue.  He also advised that in writing about the life and times of someone, to make sure it’s more of their life and less of their times.  Robert Larson, whose biographical subjects include Red Cloud and Gall, suggested starting a biography with a big event, and warned that in research, primary sources like obituaries and birth records are often wrong.  In answer to an audience question about researching, I believe it was Catherine Spude who suggested using Ancestry.com to find descendants of your subject, and make them your friends.

CRAZY HEART and WITH BLOOD IN THEIR EYES author Thomas Cobb chaired the last discussion, Truth and Fiction.  On the panel were Matthew P. Mayo, who last year won the Best Western Short Novel Spur for TUCKER’S RECKONING; two-time Spur Award winner Lucia St. Clair Robinson; and Ann Weisgarber, a Spur finalist this year for her historical novel THE PROMISE.   

After a break for lunch, the writers piled into a convoy of buses and headed to the Barnes & Noble store in nearby Citrus Heights for a massive book-signing event.   Spread throughout the massive emporium, clusters of authors sat with their books, signing them for the large contingent  of readers who strolled through the store. 


Among the authors I spoke to was Anne Hillerman.  With her first western novel, SPIDERWOMAN’S DAUGHTER, which won this year’s Spur Award for Best First Novel, she’s continuing the beloved novels that her father, the late and great Tony Hillerman, wrote.  I asked her what it was like to be stepping into those shoes.



ANNE HILLERMAN:  It was wonderful; it was a little bit intimidating, at least at first.  Because I was thinking of all the people who had loved my dad’s books for thirty years.  But then, once I started writing it, I really enjoyed it.  And I thought that all those people who had the potential to intimidate me also had the potential to love this book.  And it made me happy.  SPIDERWOMAN’S DAUGHTER is continuing the Jim Chee, Joe Leaphorn series, with Bernadette Manolito as the main crime-solver.  My contract with Harper-Collins was for two books, so I’m finishing up the second novel now; it’s due August 1st.  And I’m hoping they’ll have it out some time between April and August of 2015.”

HENRY:  You also have a strikingly beautiful book called TONY HILLERMAN’S LANDSCAPE.

ANNE HILLERMAN:  My husband, Don Strell, took the photos, and I wrote the text; the book is about places my dad loved.  (There are) descriptions of what those places are, and there are quotes from my dad’s books. And the last chapter is a piece that my dad wrote about why he loved living in Los Ranches, New Mexico.   




Bill Hill writes mostly about trails, and his books have covered the Pony Express, Oregon, Santa Fe, Lewis and Clark, California and Morman trails.   “Mainly the immigrant trails, the historic trails out west.  Yesterday and today I worked with them, so I could find old photos, drawings,  sketches.  Things that were made by the immigrants or the military, when they did their surveys, and go back and photograph the same places today. It’s a lot of fun.”  I asked him what audience his books are aimed at.  “Some are for the general audience, adults ordinarily.  Then we have introductory books about the trails, that have a little bit of everything in them.  So they have information about the early maps, diaries, guidebooks that were available to the travelers.  And a lot of ‘yesterday and today’ quotes that are related to those sites.  I like to pick two or three artists or immigrants who made sketches, and then follow them all along the west.  I’ve used people like Bruff, Tappin, Jackson, Simmons.  The last one, on the Pony Express, I used a lot of Jackson photos in addition to his sketches and paintings.” 




Bill Markley, author of DEADWOOD DEAD MEN, and WWA new member chairman, has written non-fiction, both for books and for magazines like TRUE WEST, but he’s branched out into fiction, and finds it liberating.  “For the past twelve years I’ve written non-fiction, and when you write non-fiction, you stick to the facts.  And in any story there’s always holes in the facts, and you think, ‘If I only had this one more piece of information it would make my story complete.’  With my new book, DEADWOOD DEAD MEN, it’s historical fiction, and I started thinking about this one story: why did this actually happen the way it did?  Why don’t I just create the scene in the barroom as it happened?  One thing grew into another, and I had the first chapter done.  And the editor of this publication said, ‘Write the story.’  So that’s how I got into writing historical fiction.  It’s Deadwood, August 1876, couple weeks after Wild Bill gets shot, and there was a series of murders.  And there were always rumors that there was a gang behind the scenes pulling the strings.”  Interestingly, Bill’s career with the west started onscreen.  “I got my start in the film DANCES WITH WOLVES.  I kept a journal during the filming, and then self-published.  I was in the opening Civil War scene, when they were going to cut Kevin Costner’s foot off.   Then I switched to Confederates, and I’m one of the guys who tries to shoot him off his horse.   I wasn’t a reenactor then, but I am now.  I was also in the films SON OF THE MORNING STAR, FAR AND AWAY with Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman, in the big land-rush scene at the end.  That was a crazy deal – 250 wagons, a thousand riders.  The insurance actuaries predicted that there would be one death, and a lot of injuries, but no one died.  Then I was in GETTYSBURG and CRAZY HORSE.”  




