Showing posts with label Morgan Woodward. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morgan Woodward. Show all posts

Sunday, February 24, 2019

LA/ITALIA - FRANCO NERO TALKS NEW WESTERNS; GUNSMOKE’S MORGAN WOODWARD DIES






OSCAR NOMINEE DIANE WARREN, MICHAEL IMPERIOLI, ANDY GARCIA, AND FRANCO NERO ON THE L.A./ITALIA FEST RED CARPET!



Last Sunday, February 17th, the Los Angeles Italia Festival began, as it has for fourteen years, a week before the Oscars, in the same complex where the Academy Awards are held, at Hollywood and Highland. The week-long celebration of Italian film and culture opens with a red carpet outside the Chinese Theatre 6. Receiving special honors that night would be Franco Nero and Andy Garcia.
I first spoke to Diane Warren, the ten-times Oscar-nominated song-writer who might get her first win tonight for I’ll Fight, the theme from the documentary RBG, about Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Henry Parke:   When you wrote I'll Fight, was the film completed, or was it based on knowing what it was going to be about?
Diane Warren: Well, I saw a rough cut of it and I just got really inspired, and it's such an honor to be associated with this, with RBG. Here I am, and a week from today -- eek!
Henry Parke:   Who's going to be performing?
Diane Warren: Jennifer Hudson. She's going to be singing it, and she's probably going to blow the roof off this place.
Henry Parke:   I bet she will. Previously, what have been your favorite songs you've written for movies?
Diane Warren: Last year was one of my favorites ever, was Stand Up For Something from MARSHALL. That was Common and Andra Day, and they gave me an award for that as well. And the Lady Gaga song, Til It Happens To You (from the documentary THE HUNTING GROUND), that I wrote a few years ago. It was really proud of that. I'm proud of all of them, you know.



I next spoke to Michael Imperioli, who’s been nominated for Emmys five times for his portrayal of Christopher on THE SOPRANOS.  I interviewed him, and then he interviewed me a little. In the 2018 prison-brake miniseries ESCAPE AT DANNEMORA, directed by Ben Stiller, Michael played New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
Henry Parke:   How did you like playing Governor Cuomo?
Michael Imperioli:  Oh, I liked it a lot. I got to spend some time with him and talk to him about what it was like during the prison break that the movie is about. But it was a lot of fun. It was good to work with Ben Stiller (who) is, I think a great director and really knows how to work with actors. I had a good time on that.
Henry Parke:   Tell me, do people still call you Christopher?
Michael Imperioli:  Oh yeah. I think they'll call me that till the end of my life probably. As long as they keep watching THE SOPRANOS.
Henry Parke:   I don't think they'll ever stop. How do you think THE SOPRANOS changed television?
Michael Imperioli:  I think THE SOPRANOS brought a cinematic quality to television that never really happened before. What people loved about movies, THE SOPRANOS brought to their living rooms on a weekly basis. And I think that was a seminal moment in television history.
Henry Parke:   What's been your favorite roles since then?
Michael Imperioli:  I did a movie in Portugal called CABARET MAXINE, that has not been released yet, and I think that was my favorite role since then. I play the owner of a burlesque house, who's trying to keep the old, the old world of burlesque alive in the modern, gentrified big cities.
Henry Parke:   Terrific.
Michael Imperioli:  Thank you. Who are you with?
Henry Parke:   Oh, I'm with True West Magazine and Henry's Western Roundup. I mostly write about Westerns.
Michael Imperioli:  Oh, really? Big Weston fan, huh? What's your favorite western?
Henry Parke:   Currently THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY, but it changes from week to week. What's yours?
Michael Imperioli:  Well, THE SEARCHERS, I never get tired of that, but THE WILD  BUNCH I think; I love that one.. And also, THE COWBOYS. Good friend of mine who passed away was in that: Roscoe Lee Brown. Oh, he's a great actor.
Henry Parke:   Wonderful actor, wonderful role in that, too.
Michael Imperioli:  Wonderful role; that's a really good movie. And Robert Carradine.



Next I talked briefly with Andy Garcia, who was just in THE MULE with Clint Eastwood. Garcia is working to make a film to be titled HEMINGWAY & FUENTES, about the friendship between Ernest Hemingway and boat Captain Gregorio Fuentes, the inspiration behind THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA.
Henry Parke:   How did you like working with Clint Eastwood?
Andy Garcia:   Oh, Clint is incredible. That was a sublime experience.
Henry Parke:   I understand you're filming HEMINGWAY & FUENTES.
Andy Garcia:   I would like to; I'm in the process.
Henry Parke:   That sounds like a wonderful project.
Andy Garcia:   It is. Just trying to get the financing together.



Finally I spoke to the original Django, Franco Nero
Henry Parke:   Franco, which are your favorite among your westerns?
Franco Nero:   Well... maybe DJANGO and maybe KEOMA. I think KEOMA’s an interesting western, yes.
Henry Parke:   And Enzo Castellari is a wonderful director.
Franco Nero:   Yes. We are supposed to do a new one. Maybe; we are planning to do a new Keoma. But also a new Django.  But you know, we see. Maybe one or the other, maybe one western will come out this year. Maybe both.
Henry Parke:  I heard John Sayles had written the script of the new Django.
Franco Nero:   Yes, John Sayles wrote the new Django, DJANGO LIVES. That's the title. It takes place in the United States, at the border with Mexico. New California.
Henry Parke:   What other Westerns do you like, besides your own?
Franco Nero:   I love the Sergio Leone Westerns. Then I love DANCES WITH WOLVES.

Then it was time to go inside the auditorium for entertainment and awards. After a montage of Franco Nero film clips, Mark Canton, who produced 2010’s LETTERS TO JULIET, which stars Franco Nero and his real wife Vanessa Redgrave, introduced the actor, who gratefully accepted his award.
“You want me to say something?” With a wry smile, he said, “This is an award for the work I've done up until now. Then in a few year's time, you're going to give me another one. When I retire, maybe in ten years' time. Anyway, I owe everything to the cinema. Sometimes they ask me, 'What is cinema for you?' I say cinema, for me it's like a big city where people of different colors, and different ethnic groups have their home and their dreams. So cinema will continue to exist as long as people will continue to dream. Cinema means freedom. Because in the country where there is no freedom, there is no cinema. Cinema gave me the possibility to travel the world. I've been everywhere, I've been to more than a hundred countries around the world. It gave me the possibility to have dinner with presidents, princes, princesses, governors, but also gave me the possibility to have dinner with humble people. Like fishermen, like farmers. And I have to tell you. I prefer to have dinner with the humble people. They are wiser. They are much, much wiser. Thank you for this.”

