Showing posts with label Helen Hunt Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helen Hunt Jackson. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

WEDNESDAY ‘BUTCH CASSIDY’, ‘WORD ON WESTERNS’, PLUS ‘HIGH CHAPARRAL’ REUNION, FAREWELL DAN ‘GRIZZLY ADAMS’ HAGGERTY!


NATIONWIDE ‘BUTCH CASSIDY’ SCREENINGS WEDNESDAY!



4-Oscar-winner BUTCH CASSIDY & THE SUNDANCE KID (1969) will be showing in 650 theatres across the nation, on Wednesday, January 20th.  This event comes to you from the fine folks at Fathom Events, TCM, and 20th Century Fox, and is the kick-off for a year of national screenings of classic movies.  If you’re a Round-up Facebook follower, you’ll know that I gave away two sets of tickets to a pair of readers who successfully answered the following:

Two classic Westerns, BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID and THE WILD BUNCH, were released in 1969, and both told the story of the same group of men.  One actor was in both films.  Who?  Did you know the answer was Strother Martin? 


Strother Martin in BUTCH CASSIDY


BUTCH won Best Original Screenplay, William Goldman; Best Cinematography, Conrad Hall; Best Score, Burt Bacharach; Best Song, Burt Bacharach and Hal David, for ‘Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head.

There are two shows on Wednesday, at 2 pm and 7 pm. THIS LINK will take you to the official Fathom site, with all of the theatres listed by city, and you can buy tickets there as well! 


Peter Duel & Ben Murphy in the...uh...
derivative ALIAS SMITH & JONES 


I saw the movie on Sunday, and was struck by how beautiful Conrad Hall’s photography is, and how many things I saw on the big screen that were lost on television.  I went home and watched, of all things, the pilot TV movie for a series that was an homage – or shameless rip-off – of BUTCH CASSIDY, ALIAS SMITH AND JONES.  And now we’re getting pretty obscure, but for no prize at all, what actor is in both BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID, and the TV movie ALIAS SMITH AND JONES?  Familiar character actor Charles Dierkop, who plays Flat Nose Curry in BUTCH, and an outlaw named Shields in SMITH. 


Charles Dierkop


I guess next I’ll be re-watching BLACKTHORN (2011), starring Sam Shepard as an aging Butch Cassidy, living in Bolivia, and wanting to go home. 


WEDNESDAY ‘WORD ON WESTERNS’ LUNCHEON AT THE AUTRY!


Clu Gulager in THE TALL MAN


At noon on Wednesday, January 20th, the first WORD ON WESTERNS luncheon at the Autry for 2016 will feature three very interesting gentlemen discussing their Western-making memories:  CLU GULAGER, who starred as Billy the Kid in the series THE TALL MAN (see it Saturdays on getTV) and Sheriff Ryker in THE VIRGINIAN (see it on INSP).


Bruce Davison & Burt Lancaster in ULZANA'S RAID


BRUCE DAVISON, (who to me will always be WILLARD, the kid who sic’d the rats on Ernest Borgnine), who starred with Burt Lancaster in ULZANA’S RAID, and just completed a new Western, ANY BULLET WILL DO.



And PHILIP PROCTOR, founding member of the brilliant comedy troupe THE FIRESIGN THEATRE, who also co-wrote ZACHARIAH, The First Electric Western!  It should be a great show – get there early, buy your lunch and snag a seat!


‘HIGH CHAPARRAL’ REUNION REGISTRATION DEADLINE FEBRUARY 1ST!



March 17th through the 20th, Old Tucson Studios, the original home of the HIGH CHAPARRAL series, where the ranch-house still proudly stands, will be the site of the HIGH CHAPARRAL REUNION 2016!  Coming back to their old galloping-grounds will be series stars Don Collier, Rudy Ramos and BarBara Luna.  They’ll be joined by a posse of stars from other Western series, including Robert Fuller from LARAMIE and WAGON TRAIN, Darby Hinton from DANIEL BOONE and the recent TEXAS RISING, Roberta Shore from THE VIRGINIAN, frequent John Wayne co-star Eddie Falkner, and Stan Ivar from LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE.  Also on-board are HIGH CHAPARRAL producers Kent and Susan McCray, and writers and historians Boyd Magers, Charlie LeSueur, Neil Summers, and Joel McCrea’s son Wyatt McCrea. 

The packages vary from a bare-bones $30-per-day deal to $475 with all the trimmings.  To take your pick and make your reservations, check out the official site HERE.




And here’s something special for all HIGH CHAPARRAL fans, and it’s free!  Last year the Reunion inaugurated a live Webcast of the event.  It was not cheap, but it was very entertaining and informative.  HIGH CHAPARRAL REUNION Top Hand Penny McQueen has decided that this year’s Webcast will be FREE!  You’ll be able to watch it HERE starting March 17th


DAN HAGGERTY – FILM & TV’S GRIZZLY ADAMS DIES

It’s been a rough week for passings.  About 100 days after the death of Kevin Corcoran, the Disney child star who will forever be remembered as Moochie; and as Arliss, the younger brother in OLD YELLER, his sister Noreen Corcoran died.  Known best for starring in the series BACHELOR FATHER, Noreen also appeared in episodes of ADVENTURES OF KIT CARSON, RIN TIN TIN, GUNSMOKE, and her last onscreen appearance was in an episode of THE BIG VALLEY. 



Rocker David Bowie, who starred in one spaghetti western, GUNSLINGER’S REVENGE, died, as did screen-villain Alan Rickman, who made one very memorable Western appearance, opposite Tom Sellick in the Aussie-oater QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER.





The loss that hit Western fans the hardest, of course, was Dan Haggerty, the screen’s Grizzly Adams.  A big bear of a man with a manly, handsome face, irresistible grin, and a wreath of hair, Haggerty was mostly seen in biker films until 1974, when he was cast as the 19th century mountain man and animal trainer.  That tiny, outdoor picture, shot without synchronized sound, became an astonishing hit due to the charm and talents of Haggerty.  Made for a reported $140,000 (and I suspect a lot less) it would take in $45,000,000 (the franchise, including the TV series, would gross $140 million), and create the ‘wilderness family’ western subgenre. 



Haggerty would go on to star as the title pioneer in THE ADVENTURES OF FRONTIER FREMONT (1976), play Grizzly Adams in several other films, and make many other film and TV appearances, in big roles and small.  He also lent his baritone voice to many cartoon characters.  Among his better later performances was as the trading-post operator in CHEYENNE WARRIOR (1994). 

A few months ago I wrote an article for TRUE WEST MAGAZINE about the ten best Mountain Man movies, anticipating THE REVENANT, and sought out Haggerty.  He had recently been diagnosed with cancer, and when I reached him by phone, he was in the hospital.  I apologized, and almost hung up, but he wanted to talk, and we did for a few minutes, about the movies, the character, and even more about the historical Adams.  Then he had to go for an MRI.  He asked me to call him back the next morning to continue the interview, but when I did, he had lost his voice.  We said we’d try again in a couple of weeks, and I tried, but it never worked out.  The last thing he said to me in our interview was, “Thanks for remembering me.”  I will.


‘RAMONA’ AUTHOR HELEN HUNT JACKSON RETURNS TO RANCHO CAMULOS JAN.31! 



Okay, she returns in spirit. On January 31, at 1:00 PM, experience Helen Hunt Jackson’s January 23, 1882 visit to Rancho Camulos which inspired her to include this vestige of the Californio lifestyle as one of the settings for her novel Ramona. Re-enactors will engage and delight you as they portray this event which forever changed the peaceful life at Rancho Camulos. “A Women with a Mission”, a presentation on the life of HHJ by author Patricia Clark Doerner will follow the reenactment.
The museum is located on Highway 126, 10 miles west of the I-5 freeway near Piru. Details at (805) 521-1501, info@ranchocamulos.org, or www.ranchocamulos.org.



Also, docent-led tours are available Sundays at 1, 2, and 3 and by appointment.  See the “Home of Ramona” including the 1853 adobe, 1867 chapel and winery, 1930 schoolhouse, and beautiful grounds.  View the 1910 silent film “Ramona” starring Mary Pickford that was filmed on location at Rancho Camulos. The suggested donation for the tours is $5.00 for adults and $3.00 for children over 5.  Entrance to the non-profit museum which is on private property is only allowed with a docent escort.  Check the website before going in case of closures due to weather or special activities. The museum is located on Highway 126, 10 miles west of the I-5 freeway near Piru. INFO: (805) 521-1501, info@ranchocamulos.org, or www.ranchocamulos.org.



WONDERFUL INTERVIEWS – ROBERT DUVALL AND JAMES DRURY!



I’m sorry for the lengthy delay of the Round-up, but I’ve got a great excuse!  Over the past couple of weeks, both for The Round-up and True West, I’ve been conducting a slew of interviews with personnel involved in several up-coming Westerns.  I’ve been talking to stars, writers, directors and producers of THE KEEPING ROOM, FORSAKEN, and THE PRICE OF DEATH.  But best of all, I’ve had the chance to speak at considerable length with a pair of icons of the genre, and personal heroes of mine, THE VIRGINIAN’s James Drury, and LONESOME DOVE’s Robert Duvall!  Doing it right takes a lot of time to prepare, and a lot of time to transcribe.  You’ll be seeing the results soon, and I’ll bet you’ll say it was worth the wait!




AND THAT’S A WRAP!

GREETINGS, RUSSIAN ROUND-UP READERS!

One of the true joys of writing the Round-up is the knowledge that it’s read in over one hundred countries across the globe.  It’s always fun to check and see who is reading, and what posts are the most popular.  Generally I’m read more in the United States than anywhere else, with other English-speaking countries usually next in numbers, often followed by Germany or France.  The remarkable pattern of the past couple of months is that the Round-up is often read by greater numbers in Russia than in the U.S.!   I’m delighted to have found such a large following in Russia, and I would love to know what about the Round-up appeals to them.  If you are a Russian Round-up Reader, I’d be grateful if you took a minute to leave a comment about it.  Of course I’m very eager to hear from any and all of my readers everywhere!

Happy Trails,

Henry


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

Thursday, May 1, 2014

‘RAMONA’ 91ST SEASON CLOSES THIS WEEKEND!


Synergy is everywhere!  If I hadn’t been at the Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival at Melody Ranch this past weekend, I wouldn’t have chatted with Maria Christopher, who was man-ing (woman-ing?) a booth for the Rancho Camulos Museum near Piru, and I wouldn’t have learned that this weekend, Saturday and Sunday, May 3rd and 4th, is your last chance to see RAMONA this year!



Just as it has been since 1923, RAMONA, California’s official outdoor play, will be presented at the Ramona Bowl Amphitheatre in Hemet,California Now in its 91ST season, RAMONA is a grand tradition, based on the novel written by Helen Hunt Jackson in 1884.  Her intention was to draw attention to the plight of California Indians in the same way that Harriet Beecher Stowe exposed the evils of slavery with UNCLE TOM’S CABIN.  A work of fiction, but set in real locations, RAMONA was a publishing phenomenon, and it was decided to present a play based on the book, in a natural outdoor setting, in the area where the story takes place. 

It’s a remarkably colorful presentation, with about 350 participants, and only the two leads are usually professional actors.  Some locals have taken part, in various roles and positions onstage and behind the scenes, for decades.  Among the famous actors who have taken part are GONE WITH THE WIND villain Victor Jory, who played the lead early in his career, and was associated with the show for years, and Raquel Welch, who played Ramona in 1959.  To learn more, and buy tickets, call 800-645-4465, or go HERE

It was not by chance that Maria Christopher was up on RAMONA, as there is a link between the spectacle and Rancho Camulos.  Author Jackson was in the early stages of writing her novel when a friend encouraged her to visit the Rancho as a possible setting for her story.  On January 23rd, 1882, Jackson took a train out, stayed for a couple of hours, then took a train back.  That brief visit was enough: she set the story there, and when RAMONA took on a life of its own, the Rancho became known as THE HOME OF RAMONA, and has been a hugely popular pilgrimage spot for lovers of the romance ever since.  You can see the Rancho and read about my visit for Ramona Days HERE.   



Ms. Christopher also told me that there was considerable Ramona news on the cinematic front.  While the best-known screen telling of the tale is undoubtedly the 1936 Technicolor film directed by Henry King, scripted by 20th Century Fox’s master storyteller Lamar Trotti, and starring Loretta Young and Don Ameche, this was actually the 4th version of the story.  The first, a one-reeler filmed in 1910, directed by D.W. Griffith and starring America’s Canadian Sweetheart Mary Pickford, was actually filmed at the original setting, Rancho Camulos.  The film has recently been restored, and screened at the Rancho. 


Mary Pickford


The other two versions, the 1916 version starring Adda Gleason, and the 1928 version starring Dolores del Rio, are lost.  Only they’re not! A copy of the del Rio version was recently found in an archive in Czechoslovakia!  It’s been preserved, and I’m keeping my eyes peeled for a time when this late silent version, which co-stars Warner Baxter, will be available to see.


Dolores del Rio


And remarkably enough, a single reel of the 1916 version has just been located at the Library of Congress.  As the original was ten reels, it’s only a small portion of the story.  As the preservation was being done, copies of a few frames were sent to the Rancho, where folks were surprised to find that this 2nd version of the movie was also shot on location at the Rancho!  And it was directed by character actor Donald Crisp, who won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar in 1941 for HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY.   

THAT’S A WRAP! 

I know this is a tiny version of the Round-up.  The fact is, I have an embarrassment of riches to report on, and not the time between the events to do the writing.  In the past couple of weeks I’ve attended the TCM Festival, the WILD BUNCH LUNCH at the Autry, the Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival at Melody Ranch, and The Cable Show at the L.A. Convention Center.  Late as this is, I would have skipped the Round-up entirely this week, and left it all for the next few reports, but I wanted to get the word out on the final performances of RAMONA before it was too late to be of use. 

I’ve never managed to get there and see it!  If you do, please let me know how it was!  Until Sunday,

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright May 1, 2014 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved


  

Sunday, September 30, 2012

VIRGINIAN NIGHT - RAMONA DAYS


VIRGINIAN 50TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Part 2

Roberta Shore, Clu Gulager, Doug McClure,
Randy Boone, James Drury, Lee J. Cobb (seated)
 

If you read last week’s Round-up (and if you didn’t, the link is HERE ) you know that last Saturday, the 50th Anniversary of the classic Western series THE VIRGINIAN was marked by an all-day star-studded celebration at The Autry, and a marathon of VIRGINIAN episodes on INSP, which is adding the show to it’s Saddle-Up Saturday line-up.  In fact, this coming Saturday they’ll be running five episodes in a row! 


Last week I featured my interviews with about half of the cast members who attended.  Herewith, the second half.   


Randy Boone portrayed Randy Benton in 70 episodes, from 1964 through1966.  In addition to acting, he’s a talented singer, as he proved at the dinner later that night.

 

HENRY:  You’re the only actor I know of who starred in two 90 minutes western series, THE VIRGINIAN, and then CIMARRON STRIP.  What was it like doing that length of production?


RANDY BOONE:  Uh, it was great.  I didn’t believe it: I didn’t think the movies would be so demanding on you physically.  I remember getting up in the morning, some mornings which people think are cold in Southern California, looking at that shower, and then deciding if I was going to make it, or talk the make-up man into shaving me.  It was long, long arduous days, and a lot to learn – I didn’t know how to ride a horse.  I had to learn a lot of things.  I had to find out about getting a good manager.  At first I thought, oh good, I’ve got a manager.  I got robbed at first. 

 
When Roberta Shore got married and left THE VIRGINIAN, a niece of Judge Garth was written in, and lovely Diane Roter was brought onboard for the 1965-1966 season.  She’s been busy since then, traveling the world to study and to act, and along the way became a writer as well. 

Clu Gulager and Diane Roter
 

DIANE ROTER:  I’ve done this myself; I’m a journalist.  I was a theatre critic for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, book reviewer for the L.A. Times, and film reviewer; did a regular column for the San Jose Mercury Times. 

 
HENRY: I loved the Herald Examiner.

 
DIANE: I’m so glad to hear you say that.  I loved it.  We had so many good writers there.  I was their theatre critic until my son was born.  I was hired by (legendary editor) Jim Bellows, and it was really a golden era, when he was there.  It was the only union paper in the city at that time, because they’d been a ‘scab’ paper for years, and then Jim Bellows came in, from the Washington Star, and everyone was union. 


HENRY:  How did you get cast as Jennifer Sommers?
 

DIANE:  I was doing a play in Santa Monica.  I was playing the title role in GIGI, and I got really pretty great reviews in the L. A. Times, so talent scouts came out, and I was offered contracts for two different movie studios at the same time, Warner Brothers and Universal.  And I did a screen test for Universal.  Warner Brothers wanted to put me in movies right away, which probably would have been interesting.  But Universal just happened to have a role in THE VIRGINIAN because Roberta had just left.  So that’s where I went.  I signed with Universal, a seven-year contract, so I was one of the last of the golden era (of long-term studio contracts).  I did a bunch of TV shows there, then I did two movies after, then I went to Paris, and I studied mime with Marcel Marceau -- he was one of my great mentors.  Then I came back; I did one show at the Mark Taper Forum, I directed theatre, I did some more TV, and then I started having kids.  I had my first daughter, and I started writing, and getting published. 


HENRY:  On THE VIRGINIAN, did you have any favorite guest stars that you worked with?
 

DIANE:  I was so lucky.  Norman MacDonnell was my producer on the year I was on.  He started GUNSMOKE; he was a brilliant, talented man.  And he just had the best actors.  I worked with the great ones – and I’m not just talking about Lee J. Cobb, who played my uncle, but as far as guest stars, Ed Begley was wonderful to work with; Jim Whitmore, I enjoyed working with him; Sheree North was one of my favorites.
 

HENRY:  I was madly in love with her.
 

DIANE: Were you really?
 

HENRY:  Absolutely.  I think she was one of the most beautiful creatures to ever be on film.  And so funny.
 

DIANE:  She was a great actress.  She really was – I watched her every minute.  She was a model for me.  You know, originally she had been hired to be competition for Marilyn Monroe.  Very much like Shelly Winters, when she was young.  She had a very demanding role on that show.  Really good actors on the show; I enjoyed working with Virginia Grey, Harry Guardino, and I did one with Charles Bronson – he was great to work with.  He’s probably the most shy, silent man I’ve ever known.  After THE VIRGINIAN I did a movie, I did all kinds of characters.  I did an Indian, I played a French courtesan on THE RAT PATROL, and I was on FAMILY AFFAIR, on all different types of shows, playing all kinds of characters.  And when you work with people, you realize how different they are from their persona.  Particularly Dirk Bogarde – I worked with him in one of George Cukor’s last films, JUSTINE, which was a film of THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET, and he was fabulous.  And Anouk Aimee, and Michael York – it was an all-star cast. I’ve been very lucky to work with great people, like Henry Fonda on-stage.  We did readings when he was on tour doing THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE.  And actually Jane Alexander had the part, I was the understudy, but reading with him was such a thrill.  Also, before THE VIRGINIAN I worked with Charles Laughton.

 

HENRY: When was that?
 

DIANE:  That was on GENERAL ELECTRIC THEATRE, which was hosted by Ronald Reagan; my first television role.  That was an introduction; also worked with Elsa Lanchester. 
 

HENRY:  You must have been very young.

 
DIANE:  I was fortunate that I was not a child actor.  The one thing that I did as a child, with Charles Laughton, I was about eleven.  Then with Curt Jurgens I was fourteen.  Then when I did THE VIRGINIAN I was sixteen.  But I was never a kid actor, and I never let my kids act when they were young. 


HENRY:  My wife and I did a series of interviews with child stars of the 1930s and 1940s, and none of them would ever let their children act.  They know better.

 
DIANE:  Exactly.  Paul Peterson was a friend of mine; he started an organization that works on behalf of child actors (A Minor Consideration).  I worked on FAMILY AFFAIR, with Brian Keith.  There were a couple of kids on that, who played twins: Johnny Whittaker, who did very well; and there was a little Anissa Jones.  She was a wonderful little actress, but I felt that there was trouble ahead.  And she committed suicide. 

 
 

Except for a shock of white hair, Clu Gulager looks just as handsome as he did when he joined THE VIRGINIAN cast starting in season two, in 1963.  Looking debonair in a black suit and shirt, he has the same mischievous grin he wore as Sheriff Ryker, that let you know that there was much more going on behind his eyes than he was revealing. 

 

The fact that my first name is Henry was enough to set him off on a riff about Henrys, especially one Henry Starr.


CLU GULAGER: Henry Starr was a bad dude, although he did become a movie actor.  I’ve seen posters here at the Autry Museum, of Henry as a movie star, pointing a gun.  But after that, he went back to robbing banks, which he had done before he became a movie star.  He killed several people, a lot of people.   And his brother Sam married a little girl from Missouri; her name became Belle Starr.  She was an outlaw and a killer.  They used to broker cattle, to rustle cattle, in the Indian Territory.  And they were selling to Chicago, Kansas City, different places that had a market for white-faced cattle.  They were bad people.  And they were related to me.


HENRY:  Speaking of bad people, before you did THE VIRGINIAN you starred in THE TALL MAN, with Barry Sullivan.  You were playing another bad guy, Billy the Kid, opposite his Pat Garrett.
 

CLU:  I was in my 30s when I played Billy the Kid, but I had a baby face.  So it was okay.  You can fool people sometimes; you tell them you’re a kid, and they believe you, if you have a baby-face. 



HENRY:  What was it like going from the smaller, 30 minute show to the more elaborate western?
 

CLU: Same thing; same stuff.  You only shoot so much every day.  Same camera; same horses; same saddles.  Same horse-shit.  No different. 
 

HENRY:  Around the time you joined THE VIRGINIAN, you did THE KILLERS.

 
CLU: I did THE KILLERS with an actor I liked a lot called Lee Marvin.  And Ronald Reagan and John Cassavettes and Angie Dickinson.  We killed Ronald Reagan and Angie Dickinson and John Cassavettes.  And they deserved it!  Henry, just remember, no matter what happens….  (after a long pause)  Just remember.  (Laughs).  When I said, ‘Just remember, no matter what happens,’ you were supposed to say, ‘What?’ so I could say ‘Just remember.’


HENRY:  Sorry. Next time I won’t be late on my cues.

 

 

Gary Clarke played cowpoke Steve Hill in 63 episodes of THE VIRGINIAN, seasons one and two.  He’d done quite a few episodes of other Western series before then, and even played Teenaged Werewolf in HOW TO MAKE A MONSTER.



HENRY: What actors did you enjoy working with on THE VIRGINIAN?

 

GARY CLARKE:  My favorite people on the show?  Jim and Doug of course.  But working with Lee J. Cobb, that was incredible.  Just amazing to work with.  And he really touched my life; touched me as a human being.  I loved working with Robert Redford, Lee Marvin – Lee Marvin was a hoot. 
 

HENRY:  I was just watching your episode with Lee Marvin, IT TOLLS FOR THEE, directed by Sam Fuller.  What was he like?
 

GARY: He was tough.  He knew what he wanted; he had no qualms about telling us, and we worked great with him.  He’d tell us, “This is what I want,” so we gave him that, and oftentimes more. 
 


HENRY:  Do you have any particular feelings about other directors on the show?
 

GARY:  Most all of them were really terrific.  But there was one, I can’t say the name, who was a real butt-munch, I think the term would be.  The kind of guy who would say, ‘Action,’ walk away, come back and say, ‘Oh, okay, cut.  Did they say all their words?’  ‘Yuh.’  ‘Okay, next scene.’ 
 

HENRY:  After THE VIRGINIAN you did HONDO: THE SERIES, and after that you didn’t do a lot of westerns until you came back with TOMBSTONE.  How did you like getting back to the west with TOMBSTONE?
 

GARY:  I loved it!  The way that it came about is I was living in Phoenix, I auditioned in Tucson, and Kevin Jarre, who wrote it, was also directing it.  The casting lady, Holly Hire was there, and took me in to meet him.  And he was late from lunch.  We got in there, and there were all kinds of people waiting to see him.  So she pulled me to the front of the line; I don’t know why.  Went in, talked to him.  We read a short scene.  He had my résumé  in front of him.  The phone rang, and he’s talking; I’m talking to Holly, and I think it went well.  And he said, “Wow!”  And he hung up the phone.  And he said, “You played the part of Captain Richards on HONDO!  I loved the way you played that part!”  Then he picked up the phone again, and started talking.  Holly leans over and says, “I think you got the part.”  And I did.



HENRY:  Andy Fenady, who produced and wrote HONDO, is a good friend.  Wonderful series.
 

GARY:    It was, and it was fun working with Andy.  But he almost ruined my writing career.  Because I gave him an outline for a show, that I think would have been terrific.  I handed it to him.  And he took it, and handed it back, and said, “Gary, you’re an actor.  Act.  Let the writers write.”  So years later, when I decided that I did want to write something, I wrote a script for GET SMART.  When I submitted it, I used my real name, Clark L’Amoreaux.  And the agent I had really had to push it, because they weren’t taking unsolicited scripts.  But he got it to them.  They read it, they liked it, and they wanted to see me.  And I thought, Oh Lord, they’re going to know I’m Gary Clarke, and I’m an actor, and shouldn’t write!  Show’s you how naive I was.  So I went in; I was wearing glasses, which I didn’t wear at the time, and I looked kind of dorky.  (nasally) ‘Hi, I’m Clark L’Amoreaux, and I wrote the script.’  I did three shows, and I finally decided I’ve got to fess up.  I went in and talked to Buck Henry, Mel (Brooks) was in the office, and I said, ‘Look, I’ve got something to tell you guys.  I’m Clark L’Amoreaux, but I’m also Gary Clarke, the actor.’  ‘Yeah, we know.’  ‘What?!  Why didn’t you tell me?’  ‘We wanted to see how long you’d carry it out.’  I never saw Andy after that, to tell him, so if you see Andy, tell him for me.


HENRY:  I will.  (Incidentally, Gary wrote six episodes of GET SMART)
 
James Drury, Clu Gulager, Doug Butts


Next week I’ll have Part 3 of my VIRGINIAN 50TH Anniversary coverage, featuring highlight from the panel discussion, and my interview with INSP’s Senior Vice President of Programming, Doug Butts. 



RANCHO CAMULOS CELEBRATES ‘RAMONA DAY(S)’

 

On Saturday September 29th I trusted my GPS to lead me out of Los Angeles, through wilderness and desert to Piru, the home of Rancho Camulos, also known as The Home of Ramona.   The home of the del Valle family since they were recipients of a huge land- grant (48,612 acres!) from the government of Mexico in 1839, it has rested in the hands of only two families; the del Valles  and, since 1924, the Rubels, a Swiss family which owns the land to this day. 

 

Dependent upon weather as much as any farming or ranching concern, it has had its financial ups and downs.  At various times its main business has been cattle, oranges, grapes, wine and brandy.  Currently some of its acres are planted with jalapeños.   In many ways, Rancho Camulos seems frozen in time; it looks today very much as it did a century and a half ago.

 

Although the stories of the del Valles and the Rubels are compelling enough to earn it an important place in Californio history (which you can read about HERE ), there is another connection which lifts the Rancho to the level of national, and even international fame:  it is the spot where one of the most beloved romances of American fiction, RAMONA, was conceived and set. 

 

Author Helen Hunt Jackson had previously written A CENTURY OF DISHONOUR, an exposé of Indian mistreatment by a United States government which did not honor its treaties.  Frustrated at the book’s lack of impact (despite its snappy title), Jackson determined to try again, this time writing a novel that would illustrate the same notions but in a more entertaining package.  Seeking a locale, she was encouraged by her friends the Coronels to place the story at Rancho Camulos, one of the very last of the colonial land-grant ranches.  On January 23rd, 1882, she took a train in, visited at the Rancho for a couple of hours, and took the train back.   It was a short visit, but it was enough: the tale of Ramona, the young Mexican woman who falls in love with the Indian Alessandro, even as the Americans are moving in and taking the land, would be set at Camulos.

 

Although it was not the Indian’s UNCLE TOM’S CABIN as she had hoped, it was a tremendous bestseller in its day, has never been out of print, and was for years required reading for all California school children.   People found the story so compelling that, unable to accept that it was fiction, they came searching for Ramona and Alessandro, and the Ramona cottage industry was born. 

 

So on Saturday, RAMONA DAYS was held at Rancho Camulos.  It was a remarkable event, and very well-attended.  I don’t know the numbers, but there were certainly several hundred people there at any one time for the all-day celebration.  After parking our cars just beyond the jalapeños fields, visitors hopped into an open wagon, got settled on hay bales, and a tractor pulled us to the entrance of the park and museum. 

a cork tree
 

All of the adobe structures, from the small kitchen to the large main house, were open for visiting, with knowledgeable docents everywhere.  Beautiful ancient cork trees were here and there, their rough pocked bark showing that they had provided the corks when Camulos was a winery and a brandy-maker.  The huge adobe winery is, in fact, the only building that cannot currently be visited, as it was seriously damaged during the 1994 earthquake.    
 
the south veranda
 

 

As the audience settled in chairs under the shading cork trees, they listened to a violinist, then watched a troop of Flamenco dancers, then listened to ‘The Ramona Song.’  The Ramona Pageant has been presented at The Ramona Bowl,  a huge open amphitheater in Hemet, since the 1920s, and it will have its 90th season this coming summer.  Next came the highlight of the program: the lead cast from the pageant performed scenes from the show.  Dennis Anderson, who directs the pageant, introduced Cesaria Hernandez as Ramona, Duane Minard as Alessando, and Kathi Anderson as the villain of the piece, the Senora.   The performances were moving, the story poignant, particularly so in knowing that it was being performed before the unchanged veranda where Helen Hunt Jackson sat and created the story 128 years ago.  Moreover, some of those scenes were filmed on that very veranda, 102 years ago, with D. W. Griffith directing, and Mary Pickford and Henry B. Walthall starring.   The program continued with traditional Spanish and Mexican dances. 

Kathi Anderson, Cesaria Hernandez and Duane Minard with director Dennis Anderson


 

 

In the one-room school-house that now functions as a gift-shop and theatre, documentarian Hugh Munro Neely, of the Mary Pickford Institute, was showing the 17 minute Griffith version of RAMONA, which he’d overseen the remastering of for TCM.  As the film played, he pointed out, shot-by-shot, where it was filmed.  He pointed out a scene where Ramona, locked in her room, reaches out through the barred windows. “The interior was shot on an outdoor stage in downtown Los Angeles.  The exterior shot, is on the south veranda.” After, I asked him about the research he’d done.  “Actually I wasn’t the first person to do research.  I work for the Mary Pickford Institute, and some years ago the museum requested a copy of the film, which we had in our collection.  We sent it to them, and they did a lot of the first research.  About two years ago I did the research on the countryside, that’s in the later parts of the film.  And we were able to get permission to go up in the hills, on the private land, behind Piru, and we found that the mountain scenes look almost exactly as they did 102 years ago.  Just like the scenes here at Camulos look exactly as they did 102 years ago – it’s really amazing.” 

 
Mary Pickford, locked in her room, reaches through the bars
 
window on the far right is the one Mary Pickford was reaching through

Outside of the schoolhouse I caught up with Cesaria Hernandez and Duane Minard, Ramona and Alessandro.  I asked them what it was like to be playing their roles in the spot where they were originally imagined. 

    

CESARIA:  Doing it here, and knowing that Helen Hunt Jackson was actually here, wrote it – it’s incredible.  Because there’s so much history associated with this place, and I think we kind of feed off of that – that kind of spirit, that maybe she left behind here, a little bit.   

 
DUANE:  We always like to walk the grounds.  The first time we came out here, it was just like, so this is part of a true history.  This part of what we’re playing was actually written right here.  And that is just like going to sacred ground for me.  And as a Native American, coming back to the original place, and then being part of bringing this history to life; it’s something that’s really been a high point for us. 



HENRY: How many seasons have you both been involved with the RAMONA pageant?
 

CESARIA: This will be my thirteenth season of being involved; I have played Ramona six times during that time. 
 

DUANE:  And this will be my twelfth, and I’ve played Alessandro  four times.
 

HENRY:  When did you first read the book?
 

CESARIA:  I read the book originally from cover-to-cover back in 1998, and I fell in love with it, I went up there and saw the production director Dennis Anderson put on, and the very next year I decided that I was going to audition for it.  And that was my first year of being Ramona, in 1999.
 

DUANE:  I read it in 1990.  I had heard about it so many times, (being told) you’ve got to read the story, it’s all about Native American history in California.  And I’m a California Native American, maybe I should.  So by the time 1990 came around I actually read it.  And I read it.  And I read it again, and I really enjoyed the story.  And lo and behold, there was the pageant right there in Hemet. 
 

CESARIA:  And we go back to it, between seasons; we’ll go back and read different sections, to try to bring different nuances to the scenes.  You can gain a lot from the book, so sometimes we go back and do a refresher course, especially on certain scenes. 
 

HENRY:  Have you seen any of the film versions?  And what do you think of them?
 

CESARIA:  I think we’ve seen just about all of the film versions over the years, and it’s great because you get to see these stars – Mary Pickford being the first – and it’s just so great to see people that you know doing these roles.
 

In addition to the pageant, Duane can currently be seen as Golden Eagle in the current DVD release COWBOYS & INDIANS, and will soon be seen in THE LONE RANGER.  Cesaria co-hosts the cable show THE VALLEY CONNECTION, which you can find at www.thevalleyconnection.net.

 
I strolled the grounds some more, watching demonstrations of blacksmithing and Indian weaving, admired the rose gardens and drank in the history.  A docent showed me a century-old photograph of forty members of the del Valle family, then pointed out that I was standing at the top of the steps where they had been posed. 
 
del Valle family a century ago...
 
...and where they posed
 

It was about one, and getting very hot.  I had a burrito and a soda, and was about to leave when I saw director Dennis Anderson passing by.  He’d already directed RAMONA so many times,  but I asked how it felt to do it where the story had been originally imagined.  “On a historical and spiritual level, it feels really good.  Because we’re at the heart of where Helen Hunt Jackson created her novel.  On a production side, though, it’s very different, because we do this in this huge outdoor amphitheatre, the Ramona Bowl, where the audience is like three or four thousand people spread out across the hillside.  So it’s different in a production sense, but it feels equally as good, and when I see the wind blowing, and Ramona there with her rose, it’s like I can almost see Helen Hunt Jackson’s imagination; it’s pretty cool.”



While RAMONA DAYS is actually just one day, and comes just once a year, Rancho Camulos is open every Sunday.  Go to their link for details.

UPCOMING EVENTS:

CALICO DAYS, YERMO Oct. 5-7

A western parade, a burro run, gunfighters, barbecue, a miner's triathalon, 1880s-era contests and live music at Calico Ghost Town.  760-684-0849 calicotown.com

SAN DIMAS WESTERN DAYS Oct. 6-7

PRCA Rodeo, parade, craft and food fair, music, entertainment.  San Dimas Civic Center Park and Rodeo Grounds.  909-592-3818, 909-394-7633  sandimasrodeo.com

BIG HORSE FEED HARVEST FESTIVAL, TEMECULA Oct.. 6-31

11 acre corn-maze, hy rides, pony rides, pig races, pumpkin bowling, etc.  Big Horse Feed and Marcantile.  951-389-4621 bighorsecornmaze.com

GHOST TOUR, SIMI VALLEY Oct. 5-28

Guided walking tour of sites where historical ghosts tell stories of Chumash, pioneers, and eccentrics who once lived in the Valley.  Friday-Sunday nights, Strathearn Historical Park. 805-526-66453 simihistory.com
 
 

And that’s the Round-up for this week.  I had a couple of little up-dates, but they’ll have to wait until next week.  After all, I’m already three episodes behind on HELL ON WHEELS, and I want to catch up before anyone tells me who is getting killed!

 

Happy Trails,

 

Henry

 

All original contents copyright September 2012 by Henry C. Parke  --   All Rights Reserved