Showing posts with label john sturges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john sturges. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

HAPPY 90TH BIRTHDAY MONTE MARKHAM! HERE’S OUR ‘GUNS OF THE MAGNIFICENT 7’ INTERVIEW, PLUS 'ELKHORN' RETURNS TO INSP OCTOBER 2!

 

Monte shooting low


Monte Markham, who in 1967 starred in the series The Second Hundred Years, is closing in on his first hundred! A busy actor on film and television since his 1966 debut on Mission: Impossible, and Debbie Reynolds’ co-star in 1973’s Broadway hit musical, Irene, he’s still very in-demand. But beginning in 1992, with son Jason Markham and wife Klaire Markham, Monte founded the independent documentary production company Perpetual Motion Films, and they have produced hundreds of hours of documentary television, including the first 10 episodes that premiered the landmark A&E series, Biography.

At 2022’s Lone Pine Film Festival, I had the pleasure and privilege of interviewing Mr. Markham onstage before the screening of 1969’s Guns of the Magnificent 7, speaking mostly about that film, and also about his first Western, 1967’s Hour of the Gun.  So much of our talk was punctuated by laughter, both Monte’s and the audience's, that I left the “laughs” in. I’m particularly happy that Monte shared a great story about the late Joe Don Baker.

 


Me and Monte against the Sierra Nevadas 

Henry Parke: Hello, I'm Henry Parke, Film Editor for True West Magazine, and we are so lucky to have with us one of the magnificent people of The Magnificent 7, Monte Markham. To put Guns of the Magnificent 7 in a historical context, in 1960, director John Sturges took his crew to Cuernavaca, Mexico, along with Yul Bryner, Steve McQueen, Eli Wallach, and a script based on Akira Kurasawa's Seven Samurai, and made The Magnificent 7. It's a wonderful western and it made stars of James Coburn, Charles Bronson, Robert Vaughn. It introduced Horst Buckholtz and gave Brad Dexter his best-ever film role. In 1966, The Mirisch Company sent director Burt Kennedy to Spain with a script by Larry Cohen, with Yul Bryner back as Chris, Robert Fuller in Steve McQueen's role of Vin, and Warren Oates, Simon Oakland, Fernando Ray, Emiliano Fernandez, and Rudolpho Acosta, to make Return to the Magnificent 7. It's widely considered to be, well, a movie, but nobody's best work. Then in 1969, working in Spain with a script by Herman Hoffman, Paul Wendkos directed what is clearly the best of the three sequels, and we won’t even discuss the remake, Guns of the Magnificent 7. George Kennedy, fresh from his Oscar win for Cool Hand Luke, played Chris, and as his right hand, in what would be the Steve McQueen role, the first of the new 7 he'll recruit, as you know, is Monte Markham. We're so fortunate to have him with us tonight. Monte, Guns was early in your film career, but not your first Western.

Monte Markham: No, the first Western was called The Law and Tombstone, and I was cast and got down to Mexico, and it was John Sturges directing. It was the sequel of the Gunfight at the OK Corral. They hated the name, because it would translate only to The Law and the Grave Marker in the European market -- that wouldn't have the same cache that Tombstone means in America. (Note: It was eventually retitled Hour of the Gun.) And that was just a hell of an experience. I gotta tell you. It was my first film; I had just come into town. I hadn't done any television, hadn't done any film, and we were in Torreon, Mexico and it was the first time anything was shot there. And in the cast was Sam Melville (as Morgan Earp), his first film; Johnny Voight (as Curly Bill Brocius), his first film; Frank Converse (as Virgil Earp), his first film. And we were surrounded with some of the finest character actors in New York and Hollywood. And it was such a great experience. Jason Robards playing Doc Holliday and Jimmy Garner playing Wyatt Earp. They became lifelong friends. It was a great time.

Monte in Hour of the Gun

Henry Parke: And of course, you played Sherman McMasters.

Monte Markham: Yep. He was the deputy sheriff out of Arizona.

Henry Parke: What was John Sturges like to work with?

Monte Markham: John was a very impressive and a very reticent man, a man of few words. He loved to party. Jason Robards was known to be in his booze. He was divorcing Lauren Bacall at the time. And he spent every night in the whore-house, not whoring necessarily, he just loved the company and he had a great time, <laugh>, and he drank a lot.

And the next morning, they'd be bringing him onto set with cucumbers on his eyeballs. It was an interesting time for all. We were all in the hotel dining room and having dinner. And Jason came in and said, “Hello everybody.” When he was not drinking, he was just the sweetest man in the world. "And John, " he said to Sturges, like a hurt boy, "I said hello to you on the street, and you didn't even acknowledge it." John looked at him and said, "I never speak to strangers on the street." Jason was so upset. But it (became) a joke between the two of them.

When I got the call to do the film, they said report to Los Angeles. And I had a great wife, a 2-year-old child, and I was off to Mexico. It was raining, I got a taxi, arrived at LAX, then a Mustang pulled up and spun around and stopped. Out stepped Lonny Chapman and Jason Robards and Bill Windom, drunk as coots. Got on board the plane and we flew to El Paso, Texas, had a brief news conference, and everybody was drinking the whole time. Bill Windom and Jason were wearing their wardrobe, and we flew to Mexico, to Torreon, on a DC 3 plane. We got off the plane and I ran down and said, "Hello." Mr. Sturges was standing there. And I’ll never forget the look on his face when Windom and Robards just crawled off the plane and fell down the stairs <laugh>. It was like that the whole shoot. But it was just very exciting, particularly for a young actor; just great.



Monte guesting on High Chaparral

Henry Parke: You'd also made a couple of TV Westerns, episodes of Iron Horse and Here Come the Brides. Did those, and Hour of the Gun help prepare you for Guns of the Magnificent 7?

Monte and Ed Begley on The Mod Squad

Monte Markham: Nothing really prepares you for any of that. You are all fans of Westerns, you love it, and we have the great Cowboy poems, and the writing, and it's all true: there's no greater fun. That’s when the stables were all working in Sun Valley, and the north section of the Valley; that's where all stunt men had their horses. And you want to understand that at that time, everybody had three horses. Jimmy Garner got James Stewart's horse, that was Henry Fonda's horse. Jimmy Garner had three horses, they were Buckskins. Jimmy didn't own them; the people running the studios had them. The stunts were all worked out there, at the barns.

And when I went to Hal (Note: sorry, I couldn’t decipher the last name), who was a good friend of somebody, and he introduced me, and we became great buddies. He said, come on out and we'll fix you up. And instead of having lunch I was trying to learn everything. I would learn how to jump over the butt of a horse, and mount this way, and mount that way. It was just wonderful. And Dustin Hoffman was training for Little Big Man. I remember him standing over in the corner learning how. He was just in from New York. He was working his butt off. It was great. There's the horse sequence where we get on and again, it was the American cowboy horses, the ones that we had down in Mexico, the ones that we didn't have in Spain. They'd be all over the place; they were agitated all the time.

George (Kennedy) runs up, says "Mount up," and I ran to the horse to mount, and boom, the horse ran away. <laugh> Paul (Wendkos), the director, was furious. We kept trying. And that horse would not wait for me. He said, “How are you doing?” Then, Boom. “Get away from me!” “Don't jump at me like that!” We had to tie the horse, and finally it took three different cuts to make it work so I could take off, and it was a nightmare for him. But it was just a different way of filming everything. I didn't get to jump on a horse after all that hard work. That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. But, don't tell me I'm not having a good time. It was just great. Great.

Reni Santoni, Monte, George Kennedy, James Whitmore

Henry Parke: Had you seen the original Magnificent 7?

Monte Markham: Several times, as we all have. I remember Jimmy Coburn, and it was like, my God, who is that? And the various actors; McQueen! It was great. It was an honor to do the film. I felt very strongly about it. Madrid was like the hub, and we would drive out every day, 30, 40 miles to the different locations. It was four months and it was great preparation. Paul Wendkos was the great New York director. John Frankenheimer and he were competitors all the time. And Paul just never got the role of the director that he should have. And unfortunately, he died early.

But it was just a great shoot. Joe Don Baker, just a wonderfully spooky guy. We had a great time. In Madrid at that time, it was bullfighting season. Up until a certain young man appeared on the scene, bullfighting had really degenerated into corruption, et cetera. They would drop sandbags on the bull's back to weaken them. They shaved the horn, because the bull would think, I got you. Well, I thought I got you, but they took about an inch off his horn. They were cheating all the time. Then came a young guy named El Cordobes. Many of you here may remember the name and remember seeing some of his work, those of you that are into bullfighting. We had that to go to on Sundays, and it was just wonderful. I hated the picadors, I hated a lot of it, but it was really spectacular.

George Kennedy and Joe Don Baker in
Guns of the Magnificent 7

Joe Don bought a cape, and he wore that cape, <laugh> walking down the street. A guy would look at him on the street as they're passing, like, what? What the hell you lookin' at? Whatcha looking at? Whatcha looking at? And he had a stunt girl in Spain that he dated, and she wore like the first mini skirt. This is ‘68, and we'd be in the Great Plaza Ventas, the magnificent bullring stadium there. And he'd make his entrance in that cape and have a grand time and look around. Everybody -- whatcha looking at? Whatcha looking at? It was a great time. It was a crazy time. James Whitmore -- it was an honor to know James. He was one of the finest men and finest actors I've ever worked with, one of the finest human beings. The work that he started with actors and theater all over the country that's resonating to this day.

George Kennedy, he said, “Hell, what a stroke of luck! Yul Bryner decides he doesn't want to do it, and I’d just won an Oscar, and here I am.” And he was thrilled to be doing it. He said, “We're all doing cowboys and Indians, cowboys and Mexicans.” Frank Silvera; what a gift, what a man. Tragically, shortly after we made the film, he died installing a damned garbage disposal: electrocuted himself. Bernie Casey is a great artist. Had an incredible career as a painter. That was his first film. You aren't necessarily Los Angeles Rams fans, but you remember that was the winning team, and Bernie was a great wide receiver. So it was a thrilling, thrilling shoot.

Monte about to get his neck stretched

Henry Parke: As long as you talked about most of the 7, how about Reni Santoni?

Monte Markham: Reni, I didn't know very well. And he really was pissed off when I jumped off that horse and knocked him down. I just kicked him down and knocked him down, and he kept going, "You son of a bitch!" We never really got along. I would point out that Fernando Rey, the little dove, I don't know how many remember, but he was The French Connection, another great film. Fernando was a very elegant man and a very well-known Spanish actor and spoke beautiful English.

All 7 left to right: James Whtmore, Joe Don Baker, Bernie Casey
George Kennedy, Reni Santoni, Scott Thomas, Monte

Henry Parke: And as far as elegant, evil people, Michael Ansara as Colonel Diego --

Monte Markham: He was cool, very, very cool. Married to Barbara Eden at the time, but he had a good time in Spain.

Henry Parke: With all of the location work, was it a physically difficult shoot to do?

Monte Markham: I'd like to say yes, but it was just...no. It was great people, great locations. But I will say that for me, that first day of the shooting, me just being hauled out of the saloon and down the street. We fought, and guys got shot, and finally it was the end of the day. And it was this hot hot, day. The guys were sweating like pigs. The next day it was freezing cold. I remember Jimmy Whitmore, he was working on other scenes that day. And (to match how they looked the day before) a guy was spraying (water on everyone) And Jimmy kept saying, "Don't do that. Please don't do that. If you do that again I'm going to kill you." Each time, “Just one more time.”

The difference in location shooting is we had a lot of time off. As my character, Keno. I do some tricks; I do karate and all that. So there were three guys with me on the train. And one guy, Ray, they were making a joke. He had a straw hat on. Again, this is 1968, and he took off his hat, and he had long, I mean really long hair. And they called him El Indio. He fought bulls dressed as an American Indian chief, and he was well known. We had been working, working, working. They said his village is having a fiesta, and they invited me. He's gonna fight a bull, and we'd like you to join him in the ring, and be his assistant. And I said fine, that's great. 200 kilometers north of Madrid. They picked me up on Friday night at about nine o'clock, after shooting, and we drove all night. We got there about two a.m., went into the hotel. The next morning, they were singing and dancing in the street. It was like choirs. And in the middle of it is Ray Olo, the big barrel-chested guy. And so we go down, looked at the bulls. The bulls were not bulls, they were just big, big bull cattle. And it was for charity; in fact, the mayor was one of the guys to fight a bull. And Ray was gonna take one. So we got there. I was tall, blond hair, white shirt, marching with the crowd. They gave me brandy and we're having a great time. We got to the arena, and it was like something in Sun Valley in 1938. I stood there in the ring. And the first guy introduced himself, and then he got on his knees in front of the entrance and had the cape in his hand. And the bull ran out and ran right over, knocked him down.

Monte from the book Western Portraits,
photography by Steve Carver, written 
by C. Courtney Joyner

The mayor took on his bull, and he got hit several times. And he kept saying, "My God, the things we do for charity!" <Laugh>. So in comes Ray, and Ray had the full regalia on, and I've never seen the like of it. And the bull came and it was a big one. Big -- hell, about this high at the shoulder. And Ray had stripped off his vest, he ran toward the bull, and the bull was running toward him. He was running straight at the bull, nothing in his hands. And he did a vault over the bull!

I was thrilled. I stood up applauding, like it was a football game. So then they said, “It’s your time.” I went out and they gave me a cape, the lavender one with the yellow side. I’d watched them do it. So I stood like this, the bull's charging me. And I got mixed up to where I was, and the bull hit me and ran right over me, right across my chest <laugh>. I said, I must get up. And I did. And I ‘passed’ the bull. And then ‘passed’ him again. And I looked over at Ray, and he said, "Anytime you're ready. It's my bull." It was great. It was a great time, but my chest looked like hamburger.

Henry Parke: Do you have any favorite memories from shooting the film that you haven't mentioned yet?

Monte Markham: That was a big one.

Henry Parke: I should think so.

Klaire and Monte Markham

Monte Markham: Not a favorite, but my wife was able to join us for 10 days and we were able to travel around, but Franco was still in power. All around town you would see that everything was stopped and there'd be a parade of tanks, and Franco coming through town. There'd be a big event, and Juan Carlos, the son of the ex-King was being groomed. They knew he would take over and be King, and that's the only time Franco would have let it happen. But he seemed to be everywhere. More police than I had ever seen anywhere. We were in the massive -- maybe it was about the size of the Rose Bowl -- the famous Casa de Toros in Memphis. Before one of the fights, the picadors come out. But some guy in the crowd, he kept yelling something, and he was cursing; he was drunk and he was making comments. Everybody was very shocked and quiet. And then they started laughing, and he was going on, and all of a sudden a voice went -- (Shouting in Spanish). And that was one of the policemen. 150,000 people stopped in silence. There were several different kinds of uniforms. They took him away. It was something. I mean, you were safe (from crime). You could do anything. If I came back to my room, and I’d left my money laid out in denominations on the bureau, it was (untouched), because it was a pure dictatorship. And 50 years later, my wife and I, we went back and they'd removed Franco from where he was buried. (Note: Franco was originally buried at the Valley of the Fallen, a memorial built by the forced labor of his political enemies. In 2019 Franco’s body was exhumed, and was reburied in a regular cemetery.) So there was a mix of great memory of a great people, and the rise of really artistic bullfighting with Cordobes, and us being able to play-act like that and yet have such a great time and love each other. And I can't describe it more to you, how great the memory is and how great the opportunity was. You hear it from all the guests, but I truly am one of the most fortunate people who's ever been able to act. And I thank you all for that.

Henry Parke: We have a question from an audience member.

Audience Member: The Magnificent 7 theme song is pretty iconic. It's like the James Bond theme: everybody knows it. I'm just curious, when you guys were doing those group riding scenes, did you ever think about that theme?

Monte Markham: Every moment! <Laugh> Bernie Casey was a big man, and they needed to have a particular grey, a beautiful grey, for him to ride. And the first time we were all together, for those who will remember, we came over the hill. It was early morning, dawn, dew was on the mountain and a lot of grass. And we all come over, it's George and me, and then I hear, "Whoa! Whoa! Whoa!" I looked over my shoulder, and Bernie's horse, that big grey, had just sat down on his butt and was sliding down the hill. <laugh>

And Bernie, it was all he could do to stay on. We did it twice more, and it still happened. And finally the sheepish wrangler said the horse had a saddle sore. But you always did (think of the theme). You remember in school, if you had a track meet, you’d tie a number on your back. I went to a sporting goods store, and I bought seven numbers. They set up another morning shot. We all came riding into camp. Long shot. So we're up there, we're over the mountain, and I'm passing out the numbers. George put on 1, I put on 2, and we had the music playing, we come over the mountain, they're riding in, riding in, riding in, Paul Wendkos saw it, "Very funny! Cut! Cut! Cut! " But yes, you always knew it; I'd even hum it sometimes.

INSP'S 'ELKHORN' SEASON 2 BEGINS OCTOBER 2ND

The INSP Channel just announced that season 2 of Elkhorn, their series about the young Teddy Roosevelt, will begin airing on Thursday, October 2nd. If you haven't seen it, it's quite a show, and good history. Mason Beals stars as the rising New York politician who suffered the double tragedy of losing his young wife and his mother in one night. In despair, he travels to the Dakota Badlands, where he begins the process of remaking himself as the vigorous outdoorsman we would come to know. Beals won Best Actor, and the show won Best Western TV Series in the Cowboys & Indians Movie and TV Awards. Here's a sneak peek!




And that’s a wrap!


I need to get this posted, and get ready for the interview I’m doing in a few hours with Alexander Nevsky about his newest Western, The Wide West!

To see my most recent other writings, check out the left hand sidebar near the top, where you’ll find links to my most recent articles for INSP, about Westerns at the Drive-in, and my 4 pieces in the May-June issue of True West, on different aspects of the miniseries American Primeval. And catch me on Thursday, July 3rd, on the Rendezvous With a Writer podcast!

Much obliged,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright June 2025 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

 

Sunday, June 9, 2013

‘SWEETWATER’ REVENGE WESTERN COMING SOON!




Coming soon, ‘SWEETWATER’ is a revenge western starring MAD MEN favorite January Jones as the wronged woman; Jason Isaacs, villain of HARRY POTTER films and THE PATRIOT as a doubtful prophet; and four time Oscar-nominee Ed Harris, whose most recent western is the excellent APPALOOSA, as the sheriff.  Other western vets in the cast include Eduardo Noriega of BLACKTHORN, Chad Brummett of 3:10 TO YUMA, Kathy Lamkin of NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN, David Manzanares of DJANGO UNCHAINED, Keith Meriweather of JONAH HEX, and Luce Rains of 3:10 TO YUMA, APPALOOSA, NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN, WILD BILL, and WYATT EARP!  It’s the second film from writer-director Logan Miller, who’s TOUCHING HOME also starred Ed Harris, along with Brad Dourif.     

I hope to have more information soon, but for now, here’s the first trailer –



 



TCM CLASSIC FILM FEST PART 3

Walter Mirisch and Ben Mankiewicz

On Friday, April 26th, THE GREAT ESCAPE was shown at the opulent and beautiful Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.  Before the screening, the film’s legendary producer, Walter Mirisch, spoke with Ben Mankiewicz about his earlier experience working with director John Sturges and star Steve McQueen, on a film called THE MAGNIFICENT 7.

“(Sturges and I) became friendly, and we decided we wanted to work together.  I always had in mind to find a property that we could do together.  The availability of the SEVEN SAMAURI seemed to present that opportunity to me, because I thought it would be perfect for John.  And I’ll never forget the day that he and I sat together in a projection room and watched THE SEVEN SAMAURI and just spit-balled how it would work as a western.  We were very, very excited.” 

BEN MANKIEWICZ: Did you think then, with Steve McQueen such a big, developing TV star, this early in the process, would be good in that movie? 

WALTER MIRISCH: No, that was never a factor.  Steve was still a television star on the series called WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE, prior to THE MAGNIFICENT 7.  And he was well-received in THE MAGNIFICENT 7, but he had not really achieved star status, so-called, as a result of THE MAGNIFICENT 7.  (John Sturges and I) looked around for another project to do together.  So he suggested some things, and I suggested some things.  Then the idea of THE GREAT ESCAPE came up.  The story had been put on the screen before.   The British had done a picture about that very subject. 

BEN MANKIEWICZ: (archly) If the Americans don’t make it, it doesn’t count!

WALTER MIRISCH: (laughs) Actually, no one could understand those accents, so it didn’t make a damned bit of difference.  There was some resistance, but we (he and Sturges) overcame it because he and I both got very excited at the idea of doing this movie.  Unfortunately the book we acquired, which was by a man named Paul Brickhill, who was himself a prisoner, who was a flyer in the British Air Force, is a factual book.  It’s not a novel.  All of the personal stories, we made up for our film. 

BEN MANKIEWICZ:  Who were you looking at for the two principal characters who would eventually be played by James Garner and Steve McQueen? 

WALTER MIRISCH: First of all, we had decided to tailor the script so that there would be two characters who would carry the story.  Just a few years prior to that, John had made a very, very successful movie called GUNFIGHT AT THE O.K. CORRAL (pause for applause), with Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster.  We were tailoring these roles in THE GREAT ESCAPE for Kirk and Burt.  We talked about that until we reached the point of asking how much they were going to cost.  We were having trouble getting the budget of the picture approved.

BEN MANKIEWICZ:  I heard something like four million dollars.  Is that about right?

WALTER MIRISCH:  Somewhat more than that.  A great deal at that time, I must tell you.  Anyone who has ever made a movie has heard this famous expression, “You’re going to have to cut the budget if you want to get this made.”  So when we got ‘the speech,’ John and I talked it over.  I suggested that two relatively inexpensive actors, named Steve McQueen and James Garner, might be possible for those two parts.  And we could save about two million dollars just with that one stroke. 

BEN MANKIEWICZ:  Do you realize, when you say that, that you are a genius?  (laughter and applause)  Not for saying ‘no’ to Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster.  It’s recognizing that Garner and McQueen could fill them.  It’s impossible now to envision – it would be a very different movie with Lancaster and Douglas. 

WALTER MIRISCH: I got to know Steve very well when we made THE MAGNIFICENT 7.  I was fond of him; I thought he had incredible on-screen personality.  And I liked the idea of going younger.  Prior to that I had made a film called THE CHILDREN’S HOUR, and Jim played the male lead with Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacClaine, so I was more comfortable with Steve and Jim than I would have been with Kirk and Burt. 

BEN MANKIEWICZ:  Let me ask you about Steve McQueen, because as you said he had made a big impression in THE MAGNIFICENT 7, but he was not yet a top star --

WALTER MIRISCH:  He hadn’t jumped that motorcycle over the hill yet!

BEN MANKIEWICZ:  I think one of the reasons all the people in this room cherish Steve McQueen they way we do, is because he had that fierce independence, caused by a significant chip on his shoulder.  A guy who’s filled with the self-doubt that many of us are plagued with.  And all those things made him Steve McQueen.  But they also – and I know you’re somebody who loved him dearly – made him a handful to deal with.

WALTER MIRISCH:  (laughs) Steve has that quality, the French call je nes se quois.  I don’t know why, but he’s got it.  He radiated it, and he radiates it on the screen. 

BEN MANKIEWICZ:  Now, he left the set for some time when he didn’t like the way his part was, he didn’t like James Garner’s turtle-neck.  James Garner had a great line: “He wanted to be the hero, but he didn’t want to do anything heroic.”  He thought his character was corny.  As a producer you got through that; you navigated those waters.  You worked with McQueen again, and he gave one of his best performances in THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR.  How do you deal with a fantastically talented mercurial star, and keep your picture running at the same time? 

WALTER MIRISCH:  Steve always thought there were too many words.  And I came to trust that, because I learned that he especially was able to convey a great deal by his very expression.  So I was open to cutting down the amount of speeches; there was a lot he could convey with his eyes.  John was also well aware of that. And we collaborated on that, and also Steve had a good sense of story.  There’s a very famous incident, of course, where Steve got upset in THE GREAT ESCAPE and went away for a while, but that was overcome by rewriting.  I said we’ll overcome what you’re upset about, and he said, “That sounds fine.  I’ll be back to work tomorrow.” 

BEN MANKIEWICZ: Did those new pages include things like, ‘rides motorcycle,’ ‘carries baseball glove’? 

WALTER MIRISCH:  He conveyed more about independence of spirit, and courage, just by throwing that baseball against that wall, and catching it, than you could do with long speeches. 

BEN MANKIEWICZ: I don’t think this will be giving anything away.  At one point Steve McQueen is chased on motorcycles by some Germans.  One of those Germans chasing Steve McQueen on a motorcycle is Steve McQueen.  Any opportunity to ride a motorcycle –

 WALTER MIRISCH:  (laughs) You know you’re not supposed to give away all the secrets!

Coming soon – the final TCM CLASSIC FILM FESTIVAL entry, featuring Burt Reynolds, Jon Voight, Ned Beatty and director John Boorman discussing DELIVERANCE.


CORRAL GUNFIGHT ‘O.K.’ NO MORE

 

In the twenty-five years since the Autry opened, much has changed, as exhibitions are expanded, shrunken or moved.  But the life-sized ‘Gunfight at the O.K. Corral’ diorama’s only noticeable change over the years has been the replacement of guns, as they were occasionally swiped from the hands of the Earps.  I remember once coming and finding that of all the figures, only one of the Clantons was still packing iron.  (Then again, I once went to a wax museum in Coney Island, and saw Abe Lincoln assassinated by John Wilkes Booth with a Buck Rogers Ray-Gun.) But on June 2nd, a different kind of packing – packing away – took place.  The Gunfight is being replaced by a new show, Western Frontiers – Stories of Fact and Fiction which, starting on July 25, will tell the story of the West using firearms of great historic and artistic significance.

I’m looking forward to the new show; but I’ll miss the gunfight.  I always thought the narration was a little clunky, but I’ve never gone through that gallery and not pressed the button, to see the show.  And it was a thrill to watch it, then cross to the facing cabinet and see a gun belonging to Doc Holliday, and the sketch of the corral that Wyatt Earp himself had drawn.
Wyatt Earp's sketch of the O.K. Corral


If you’re going to miss it as well, or if you’ve never seen it, click the Youtube link below.  It’s not great – it was shot by an amateur, but it’s only thanks to ‘Ms. Lizzy Borden’ that we have a living record of it at all: http://youtu.be/V1hbHaLyrdk

 
MEMPHIS FILM FESTIVAL - ‘A GATHERING OF GUNS 5’ JUNE 13TH-15th
 

At Sam’s Town Resort in Tunica, Mississippi (30 miles South of Memphis, Tennessee), the guns will be gathering, and Boyd Magers has assembled quite a crew!  From HIGH CHAPARRAL, Henry Darrow, Don Collier and Rudy Ramos.  From WAGON TRAIN, Robert Fuller and Denny Miller.  From THE VIRGINIAN, the man himself, James Drury.  SPIN & MARTY – Tim Considine and David Stollery.  ELFEGA BACA himself, Robert Loggia (who was also the lead villain in the first movie I wrote, SPEEDTRAP).  Lisa Lu – Hey Girl from HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL.  Dan Haggerty and Don Shanks from GRIZZLY ADAMS, ZORRO star Duncan Regehr, plus Alex Cord, Gregg Palmer, Tommy Nolan, and Terry Moore.  James Best will present a one-man show, and Johnny Crawford of THE RIFLEMAN, who fronts a wonderful swing orchestra, will present a full banquet concert.  To learn more, go HERE.  http://memphisfilmfestival.com/


WGA NAMES 3 ½ WESTERNS AMONG 101 BEST-WRITTEN SERIES



Lists like this always provoke arguments – or in our case, barroom brawls – but the membership of the East and West branches of the Writers Guild of America voted on-line to determine the 101 best-written TV series in the history of television.  First recognized in the Western field was, at #32, DEADWOOD created by David Milch.  Not another sagebrush saga until #84, a tie  between the courtroom drama THE DEFENDERS, created by Reginald Rose, and GUNSMOKE, pilot written by Charles Marquis Warren and John Meston.  At #86 was JUSTIFIED, pretty-much a Western, developed for Television by Graham Yost, based on the Short Story “Fire in the Hole” by Elmore Leonard, in a tie with SGT. BILKO, by Nat Hiken.  Finally, coming in at #96 was LONESOME DOVE, teleplay by Bill Wittliff, based on the novel Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry; this was tied with SOAP, created by Susan Harris. 


To be fair, there was a lot of excellent writing covering a wide array of genres, dramatic and comedic, on the list, and only a couple of series that I personally hated.  But how a list could be compiled of the best of all TV writing, and have no mention of RAWHIDE, or WAGON TRAIN, or THE REBEL, or HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL, is beyond me.  Who do you think they left out?  To see the entire list, go HERE.  http://www.wga.org/content/default.aspx?id=4925

 

‘THE NEVADAN’ COMIC STRIP!

Remember a 1950 Columbia film, THE NEVADAN, starring Randolph Scott, Dorothy Malone and Forrest Tucker? My daughter gave me an old western movie magazine, and in it was a comic-strip version of the movie. I thought my Rounders might find it amusing, so I started running it, one panel a day, on the Round-up Facebook page.  The response has been enthusiastic, and it’s now been running long enough that I thought I’d include it here, from the beginning, for people who might have missed a panel or two.  Hope you enjoy it!






 

 








More of 'THE NEVADAN' coming tomorrow!

THE WRAP-UP

On Saturday I had the pleasure of attending an Autry screening of DOUBLE INDEMNITY, hosted by Los Angeles Police Museum President Glynn Martin, novelist (L.A. CONFIDENTIAL, THE BLACK DAHLIA) James Ellroy, and Autry Curator Jeffrey Richardson.  That night I attended a screening of Selig and Fox Tom Mix films at the Egyptian Theatre, introduced by Col. Selig biographer Andrew Erish.  I'll have highlights from both talks next week.




Can't believe I forgot to wish Clint Eastwood a Happy Birthday back on May 31st.  He has without question done more to encourage, improve and preserve on-screen Western story-telling than anyone else in the last half century!  Happy Birthday!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright June 2013 by Henry C. Parke - All Rights Reserved







 





 
 
 

Friday, March 12, 2010

IS FX OPTIMISM 'JUSTIFIED'?





UPDATED 3/17 -- SEVERAL NEW WEEKEND EVENTS -- CHECK BELOW

WE'LL FIND OUT TUESDAY 3/16 AT 10 P.M. JUSTIFIED is a modern-day western spun from the Elmore Leonard story Fire In The Hole. Timothy Olyphant, who spent three years in DEADWOOD as Sheriff Seth Bullock, plays U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens, a polite but deadly Kentucky gentleman. If you'd like to see the trailer, click here. Executive Producer Graham Yost has at least ten shows in the can so far, and an interesting collection of behind-the-scenes talent. Tony Goldwyn has directed one episode, and Elmore Leonard has produced one.

TRUE GRIT ROLLS CAMERAS IN TEXAS AND NEW MEXICO

The Coen brothers may have missed out an their own Oscar for their SERIOUS MAN script, but their Rooster Cogburn, Jeff Bridges, goes to the set with a Best Actor Oscar under his arm for CRAZY HEART. Barry Pepper will play Ned Pepper, the role originally assayed by Robert Duvall. Pepper his a long string of notable credits, but I'll always remember him as the sniper in SAVING PRIVATE RYAN (1998). Paul Rae will portray Emmett Quincy, and Ed Corbin will play 'Bear Grit'. Cinematographer Roger Deakins, whose eight Oscar noms include THE ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES (2007) and the Coen's NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN (2007) will be behind the camera. The score will be composed by Carter Burwell, who did similar chores so memorably for THE ALAMO (2004) and this year's WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE.

COWBOYS AND ALIENS GETS START DATE, RELEASE DATE

Robert Downey Jr. is out to do another SHERLOCK HOLMES, Daniel 'Bond' Craig is in his place, and with lovely HOUSE star Olivia Wilde in, the Jon Favreau-helmed Scf-Fi western should be before the Universal cameras this July. Favreau, who directed IRON MAN and ELF, won't say yet whether he'll be shooting in 3D. Asked by MTV why she signed on, Olivia Wilde replied, "It's really interesting people who just want to make a great story... Western enthusiasts will be happy. Sci-fi enthusiasts will be happy. Jon Favreau likes to describe it as a mash-up... It's going to have awesome effects, but Jon Favreau and everyone else are concentrating on making a great story and I'm absolutely humbled and excited to be a part of it." The announced release date is July 29, 2011, and be warned, that's also the announced release date for THE SMURFS MOVIE. Decisions, decisions...

ONE MORE WALK-DOWN FOR VIRGIL COLE

Mystery readers around the globe were saddened to learn of the death of prolific author Robert B. Parker, at his home in Cambridge, on January 18th, from a heart attack. Much was said at the time of his very popular three mystery series, SPENSER FOR HIRE, JESSE STONE, and SUNNY RANDALL, but there was little or no mention of his VIRGIL COLE western series, which included GUNMAN'S RHAPSODY and APPALOOSA, the latter leading to the excellent movie of the same title. With the death of his creator, does this mean Virgil Cole is at the end of his tether? Not quite, according to publishers G.P. Putnam's Sons. In May 2010, they will be bringing out the last novel of the series, BLUE-EYED DEVIL, and will simultaneously issue the current hard-cover release, BRIMSTONE, in paperback. I just read APPALOOSA, and I don't ever recall a movie that followed a book more closely -- the dialogue is intact virtually word-for-word. When the film opened, director-star Ed Harris was already talking about a sequel. I've been trying to find out if New Line Cinema has one in the works, but I haven't got a direct answer back. If you have any doubts as to whether a sequel is desirable, click here to see the trailer for APPALOOSA (2008).

WESTERN COMPOSER NATHAN SCOTT DIES

Nathan Scott, a composer, orchestrator and conductor with a staggering 950 professional credits, died at his home in Sherman Oaks, at the age of 94. Born in Salinas, he graduated from UC Berkeley with a music degree in 1939. He worked on radio as the west-coast music director of the NBC BLUE NETWORK until he entered the Army, where he worked on such Armed Forces Radio Service shows as COMMAND PERFORMANCE. In 1946 he went to work at Republic Pictures, and if you've seen the films of MONTE HALE, GENE AUTRY, WILD BILL ELLIOT and ROY ROGERS of that period, you've almost certainly heard Scott's scores. He also composed the music for John Wayne's WAKE OF THE RED WITCH (1948) MONTANA BELLE (1952), where Jane Russell portrayed Belle Starr, and many others. Moving to television, he also composed for episodes of LARAMIE, THE VIRGINIAN, HAVE GUN-WILL TRAVEL, RAWHIDE and GUNSMOKE.

WEEKEND EVENTS - AROUND TOWN - AROUND THE COUNTRY

ERNEST BORGNINE IN PERSON!

On Saturday, March 20th, at 2:00 p.m., The North Hollywood Library, at 5211 Tujunga Ave., at the corner of Magnolia, will host a free screening of MARTY, the movie that earned Borgnine his Oscar -- and he will be present following the screening! (818) 766-7185.

AT THE AUTRY

On Saturday, March 20th at 1 p.m., The Southwest Musueum presents a lecture, The View FRom the Braun:Archeoastronomy, describing how the first Americans used the sky as part of their worldview. The cave-paintings look fascinating. Admission is free to members, $10 to non-members, and NOTE: THIS IS AT THE SOUTHWEST MUSEUM, NOT THE AUTRY MUSEUM IN GRIFFITH PARK. For details, click here.

At the museum in Griffith Park, in addition to the above, and regular weekend family events like gold-panning, there will be a Santa Fe craft show at the gift shop on Saturday at 11:00 a.m., and on Sunday at Noon, the 3rd Sunday Jam with the Western Music Association. Also, in the Wells Fargo Theatre, a play, TALES OF AN URBAN INDIAN, will be performed Thursday, Friday 8:00 p.m., Saturday at 2:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.,and Sunday at 2:00 p.m. For more information, including tickets for the play, click here.

LOS ENCINOS STATE HISTORIC PARK

Sunday 3/20 Living History. From 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. you can step back in time! The living history program features a working blacksmith shop, 19th Century children's games, traditional music, tours of the historic structures, and strolling folks in period costume -- great fun for kids and adults, and you can feed the ducks! They do this program on the third Sunday of every month. Los Encinos is located at 16756 Moorpark St., Encino, CA 91436-1068. (818)784-4849. For more information, click here.


THE ANTHOLOGY FILM ARCHIVES - NEW YORK CITY

Buster Keaton
THE GENERAL
1927, 105 minutes, 16mm, b&w, silent. With Buster Keaton, Marion Mack, Glen Cavendar, Jim Farley, and Joseph Keaton.
One of Keaton's best silent features, setting comedy against a true Civil War story of a stolen train and Union spies.
-Saturday and Sunday, March 20 & 21 at 5:30.
Anthology Film Archives | 32 Second Avenue | New York | NY | 10003

LANDMARK THEATRES FEATURES 'A TOWN CALLED PANIC' IN 3 STATES

A TOWN CALLED PANIC. Okay, it's not a traditional western. In fact, it's animation, very limited stop-motion animation, but it does feature a cowboy, an Indian, and a horse, it's a Belgian and French co-production, and except for some cursing in the subtitles, it's supposed to be great for kids! It's playing at the LAGOON CINEMA in Minneapolis, the TIVOLI THEATRE in St. Louis, and the MIDTOWN ART CINEMA in Atlanta. If you want to know more, click here .

PAPERBACK COLLECTOR SHOW AND SALE - MISSION HILLS, CA
Sunday, March 21 9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

This is an annual event that I NEVER miss. Dozens of paperback dealers and collectors from around the country converge, bringing pulps and paperbacks exclusively. There is more horror and sci-fi than anything else, but there are a lot of westerns -- I've picked up tons of Luke Short, and seen plenty of Max Brand, Zane Grey, Louis Lamour and the rest. The pristine stuff can be pricey, but you can find lots of great deals if you're not so picky about condition -- I rarely pay more than $2 for anything, and purists sneer at my 'reader copies,' but after all, I'm getting them to read, not to seal them in a vault. They also have forty writers and other guests there to sign books, and THEY DON'T CHARGE for autographs! They're mostly sci-fi and horror people, among them Ray Bradbury, William F. Nolan and Edd "Cookie" Byrnes, who starred in a number of spaghetti westerns. For a complete list of signers and time slots, click here. It's at the Guest House Inn, 10621 Sepulveda Blvd., Mission Hills, CA 91345, and admission is $5. And tell them Henry's Western Round-up sent you.

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 THE LONE RANGER at 1:30 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.

WESTERN MOVIES ON TV
Note:AMC=American Movie Classics, EXT= Showtime Extreme, FMC=Fox Movie Channel, TCM=Turner Classic Movies. All times given are Pacific Standard Time.

BEST DARN THING ON TV ALL WEEK!!!
TCM THURSDAY - O.K. CORRAL-A-THON!


FOUR MOVIES IN A ROW dealing with the Earps, Doc Holliday and the Clantons!

5:00 p.m. - MY DARLING CLEMENTINE (1946) - The John Ford version, with Henry Fonda, Victor Mature and Walter Brennan.

7:00 p.m. - GUNFIGHT AT THE O.K. CORRAL (1957) - The John Sturges version, with Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas.

9:15 p.m. - HOUR OF THE GUN (1967) - The NEXT John Sturges version, with James Garner, Jason Robards Jr., and Robert Ryan.

11:00 p.m. - MASTERSON OF KANSAS (1954) - The William 'TINGLER' Castle version, with George Montgomery, Nancy Gates and James Griffith.

SECOND BEST DARN THING ON TV ALL WEEK:
TCM SUNDAY - TWO AKIRA KURASAWA WESTERNS BACK TO BACK!


5:00 P.M. - THE OUTRAGE (1964) - RASHOMAN with Mexican bandits, stars Paul Newman, Claire Bloom and Edward G. Robinson, directed by Martin Ritt, screenplay adaptation by Michael Kanin.

7:00 p.m. - THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960) - 7 SAMAURI in Mexico, directed by John Sturges, screenplay adaptation by William Roberts, and starring the seven: Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, Robert Vaughn, Brad Dexter, James Coburn, Horst Buchholz and, in the role he was born (in Brooklyn) to play, Eli Wallach as Calvera!

Monday 3/15

FOX FLAMING STAR (1960) An early film from the soon-to-be-great Don Siegal, working from Nunnally Johnson's script of a Clair Huffaker novel. Elvis Presley, playing a role planned for Marlon Brando, is the half-breed son of white John McIntire and Kiowa Dolores Del Rio, forced to take sides in a local war between white and Indian. Surprisingly good, you realize how good an actor Elvis could have been if Col. Parker hadn't steered him into mostly inane crap. With Steve Forrest and Barbara Eden.

Tuesday 3/17

FOX 7:00 a.m. THE MARK OF ZORRO (1940) A delight! Rouben Mamoulian directs John Taintor Foote's adaptation of the Johnston McCulley story. Ty Power, Basil Rathbone, Linda Darnell et al have great fun, and the audience has even more.


Wednesday 3/17

EXT 6:30 a.m. SHADOWHEART (2009) A bounty hunter is out revenge in 1865 New Mexico. Directed by Dean Alioto from his and Peter Vanderwall's script. Starring Justin Ament, Angus Macfayden, Daniel Baldwin, William Sadler, and two great pros, Rance Howard and Charles Napier.

EXT. 4:35 p.m. SHADOWHEART See above.

Thursday 3/18

FOX 3:00 a.m. SHERIFF OF FRACTURED JAW (1959) Comedy western, D:Raoul Walsh, W:Howard Dimsdale, starring Jayne Mansfield, Kenneth More, Henry Hull, Bruce Cabot.

EXT 3:05 a.m. SHADOWHEART (2009) A bounty hunter is out revenge in 1865 New Mexico. Directed by Dean Alioto from his and Peter Vanderwall's script. Starring Justin Ament, Angus Macfayden, Daniel Baldwin, William Sadler, and two great pros, Rance Howard and Charles Napier.


TCM 3:15 a.m. THE TENDERFOOT (1932) An innocent cowboy decides to back a Broadway play. Directed by Ray Enright, from a story by Richard Carle and Broadway comedy master George S. Kaufman, adapted by Earl Baldwin, Arthur Caesar and silent comic-turned comedy writer/director Monty Banks. It stars Joe E. Brown and Ginger Rogers.

FOX 5:00 a.m. O. HENRY'S FULL HOUSE (1952) A collection of five O. Henry short stories directed by five directors: Henry Hathaway, Henry King, Henry Koster, Jean Negulesco, and doing the western segment, The Ransom of Red Chief, Howard Hawks. Writing this one segement, uncredited, were Ben Hecht, Nunnally Johnson and Charles Lederer! Starring Fed Allen and Oscar Levant as the kidnappers, and Rin Tin Tin star Lee Aaker as the 'victim', narrated by John Steinbeck!

EXT 9:00 a.m. THE CLAIM (2000) Michael Winterbottom directs from Frank Cottrell Boyce's screenplay, based on Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge, moved to the American west. Stars Peter Mullan, Wes Bentley, Nastassja Kinsky, Sarah Polley and Milla Jovovich.

EXT 12:35 p.m. GANG OF ROSES(2003) Female rappers Lil' Kim, Macy Gray, Monica Calhoun, LisaRaye play gunslingers in a search for revenge and gold, not necessarily in that order. The locations and production are good, and there's a curious enjoyment to seeing James Coburn's introduction from MAGNIFICENT SEVEN, and Eli Wallach's near hanging from THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY ripped off by women. But the plotting is often moronic, and an awful lot of it is needlessly vulgar -- a woman on the gallows loudly discussing her vagina with the man who's about to throw the switch is a bit much, even by DEADWOOD standards. Written and directed by Jean-Claude LaMarre.

EXT 4:25 p.m. THE CLAIM (2000) Michael Winterbottom directs from Frank Cottrell Boyce's screenplay, based on Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge, moved to the American west. Stars Peter Mullan, Wes Bentley, Nastassja Kinsky, Sarah Polley and Milla Jovovich.

EXT 10:00 P.M. GANG OF ROSES(2003) Female rappers Lil' Kim, Macy Gray, Monica Calhoun, LisaRaye play gunslingers in a search for revenge and gold, not necessarily in that order. The locations and production are good, and there's a curious enjoyment to seeing James Coburn's introduction from MAGNIFICENT SEVEN, and Eli Wallach's near hanging from THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY ripped off by women. But the plotting is often moronic, and an awful lot of it is needlessly vulgar -- a woman on the gallows loudly discussing her vagina with the man who's about to throw the switch is a bit much, even by DEADWOOD standards. Written and directed by Jean-Claude LaMarre.


Friday 3/19

FOX 5:00 a.m. NORTH TO ALASKA (1960) A comic western featuring the romatic triangle of gold-mining partners John Wayne, Stewart Granger and lovely Capucine, with Ernie Kovacs and Fabian. Directed by Henry Hathaway, written by half of the WGA -- screenplay by John Lee Mahin, Martin Rackin and Claude Binyon, from a play by Lazlo Fodor, and an idea by John Kafka, with uncredited work by Ben Hecht and Wendell Mayes.

FOX 9:00 a.m. BANDOLERO! (1968)Great fun with Stewart and Martin as feuding brother outlaws. Featuring Raquel Welch, Harry Carey Jr., Jock Mahoney, Don 'Red' Barry, Roy Barcroft, D:Andrew McLaglen, W:James Lee Barrett (If you want to see an incredible list on stuntmen, check out the listing on IMDB)

FOX 11 a.m. BROKEN ARROW (1950) James Stewart is an ex-soldier, and Jeff Chandler is Apache Chief Cochise, trying together for peace. D:Delmer Daves, W:Albert Maltz(another writer's name may be one the credits -- Maltz was blacklisted and had someone 'front' for him).

TCM 12:30 a.m. DODGE CITY (1939) Errol Flynn decides to clean up the town! Delightful, exuberant fun, written by Robert Buckner and directed by the terriffic Michael Curtiz. It features all of the Warner Brothers stallwarts: Olivia de Havilland, Ann Sheridan, Bruce Cabot, Frank McHugh, Alan Hale, Victory Jory and Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams. (SPOILER ALERT) 8 year old Bobs Watson, the kid who gets dragged to death, told me they tricked the school-teacher off of the set of the picture, so Bobs could do the dragging stunt himself!

EXT 4:45 a.m. THE CLAIM (2000) Michael Winterbottom directs from Frank Cottrell Boyce's screenplay, based on Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge, moved to the American west. Stars Peter Mullan, Wes Bentley, Nastassja Kinsky, Sarah Polley and Milla Jovovich.

TCM 2:45 p.m. BIG HAND FOR THE LITTLE LADY (1966) Joanne Woodward has to step into a high-stakes poker game when her husband is too ill to continue. With Henry Fonda and Jason Robards Jr. Directed by Fielder Cook, written by Sidney Carroll, originally as an episode of the tv series PLAYHOUSE 90. If you'd like to see that version, click here.

Saturday 3/20

AMC 6:00 a.m. BLAZING SADDLES (1974)Mel Brooks directed and co-wrote, with Norman Steinberg, this delightfully broad western comedy about a town getting it's first black sheriff, Cleavon Little, helped only by Gene Wilder as the Waco Kid. With Slim Pickens and Madeline Kahn, and featuring a rousing theme sung by Frankie Laine.

TCM 9:00 a.m. THE OUTLAW (1943) Jack Beutel plays the title character, Billy the Kid, but Jane Russell is the titular head of the cast, which also features Thomas Mitchell and Walter Huston as Pat Garrett and Doc Holliday, respectively. Howard Hawks started directing it, but quit, and Howard Hughes took over, with a script by Jules Furthman. Not brilliant, but worth seeing, especially screen-filling Jane Russell in her first starring role.

EXT 2:35 p.m. SHADOWHEART (2009) A bounty hunter is out revenge in 1865 New Mexico. Directed by Dean Alioto from his and Peter Vanderwall's script. Starring Justin Ament, Angus Macfayden, Daniel Baldwin, William Sadler, and two great pros, Rance Howard and Charles Napier.


Sunday 3/21

TCM 3:00 a.m. GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST (1938) Theatre impressario David Belasco's play about a frontierwoman sheltering an outlaw becomes a vehicle for the voices of Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. With Buddy Ebsen. Directed by Robert Z. Leonard, script by Isabel Dawn.

AMC 3:00 a.m. BLAZING SADDLES (1974)Mel Brooks directed and co-wrote, with Norman Steinberg, this delightfully broad western comedy about a town getting it's first black sheriff, Cleavon Little, helped only by Gene Wilder as the Waco Kid. With Slim Pickens and Madeline Kahn, and featuring a rousing theme sung by Frankie Laine.

EXT 5:00 a.m. SHADOWHEART (2009) A bounty hunter is out revenge in 1865 New Mexico. Directed by Dean Alioto from his and Peter Vanderwall's script. Starring Justin Ament, Angus Macfayden, Daniel Baldwin, William Sadler, and two great pros, Rance Howard and Charles Napier.

That's it for this week! In the coming weeks I'll have a review of Courtney Joyner's book, THE WESTERNERS, info about the upcoming Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival, westerns on the radio and the internet, so don't touch that dial!

Adios,

Henry