MORGAN WOODWARD DIES AT 93




Henry and Morgan 

Morgan Woodward, the Texas-born actor who excelled at playing villains in Westerns, Sci-Fi, Crime films, and just about every other genre, has died after a long, heroic struggle with cancer. He guested more often on GUNSMOKE than any other actor, was the third most frequent guest on WAGON TRAIN, and played Shotgun Gibbs to Hugh O’Brian’s WYATT EARP in 81 episodes. Despite his cold visage in COOL HAND LUKE, which created the craze of mirror sunglasses for lawmen, he was one of the nicest, most cheerful men you could ever meet.

I first met Morgan on the set of the movie I wrote my last year in college, 1977’s SPEEDTRAP. (In it, Joe Don Baker had to face down three great villains, Timothy Carey, Robert Loggia, and Morgan Woodward, who are now, sadly, all gone.)  I don’t think we ran into each other again until 1993, when Nickodell’s, the legendary restaurant outside the Paramount and former R.K.O. lots closed, and we were the last customers in the place.

Since then we’d run into each other at least once a year at western events, and he was always full of great stories about making movies, and friends like L.Q. Jones and Fess Parker. I interviewed him a few times, most recently for True West Magazine, and the article is in the current issue. I’m including the link. I’d received my copies a week ago Friday, and put one in the mail to him on Saturday. Yesterday, I had a phone message from his care-giver, telling me that Morgan had died, and that he’d insisted she call me, to tell me how much he enjoyed the article. I’m so glad I got it to him in time.  Here’s a link to the interview.
Nearly a decade ago I did a longer interview with Morgan here in the Round-up. Here it is.
I first met Morgan Woodward in 1978, in Phoenix, on the set of my first movie with a writing credit, SPEEDTRAP. The hero of the piece was Joe Don Baker, and the more gravitas the hero has, the stronger the villain needs to be. Morgan Woodward, as the corrupt Police Chief, was plenty strong, with a presence that grips the attention.

Although I’ve enjoyed Morgan’s work since then, I hadn’t seen him in person for more than thirty years, when I ran into him at an autograph show in Burbank a few weeks ago. He kindly agreed to sit down and talk about his long screen career in the saddle. Not surprisingly, he’s a Texan by birth, born September 16th, 1925. “I was born in Fort Worth, only because we didn’t have a hospital in Arlington, fourteen miles away.” Naturally, I assumed he plays a cowboy so well because, being a Texan, he did so much riding as a kid. “Nope, I did not. I learned to ride when I came to California.” Well, at least I was right about his always liking western movies. “Oh sure – every kid likes westerns! Tom Mix, Hoot Gibson, Buck Jones.”

Interestingly, his first love was not acting, but aviation. “We had an Army airfield six or seven miles from Arlington and my family would go out there on weekends, and watch the weekend warriors fly the airplanes, and I was just always interested in airplanes. Most kids my age were interested in planes, back in the 1930s.” He first flew a plane when he was sixteen, and continued to fly until just a few years ago.

Graduating from High School in 1944, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps Training Program. “We went through basic training, ready to go to pre-flight. But they didn’t have room for us, so they sent us to CTD – College Training Detachment. I went to the University of Arkansas for about six months, and they still didn’t have room in preflight, so they sent us to Pampa Army Airfield, to do all the jobs the enlisted men wouldn’t do. (laughs) We saw the handwriting on the wall, because a lot of flyers were coming back from overseas, they had nothing more to do than chase pretty girls in West Texas. One morning we were told that the commanding General of the Flying Training Command said all flying training had stopped. The war was going too well, and they didn’t need any more pilots. That was the end of my hope for getting my wings in the Army Air Corps. I was sent to Scott Field, Illinois, to radio school, and I stayed until they decided we aviation cadets were just surplus, so they got rid of us just before Christmas of 1945.”

After the war he entered Arlington State, majoring in music and drama, planning on a career in opera. “I gave it up because I had a sinus condition, still do, that would not allow me to be a consistent singer. So I traded Grand Opera for Horse Opera.” In 1948, he transferred to the University of Texas at Austin, a drama and music minor, majoring in business administration. Among his classmates were Fess Parker, Jayne Mansfield, Rip Torn, L.Q. Jones, and Pat Hingle. Not all of them seemed marked for greatness. “Jayne Mansfield certainly didn’t stand out at the time. L.Q. wasn’t in the drama department – L.Q. was the cheerleader. He didn’t get into movies until Fess Parker sneaked him in to see a director. L.Q. is so crazy; he convinced the director that he ought to be in the picture. Pat Hingle was a fine actor. Rip Torn was a good actor. Then he was Elmore Torn.”

In 1951, just as he was entering law school, Morgan was recalled to active duty. He finally got overseas. “I was in the Military Transport Command; we were flying between Japan and Korea. I was happy to be up in the air, and we didn’t get shot at.” When he was back stateside, he decided against going back to law school. “World War II and the Korean War, I thought, Hell, although I was only about 26 years old, I’m getting too old to go to school. Fess Parker at that time was Davy Crockett. And Disney was getting ready to do THE GREAT LOCOMOTIVE CHASE. So Fess told Disney he knew this guy who would be just absolutely great as this wild-eyed Confederate Master Sergeant. So that’s how I got my ‘in’. I went to California to do a screen test for Walt Disney, and I was signed to a three-picture contract.”

Henry: Did you meet Walt, himself?

Morgan: Yes, as a matter of fact, the first day of shooting, when I went on the set, he came down to see this guy who had come out from Texas and was going to be in his first motion picture job. He was a great guy, great guy. Anybody’s a great guy who’ll sign me to a three-picture contract!

H: The next one was WESTWARD HO, THE WAGONS!

M: Right, and then ALONG THE OREGON TRAIL, a short film.

H: With WESTAWARD HO, you were with Fess Parker and Iron Eyes Cody.

M: Oh yes, Iron Eyes was a great friend of mine, just a splendid guy. In the words of the Indians, a straight arrow.

H: Your director, William Beaudine, used to be Mary Pickford’s personal director in silent movies.

M: That’s right, Bill Beaudine was just great. No bullshit, and he was terrific.

H: From 1958 through 1961 you had your first regular character, on WYATT EARP, as Shotgun Gibbs. How did you get that role?

M: I did an episode of WYATT EARP the year before, as Captain Langley of the Texas Rangers. The producers loved the character, so they had Stuart Lake write in a character somewhat like this Ranger Captain, Shotgun Gibbs, and I was on that until 1961. He was a wonderful writer.
(Note: Stuart N. Lake, a writer in the film business at least as far back as 1916, wrote the book WYATT EARP, FRONTIER MARSHAL, on which virtually all Wyatt Earp films, and the TV series, were based. He was nominated for a Best Story Oscar for THE WESTERNER (1940), about Judge Roy Bean.)

H: How did you like playing a recurring role, as opposed to playing a different character each time?

M: I loved it: I got a check every Friday.

H: Obviously, you worked a lot with Hugh O’Brien. What was he like?

M: He was a nice fellah. He was not the easiest fellah in the world to get along with, but he and I got along – we were together for over three years, got along fine.

H: What sort of a shooting schedule would you have for an episode?

M: We shot five days a week, Monday through Friday, usually shot three days on the set, at Desilu Studios, two days on location, out at Melody Ranch.

H: There were a lot of interesting guest stars on WYATT EARP, like Andy Clyde, and semi-regulars like Lash LaRue.

M: Well, Lash is a real character. And I working with Andy Clyde, because Andy Clyde was an icon. I also worked with Anna Mae Wong on WYATT EARP. I worked with Kermit Maynard, a lot of guys who weren’t stars anymore, and they were old, but it was quite something to work with them.

H: What are your best memories of working on that show?

M: It was the first time I had a regular series, and the producers of WYATT EARP were going to do a series on Sam Houston, called THE RAVEN, and they selected me to do Sam Houston. Unfortunately, the producer had a heart attack, and the show was put on hold for a while. Then he got better, we started to get into production, he had a another heart attack and died, and that was the end of that.

H: In the late 1950s you were doing a lot of western TV episodes. ZANE GREY THEATRE, CHEYENNE, SUGARFOOT, BROKEN ARROW, RESTLESS GUN, BAT MASTERSON 

M: That’s right, I think I did every western there was.

H: Were any of them particularly memorable?

M: They were all memorable because I got paid, I had a job. I remember all of them – I’ve never forgotten anything I ever did. Because actors never know when they’re going to work again.

H: You did GUNSIGHT RIDGE with Joel McCrea, Mark Stevens and one of my favorites, L.Q. Jones.

M: Mark Stevens – he had a fairly good career going at that time. Why is L.Q. Jones one of your favorites?

H: Because he’s one of those actors that just grabs the eye and makes you follow him.

M: Always playing crazy guys. (laughs) That’s what L.Q. does. We’ve been friends for over sixty years.

H: How did you like working with Joel McCrea?

M: He was terrific.

H: You did a couple of films with Audie Murphy – RIDE A CROOKED TRAIL and GUNPOINT. GUNPOINT was directed by Earl Bellamy, who we both know from SPEEDTRAP. What was Audie Murphy like?

M: Well, very distant. He was so distant it was hard to figure him out. He had a few very close friends, and that was it. I guess they were close. I remember GUNPOINT. In RIDE A CROOKED TRAIL I don’t think I had that great of a part. Walter Matthau was in it. He was very amenable. Henry Silva they brought from New York – it was popular at that time to bring New York actors out to California. Henry got his start on Broadway, you know. In ‘A HATFUL OF RAIN’, he played a character called ‘Mother.’ He and I became good friends.

H: You did about a dozen episodes of WAGON TRAIN. In the ALEXANDER PORTLASS STORY, you kidnap Robert Horton and help Peter Lorre search for Maximillian’s gold. And you got killed by Peter Lorre for your trouble. What was Lorre like by this time in his career?

M: Well, I didn’t get to know Peter very well. When we were not working together, we weren’t social. (laughs) All I can tell you is he was kind of a strange little man.

H: That’s what he played to perfection.

M: Himself, I think.

H: Because you were playing different characters in a dozen episodes of the same show, was there ever concern about your becoming too recognizable? Sometimes you had big scars, and sometimes you had an eye-patch. Was that to try and make you look different?

M: Well, it concerned me. I certainly didn’t want people recognizing me, saying, ‘There’s that character again.’ I hope I got away with playing the different characters.

H: You were usually a bad guy, but not always. In the JED POLK STORY, you’re a survivor of Andersonville Prison Camp. It was a very emotional part – very intense. Any particular memories of doing that episode?

M: Not really. I have all my scripts – I’d have to go back and read the scripts.

H: You did so many – which were your favorite WAGON TRAINs?

M: Well, I got to work with Polly Bergen, and that was interesting. We got to know each other, and as a matter of fact saw each other socially a few times after that.

H: What was Ward Bond like?

M: Very rough, very gruff, very profane. But in a kind of a lovable, likable way.

H: Kind of like his characters in John Ford westerns?

M: That’s right – that was Ward Bond.

H: Of course, in the middle of the series, he died, and was replaced by John McIntire. Did that change the show a lot?

M: Yuh, because they were two different types. McIntire was a very different type than Ward Bond. So it changed the character of the wagon master, but I don’t know that it changed the show a lot.

H: Over the years there were a lot of regulars who came and went. There was Robert Horton, Terry Wilson, Frank McGrath, Robert Fuller, Denny Miller.

M: Bob Fuller is one of my best friends. He’s bought a ranch in Texas, and he came out for that big autograph show two weeks ago. We were sitting side-by-side. Peter Brown was just down the row.

H: I saw Peter Brown – maybe Robert Fuller was at lunch when I came by.

M: He probably was in the bar (laughs). And Denny Miller was there. I was hoping Clint Walker would be there. I like to see those guys that are still alive. We’re all getting old.

H: In the 60s you did a lot of western series, HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL, BIG VALLEY, RAWHIDE, BRANDED, DEATH VALLEY DAYS, IRON HORSE, CIMMARON STRIP, VIRGINIAN, HIGH CHAPPARRAL – like you said, you did all the westerns.

M: Yuh, I did.

H: What were your favorites?

M: Oh, GUNSMOKE, of course. I did more GUNSMOKES than any other actor in the world. I say in the world because they had people come over from Europe to do the show. I did nineteen. Plus the GUNSMOKE movie in ’91 or ’92. It seems like yesterday but, my God, it’s been twenty years!

H: I was just watching MATT DILLON MUST DIE; that’s a terrific show.

M: I enjoyed making that particular show. We shot that in Utah, in the mountains.

H: The story is a variation on MOST DANGEROUS GAME. (SPOILER ALERT) And your wife’s death fills you with such overpowering rage that you’re murdering indiscriminately. Eventually your own sons. It’s a real heartbreaker of an episode, and you bring great humanity to a character that could have seemed very one-dimensional. How do you prepare to play a role like that?

M: I just read the scripts and conjure the character in my mind. I read the script until I almost read the print right off the page. I spend hours and hours and hours, over and over and over reading the script, filming the show in my mind.

H: I was just talking to Earl Holliman last week –

M: He was at the autograph show. We spoke. I remember I worked with Earl several times, in the show with Angie Dickinson, POLICE WOMAN, and then GUNSMOKE.

H: He said there was an episode that you two did on GUNSMOKE called HACKETT. He said that it was one of his favorite shows because you switched roles.

M: Yeah, two or three days before we were to shoot the show, the producer called and said, “Look, you guys are gonna switch parts. I want Morgan the bad guy to play the coward, and I want Earl Holliman to play the bad guy.” That may have been one of the few times that Earl got to play a bad guy.

H: Which episodes are your favorites?

M: There was a segment called LOBO. I was watching it in my home, by myself, and all of a sudden I realized that I was watching me, and I didn’t know that I was watching myself. I was so engrossed in the show, then all of a sudden I snapped to, and I thought, “But that’s me!” So I figure, if I can fool myself, that I might be pretty good.

H: Any other episodes?”

M: Well, HACKETT, and then MATT DILLON MUST DIE.

H: How’d you like working with Jim Arness?

M: No better person to work with in the world than Jim Arness! He’s a good friend of mine, and I still call him about every week.

H: I understand he had a wonderful deal on the show where they would shoot his scenes for several episodes back to back, and he’d go off surfing, and they’d shoot around him. Did you have to deal with that kind of a situation, or was he usually on the set?

M: I never had to deal with that, and if it would inconvenience any other actor I don’t think Jim would allow that.

H: How about the other actors? Amanda Blake, Milburn Stone.

M: Oh, they were all great characters. GUNSMOKE was a dream to work on. The producers were great, the actors were great, they always had great cast members. They were all good scripts. Great show to work on – a happy show.

H: How many times did Matt Dillon kill you?

M: (Laughs) You know, I don’t remember. But I usually got shot. Or beat up.

H: You also did eight episodes of BONANZA.

M: Yes, I did. I liked it very much. David Dortort (the show’s creator and producer) was a favorite of mine. Dan Blocker was a good friend of mine – fellow Texan.

H: Did you have a favorite episode?

M: Oh, it may have been FOUR SISTERS FROM BOSTON, with Vera Miles.

H: In 1966 you guested on THE LUCY SHOW, in the famous LUCY AND JOHN 
WAYNE episode.

M: That was great fun.

H: Had you worked with John Wayne before?

M: No, I had not. I liked working with him very much. I had an opportunity to work with him again, but I screwed that deal up because I didn’t like the part that they offered me, and I turned it down. And that was one of the few mistakes – because I almost never turn down a part. But I just didn’t like that part at all.

H: What movie was that?

M: I think it was TRUE GRIT.

H: Well they’re doing that one again. I think they just wrapped shooting, with Jeff Bridges as Rooster Cogburn.

M: Jeff’s a good actor, but I’m sorry they’re doing TRUE GRIT again.

H: How did you like working with Lucille Ball?

M: She was wonderful. Very professional, but at the same time, a great lady.

H: Had you done much comedy at that point?

M: No, but L.Q. Jones and I did a comedy on WAGON TRAIN. CHARLIE WOOSTER: OUTLAW. It’s the one where Charlie (Frank McGrath) gets kidnapped by this woman, and L.Q. and I play her two crazy sons.

H: In 1968 you did FIRECREEK with Henry Fonda and Jimmy Stewart.

M: Great cast, Jack Elam – just look at the cast list on that picture. God, it was just amazing to get all those people together.

H: Often people with small parts, like Ed Begley, Inger Stevens. It’s dark movie, not a very happy one.

M: No, it’s not. It is a dark film.

H: You and the rest of the gang are together, and Henry Fonda is off with Inger Stevens.

M: He was wounded, and Inger Stevens was taking care of him. You got the idea there was something going on between the two of them, or there could be. (SPOILER ALERT!) And then of course she winds up killing him.

H: You and your friends kill the town simpleton, you kick his dog, you get shot by Jimmy Stewart and dragged to death by your horse.

M: (laughs) I got my comeuppance!

H: Did you do any of that drag yourself?

M: No. Well, I started the drag, and then they cut to a stuntman.

H: Now your director on that was Vincent McEevety, who had done a lot of westerns and, like you, a lot of sci-fi.

M: I worked with Vince a lot on westerns – I can’t tell you which ones. I worked with him before and I worked with him afterwards. I did a STAR TREK with him, DAGGER OF THE MIND.

H: In ‘69 you were with Richard Widmark and Lena Horne in DEATH OF A GUNFIGHTER. It’s quite a good film, which is a surprise considering the credited director is Alan Smithee, the
pseudonym directors use on films they’re ashamed of.

M: No. Robert Totten started directing it, and he didn’t like the fact that Lena Horne was the leading lady, and that here was a racial (element) to the story, and he kept griping. And finally Lew Wasserman fired him and Don Siegal took over. So they used the phony name Alan Smithee. Turned out pretty good.

H: For several years you were in DALLAS, sort of a modern Western. That was an incredibly popular series.

M: Yes it was.

H: Did you have a good time on that?

M: Oh, I certainly did. I was a regular on it for three years. So ’86, ’87, ‘88 I didn’t do very many (other) shows. As a matter of fact I was doing DAYS OF OUR LIVES, the daytime soap opera, at the same time.

H: I understand that with soaps, you have to learn an incredible amount of dialog with every episode. Were the pressures of doing that kind of show very different from doing a regular show?

M: I hated it. If I hadn’t have been dedicated – I simply wouldn’t walk off a show, or say I don’t want to do it anymore. But if I had to do it again I would. I didn’t like it at all. I just didn’t like daytime soap opera. I didn’t have time to prepare, I didn’t like the cue cards, I thought the dialog was asinine. But I must say I certainly met some good actors on soap opera. Some weren’t, but there were some really fine actors.

H: You’ve done THE A TEAM, where you’ve done comic western episodes. Did you enjoy that show?

M: Oh yes, oh yes. God, that was a lot of fun. George Peppard was a very nice fellow.

H: The last western-ish thing you’ve done was play bounty hunter Sam Travis in THE BOUNTY HUNTER’S CONVENTION episode of THE ADVENTURES OF BRISCO COUNTY JR.

M: That was not a favorite of mine, and it was not a favorite because I didn’t do a good job on that show. I was off-center, and I don’t know why. The show, I guess, was alright, but I was not at all satisfied with my performance.

H: I just watched it this week, and I found it very funny, and I found you very good in it.


M: Thank you – I’m happy to hear you say that.

H: In addition to Westerns, you’ve had an extensive career in science fiction. STAR TREK, PLANET OF THE APES, LOGAN’S RUN, BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS, X-FILES, MILLENIUM. What do you prefer – science fiction or westerns or something else?

M: Well, it all depends on the script. If it’s a good show like the X-FILES, I love doing that, and I love doing westerns. It all depends on the script.

H: You’ve been acting in television for over forty years. You started near the beginning of the industry. What sort of changes, good and bad, have you seen over the years?

M: Well, I retired in 1997. My first professional job was with the Gulf Oil Theatre in Dallas, Texas. We had the first theatre-in-the-round in America. That was 1947, I was going to school in the morning, working in the afternoon and the evenings in the theatre. So in 1997 that was fifty years. And I thought, fifty years is enough, and I retired. And one of the reasons I retired is because I got tired of going in and interviewing with people who were very young, and were apparently young in the business, and they had not done their homework. And they’d say, “What have you done?” And I thought, for God’s sake, I’ve been in film for over forty years, and I have to go through the same routine all the time. It just became not that much fun, not that interesting. And some of the parts that were offered, even if I got them, they weren’t that interesting.

H: Overall, which are your own favorite Western performances?

M: Like I told you, the episode of GUNSMOKE, LOBO, when I was watching myself and didn’t realize it. And then, MATT DILLON MUST DIE, I liked that very much. I did a picture for Disney called THE WILD COUNTRY with Vera Miles and Steve Forrest.

H: Is that the one with Ron Howard and Clint Howard?

M: Yes, that was a favorite of mine. Robert Todd directed that.

H: What are your favorite westerns of other people?

M: Well, remember the series that Sam Peckinpah wrote, was it called THE WESTERNER (1960)? It didn’t last very long. With Brian Keith. That was good. THE ROUNDERS, Max Evans wrote that, with Henry Fonda and Glenn Ford.


ONE MORE THING...





A couple of weeks ago I attended an event called Film Italy Los Angeles, and waited two hours on the red carpet to talk to Claudia Cardinale, of Once Upon A Time In The West. And at the very moment when the red carpet guy says to her, "This is Henry Parke from True West," Claudia’s daughter grabs her by the wrist, says “Mom, we just have time for a cigarette before the awards”, and dragged her off. But at least I got a nice picture.

Enjoy the Oscars!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright February 2019 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved



Tuesday, January 17, 2017

VILLAINS AT THE AUTRY TUESDAY! PLUS ‘MERCY STREET’ RETURNS, OLD WEST AUCTION, ‘BOONVILLE REDEMPTION’ AND ‘HIS FIRST COMMAND’ STARRING HOPPY REVIEWED!


MORGAN WOODWARD TO STARE DOWN ‘WORD ON WESTERNS’!



Tuesday, January 17th, at eleven a.m. sharp – don’t make him wait! – the man who faced down Matt Dillon nineteen times, and was killed my Matt in nearly all of them, will be joining Rob Word in the Wells Fargo Theatre of The Autry Museum for a look at WESTERN BAD GUYS in the newest edition of ‘A Word on Westerns.’  Other sinister visitors will include Jerry Potter from GUNSMOKE, THE WILD WILD WEST MOVIE, and THE ALAMO: THIRTEEN DAYS OF GLORY.  Also Patrick Kilpatrick from THE QUICK AND THE DEAD, LAST STAND AT SABRE RIVER and LAZARUS MAN, and Tara Gordon, daughter of Leo Gordon, of MCCLINTOCK!, MAVERICK and GUNSMOKE fame!  It’s a free event, always entertaining and informative. Don’t miss it!   


ALSO AT THE AUTRY – ‘THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE’ ON SATURDAY



As part of the Autry’s long-running ‘What is a Western?’ film series, on Saturday, January 21st, at 1:30 pm in the Wells Fargo Theatre, see Sam Peckinpah’s charming and surprisingly gentle THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE (1970), starring Jason Robards Jr. and the dazzling Stella Stevens, and screened in glorious 35MM! 

BRIAN LEBEL’S OLD WEST AUCTION SATURDAY – JAN. 21ST!



This year’s annual Old West Auction in Mesa, Arizona will feature a compendium of beautiful and fascinating art and artifacts from American history.  They always have wonderful posters, paintings, Cowboy art, American Indian Art, guns, saddles, Edward Bohlin silver. Among the most fascinating items, seen on the catalog cover above, is a Sharps rifle scientifically proven to have been used by an Indian at The Little Bighorn – it’s expected to fetch from $300,000 to half a million.  And there are costume items from John Wayne, Buck Jones, and Gene Autry, Roy Rogers’ watch, Tom Mix’s chaps, letters written by Buffalo Bill Cody, a gold watch given by Will Rogers to Charlie Russell, and much more.  The link to learn more is HERE.


‘MERCY STREET’ RETURNS!  SEASON 2 STARTS SUNDAY, JAN.22ND!



The story of two volunteer nurses on opposing sides of the Civil War, working together at a military hospital, PBS’s MERCY STREET is back for another season starting this Sunday.  As schedules for PBS vary from station to station, check for times, and also check to see if they’re doing any kind of recap from season one.  The one criticism I heard last year was that the show was a little claustrophobic, but the producers have promised to open it up more for season two, as the trailer indicates.

BOONEVILLE REDEMPTION – A Film Review



Feeling a need to get out of town, film executive, casting agent and author Judy Belshe-Toernblom visited the town of Boonville, in Northern California, learned about the locals’ unique dialect, ‘boontling,’ and the seed of a story took root in her imagination. In time it grew into a screenplay, and now a movie, BOONVILLE REDEMPTION (to read about my visit to the set, go HERE and HERE), and a prequel novel, BOONVILLE REDEMPTION: THE END OF THE BEGINNING. 

Directed by Don Schroeder, the faith-based film set in 1906 boasts an impressive supporting cast, including Pat Boone as the town doctor and story narrator, Diane Ladd as the grandmother, Robert Hays as a pastor, and Ed Anser as the judge. 


Pat Boone and Emily Hoffman between scenes

But the film truly rises and falls on the shoulders of the very young and very talented Emily Hoffman at the story’s center.  She plays Melinda, a child who has always known she was looked down upon, but only recently learned the reason; that she was born out of wedlock.  She lives with her mother Alice (Shari Rigby), half-brother (Callder Griffith), and stepfather, a man named Maddox (Richard Tyson), who is the most wealthy, and feared, man in town.  He considers himself to have ‘saved’ her mother by marrying her, and he hates Melinda as a living reminder of his wife’s history, and shame.
When Alice’s mother (Diane Ladd) is ailing physically and mentally, Maddox seizes the opportunity, and sends Melinda away to care for the old lady.  Through the old lady, who drifts in and out of rationality and the boontling language, Melinda starts to uncover the truth about her true father, his disappearance, and crimes that include murder.  She’s helped in her efforts by an eccentric young boy nicknamed Shakespeare (Nicholas Neve). 

I’m not going to say ‘spoiler alert’, but it is 1906 in Northern California, and true history does intrude in this fictional tale.  A Western only in terms of its setting, it is in many ways a mystery, though without the urgent pacing we identify with that genre.  But whether in several genres or none exactly, it’s a well-acted, attractively filmed story of an endearing girl’s search for the truth about her own existence, and how her revelations turn a seemingly sleepy and highly secretive community on its head. 

BOONVILLE REDEMPTION is available on Amazon.com, and in stores on DVD.


HIS FIRST COMMAND – A Video Review



Early in the story, spoiled playboy Cary Culver (William Boyd) is asked by a society lady if he is ‘that’ Culver, whose scandals are always in the paper.  He laughs it off – that’s his cousin, he fabricates, who makes it hard for folks who share his name.  Ironically, less than two years later Boyd would be in precisely the same position, with no fabricating.  In 1931 another actor named William Boyd would be arrested in a brothel, and when newspapers ran a picture of the wrong man, the white haired DeMille star would be ruined for years, until he was hired to play the role that would change his life and make his career, Hopalong Cassidy.

In the 1929 service comedy HIS FIRST COMMAND (Pathe), Boyd’s character is so determined to prove to Col. Gaylord’s smug but lovely daughter Judy (Dorothy Sebastian) that he can be more than a dilettante, that he enlists in the cavalry, and unexpectedly (okay, very expectedly) has a chance to prove himself a hero.  

Originally promoted as “All Music, Color and Dialogue” (the color sequences presumably no longer exist), this early talkie shares many of the traits common to films in the transition from the silents – pacing problems, some stilted performances, with most scenes done in one shot, because it was so difficult to edit.  But it’s amusing, and novel to see Boyd playing a character so different from his trademark role.  And Boyd’s naturalness and ease with sound is years ahead of its time.  The film was important in Boyd’s life as well as career, since he subsequently divorced his second wife, Elinor Fair, and married leading lady Dorothy Sebastian.  She was well-known for starring opposite Buster Keaton in SPITE MARRIAGE (1929) and other films, and they were said to have been lovers at one time.   

It’s directed by Gregory LaCava, whose 1936 comedy hit MY MAN GODFREY would find William Powell and Carole Lombard examining many of the issues raised by COMMAND. LaCava co-wrote COMMAND with actor/writer James Gleason and Jack Jungmeyer.  The audio quality is good, and the grey scale and condition of the print is good, although the focus is fuzzy throughout.  But odds are it’s the best, quite possibly the only, copy available of this entertaining little film.  It’s available from Alpha Video HERE


ONE MORE THING…



It’s a pity that after 146 years, Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus is, or soon will be no more.  I loved it as a kid, and I loved it as an adult who likes to feel like a kid once in a while. While I was often dubious about the treatment animals received at the tiny fleabag circuses, most of the complaints about abuse at Ringling Brothers didn’t ring true.  Sorry, kids of coming generations. You’ll never experience the Greatest Show on Earth!

AND THAT’S A WRAP!

Happy Trails,
Henry

All Original Contents Copyright January 2017 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

  

Sunday, October 23, 2011

14th SILVER SPURS HONORS BEST OF THE WEST


On Friday, October 14th, the Reel Cowboys presented their 14th Annual Silver Spur Awards, in the Empire Ballroom of the Sportsmen’s Lodge in Studio City.  The successor to the Golden Boot Awards, Reel Cowboys President Robert Lanthier explains, “We are pretty much the Oscar awards for Westerns.” 


(Early arrivals check out the silent auction)




The Reel Cowboys is made up of people in and around the motion picture and television industry with a Western bias.  The Spur gala’s purpose is to recognize career excellence, and it is also a fund raiser for a different worthy cause each year.   This year’s recipient is the Autry Center’s ‘All Aboard!’ program.  Lanthier explains, “It provides free bus transportation to California children in Title 1 schools (to the Autry), so they can learn more about their history and discover the different influences that play a part in their lives today.  This program has brought over 17,000 kids to the museum.”  Additionally, those kids and their parents receive a years’ membership at the Autry.  Currently there are more than fifty classes on the waiting list, hoping to take part.


(Karin McKechnie and the pink corset
 she contributed to the silent auction)


The doors to this very elegant event opened at six, and early arrivers, dressed in stylish western-wear, began streaming in, many of them eager to check out the items at the silent auction.  These included art, posters and lobby cards, autographed DVD collections, costume items and other mementos. 


(Dick Jones, A.J. Fenady and their ladies) 


Music was provided by Cowbop, featuring lead singer Pinto Pammy.  Among the early arrivers were singer Johnny Western.  One of the most distinctive voices in Western music, long associated with Gene Autry and Johnny Cash, he’s best remembered as the writer and singer of the theme from HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL, The Ballad of Palladin.  He also co-wrote songs for BONANZA and THE REBEL.  In addition to singing a medley of Western themes, Johnny Western would co-emcee the evening with Sam Neely, known as ‘The Cowboy Auctioneer.’


(Producer Rob Word beside a picture of himself as s child,
visiting John Wayne on the set of THE SEARCHERS)


Other early arrivals included past Silver Spur recipients, the beautiful Stella Stevens, television's WYATT EARP, Hugh O'Brien, and infamous Western villain (and WYATT EARP co-star) Morgan Woodward.  Near the silent auction I spotted one of the night’s recipients-to-be, Andrew J. Fenady, and I asked him about the importance of the occasion.  He grinned. “Well, I read the obituaries.  They’re pretty damned depressing.  But if I see my name’s not there – any day’s an important day.  But seriously, there’s a lot of old friends here who I haven’t seen in quite a few years,  people that I’ve worked together with during the things that we did: THE REBEL and BRANDED and HONDO, and unfortunately your paths don’t cross  as often as you would like them to.  So it’s a great opportunity to see some of us survivors.  It’s a happy occasion – it beats the Hell out of funerals.”


(Hugh O'Brien arrives)


A few minutes later I ran into producer Rob Word.  “I’m here to present to the great Andrew J. Fenady, the writer producer of THE REBEL and BRANDED and HONDO – he even named one of his sons Duke.  And he wrote and produced one of the last of the epic films that Wayne did, CHISUM.  And it’s an honor for me; Andy was the one who nominated me for a Golden Boot Award, so it’s nice for me to be able to present to him. “     


(Morgan Woodward lets me squeeze into a picture with him)


When everyone had found their seats, the program officially began with Presentation of Colors by the Merced County Sheriff Posse, the Pledge of Allegiance led by World War II veteran Ivan Creggar, the singing of God Bless America led by Erwin Jackson, and an invocation by former Wheel of Fortune hostess Dr. Susan Stafford. 


(Autry Curator Jeffrey Richardson and Mrs. Richardson)


While eating our steak and salmon we were serenaded with a Western medley by Lloyd Reading, whose voice is as full and melodic at 92 as it was when he was singing with the Rocky Mountain Cowboys in the 1940s.  Later, Johnny Western would delight us with a medley of his own and others’ Western TV themes.  We were welcomed by Reel Cowboys President Robert Lanthier, introduced to several 911 First Responders who were honored guests, and heard from event producer Cyndi Tracy, Autry National Center President Daniel M. Finley, and were treated to a brief auction by Sam Neely, who sold, among other items, a sailing trip on the late Spencer Tracy’s yacht!


(L.Q. Jones and his wife chat with Courtney Joyner and his finace, Mary)


After dinner, the first award was presented by 2003 Honoree Ann Rutherford to Fay McKenzie.  Fay started her screen career at ten weeks old, playing Gloria Swanson’s baby, and was a busy child actress on stage and screen,  Starting in 1934, at age 15, she played Western female leads opposite Wally Wales, Ken Maynard, Randolph Scott, and above all, Gene Autry, with whom she costarred five times.  Presenter Ann, equally remembered as Polly Benedict in the ANDY HARDY films, and as Scarlet O’Hara’s youngest sister in GONE WITH THE WIND, revealed that she has the distinction of being both the first and last girl to get a big-screen kiss from Gene Autry.   The reaction of the largely boy audience was so negative that Gene went back to kissing Champion.


(l to r front row -- Johnny Western, Andre Veluzat, A.C. Lyles, John Moio, Ann Rutherford, Fay McKenzie, Dick Jones, Rob Word, Renaud Veluzat.  Back row, Sam Neely, Ted White, L.Q. Jones.  Far right, applauding, Cyndi Tracy)


Next up, Rob Word presented The Silver Spur to A. J. Fenady.  Fenady, looking back on his career, talked about the luck of timing, that he arrived when television was so new that anyone who had an idea had a good idea.  “There’s an old saying that you can tell a lot about somebody by the company he or she keeps.”  He paid tribute to an amazing string of actors he’d worked with over the years, starting with, “Nick Adams, Jim Drury, Stu Whitman, Steve Forrest, Peter Graves, Jamie Farr… and that giant of all giants, John Wayne.”  It was an impressive list even before he got to the Oscar winners.  Gloria Grahame, Ben Johnson, Ray Milland, Don Ameche, Arthur O’Connel, Dean Jagger, Broderick Crawford, and that beloved Ernie Borgnine.  And someone who should have won at least one or two of those, for CAPE FEAR, NIGHT OF THE HUNTER, HEAVEN KNOWS MR. ALLISON, Robert Mitchum.  I hope that maybe a little of their talent, and accomplishments, rubbed off on me.  A long time ago I wrote a line for Dick Powell:  ‘When you get old, you start tripping over your memories.’  But some memories are worth tripping over.  This is one of them.”


(Erwin Jackson, Cyndi Tracy, Johnny Western, Robert Lanthier)


Then treasured character actor and all-around wild-man L.Q. Jones took to the stage to honor James Drury, and actor who will always be recalled as the unnamed character The Virginian, whom he portrayed in 249 episodes.  Speaking about the grueling pace of production, Jones pointed out that each VIRGINIAN was 90 a minute TV-movie, and they started a new one every eight days!  Drury recalled, "I was in Fredericksburg, Texas recently, making a personal appearance.  And this man came up to me and said, 'It must be wonderful to be Jamie Drury, The Virginian.  Because everywhere you go, people are happy to see you.'  Well, I hadn't really thought of it that way.  But it's true.  THE VIRGINIAN moved so many people, on so many levels.  And now that it's back on Encore, I have grandfathers calling me -- and I'm a grandfather -- and saying, 'Jim, my kids are watching your show without being asked, and without being told.'  And that's the most gratifying thing that I could possibly hear." 

In one of the more sentimental moments in an already very sentimental evening, Johnny Western and Dick Jones stepped to the podium to honor the late, great Gene Autry.  Dick Jones, a child actor of the 1930s and 1940s, remembered by many as the voice of the little wooden boy in Disney’s PINNOCHIO, had an even busier career in Westerns due to his skill as a horseman.  Known as The World’s Youngest Trick-Rider and Trick-Roper at age four, by six he was performing in Hoot Gibson’s rodeo.  His horsemanship was shown off to great effect in dozens of movies, ROCKY MOUNTAIN (1950) with Errol Flynn being one of the best.  But his connection with Autry was legendary, starring in five features with Gene, with appearances in Gene’s own series and ANNIE OAKLEY, and two starring Flying A series of his own: THE RANGE RIDER, with Jock Mahoney, and BUFFALO BILL JR.  Both Jones and Johnny Western, the self-described “Last man standing in the Gene Autry Music Organization,” said they felt like Gene was a father to them.  So how perfect that his widow, Jackie Autry, is a recorded appearance, said that Gene, who never had children, thought of Johnny and Dick as his sons. 

A well-deserved, yet highly unusual, award went to Andre and Renaud Veluzat.  These brothers bought Melody Ranch from Gene Autry in the 1990s, after it had been largely destroyed by fire, and painstakingly rebuilt it to its former design and former glory.  It’s now one of the busiest and finest of movie ranches, and soon to be the home Quentin Tarantino’s new Western, DJANGO UNCHAINED.  The award was presented by the Ambassador and Elder Statesman of Paramount Studios, and unquestionably the most dapper man in Hollywood, A.C. Lyles.   Lyles, who started his career at Paramount in 1928, and is still there today, began producing with RAWHIDE, was consulting producer for DEADWOOD, and in the interim produced more than a dozen Western features. 


(Cake in the shape of a boot with a Silver Spur)


The final honoree of the night was stuntman Ted White, whose presenter was John Moio, a fellow stuntman whose career goes back to THE HALLELUJAH TRAIL and THE CINCINNATI KID.  A Marine wounded during World War II, White used the G.I. Bill to attend the University of Oklahoma, where he excelled in football and boxing.  When he came to L.A., he met legendary stuntman Roydon Clark, who encouraged Ted to get into the business.  Ted not only took the advice, in 1961 he and eleven other stuntmen formed the Stuntmen’s Association.  Ted has doubled Clark Gable, Rock Hudson, Fess Parker, John Wayne, and many others. 


All too soon the evening was over, and folks started making their way home.  But the good news is that, while The Silver Spurs are given out only once a year, the Reel Cowboys are accessible all year round.  Robert Lanthier explained, “Saturday mornings we meet at Big Jim’s Restaurant in Sunland – at the corner of Lauren Canyon and Sheldon.  The public is welcome.  And we discuss upcoming events, what’s going on in our organization, and then we have about a half hour of fine country music.  And we’ll be doing that again tomorrow.  Hopefully Johnny Western will be able to come there and sing with us.”  I understand Johnny Western sang for 45 minutes on Saturday.


JERRY BRUCKHEIMER SACRIFICES SUPERNATURAL COYOTES TO SAVE LONE RANGER!

Probably the first case of animal sacrifice that I heartily approve of! In an interview with the Hollywood Reporter, producer Bruckheimer, explaining how they cut the budget from $250 million to $215 million said, “We cut a sequence involving a coyote attack—supernatural coyotes—and a small animated segment.” 

MORE ‘DJANGO UNCHAINED’ CASTING

Although no deal-memo is signed yet, reportedly Quentin Tarantino is hoping to add Joseph Gordon-Levitt, of INCEPTION and 500 DAYS OF SUMMER,  to his cast.  No details yet on who he’d play. 


TCM FANATIC - WESTERN NOW ONLINE!

And speaking of TCM (okay, nobody was), have I mentioned that the segment I was interviewed for is now viewable here?




THE AUTRY NATIONAL CENTER

Built by cowboy actor, singer, baseball and TV entrepeneur Gene Autry, and designed by the Disney Imagineering team, the Autry is a world-class museum housing a fascinating collection of items related to the fact, fiction, film, history and art of the American West. In addition to their permenant galleries (to which new items are frequently added), they have temporary shows. The Autry has many special programs every week -- sometimes several in a day. To check their daily calendar, CLICK HERE. And they always have gold panning for kids every weekend. For directions, hours, admission prices, and all other information, CLICK HERE.

HOLLYWOOD HERITAGE MUSEUM

Across the street from the Hollywood Bowl, this building, once the headquarters of Lasky-Famous Players (later Paramount Pictures) was the original DeMille Barn, where Cecil B. DeMille made the first Hollywood western, The Squaw Man. They have a permanent display of movie props, documents and other items related to early, especially silent, film production. They also have occasional special programs. 2100 Highland Ave., L.A. CA 323-874-2276. Thursday – Sunday 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. $5 for adults, $3 for senior, $1 for children.

WELLS FARGO HISTORY MUSEUM

This small but entertaining museum gives a detailed history of Wells Fargo when the name suggested stage-coaches rather than ATMS. There’s a historically accurate reproduction of an agent’s office, an original Concord Coach, and other historical displays. Open Monday through Friday, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. Admission is free. 213-253-7166. 333 S. Grand Street, L.A. CA.


FREE WESTERNS ON YOUR COMPUTER AT HULU


A staggering number of western TV episodes and movies are available, entirely free, for viewing on your computer at HULU. You do have to sit through the commercials, but that seems like a small price to pay. The series available -- often several entire seasons to choose from -- include THE RIFLEMAN, THE CISCO KID, THE LONE RANGER, BAT MASTERSON, THE BIG VALLEY, ALIAS SMITH AND JONES, and one I missed from 2003 called PEACEMAKERS starring Tom Berenger. Because they are linked up with the TV LAND website, you can also see BONANZA and GUNSMOKE episodes, but only the ones that are running on the network that week.

The features include a dozen Zane Grey adaptations, and many or most of the others are public domain features. To visit HULU on their western page, CLICK HERE.

BONANZA, GUNSMOKE and BIG VALLEY

Every weekday, TV LAND airs a three-hour block of BONANZA episodes from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. They run a GUNSMOKE Monday through Thursday at 10:00 a.m., and on Friday they show two, from 6:00 to 8:00 a.m.. They're not currently running either series on weekends, but that could change at any time.  INSP is showing THE BIG VALLEY every weekday at noon, one p.m. and nine p.m., and Saturdays at 6 p.m..  They'll soon be adding DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN to the mix.

NEED YOUR BLACK & WHITE TV FIX?

Check out your cable system for WHT, which stands for World Harvest Television. It's a religious network that runs a lot of good western programming. Your times may vary, depending on where you live, but weekdays in Los Angeles they run DANIEL BOONE at 1:00 p.m., and two episodes of THE RIFLEMAN from 2:00 to 3:00 p.m.. On Saturdays at 2:00 p.m. it's THE RIFLEMAN again, followed at 2:30 by BAT MASTERSON. And unlike many stations in the re-run business, they run the shows in the original airing order. There's an afternoon movie on weekdays at noon, often a western, and they show western films on the weekend, but the schedule is sporadic. 

AMC has been airing a block of THE RIFLEMAN episodes early Saturday mornings, usually followed by Western features.

And RFD-TV is currently showing THE ROY ROGERS SHOW at 9:30 Sunday morning, repeated several times a week, and a Roy feature as well -- check your local listings.

That’s all for now! 

Happy Trails,

Henry


All original content copyright October 2011 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved