Showing posts with label Terry Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry Moore. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
‘RED SKELTON LOST EPISODES’ AND ‘LEGEND OF THE RENO BROTHERS’ REVIEWED!
Red as Sheriff Deadeye with Terry Moore
‘THE RED SKELTON SHOW’ – THE LOST EPISODES – A Home
Video Review
Although he seems to have dropped off of the radar
of late, few stars have had a career to match that of comedian – or clown, as
he preferred – Red Skelton: star of vaudeville, Broadway, radio, movies, and
television. In 1951, when TV was in its
infancy, his manager, who also happened to be his ex-wife, negotiated an
unheard-of contract for five million dollars for seven years.
While he never appeared in a traditional Western,
Red’s second screen appearance was starring in the 1939 Vitaphone short
BROADWAY BUCKAROO, where his character builds a dude ranch on the Great White
Way. Nine years later, he starred in
MGM’s A SOUTHERN YANKEE, a partial remake of Buster Keaton’s classic THE
GENERAL, with Keaton himself supplying some of the gags.
Always avoiding anything that seemed sophisticated
or urban, his CBS series ran for a staggering 20 years. It could have gone on longer – the ratings
were always good and frequently in the top ten – but 1971 was the year that CBS
decided to shake itself of its ‘rube’ shows, getting rid of long-time hits like
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES, GREEN ACRES, PETTICOAT JUNCTION (actually 1970), THE RED
SKELTON SHOW, and GUNSMOKE. CBS head
William Paley, a fan of GUNSMOKE, was out of the country when the decision was
made, and when he came back, he blew a gasket, and insisted Matt Dillon return
post haste, but he let Red and the others fade away.
Like contemporary Jackie Gleason, rather than
playing a single character, Red had a raft of popular personas, among them Clem
Kadiddlehopper, Freddie the Freeloader, con-man San Fernando Red, and western
lawman Sheriff Deadeye.
Timeless
Media Group has packaged eighteen previously
unreleased half-hour episodes from 1959 and 1960, under the heading THE LOST
EPISODES, and while perhaps not lost, they’ve surely not been seen for
decades. While the quality of the prints
is variable – apparently CBS didn’t see long-term value to preserving them –
the shows are delightful, and very watchable, scratches and all. Of most interest to Western fans is DEADEYE
TURNS IN HIS BADGE, with guest stars Billy Barty, Charles Ruggles, and adorable
Terry Moore. Also, GUNSMOKE’S Miss
Kitty, Amanda Blake, appeared frequently as San Fernando Red’s shapely
accomplice, Ruby, and two of those episodes are included. SAN FERNANDO FOR GOVERNOR also includes a delightful
late-in-the-career performance by Laurel and Hardy foil Billy Gilbert. And SAN FERNANDO’S TREASURE co-stars fellow
westerner Guy Madison, just after his run starring as WILD BILL HICKOCK.
Because the series was extremely popular, and
clearly a lot of fun to do – they were shot in front of a live audience with no
retakes, no matter what – everyone wanted to be on, and the line-up of guests,
from established stars to young people on their way up to long-time character
actors, is a pleasure to watch. Keenan
Wynn, Richard Deacon, Jamie Farr, Buster Crabbe, Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom,
Jackie Coogan, Barbara Nichols, Gerald Mohr, Fabian, Eve Arden, William
Demarest, Vivian Vance, Anthony Caruso, Marilyn Maxwell and Sebastian Cabot all
take part, often mocking their own established images.
The shows are written by a talented crew, including
Sherwood Schwartz, who would go on to create GILLIGAN’S ISLAND; sight-gag
wizard and PRC cowboy Dave O’Brien, who helped craft, and starred in, hundreds of PETE SMITH
SPECIALITY shorts at MGM; and of course Red himself – it’s fun to try and guess
which lines were actually ad-libs, and which were simply well crafted to seem spontaneous. The frequent off-hand references to Khrushchev,
Kennedy and Nixon set the shows in a historical context.
Red with Vincent Price (not in set this set)
One element that startled and amused me was that Red
was famous for ‘keeping it clean,’ and allowing no blue material. But the truth is, while playing the rube, he
was very sophisticated and subtle, and it’s amazing what he got away with. In an opening monologue, he tells a story about
a farmer milking a cow, and telling her that he’s got a surprise for her. The cow replies, “I’ve got a surprise for
you: I’m a bull!” Although Red didn’t
quite say it, the farmer is obviously
pulling on something other than an udder.
One of the San Fernando Red episodes opens with Red at his desk,
scamming a victim over the phone, while playing with items on his desk; he
keeps laying down a rubber stamp, and making it stand up by moving a pad of
paper. Moments later, when Amanda Blake
appears, and strikes an alluring pose, Red moves the pad, and again the rubber
stamp stands straight up – the joke is obvious, but as he’s played with the
rubber stamp innocently before, he has deniability if a censor objects.
Included in the eighteen shows are two episode in
which Red does not appear – one in which Arthur Godfrey and Jackie Gleason fill
in, and another where Danny Thomas and his TV kids Angela Cartwright and Rusty
Hamer do the honors. Whether you’re a
long-time fan of the red-head, or if you’re interested in TV comedy before
formats became so limiting and inhibiting – in fact, if you simply like to
laugh, I think you’ll get a huge kick out of THE RED SKELTON SHOW – THE LOST
EPISODES. I know I did. Or should I say ‘I dood it!’
THE LEGEND OF THE RENO BROTHERS – A Film Review
It seems incredible that a family of outlaws that
served as subjects for movies starring Randolph Scott (RAGE AT DAWN) and Elvis
Presley (LOVE ME TENDER), and who committed the first non-military
train-robbery, along with uncounted other crimes, could remain obscure, but
indeed they have. But filmmakers Anthony
Susnick, Morgan Raque, and David Distler have gone a long way towards righting
that wrong with their documentary, THE LEGEND OF THE RENO BROTHERS.
The Renos were an Indiana-based family whose first
criminal enterprise came during the Civil War, when a couple of the boys took
up ‘bounty jumping,’ enlisting in the Union Army for a cash payment, then
disappearing, reappearing elsewhere, reenlisting under assumed names, again
taking the cash, and again disappearing.
After the war ended, the brothers, four in all, began their criminal
activity in earnest. It’s impossible to
know the full extent of their felonious activities, because as they became
well-known, they got blamed for everything.
But it’s clear that they robbed and killed and burned – and pulled off
the first three train hold-ups,
earning them the enmity of the Adams Express company, which hired Allan
Pinkerton himself to track them down.
How they in fact met their end is so unusual that it would be a spoiler
to discuss it here; but I assure their fates are memorable.
Reno Gang leader Frank
In spite of the fact that there are no living
witnesses left, and few authenticated photos of the lads, the filmmakers do an
admirable job of bringing the Renos’ desperate lives excitingly to life. Using a blend of historical photographs,
narration, old movie footage, newspaper stories, and reenactments, RENO
BROTHERS is a compelling movie that entertains as it informs. There are several on-camera historians, two
in particular, who help to tell the story; and the amount of historical
research, and the obvious passion of the filmmakers for their subject, makes it
all the more engrossing.
There is considerable manipulation of the film image
– altering color, adding shaking and scratches – that I normally find
distracting but here, in most cases I felt it enhanced the experience. Some
of the reenactment scenes went on a bit longer than necessary, but the fact is,
you need a ninety-minute film if you’re going to be able to market it;
sometimes, unfortunately, the extra screen-time underscored that not all of the
reenactors, while good visually, were accomplished actors.
Costume test shot for LOVE ME TENDER
While many historical documentaries are informative
but dry, RENO BROTHERS is a compelling movie, with good music, that will
entertain the knowledgeable Western history fan as well as folks who want some
excitement, and don’t mind learning a little in the process. Below is the trailer – take a look!
CALL DIRECTV TO PROTEST DROPPING INSP – THE
VIRGINIAN/HIGH CHAPARRAL CHANNEL!
If you’re a DirecTV subscriber, and you haven’t yet
spoken to a person, and registered your complaint at losing the station with
the exclusive rights to both HIGH CHAPARRAL and THE VIRGINIAN, I urge you to do
so. When I did so today, and spoke to a
very polite and patient woman, she took note of my complaint and my account,
and assured me that if enough subscribers complain, they’ll open negotiations
with INSP. You’ll never get what you
want if you don’t speak up! Please call
1-844-GET-INSP, and tell them you want INSP back; and also go to http://www.iwantmyinsp.com/ -- and sign the on-line petition. Thanks!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IDA LUPINO
Ida Lupino was born February 4th,
1918. English theatre royalty, a
dazzlingly talented actress, she didn’t star in many westerns, but the ones she
did, like LUST FOR GOLD and JUNIOR BONNER, were memorable. But more remarkable was her skill in
directing Western TV: HOTEL DE PAREE, eight HAVE GUN WILL TRAVELS, THE
RIFLEMAN, DANIEL BOONE, THE VIRGINIAN, and DUNDEE AND THE CULHANE.
THAT’S A WRAP!
I had a couple of stories I planned for this week’s
Round-up, especially an update on ‘RESURRECTION OF EL PURO’ and ‘SIX GUNS TO
HELL’, but they’ll have to wait until next week. Have a good one!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright February 2014 by
Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
Monday, September 30, 2013
‘SILVER SPUR’ GLITTERS AT SPORTSMEN’S LODGE
Tommy Cook, Joely Fisher, Connie Stevens,
Jon Voight and Andrew Prine
On Friday night, September 27th, I had
the pleasure of covering the 16th Annual Silver Spur Awards at the Sportsmen’s Lodge in Studio
City. The Awards is the big annual celebration
of The Reel Cowboys, an event that
started when Pat Buttram passed away, and the Golden Boot Awards ceased.
The event is always
run to benefit a deserving charity, and for the second year in a row, that
charity was the MVAT, the Military and Veterans Appreciation Trust (learn more
at http://www.mvat.org/)
I arrived shortly
after the doors opened at six, but a large throng of elegantly western-dressed
folks packed the place. Once inside, I
checked out the silent auction. Spread
around the tables were many DVDs of the excellent HEATHENS AND THIEVES (see my
review HERE ) . And in addition to the event program, with a
cover designed by Spencer Tracy’s artist grandson, at every seat of the
twenty-five banquet tables was a T-shirt from the exciting HOT BATH AND A STIFF
DRINK (read my story about their rough-cut screening HERE ).
I quickly spotted
one of the evening’s honorees, Louis Gossett Jr. I asked him if he was excited. “I am very excited. It’s an honor to get this blessing from
cowboys.” I asked him what his favorite
western was. “My favorite western is
LONESOME DOVE. My favorite western that’s
not with me is RED RIVER.”
Just then, Hugh O’Brian entered, dressed in some of
his elegant Wyatt Earp finery. With so
many actors portraying that lawman in recent years, I acknowledged him as the
best, but asked who the second beat Earp was. “The second best? I guess it was me. The best was Wyatt himself. He was a helluvah man. He died here, by the way, in 1929, on 19th
Street. He lived here in Los Angeles the
last three or four years of his life. He
made money doing appearances and stuff.
The people just west of Newhall, that huge area between there and Las
Vegas, like 150 miles by 200, they put up one notice at the upper
entrance. It said ‘This Property Is
Guarded by Wyatt Earp.’ Nobody ever came
on it again,” he told with a chuckle.
Robert Wagner and Hugh O'Brian
I told him that the day before I’d spoken to Morgan
Woodward, who played Shotgun Gibbs on 81 episodes of THE ADVENTURES OF WYATT
EARP. Morgan just turned 88 last week,
and Hugh was disappointed that Morgan wasn’t at the Spurs this time, unlike
last year. “The success of the WYATT
EARP SHOW gave me the opportunity to put on what is now the largest youth
organization in the world. 98% of every
public and private high school in the United States lets their 10th
graders know about the program, and each high school selects one or two
students to go to the HOBY (Hugh O’Brian Youth) program on the local
level. We get over 200 10th
graders together at a time. In
California, for instance, we have six locations. We focus on 10th graders because
when I was in 10th grade, that’s when I had to decide to fish or cut
bait. To go to college or whatever. It’s a very, very formative year. You really have to make decisions. But you also need to know what the
opportunities are.: You can learn more
about HOBY by going HERE http://www.hoby.org/.
Just a few steps away from Hugh O’Brian I saw Robert
‘R.J.’ Wagner, who was to be one of the evening’s honorees. I told him I’d just spoken to Hugh O’Brian. The two, along with Earl Holliman and the
late Richard Widmark, played the four sons of Spencer Tracy in the excellent
western BROKEN LANCE (1954). I asked if
BROKEN LANCE was his favorite among his westerns. “Yes, undoubtedly. I think it’s one of Hugh’s, too.”
Tommy Cook, Little Beaver from both the original
ADVENTURES OF RED RYDER Republic serial
with Don ‘Red’ Barry, and on the radio with Reed Hadley, was the evening’s
Master of Ceremonies. He took the stage,
and began by thanking the band. “Ladies
and Gentlemen, the Reel Cowboys have an outstanding show for you tonight,
paying tribute to world famous stars of film and television who embrace the
western traditions.” Then he introduced some guests in the audience, including LAND
OF THE GIANTS star Deanna Lund, MAGNUM P.I. regular Larry Manetti, and Silver
Spur winner, Republic Western star
Donna Martell. Rhonda Fleming, who could
not attend, provided a table for Mvat service members.
Donna Martell
90 year-old cartoon voice artist Jimmy Weldon led
the pledge of allegiance, and actress Elaine
DuPont, widow of Ray ‘Crash’ Corrigan, sang the Star Spangled Banner.
Elaine DuPont
Tommy Cook made an introduction. “When I played Little Beaver on the Red Ryder Radio Show, she played Little
White Cloud. We were about twelve years
old. She’s one of our former
honorees. Miss Terry Moore.” The Oscar nominee for COMEBACK LITTLE SHEBA took
the mic and said, “Nobody’s done a better job at this than Tommy. He’s worked so hard; all he talks about are
The Silver Spurs. It means everything to
him.” And she added with a grin, “And now it’s time for him to get an award,
and he doesn’t know it – it’s a surprise for him. I’m sorry Dick Van Patten couldn’t be here,
because Tommy and Dick and I all grew up together. We love each other. Tommy, this is for you, The Jack Iverson
Founders
Award.”
Award.”
Terry Moore
Tommy Cook, Terry Moore, Reel Cowboys Pres. Robert Lanthier
The next honoree was one of the stars of THE MIRACLE
WORKER, Andrew Prine. In addition to
starring in several feature westerns like CHISUM, TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER, GETTYSBURG
and guesting in many western series, he starred in two of his own, THE WIDE COUNTRY,
with Earl Holliman, and THE ROAD WEST, with Barry Sullivan. His award was presented by his lovely wife of
27 years, actress and producer Heather
Lowe. After a series of film clips, Andrew
Prine took the stage, commenting, “I die good, don’t I? I died in all those pictures. Were they trying to tell me something? This is a great honor. All I ever did was have a good time as an
actor. I’ve had the most wonderful time
of my life doing cowboy work, pretending to be a real cowboy. Also I married a pretty good-looking woman,
so I’m just gonna see what she’s up to later tonight. Thank you very much.”
Andrew Prine
Andrew Prine and Heather Lowe
The next presenter was movie and TV villain, and
professional drummer for Trini Lopez and Johnny Rivers, Mickey Jones. He discussed the life and career of stuntman Chuck
Hicks, from the Merchant Marines through amateur and then professional
athletics, from extra to stunt man to actor.
Chuck was cast as one of THE UNTOUCHABLES, but series star Robert Stack
thought he was too good-looking, and had him cut. He was Clint Walker’s double on
CHEYENNE. He went on to work in nearly
all of Clint Eastwood’s films, BONANZA and GUNSMOKE. They rolled the clips, and in addition to an
exhausting-just-to-watch brawl with Hoss Cartwright that TV Guide described as the best fight of the year, there was a scene
from BREAKING BAD, demonstrating that he’s still in the game. Hicks
spoke with modesty and humor, acknowledging actors who were athletes, like
Michael Landon and Mike Connors, who could have done their own stuntwork if
they wanted to, and derided the 400 pound actors who claim straight-faced that
they do their own stunts. This became
the running gag of the evening, and almost every actor who later took the stage
apologized for taking credit for stunts they didn’t really do.
Mickey Jones, Chuck Hicks, Nikki Pelley
Next was the musical comedy act of Evans and Rogers,
followed by the next presenter, actress Joely Fisher, who introduced her
mother, the vivacious Connie Stevens. Connie,
who will always be Cricket from HAWAIIAN EYE to those of us who grew up on it,
also acted in one MAVERICK, one CHEYENNE, two SUGARFOOTS (Sugarfeet?) and a
TEMPLE HOUSTON, and has directed her first movie, SAVING GRACE B. JONES. Set in small-town Missouri in the 1950s, it
stars Michael Biehn, Tatum O’Neal and Penelope Ann Miller. She’s next set to direct PRAIRIE BONES, a
story about a young couple who must survive an unthinkable tragedy in a hostile
wilderness. The rumor is that it will
star Franco Nero.
Connie Stevens, Joely Fisher
Joely recalled travelling with her mother on USO
tours, and described her mother as a story-teller. When Connie came out on stage, the first
thing she asked was, “Is Robert Fuller here?”
We wish he was. “Me, too. We
dated when I was 18 years old. That film
clip (from MAVERICK) was the first thing I did at Warner Brothers when I was 17
years old. I was doing HAWAIIAN EYE, but
they could never find me, because I was always hiding out with the
cowboys. As a crazy kid I went down to
some country bar with some stuntmen, and we slit our wrists and mixed our
blood, so we would really be related forever.
I think I really am.” Turning to
Joely she added, “There’s a lot you don’t know about me, hon. I’m really happy to be here. There’s a lot of testosterone in this
room. It’s hard to come by these days,
in the movies. In Hollywood. But I’m very happy to be here, with some of
my favorite people – Jon Voight, Lou Gossett – holy cow, do I love these guys. I always wanted to do westerns, so the
closest I got was I moved to Wyoming. We
still have a few cowboys there. I hope
to see you again. I thank you very much
for this award.”
Lucky Ewing
Next to be honored was familiar western henchman Ewing
‘Lucky’ Brown, who now runs a production facility in the San Fernando
Valley. Among his more notable roles
were one of the Ryker men in SHANE, and in PONY EXPRESS with Charlton
Heston. “I tried to get into westerns
right after World War II. Monogram, P.R.C., Argosy. I got to be very good friends with a director
who worked all the time. It was like a
stock company. He was Oliver Drake. One day I said to Ollie, ‘These western
pictures we’re making. What do they
cost?’ He said, ‘Forty-five thousand
dollars.’ That included the writer, the
director, the horses, and the star! I
thought, wow! In those days, if you did
a fight, that was part of your job – that was not considered a stunt. That was not until I was on SHANE, and George
Stevens asked me if I could
fight. By the way, I was originally
hired on SHANE as the gunfighter. They
wanted Jack Palance originally, but Palance was doing a film at 20th Century Fox. So they
screen-tested a bunch of people, and I happened to be picked. Then this agent calls and says, ‘Jack Palance
has just finished his picture. He’s
available, if you still want him.’ Well,
I get this arm around the shoulder by the assistant director. He says, ‘You know, we’ve got a better part
for you. You’ll be one of the brothers.’ I got the same money, because of the
contract, as Jack Palance did. But I can’t
see anyone but Jack Palance in that role.
And we became good friends, and I told him so. But anyway, it’s been one helluvah ride, and
it ain’t over yet. Bless you and thank
you.”
The next presenter, Bob Minor, was stunt coordinator
on MAGNUM P.I., and the film GLORY. He
was presenting to Louis Gossett Jr., whom he’d worked with going back to the ‘70s,
on films like TO KILL A COP, J.D.’S REVENGE, and THE CHOIRBOYS, into the 1990s
and IRON EAGLE III. Mr. Gossett acknowledged
the applause as he took the stage. “Thank
you very much. Westerns have always been
my favorites, even though I come from Brooklyn.
I came to California to film a series called THE YOUNG REBELS. I was playing a horse expert. They brought me to a ranch, taught me how to
ride horses, how to take care of them, to curry them, to saddle them. It’s a pleasure to be here with Bobby, who
made me look good, who’s been my stuntman.
And it’s really a pleasure to be in the presence of some of the greats
at this table. This is my 60th professional year. I’m very fortunate. And I’m very deeply grateful to be here.” With a grin, he added, “I’m deeply grateful
to be anywhere.”
Mike Connors and R.J. Wagner
Next up was Mike Connors, TV’s MANNIX, to talk about
R.J. Wagner, back when they first started in the industry. “Back then you had to sing, and dance, and
fence. You had to ride horses; ride
camels. R.J. pretty much rode just about
everything in Hollywood.” And when that
brought smirking chuckles, he added, “Wait a minute. And at that time R.J. learned to really
ride. And I remember the stunt men and cowboys
saying, ‘That R.J. sits that horse very well.
He sits that saddle.’ And he’s
had horses all his life. When he lived
in the Pacific Palisades he had horses and stables on the property. When he had a ranch out in the Valley he had
stables and horses. And at one time he
owned about 184 acres in Simi Valley with some friends, that they bought from
Bing Crosby, out northwest of Simi. In
fact the horse Seabiscuit is buried on that property. He’s one of the few actors that have bridged
that gap from old Hollywood to Hollywood today.
He worked with people like Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Henry Fonda, Barbara
Stanwyck, Jimmy Stewart, Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Barbara
Stanwyck. (Note: if you read R.J.’s
autobiography, you’ll know why Mike Connors is having fun dwelling on Barbara
Stanwyck.) And today he’s working with
the young stars of Hollywood; he’s bridged that gap, and still doing great
work.”
R.J.
said, “I’m very honored to be an honoree with all these other people. It is indeed a very big privilege to me. When I was a kid, I always wanted to be a
cowboy. And tonight you made that
possible. And now I am a real
cowboy. I’m going to give this wonderful
honor to my grandson. And when he sees
it, I can tell him that I am a real cowboy.
Thank you so much.”
Jon Voight
Tommy
Cook introduced Jon Voight, noting that he had starred in MIDNIGHT COWBOY,
DELIVERANCE, won his Oscar for COMING HOME, and can currently be seen on
Showtime in RAY DONOVAN. Voight
recalled, “I started out in Yonkers, New York.
Grew up with two brothers, and we were always a very rambunctious
threesome. And I remember playing in
this park across the street from the house.
We would play cowboys. And I
would always imagine I’m on a white horse.
I had a hat and gun. I got to
play a good guy all the time. And then
the team in my neighborhood said, ‘Jon, you’re always playing the good
guy. You’ve got to play the bad guy.’ I said, ‘Good. I’ve got a black horse.’ I mean, this all came from movies. And you know, it’s a wonderful thing, cowboy
movies. We used to go to a place called
Bronxville, which was up the road from Yonkers, and we used to see all the
trailers, and it was Hopalong Cassidy, Gene Autry, Roy Rogers. And then we would come back in the afternoon,
and play cowboys all day. And then as I
grew up, I found myself in the film business.
And my beginnings were as a cowboy.
And I always knew, when I was playing these roles, when I was doing these
movies, that there was something about them, a morality in all these
pieces. There was a good guy, and we all
knew who the good guy was. And we knew
what the good guy did. And we knew what
the bad guys did. And there was a
rule. You knew if there was a bully, and
he pushed people around, somebody had to stand up to him. We learned a lot from cowboy movies. And now I have to say, as I look around
today, what we need is good cowboy movies.
And when we face the world situation – not to get political – we want to
know who the good guys and bad guys are.
We need to go back and watch SHANE or watch HIGH NOON. And we’ll figure out what we have to do, because
you don’t let the bullies get away with it.
Anyway, I’ve had a wonderful run.
And I’ve done several movies where I’ve played older parts in cowboy
films. I did RETURN TO LONESOME DOVE,
worked with Lou Gossett. I played a
sheriff in a movie called JASPER, TEXAS, with Lou Gossett. And it seems, being here with Connie and Lou,
I see them all the time, supporting the troops, as this group does. And there’s something right about that. It’s appropriate. Without this military, these great people,
these heroes, we wouldn’t be the country that we are. We wouldn’t have the peace and freedom that
we do. I feel very honored to have a little
piece of it. And Chuck, I used to say I
did a lot of my own stunts; I’ll never say that again. Anyway, I’m very honored to be among you, in
this wonderful group. And I’ll be very
proud to show this to my grandchildren.
And when they ask me what it is, I’ll say, ‘You see, I am a western
hero.’”
Earl Holliman
It was a very enjoyable evening. Coincidentally, on Saturday morning I was at
the Actors & Others for Animals
banquet, Best in Show, where I ran
into Earl Holliman, Hugh O’Brian’s and Robert Wagner’s brother from BROKEN
LANCE. Small world, Hollywood!
LIVE EVENTS IN OCTOBER
We have an unusually busy month of live western and
history-related events all over California.
I’m sure there are plenty in other parts of the country, and the planet,
and if you’ll let me know, I’ll be very happy to share them.
RANCHO CAMULOS
Plenty is happening at the ‘Home Of Ramona’, near Piru. On Sunday, October 6th, it’s the
California Mission Ride, as a 600 mile horseback journey through the past and
to the future comes to the Rancho. At
10:00 a.m. you can greet the horseback riders who are traveling from Mission to
Mission “to discover life and land of current communities in their Mission era context.”
Museum tours will also be available for the usual five bucks, free for
kids.
And at 2 p.m., there’s a show featuring Hollywood
stuntmen and Silver, from this summer’s LONE RANGER. The stunt performers in the show are the very
talented and experienced Jack and Clint Lilley, and Rod Rondeaux, who I
interviewed for the Round-up HERE
On Saturday, October 12th, NCIS fans, choked up at the loss of Zeva from the show (I know I’ll miss her), can tour the locations at the Rancho where the season’s premier episode, “Zeva’s Farewell,” were shot. This is expected to sell out, so reservations are a good idea.
Finally, on October 19th, Trafalgar Day (so I am told), Camulos welcomes Napoleonic War re-enactors! From noon ‘til 6pm you can admire period costumes and watch military battles! To learn more about these events, and everything else happening at the Rancho, go HERE.
On Saturday, October 12th, NCIS fans, choked up at the loss of Zeva from the show (I know I’ll miss her), can tour the locations at the Rancho where the season’s premier episode, “Zeva’s Farewell,” were shot. This is expected to sell out, so reservations are a good idea.
Finally, on October 19th, Trafalgar Day (so I am told), Camulos welcomes Napoleonic War re-enactors! From noon ‘til 6pm you can admire period costumes and watch military battles! To learn more about these events, and everything else happening at the Rancho, go HERE.
COACHELLA VALLEY HISTORICAL MUSEUM
Now through May 31st, 2014, experience Journey of a People: A History of the
Cahuilla and Chemehuevi Tribes in the Coachella Valley, Indio. Displays of prehistoric Indian artifacts,
historic photos and individual histories from the five local tribes. To learn more, call the museum at
760-342-6651, or visit cvhm.org.
SAN DIMAS WESTERN DAYS OCT. 5-6
There will be food, crafts, a parade, music and
entertainment at the San Dimas Civic Center Park, and San Dimas Rodeo
Grounds. Learn more at 909-592-3818, or
visit sandimaschamber.com
BIG HORSE CORN MAZE AND HARVEST FESTIVAL, TEMECULA
OCT. 5-31
The maze is 11 acres, plus hay rides, pony rides,
rig races, pumpkin bowling and more. It’s
at Big Horse Feed and Mercantile. Call
951-389-4621, or visit bighorsecornmaze.com
GHOST TOUR OF SIMI VALLEY OCT. 11-27
A guided walking tour where historical ghosts tell
stories of the Chumash, explorers, pioneers and others who once populated the
Valley. Friday and Saturday nights at
Strathearn Historical Park.
805-526-6453 simihistory.com
FIDDLERS’ OLD TIME MUSIC FESTIVAL, SANTA
BARBARA OCT. 13
Celebration of American folk music as performed on
fiddle and banjo. Both competitions and
showcase performances, tours of the historic Stow House, music workshops, kids
activities, and eats. 805-450-2243 fiddlersconvention.org
HORSE HERITAGE FESTIVAL, SAN MARCOS OCT. 13
Demonstrations, pony rides, frontier games, pumpkin
patch, petting zoo, food and raffles at the Walnut Grove Park. 760-744-9128
helpthehorsepark.com
SILVERADO DAYS, BUENA PARK, OCT. 18-20
Enjoy hog calling, pig racing, arts & crafts, a
chili cook-off, car show, live music and
more, at William Peak Park. Silveradodays.com
DUST BOWL FESTIVAL, WEED PATCH, CA., OCT. 19
If you’ve been hankering for a return of the Great
Depression, it’s your lucky day! At
Sunset School, at the intersection of Weedpatch Highway and Sunset Boulevard,
enjoy musical entertainment, historical displays, square dancing, booths for
kid and adults, fried bologna sandwiches and more, from 8 am to 3 pm. If there’s a phone or website, I don’t have
it.
WILD WEST WEEKEND, MOORPARK, OCT. 19-20
Stunt ropers, bullwhippers, flea circus, roping
range, and music abound at the Underwood Family Farms. 805-529-3690 underwoodfamilyfarms.com.
THAT’S A WRAP!
Have a great week, pardners!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright September 2013 by
Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
SILVER SPURS SPARKLE!
15TH SILVER SPURS
They pulled it off!
It was touch and go there for a while – I’d talked to Robert Lanthier,
President of the non-profit REEL COWBOYS, a few times during the previous week,
and he told me that ticket sales were so slow that they’d have to cancel the
event if things didn’t pick up. “We have 166 tickets left to sell. This is for charity, for quadriplegic
veterans, for families of veterans.”
Every year the REEL COWBOYS chooses a different charity to support with
their banquet, and this year it was the MVAT Foundation.
When I arrived at The Sportsmen’s Lodge on Saturday night,
there wasn’t an empty seat in the entire Empire Ballroom. I perused the silent auction offerings, noting western
jewelry and art, sports memorabilia, several items related to honoree Rex
Allen, and my particular favorite, a braided hairpiece worn by Iron Eyes Cody,
complete with feathers. I put a bid for
CHAMPIONSHIP RODEO, a board game created by rodeo star and costume designer
Nikki Pelley, and the evening’s festivities got off to a fast start. Erwin Jackson and The Canyon Riders performed.
Boyd Magers, author of many books on the western film, spoke about Republic’s last great singing cowboy, Rex Allen; how he’d been thwarted in his performing career until he could save up $75 to have a surgeon correct his one crossed eye. Rex not only had a successful movie career, but starred on TV as FRONTIER DOCTOR, and had probably his greatest success narrating more than a hundred documentaries and TV episodes for Walt Disney. Boyd then introduced Rex Allen Jr., who took the stage, singing and MC-ing the program. Rex Jr. talked about recording
his hit, LAST OF THE SILVER SCREEN COWBOYS with his dad, and with Roy
Rogers. As they were listening to the playback,
Roy started
laughing, and Rex Sr. asked him why.
“The older I get, the more I sound like Gabby Hayes.”
Next to take the stage was Bo Hopkins who made his first
film appearance, indelibly, as Crazy Lee in THE WILD BUNCH. Born William Hopkins, his first big stage
success was in a production of Inge’s BUS STOP, and he took the name ‘Bo’ from
his character. He was there to honor
Robert Loggia, known to younger audiences from SCARFACE and THE SOPRANOS, and
who I’m proud to say starred in the first film I wrote, SPEEDTRAP. But he made his first big impression on
audiences in Disney’s NINE LIVES OF ELFEGO BACA, playing the real-life gunman
and lawyer, one of the first Hispanic characters to be the lead on American
television. (If you, like me, haven’t
seen this character in quite a while, you can see a ten minute clip from the
first episode HERE.) Loggia said, “It’s great to be part of the
gathering. The brethren; and the ladies.” To the crowd’s surprise and delight, he sang
beautifully in Italian.
Terry Moore, best remembered as the gal-pal of MIGHTY JOE
YOUNG, and particularly busy in westerns, big-screen and small, in the 1960s, took
the stage next, to honor Anne Jeffreys. “I am so happy to be here among you, to
introduce who I think is the most beautiful woman in the world. She’s been in show business forever because
she started as a teenager. She was a
Powers Model, and she studied opera.
She’s sung Tosca. She’s a great
actress and a great singer.” Terry went
on to say that Anne had been in a musical review when she was spotted by Nelson
Eddie and Jeanette MacDonald, and appeared with them in I MARRIED AN ANGEL. Then she was signed by Republic, did FLYING
TIGERS with John Wayne, and her contract was bought by R.K.O. “While she was doing KISS ME KATE at the
Schubert, there was this gorgeous actor, Robert Sterling, playing in the
theatre next door. They met, fell in
love, and six months later, they were married.”
They starred together in the wonderful TOPPER series, and
frequently worked together in other shows.
They were married for 54 years, until his death, and it is astounding to
look at this beautiful woman and realize that she is not only still acting, but
she will turn ninety in January. They
ran a clip of her singing in a western, and rather than waiting for her
introduction, she came out on stage. “I
was backstage, and I couldn’t see what they were running. But I died in both of them, didn’t I? I never got the man; he either ran off with
somebody else, or was killed, and killed me at the same time. It’s such an honor to be honored. The era of the cowboys, it will come back. It has to.
It’s history. It’s wonderful
history, too. I think I did twelve
westerns; eight of them at Republic, a couple at R.K.O. One with the swimmer; what was his name? He was blond and very handsome.”
Other voices shouted ‘Johnny Weissmuller!’ I shouted, ‘Buster Crabbe!’ (Okay, so I’m a show-off. BILLY THE KID TRAPPED,
PRC,1942.)
“Buster Crabbe!
Anyway, I feel very closely connected to Western films. I grew up, really cut my eye-teeth doing a
series at Republic with Gabby Hayes and Wild Bill Elliot. I learned a lot of
things from doing those westerns. First
of all, the girl was never important at all.
My back was always to the camera while the fellows were frolicking or
shooting or whatever they were doing. I
learned to wiggle my hair-ribbon in the back to get attention. It was a school, really a wonderful
school. And young people don’t have that
today. It’s a different world.
“Gabby Hayes, if you didn’t know him, was very different
from the characters he played. He was a
dude. He’d wear a tailored black suit
with striped pants, beard shaved off, and he had shoes on instead of boots, and
he had his teeth in, so you wouldn’t know him.
He was a wonderful man, and it was a great pleasure to work with
him. I also worked with him when I went
to RKO on TRAIL STREET
and RETURN OF THE BAD MEN. Same cast;
same horses; same script, just about.
“I was going to tell you a story about making one of the
movies at Republic, I think it was
WAGON TRACKS WEST. I’m not sure; I did eight of them. I was playing an Indian girl; my name was
Moon Hush. With my blonde hair – of
course I had a wig on. I entered the
commissary with my headband on and my fringe and everything, sat down at the
counter for lunch. My agent came in and
sat down beside me, and had no idea who I was at all. He said, ‘Would you pass me the sugar
please?’ I said, ‘If you pass-um me
salt.’ Then I laughed, and he laughed,
and he knew who I was.
“I was out there in the hot sun at the back lot at
Republic. And I had on my Indian outfit,
with the headband and the fringes. It
was not too comfortable – it was a dusty, dusty place. I was sitting there, reading my script. And a cowboy sneaked up behind me, and tied
my fringe onto the chair. So I hear,
“Okay, you’re on!” And I’m tied to the
chair! And as I ran across the set, I had powder in
my moccasins because it was so hot. And
as I ran, white puffs came out of my shoes.
They called me White Cloud after that, instead of Moon Hush.
“I got back at them.
It was so hot that day, and the prop man, he had fires going, and fish
hanging on things. So I took one of the
fish, the smoked herring – pretty smelly – and I wrapped it, and I hid it in
the prop box. For three days they were
looking for that fish. ‘I can smell it
-- where is it?’ ‘Where is it?’ ‘Hah-hah-hah!
You tie my fringe, I get even with you!’
They were wonderful days; wonderful times. I hope that they will do more westerns again,
and soon. And all of you will be here to
work (on them). I’m delighted to see all
my cowboys looking so shiny, bright, young and happy. I’m so delighted to have this. I had a Golden Boot, and now I’ve got a
Silver Spur to go with it!”
(If you’d like to see Anne in a western, click HERE to see her and Robert Sterling in the JULIE GAGE STORY
episode of WAGON TRAIN.
The next presenter was Wilford Brimley, who prior to his
acting career had been a wrangler, blacksmith, and a bodyguard for Howard
Hughes. Rex Allen Jr. revealed that
Brimley came to film and TV shoeing horses, and as a riding extra. “We were doing a charity rodeo in Abilene , Texas . And I was sitting on horseback, next to him;
we were doing the grand entry. I’d been
in Abilene for
about three days, and I hadn’t seen him at the hotel. So I said, ‘Mr. Brimley, are you staying at
the hotel?’ ‘No. I’m staying in the horse trailer.’ ‘In the
horse trailer?’ ‘Yuh. I just move the horse outside, put in some
new straw and stay in the horse trailer.
I don’t want to stay in a hotel.’
He is a wonderful, wonderful man, a credit to western films and to the
film industry. He is an all-American
cowboy. He is a good man.”
Brimley took the mike and commented, “If b&llsh*t was
honey, this place would be swarming with bees.
They tell stuff about you, and you don’t even recognize yourself. There’s a kid out here, going to get a prize
for being a stuntman. Now (Rex Allen
Jr.) said I used to be a stuntman – let me get that straight. I never was a stuntman. I was an extra, a gilley. I worked every day for twenty-two dollars and
five cents, and went up from there. This
kid is and was and always will be a stuntman.
They tried every way they can to kill him. This kid is one of my kids, and I’ve got ‘em
spread all over. But I don’t love any of
them any more than I love Clifford Happy.
Come out here, son.”
Clifford started by thanking Wilford Brimley, who had braved
storms in Wyoming
to be there. And he paid tribute to his
parents, who are both Rodeo Hall-of-famers.
His father had started as a rodeo pick-up man, “…pick-up buck horses,
take the cowboys off them after they’d had their eight-second ride.” He went on to supply horses to the
movies. “I was proud to watch my mother,
father and sisters trick-ride. Because
of (my mother’s) athletic ability, and nerves of steel, she worked many
westerns back in the day, as well. I
grew up watching westerns faithfully, every Saturday, with Roy Rogers, Rex
Allen, Hopalong Cassidy. After watching
all my cowboy shows, out the door I’d go, catch my own mare, Sadie, ride her
down through the dust, chasing every gangster around, with my Red Ryder BB-gun. Hard to believe that some twenty years later I’d
meet the girl of my dreams, marry her, and raise two little cowboys. Sean and Ryan are third generation
stuntmen. They’ve both just worked on
LONE RANGER, DJANGO, as well as COWBOYS & ALIENS. So yes, they’re still making westerns.” Happy was working around movie sets to
support his family, and raise rodeo entrance fees, when a stuntman he was
visiting broke a leg doubling for Andrew Prine.
That stuntman recommended Happy to take over, and that was the start of
his career. He went on to do stunts in
THE LONG RIDERS (the famous horse-crashing through the windows scene), SILVERADO,
NORTH AND SOUTH, THREE AMIGOS, GERONIMO, and many more. “It’s not all sunglasses and autographs, as
you know. We are not daredevils. We calculate all our stunts so we can get up
and do it again, and again.” He was
doubling Tommy Lee Jones on LONESOME DOVE, and Tommy Lee began asking for
him. “I’ve been very blessed by Tommy’s
generosity, requesting me on twenty or twenty-five shows. Without the many stunt-coordinators that put
their faith in me, I would not have had the many opportunities that I have been
given. They’ve helped me to make my
career successful and satisfying. I’ve
literally lived my Saturday daydreams, playing cowboys and Indians,
bank-robbers and rustlers for thirty-five years now. I am humbled by this Silver Spur Award, and I
want to thank y’all. With hundreds of
channels to choose from, I find myself looking back to my faithful Western
Channel. For you see, cowboys truly are
my heroes.”
For a change of pace, next onstage was Tombstone Tony Redburn
performing a remarkable gun-spinning and dancing routine, to Will Smith’s WILD
WILD WEST which must be seen to be appreciated, which is why I’m including a
link to a previous performance HERE.
Next onstage was Ben Murphy, who shot to fame in 1971,
playing opposite Peter Duel in the delightful ALIAS SMITH AND JONES
series. If you haven’t seen it in a
while, you can see the pilot HERE.
Having not seen Murphy in quite some time, I was delighted
to see the seventy-year-old actor looking just as he did in the 1970s, except
for an elegant head of white hair. Murphy
recounted that when he and Duel were doing the series, they would save the
blanks for the takes, and just say ‘Bang!’ for the run-throughs. But sometimes they would rehearse so much
that they’d forget, and say ‘Bang!’ for the takes. Murphy was there to honor the writer, director
and star of the BILLY JACK movies, Tom Laughlin, who was there with his costar
and wife of 58 years, Delores Taylor.
“When I was a young actor, Tom Laughlin used to invite me to his home to
play tennis, which he did for a lot of us.
And after a day of tennis we would watch films in his home; he was very
gracious that way. And he seems to me to
represent that great mythic western cowboy.
The man who comes into town, quiet, but if you push him into a corner,
he will fight. And he will protect those
weaker than himself. Part of that western
lore. And Tom mentally created that in
his role as Billy Jack, but as a filmmaker he was an inspiration to a lot of us
because he did it his way. He bucked the
system. He made the picture with his
money, his way, and he proved them wrong.
He got it done. It is my honor:
Tom Laughlin.”
He received a tremendous standing ovation. Having not been
on the screen in more than three decades, it is startling to see Laughlin as an
eighty-year-old man. But though he
appeared frail, and his voice was soft, he had plenty to say. “Thank you, thank you, thank you. I really want to, first of all, begin my
gratitude by quoting Abraham Lincoln.
‘All I am, or ever hope to be, I owe to my angel mother.’ I was a very precocious chick, reading in the
second grade 6th and 7th grade books. I read a biography of Lincoln in 7th grade. And I’m quoting that first line eighty years
later. The reason is, all I’ve ever done,
all the luck I’ve had, success I’ve had, I owe to my own dear wife and life
partner standing here. We recently
celebrated our 58th wedding anniversary. And never, in that time for one second did we
think of divorce. Murder, yes, but never
divorce.
“I want to thank my good friend Ben for that wonderful,
wonderful introduction. My gratitude to
all of you in this society for honoring; but it wasn’t me, it was us. We have been an unbelievable
joined-at-the-hip partnership in everything.
Every movie, every script, every acting (role).” Delores took the microphone for a few moments
and echoed those sentiments.
For the final tribute of the evening, Academy Award winner
Louis Gossett Jr. took the stage to
honor Bo Svenson. Speaking of great
actors of the past, Gossett noted, “…there’s a pride in working with the Jack
Palances, the Sidney Poitiers, George C. Scotts, the Paul Newmans, the James
Deans – they all had one thing in common.
That they wanted to do what they did to perfection. They were never satisfied. They work constantly, trying to hone their
scenes on a daily basis. I just
witnessed that experience a few weeks ago in Canada ,
with a young Swedish hockey player, who came to America and (worked on) stage and
western film, and captured my attention and respect. He applies himself on a daily basis. He asked me to give him this award. And I agreed, because of his life, because of
his art, and because he’s taller than me.
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Bo Svenson.”
Bo Svenson
Mr. Svenson took the stage.
“I didn’t know what to expect from this evening. As a kid, I always had a dream. I wanted to come to America . And here I am. I spent six years in the Marine Corps. I’ve been married to Lise since 1966. I attribute the longevity of that to the fact
that I’m absent a lot, and that she has a very poor memory. So thank you all very much for a, for me,
very worthwhile evening.”
Strolling around the ballroom I spotted a number of actors
who were there not to perform but to enjoy the evening: Martin Kove, Dan Haggerty, RANGE RIDER and
BUFFALO BILL JR. star Dick Jones, Johnny Whitaker, Cliff Emmich, weapons expert
Anthony DeLongis, DEADWOOD regular Ralph Richeson.
Anthony DeLongis and Martin Kove
back row, Clifford Happy, Wilford Brimley, Anne Jeffreys, Delores Taylor,
Bo Svenson, Louis Gossett Jr.; in front, Tom Laughlin, Ben Murphy
AMERICAN INDIAN ARTS MARKETPLACE AT THE AUTRY
November 3rd and 4th, Saturday and
Sunday, the Autry will again host over 180 Native American artists – there’s no
other show anywhere in Southern California that features this range and volume
of Indian art. Don’t miss it!
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
Built by cowboy actor, singer, baseball and TV entrepreneur 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 permanent 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.
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
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.
WESTERN ALL OVER THE DIAL
INSP’s SADDLE-UP SATURDAY features a block of rarely-seen classics THE VIRGINIAN and HIGH CHAPARRAL, along with BONANZA and THE BIG VALLEY. On weekdays they’re showing LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, BIG VALLEY, HIGH CHAPARRAL and DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN.
ME-TV’s Saturday line-up includes BRANDED, THE REBEL and THE GUNS OF WILL SONNETT. On weekdays it’s DANIEL BOONE, GUNSMOKE, BONANZA, BIG VALLEY, WILD WILD WEST, and THE RIFLEMAN.
RFD-TV, the channel whose president bought Trigger and Bullet at auction, have a special love for Roy Rogers. They show an episode of The Roy Rogers Show on Sunday mornings, a Roy Rogers movie on Tuesday mornings, and repeat them during the week.
WHT-TV has a weekday afternoon line-up that’s perfect for kids, featuring LASSIE, THE ROY ROGERS SHOW and THE LONE RANGER.
TV-LAND angered viewers by dropping GUNSMOKE, but now it’s back every weekday, along with BONANZA.
And that's it for this week! And please, if you have any events that you think belong in the Round-up, please let me know!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Material Copyright October 2012 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved
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