There were a lot of writers of western fact and fiction present, but Harlan Hague, whose book THE PEOPLE will be published by Five Star in August, was my first interview with a writer of western speculative fiction.   “The People are a confederation of plains tribes that have put aside ancient enmities and formed a joint opposition to the United States.  They decided that they had an enemy worse than the next tribe over the hill.  I rearranged time and place so outrageously that I don’t mention places or places in the story, but I would guess it was in the 1840s.  The tribe on which I focus is a tribe which supposedly went extinct in the 1820s.  They had lived on Newfoundland.  But in my book I rescue the Beothuk and have them migrate westward and settle on the western plains.” 




James E. Meuller’s third book, SHOOTING ARROWS AND SLINGING MUD – CUSTER, THE PRESS, AND THE LITTLE BIGHORN, has been in the works for about twenty years, ever since the author was working towards his PhD at the University of Texas, Austin.  “Custer was stationed there on reconstruction duty after the Civil War, and there’s actually a picture of a U.T. building with Custer sitting on the steps.  At that point I wrote a paper for a class about Custer and the press coverage.  Then I wrote a series of academic articles.  It took about two and a half years to write the book after I got the contract, but I’ve actually been working on it for about twenty years.  It’s a study of how the Little Bighorn was covered in newspapers of the day, and talks about various aspects of the coverage, including humor.  For example, within a week or less of the battle, newspapers were telling jokes about it.  One newspaper in Kentucky had on its front page that Custer’s death was ‘Siouxicide!’  There are chapters discussing how accurate and inaccurate the coverage was. There’s a chapter on the impact on the 1876 presidential campaign, because it was an election year.  Surprisingly, it didn’t have that much impact.  The battle was front-page news from July through August.  But relatively quickly, the Hamburg Massacre, which was a race riot in South Carolina, between a black militia unit and ex-Confederate soldiers, knocked the Little Bighorn off the front page.  ”         



I was eager to talk to Paul Colt, author of BOOTS AND SADDLES – A CALL TO GLORY, because I overheard that it was about Blackjack Pershing’s pursuit of Pancho Villa.  My grandfather, Henry Charles Parke, whom I am named after, rode in Pershing’s cavalry in that adventure.  “It’s a historical dramatization.  I like to do what I call unexpected history, where it focuses on some little known or overlooked aspect of a famous character of event.  Everybody knows George Patton because of George C. Scott’s dramatic portrayal.  But most people don’t know that early in his career he was a cavalry officer; he was the Army’s first saber master.  And on the cusp of the twentieth century, just before World War One, he could already see that the cavalry was on its last days.  He was very frustrated; he was 32 years old, still a 2nd lieutenant and he was thinking of resigning his commission.  Then Pancho Villa raided Columbus, New Mexico, Woodrow Wilson sent Pershing into Mexico to get him.  Patton talks his way onto Pershing’s staff; during that nine month campaign, Pershing puts his arm around Patton and saves his career.”   




Fiction writer Thom Nicholson’s inspiration for REVENGE OF THE STOLEN DOVE came from life.  I asked if the dove of the title was of the soiled variety.  “When I was eighteen, I met a 95-year-old woman who, when she was sixteen, working in her father’s field in Nebraska, two men came by in a wagon and scooped her up.  Took her to Denver, addicted her to opium, turned her into a prostitute and sold her to a brothel.  And it took her ten years to get away; she went back to Nebraska, and her family was gone.  She never saw them again, ever.  She didn’t have any skill other than what she’d been doing.  So she went back to doing that, and was a prostitute, and became a madam.  She bought property, and when I met her at 95 she was a genteel woman of leisure living off her investments.  She told me part of the story.  I told her I had to hear the rest.  She told me to come back later; when I did, she had died.  So I had to make up the (rest of the) story for her.  So this is written in her honor.”  

I knew that evening I’d be watching Clu Gulager -- famous for his role as Sheriff Ryker in THE VIRGINIAN, and as Billy the Kid in THE TALL MAN, and movies as disparate as THE KILLERS and THE LAST PICTURE SHOW -- emcee the Spur Awards that night.   But when I spotted him at Barnes & Noble, I thought it would be a better time to get an interview.  I was right.  To say the talk was wide-ranging is an understatement, but even if I got few direct answers to my questions, the responses were always informative and entertaining.  I asked him why he was attending the convention. 



Clu channeling Jack Benny


CLU GULAGER:  Sex.  Pure sex.  It’s a sexual reasoning I have.  Most people here are not spring chickens – certainly I am not.  And I am drawn to women who are not spring chickens; and there are quite a few here.   

HENRY:  It is the Western Writers of America convention.  Have you done any writing yourself?

CLU GULAGER:  I write scenes for my film-acting workshop, for the actors.  Other than that, I am very, very intimidated by you guys, and your editors.  Because wordsmiths, to me, are the supreme art.  And I know that Picasso wouldn’t enjoy me saying it, but I’ve said it, and I’ll say it again.  Tonight I’ve got to say a couple of words; and I’m very frightened.  Because I know the cynicism that goes into writing.  I’ve written enough to know that you have to be somewhat skeptical of all of your sources, of your subject, and of your wording – and especially your syntax. I have written a western that I like, a screenplay, and my son, who is a filmmaker (writer/director John Gulager), likes a lot, called MISTER.  And I’ve written about fifteen screenplays, none of which have been done.  We’ve gotten some of them partially made, and then run out of money all the time.  I should probably know your films --

HENRY:  It depends how late you stay up, and what strange channels you watch.

CLU GULAGER:  Well, I don’t watch TV.  I don’t have any machines in my house, except a refrigerator, and a stove that’s broken.  And of course, my head.  That machine doesn’t function well at this time, but it’s there; I sleep with it.

HENRY:  Okay, this will come out of left field: what was it like doing THE TALL MAN, with Barry Sullivan as Pat Garrett?

CLU GULAGER:  He looked like a turtle, when he was looking good.  Otherwise he looked to me like he was about to crumple, most of the time.  Alcoholics tend to feel badly when they get up in the mornings, and we started shooting early.  So by noon he was about ready to go home.  That’s showbiz talk. 

HENRY:  Was he drinking while you were doing the show?

CLU GULAGER:  Oh yes.  We sat down from time to time.  I was a young actor, and did not like that.  I knew everything then.  And what I know now you could put on the head of a needle. 

HENRY:  What is your favorite role among your screen performances?

CLU GULAGER:  Oh, I enjoyed mounting Cybil Shepherd on a pool table in THE LAST PICTURE SHOW.  That was fun.

HENRY:  That sounds fun.

CLU GULAGER:  Thank you.  I enjoyed shooting Alan Alda in the belly with a double-barreled shotgun in THE GLASS HOUSE.  He deserved it.

HENRY:  For a long time.

CLU GULAGER:  Mm-hm – yup.  I got him at the end of the movie.  And I enjoyed it when Randolph Scott’s pony fell with me while I was doing Billy the Kid.  Fell with me in a gully in the back lot of Universal and almost killed me.  I enjoyed that a lot because I felt it would be a good story to tell.  I never tell it, but I’m telling you.

HENRY:  Randolph Scott was not in the show with you, was he? 

CLU GULAGER:  No, he’d gone, but he left his pony, and that’s what they gave me to ride.  It was 19, and I rode it for a while.  Then it gave out, and they gave me another horse that was so high that I could hardly mount it.  This one time Ronald Reagan came on the set; his wife was in it with me – very good actor, Nancy.   He came on.  I had a hard time getting on that damn horse.  So about the eighth time, I just fell flat and just lay there.  He said, “Clu.  Clu.”  I said, “Yeah, Ron?”  He said, “I’ll tell you how I did it.  I started mounting the horse, and just as I started to get up, I said, ‘Cut.’  And so they cut, and then they showed me on top of the horse, already mounted.”  I said, “Thank you.”  I wanted to tell him to shove it, you know, but I couldn’t, because he was the future governor and president.  Good guy; real good guy.  He’s the one that closed all the Indian schools.  And the Indians wouldn’t go to the white schools, so they just stopped going to school.  I’m an Indian.  So all my friends who taught in Indian schools said, “Look, could you help us, could you talk with Ron and ask him not to do it?  Tell him that the kids won’t go to the white schools?”  And I said, “Yeah.”  But I never did.  I didn’t feel – not my place.  He was not going to listen to me. 

HENRY:  Was that when he was Governor of California?

CLU GULAGER:  President.  They were economizing.  They were conservatives from Illinois.  And he believed in saving moola, no matter the consequences.  But he was a kind gentle man to me.  I did a movie called THE KILLERS with him.  He played a villain.  He was very good; very good.  He hated it.

HENRY:  Wasn’t that his last movie?

CLU GULAGER:  Yeah.  But he was really good in it.  You see, his agent ran Universal, Lew Wasserman.  So Lew prevailed upon him: “Look, I’ve helped you all these years.  We need you in this picture.”  It was a TV movie, not worth two cents.  He didn’t want to do the movie, but he had to do it, because Lew got him elected Governor, and eventually President, and he knew which side his bread was buttered on, and he took it seriously, this political activity he was engaged in.  He loved it.  Nancy said, “He doesn’t like show business any more.  He likes politics; he’s very interested in politics, Clu.”  And I knew what she was talking about, because of my whole family; I come from a political background.  You do get involved with different things.  I don’t know what you’re involved in other than your writing, but you do become obsessed with things.  And look what happened.  He could fall asleep in an instant, in a meeting of Congress.  Brilliant, brilliant mind – you try falling asleep when you’re President, in the middle of Congress.  He could nap, and not even be drunk.  I don’t think he drank to excess.

HENRY:  Now in THE KILLERS, you were with Lee Marvin and Angie Dickinson.

CLU GULAGER:  Yes, and I hit Angie Dickinson in the face as hard as I could, and I enjoyed it.

HENRY:  So you’re really fond of her, I take it.

CLU GULAGER:  I like her, except for one time I asked her to come down to The New Beverly.  (Note: The New Beverly is a revival house in L.A. owned and operated by Quentin Tarantino; very funky and very chic.)  We were showing THE KILLERS, and I’d talk with her.  And she said she couldn’t make it.  And I wanted to say…but I didn’t; I’m a gentleman.

HENRY:  THE KILLERS was directed by Don Siegal.  What was he like? 

CLU GULAGER:  I loved him as a person, very much.  Very kind and gentle.  We bonded, we were very good friends.  And his boy, Kristopher Tabori was a good friend of mine.  I must say that one of his films was one of my favorite horror films for decades.  And that was INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, with Kevin McCarthy, in black and white.  And then other things took over.  I loved ALIEN a lot, that Don O’Bannon wrote.  And Dan O’Bannon wrote a piece one time for me, called RETURN OF THE LIVNG DEAD.  And I did it.  And I said, how come you cast me in this thing, because I was a cowboy actor, kind of a legitimate actor.   And this was nonsense.  And he said, well, who would you put in it?  And I thought and thought, and I couldn’t think of anyone that would accept that role, it was so ridiculous.  I said, I can’t think of anyone.  He said, there you go.   



THE SPUR AWARDS DINNER



Jim Beaver


The convention was capped that night with the banquet, and the bestowing of the Spur Awards.  The main course was salmon, the desert was tiramisu, and the entertainment began with a bit of time-travel.  We were brought back to a mid-80s western film festival.  Actor and film historian Jim Beaver, known for his roles in DEADWOOD, SUPERNATURAL and JUSTIFIED, was hard to recognize within a wreath of crusty whiskers, as he played the festival’s special guest, an amalgam of all the great and near-great and not-that-great sidekicks of yesteryear.  To the delight of we hard-core cowboy-movie nerds, peppered among the jokes were frequent references to the most obscure of B-western productions. 

The program continued with a series of special awards.  The first, The Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement, went to Robert J. Conley.  As a Cherokee, he wrote about the west from a not too common perspective, writing short stories, novels and non-fiction, including THE CHEROKEE ENCYCLOPEDIA. 
A beloved and much honored member, described as ‘the face and heart of the WWA,’ he died this February, at the age of 73.  But fortunately, this was not a posthumous presentation; Candy Moulton, executive director of the WWA, aware of his health problems, travelled to his home in Sylva, North Carolina, and made the presentation a week before his death.  Along with all the remembrances of him, his leather-braided cane was placed across the top of the lectern.    



Clu Gulager, a close friend of Conley, and part Cherokee himself, told the audience of the time he asked Conley to play a lawman in a film, and Conley eagerly agreed, even though he had to shave his head for the part.  And then, to Gulager’s chagrin, that scene ended up on the cutting-room floor!



Johnny Boggs and Ollie Reed


The Stirrup Award was presented to Ollie Reed Jr., by Roundup Magazine editor Johnny D. Boggs, for his article on the LONGMIRE TV series. 



Diane & John Gulager, C. Courtney Joyner, Clu Gulager, Kirk Ellis


The Lariat Award for exceptional support to the WWA and literature of the West, went to Tucson radio host Emil Franzi.  The Branding Iron Award for support to the WWA and its goals went to writer and, until recently, chair of the membership committee, Rod Miller. 



Anne Hillerman & Sherry Monahan


Clu and new WWA President Sherry Monahan handed out the Spurs.   The Spur for Best Western Contemporary novel went to James Lee Burke for LIGHT OF THE WORLD.  Best Western Historical Novel was SILENT WE STOOD, by Henry Chappell.  Best Western Traditional Novel was CROSSING PURGATORY, by Gary Schanbacher.  Anne Hillerman’s SPIDER WOMAN’S DAUGHTER was the Best First Novel.  Mark Lee Garner’s SHOT ALL TO HELL: JESSE JAMES, THE NORTHFIELD RAID, AND THE WILD WEST’S GREATEST ESCAPE, was Best Western Non-Fiction – Historical.  Best Western Nonfiction – Contemporary, was William Philpott’s VACATIONLAND. 



Earle Labor and his family of researchers


Best Western Nonfiction - Biography was JACK LONDON: AN AMERICAN LIFE, a book sixty years in the making, by Earle Labor.  Just a personal note here:  I was delighted that Labor, who brought on-stage his family of researchers, credited his interest in the subject with a book he read as a kid, JACK LONDON’S STORIES FOR BOYS.  It was also my father’s favorite book as a kid, and the one he gave to me when I was bored with what they were having me to read in school.



Juni Fisher


Best Western Juvenile Fiction was PAPA’S GOLD by Ellen Gray Massey.  Best Western Juvenile Nonfiction was Jean A. Lukesh’s EAGLE OF DELIGHT.  STORYTELLER (Best Illustrated Children’s Book) was YOSEMITE’S SONGSTER: ONE COYOTE’S STORY, by Ginger Wadsworth, illustrated by Daniel San Souci.  Best Western Short Fiction Story went to CABIN FEVER by Brett Cogburn.  Best Western Poem, by Amy Glynn, was CHAMISE.  Best Western Song was STILL THERE, by Waddie Mitchell and Juni Fisher, and Juni was there to perform it.  Best Western Documentary was INDIAN RELAY by M.L. Smoker.  Best Western Short Nonfiction was THE OTHER JAMES BROTHER by Mark Lee Gardner in Wild West Magazine.



Me & Clu bid a fond farewell to the WWA Convention!


WEDNESDAY LUNCH @ THE AUTRY: COWBOYS AND COMICS: FAST ON THE DRAW!




Wednesday, July 16, at High Noon, Rob Word’s ‘A Word On Westerns’ Cowboy Lunch will take place, as it does on the third Wednesday of every month.  The focus this time will be on western-themed comic books.  As Rob points out, “The boom years for television westerns were in the 1950's and 1960's.  It was the same with comic books. The shelves of dime and drug stores were filled with comics featuring glossy covers of practically every TV and movie western.  And new western heroes like Ghost Rider, The Rawhide Kid, The Trigger Twins and Tomahawk were being offered in glorious Four Color stories.  Westerns were outselling superheroes and you'll discover some things you didn't know about the reasons why!”

Guests will include legendary MAD MAGAZINE artist and ‘Bat Lash’ creator Sergio Aragones; ComicCon’s Mark Evianer; actor and would-be ‘Lieutenant Blueberry’ (a French Western strip) Martin Kove; Will Ryan on sidekicks who got their own comics; music by the lovely Saguaro Sisters; and Olympic Gold Medalist and stuntman Dean Smith, talking about his adventures with John Wayne.  You buy your lunch, but the entertainment is free!


DEAN SMITH SIGNS AUTOBIO ‘COWBOY STUNTMAN’ WEDNESDAY AT THE AUTRY!



If you needed another reason to go to the Autry on Wednesday, track & field Olympian-turned-stuntman Dean Smith will be signing his autobiography at the Autry!  Starting in 1957 on WAGON TRAIN and continuing through ROUGH RIDERS in 1997, Dean has stunted and stunt-coordinated in nearly a hundred movies and series, doubling for stars like Roy Rogers, James Garner (in 1994!), Doug McClure, Dale Robertson, and worked with John Wayne on THE ALAMO and MCCLINTOCK!    


WIN TWO TICKETS TO SEE G.T. HURLEY THURSDAY NIGHT!




I’ve got two free tickets to the first person who emails me at swansongmail@sbcglobal.net, and asks for them!  Part of the OutWest Concert series at the Repertory Playhouse (a.k.a. The Rep) at 24266 Main Street, Newhall, CA 91321, it is sponsored by the charming folks at OutWest Boutique – click their link on the upper left-hand corner of the Round-up to learn more.  Hurley comes from Montana, and he sings about his life as a rancher and hard-rock miner.  He’s opened for Baxter Black and Jon Chandler.  To buy tickets (in case you’re not the first with the email), which are $20, call 661-255-7087.


INSP COMING BACK TO DIREC-TV!




If you, like me, have been missing Saddle-up Saturday, and your required weekly doses of THE VIRGINIAN and HIGH CHAPARRAL, I have great news!  While no official announcement is being made, my sources at INSP have confirmed that folks who have continued to call DirecTV and complain about INSP being dropped are now being told that the station will be back on July 21st





DICK JONES, ‘BUFFALO BILL JR.’, DIES


Dick Jones at the 2012 Silver Spurs


Last Monday, actor Dick Jones died at the age of 87.  Born in Snyder, Texas, he was a fine horseman by the age of four (no, that’s not a typo), and was quickly hired by Hoot Gibson to perform in his rodeo as the world’s youngest trick-rider and trick-roper. Hoot told my mother the famous words: 'That kid ought to be in pictures.' She said, 'Whoopee!' and away we went to Hollywood.

After a few years playing dozens of often uncredited bits in major features, Bs and OUR GANG shorts – he’s great as the pesky neighbor kid in NANCY DREW…REPORTER – he became famous as the voice of the wooden puppet who wanted to be a boy in Walt Disney’s PINOCCHIO.  Appreciated by western filmmakers for his saddle-skills, he was not only cast in the excellent ROCKY MOUNTAIN, with Errol Flynn; he was put on the film early, to see which actors could actually perform the various ‘mounts’ that were required.

Gene Autry was among the filmmakers who appreciated Dick’s talent and potential, and used him in five of his movies, most dramatically in LAST OF THE PONY RIDERS (1953), where Dick goes gunning for Gene.  Counting TV episodes, Dick and Gene shared the screen nineteen times.  And Autry produced the two series Dick is best remembered for, THE RANGE RIDER, where he played Jock Mahoney’s sidekick, Dick West; and BUFFALO BILL JR., where Dick was the title character.   Mahoney and Jones never used stuntmen, because no one could do the demanding stunt-work any better than the stars. 
In 1965, after REQUIUM FOR A GUNFIGHTER, he retired from the screen, and went into business.  But he never lost his fondness for the genre, sometimes attended film festivals, and over the past few years I met him several times at Silver Spur dinners and events at The Autry.  He was about the nicest man you’d want to meet.  I’m linking an episode of THE RANGE RIDER, so you can see Dick at work.  Enjoy!



THAT’S A WRAP!

That’s all for this Round-up!  Have a great week!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright July 2014 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved