Tuesday, November 11, 2014

‘HOMESMAN’ REVIEWED, ‘COMPANEROS’ BLU-RAY WINNERS, PLUS TARANTINO’S TV INSPIRATIONS!


THE HOMESMAN – a Film Review



Tommy Lee Jones’ film of Glendon Swarthout’s novel THE HOMESMAN is a revelation.  The novel itself is a remarkable and beautiful telling of a heroic and tragic tale, and one that had never been told before; in a Western, that’s remarkable in and of itself.  The trials, tragedies and disappointments of frontier life have driven some women mad.   A successful yet lonely spinster, Mary Bee Cuddy (Hilary Swank), a victim of her too-charitable view of human nature and her strong sense of honor, finds herself -- rather than any of the husbands -- responsible for transporting three madwomen across the endless Nebraska Territory to Iowa, where a generous minister and his wife (Meryl Streep) are waiting to get them help, whether it be to take them in, or reunite them with their families back east. 

Though competent as a man with gun or horse – perhaps too competent and bossy for a woman hoping to attract a man – Mary Cuddy quickly realizes she is not physically capable of single-handedly driving the wagon and caring for three volatile women, when providence provides her hope, in the form of low-life claim jumper George Briggs (Tommy Lee Jones).  She saves him from a noose only after securing his promise to help her with a difficult undertaking: she wisely doesn’t tell him what it is ahead of time.  Having cheated death by inches, he is overwhelming grateful, but dubious about the journey, and resentful of her attitude towards him.  He agrees to go, but neither of them thinks he’ll follow through to the end.  As an inducement, she arranges a reward to be waiting for him, should they reach their Iowa destination. 

The two travel to the three homesteads, gathering their charges, and observing a bit of what made the women what they have become.  Mary and George’s adventures begin as they cross the seemingly infinite prairie, dueling over whose view of humanity should guide their journey.  They travel, surrounded by dangers, facing their own remarkable hardships, and under each other’s influence, they both grow and change as individuals.  Jones and Swank are by turns endearing, infuriating, and ultimately heartbreaking.  Playing people who always keep a tight rein on their emotions, their performances are wonderfully restrained, yet you always know what they are thinking and feeling.  George and Mary Bee are both strongly opinionated people.  Jones’ George knows in a practical sense what must be done to survive in this savage world, moral or not, and tries hard to hide any misgivings.  He is a man of surprising dignity and pride, and when insulted is a force of the devil.  Swank’s Mary Bee aches for a kinder world, like the one she was raised in.  She so longs for culture that when she sings, she plays her accompaniment on a keyboard of needle-point; she confides that she’ll soon die without real music.  Additional Oscars may be in both of their futures.

Author Glendon Swarthout holds a hallowed place among novelists, Western and otherwise, having had previous successes, both book and film adaptations, as diverse as WHERE THE BOYS ARE, THEY CAME TO CORDURA, BLESS THE BEASTS AND CHILDREN, and the unforgettable THE SHOOTIST, which was John Wayne’s last film, and one of his finest performances.  One senses that Tommy Lee Jones sees THE HOMESMAN as his SHOOTIST, certainly not as a final film, but as the crowning achievement of a career in Westerns that has included triumphs like LONESOME DOVE and THE MISSING.  HOMESMAN is his third western as a star-writer-director, his two previous being the exceptional THE GOOD OLD BOYS and THE THREE BURIALS OF MELQUIADES ESTRADA.

The script adaptation by Jones, Kieran Fitzgerald and Wesley A. Oliver is an excellent paring down of a story that fortunately was just about the right size to begin with.  There must always be cuts – the novel has four madwomen rather than three – but all that is crucial is retained, as is much of the novel’s dialogue, and the visuals match the novel’s descriptions impeccably.  There is an effort to cut to the heart of scenes which, in the book, had extensive build-up.  There are effective additions as well.  An early scene with Mary Bee serving dinner clarifies elements of her personality.  The three women, played by Grace Gummer, Miranda Otto, and Sonja Richter, are more fleshed out than in the book, and the structure of their flashbacks is more effective than in the book.  But ironically, the women’s specific issues are often not as clear on the screen as on the page.   Most remarkable is a story-turn in the novel which is as justified as it is unexpected and daring.  I was sure it would never reach the screen, and happily, I was absolutely wrong. 

Among the effective though brief supporting performances are Barry Corbin as an honorable townsman, John Lithgow as troubled minister, James Spader as a man who will regret his unaccommodating decisions, and in one of the several very effective action scenes, Tim Blake Nelson as a freighter who tries to spirit away one of the women. 

The cinematography and shot compositions by Rodrigo Prieto are unselfconsciously beautiful, too efficient to show beauty for its own sake, instead being breathtaking while in the service of the action.   Editor Roberto Silvi brings the skills for cutting to the chase that he demonstrated collaborating with Jones in THREE BURIALS, and in TOMBSTONE.  Also from THREE BURIALS, production designer Merideth Boswell and her crew have a wonderful eye for period detail.  Early on in their journey, the audience gasps as George, who has been complaining of being cold at night, steals a buffalo skin off a corpse on an Indian burial platform.  Just for a moment we glimpse that the blanket beneath the pelt bears the design of The Hudson Bay Company.  These filmmakers know their stuff.

WE HAVE ‘COMPANEROS’ BLU-RAY WINNERS!



Tonight my wife and my niece each reached into my up-turned Stetson and pulled out a slip of paper bearing the name of someone who had correctly matched Franco Nero’s co-stars to the correct movies.  The winners, Thomas Betts of Anaheim, California, and Shawn Gordon of Bonney Lake, Washington, will soon be the lucky recipients of beautiful Blue Underground Blu-Ray editions of COMPANEROS, starring Franco Nero and Tomas Milian, and directed by the legendary Sergio Corbucci. 

Here are the correct match-ups:
1. DJANGO STRIKES AGAIN b. Donald Pleasance
2. THE MERCENARY e. Jack Palance
3. KEOMA f. Woody Strode
4. CIPOLLA COLT c. Martin Balsam
5. DON’T TURN THE OTHER CHEEK a. Lynn Redgrave
6. DEAF SMITH AND JOHNNY EARS d. Anthony Quinn

Fellow Western writer C. Courtney Joyner and I had a great time doing the audio commentary on this stunning film, and I’m grateful to the good folks at Blue Underground for providing the Blu-Rays for this giveaway.  They have a wonderful catalog of Westerns, thrillers, Gialli, zombie films, Christopher Lee - Fu Manchu movies, documentaries and more.  Check out their website HERE.  


‘LITTLE BIG MAN’ SATURDAY AT THE AUTRY



I must admit that I did not like this movie when I originally saw it – I found the humor too broad and too unfunny.  But over the last several years, so many Indian friends have told me it is their favorite, or one of their favorite films, that I’m looking forward to giving it another chance.  Directed in 1970 by Arthur Penn, LITTLE BIG MAN stars Dustin Hoffman as a 121-year-old man reliving his adventures during an interview with a journalist – adventures that include being the only survivor of The Little Big Horn!  His co-stars include Faye Dunaway, Richard Mulligan as a demented Gen. Custer, and Chief Dan George in the role for which he was Oscar-nominated.  Scripted by the great Calder Willingham, from a novel by Thomas Berger.  Dick Smith’s aging make-up on Hoffman is fabulous. 

LITTLE BIG MAN is presented at 1:30 pm, free with museum admission, as part of the continuing monthly ‘What Is A Western?’ film series, with an introduction by Jeffrey Richardson, Gamble Curator of Western History, Popular Culture, and Firearms.  Following the movie, you can visit the Journeys Gallery and see artifacts related to The Little Big Horn. 


RITA COOLIDGE HEADLINES ‘NATIVE HARMONIES’ IN LONG BEACH SAT. NOV 15



In celebration of Native American Heritage Month, Raindance and Whirlwind Studios are presenting a concert at the Ernest Borgnine Theater in Long Beach, featuring two-time Grammy winner Rita Coolidge, Shelley Morningsong and Fabian Fontenelle, blues artist Tracy Lee Nelson – I loved his work at the Santa Clarita Cowboy Fest, World Champion hoop dancer Lowery Begay, and traditional Native American dancers from all over the country.  The program begins at 6pm, ends at 10pm, and will include a red carpet with famous Native American actors, including many from the cast of YELLOW ROCK, and Saginaw Grant from THE LONE RANGER.  Visit these sites for more information, and to buy tickets: https://Facebook.com/nativeharmonies


TARANTINO’S ‘HATEFUL 8’ INSPIRATION?  ‘HIGH CHAPARRAL’, ‘BONANZA’, ‘THE VIRGINIAN’!



I’ve got the feeling Quentin Tarantino watches INSP.  In Mike Fleming’s story in DEADLINE: HOLLYWOOD, Tarantino spoke at the American Film Market about HATEFUL 8 at a panel, surrounded by producer Harvey Weinstein, flanked by cast members Walton Goggins, Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, and Jennifer Jason Leigh, and in addition to announcing new cast members Channing Tatum and Oscar-nominated Demian Birchir, revealed his inspiration for the Western’s plot.




“It’s less inspired by one Western movie than by BONANZA, THE VIRGINIAN, HIGH CHAPARRAL.  Twice per season, those shows would have an episode where a bunch of outlaws would take the lead characters hostage. They would come to the Ponderosa and hold everybody hostage, or go to Judge Garth’s place–Lee J. Cobb played him in THE VIRGINIAN, and take hostages. There would be a guest star like David Carradine, Darren McGavin, Claude Akins, Robert Culp, Charles Bronson or James Coburn. I don’t like that storyline in a modern context, but I love it in a Western where you would pass halfway through the show to find out if they were good or bad guys, and they all had a past that was revealed. I thought, what if I did a movie starring nothing but those characters? No heroes, no Michael Landons. Just a bunch of nefarious guys in a room, all telling back stories that may or may not be true. Trap those guys together in a room with a blizzard outside, give them guns, and see what happens.”  Sounds like Quentin’s been watching SADDLE-UP SATURDAY on INSP with the rest of us.  And how about Barbara Stanwyck on THE BIG VALLEY?  Didn’t Victoria Barclay get kidnapped every third episode, usually by L.Q. Jones?


THAT'S A WRAP!  

I'm just back from THE HOMESMAN Press Conference, where Tommy Lee Jones and Hilary Swank had plenty to say about the making of this outstanding Western movie.  I’ll have details in next week's Round-up.  

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright November 2014 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved





Sunday, November 2, 2014

WIN A BLU-RAY OF ‘COMPANEROS’! PLUS CROATIAN COMEDY-WESTERN ‘KAUBOJI’ REVIEWED, INDIAN MARKETPLACE AT THE AUTRY, RAMONA DAYS!


Updated 11-6-2014 - see HELL ON WHEELS Returns! 

WIN A BLU-RAY OF ‘COMPANEROS’!



As regular Round-up readers know (they may not care, but they know), I’ve had the pleasure of doing commentary tracks, along with director, screenwriter and Western novelist C. Courtney Joyner (SHOTGUN is his latest), on a number of Western movies, the most recent being the beautiful Blue Underground Blu-Ray edition of COMPANEROS, starring the wonderful Franco Nero and Tomas Milian, and directed by the legendary Sergio Corbucci.  You can read more about it HERE.  



Those kind-hearted  Blue Underground folks have offered me two of the COMPANEROS Blu-Rays to share with Round-up readers who truly deserve them, and I figure the most deserving among you are the ones who know the most about Franco Nero and his Westerns.  So, here’s what you need to do to win:  match the Franco Nero co-stars to the correct movies.  I’m giving the movies numbers, and the actors letters, so put your answers in a “1a, 2b” type format, and send it to swansongmail@sbcglobal.net , and put COMPANEROS in the subject line.  And make sure to include your name, phone number, and snail-mail address. On Sunday, November 9th, I’ll randomly select two winners from among all correct entries. 

1. DJANGO STRIKES AGAIN
2. THE MERCENARY
3. KEOMA
4. CIPOLLA COLT
5. DON’T TURN THE OTHER CHEEK
6. DEAF SMITH AND JOHNNY EARS

a. Lynn Redgrave
b. Donald Pleasance
c. Martin Balsam
d. Anthony Quinn
e. Jack Palance
f. Woody Strode



Granted, some of these movies are known under several different titles, but who told you life was fair?  Incidentally, Blue Underground offers several Franco Nero westerns, including DJANGO; TEXAS, ADIOS; KEOMA, and Franco Nero crime thrillers including HOW TO KILL A JUDGE, STREET LAW, THE FIFTH CORD, and HITCH-HIKE.  Check out their website HERE.  


KAUBOJI – ‘THE COWBOYS’ – A Film Review



On Thursday night, October 23rd, KAUBOJI, or COWBOYS, had its second United States screening at Santa Monica’s AERO THEATRE.  KAUBOJI is based on a popular comedy stage play written by Sasa Anocic, who stars in the film.  The direction, as well as script adaptation, is by Tomislav Mrsic.
Croatia’s official submission to The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the Best Foreign Language Oscar, KAUBOJI is a clever and touching comedy that might just reach that Oscar goal. 

Set in an ugly and unwelcoming industrial town, it’s the story of Sasa Anlokovic (Sasa Anocic), a frail and defeated-looking theatre director who returns to his hometown at the invitation of his old friend, the Mayor (Niksa Butijer), to produce a play, in hopes of brightening the existences of a people who haven’t seen a stage production of any kind in decades.  Sasa is dubious, but has no better offers and one senses that, like Julian Marsh (Warner Baxter) of 42ND STREET, he needs a success, and badly.  He holds an open-call for actors, and in a delightful reversal of CHORUS LINE, where the auditioners reveal their entire lives, here, out of excessive caution, fear or stupidity, the director approaches emotional collapse trying to get them to reveal anything about themselves.  What quickly becomes clear is that there is not a soul in town who is an actor, and there are only a handful of people willing to learn.  Therefore, every auditioner, no matter how clueless, is awarded a role in the show – even the girl who no one can understand, and her brother who cannot or will not speak, and whose fascination with anything electrical is a source of constant danger. 


The dubious director


A first-time meeting with the assembled cast reveals that almost none have ever seen a play.  Director Sasa quizzes them on what TV shows they like – they only watch news!  He hits pay dirt when one mentions he likes Western movies.  It turns out they all do – from STAGECOACH to RIO BRAVO, from Spaghetti Westerns to Winnetou, it’s their only common ground, and the director quickly begins fashioning a Western story for them, using every stock character and plot cliché known to the genre.
 

"You've got the part!"


Reminiscent in tone and humor and subject-matter to films like BILLY ELLIOT and THE FULL MONTY, where desperate people find hope in the theatre, KAUBOJI takes it one step farther, because the Western genre that unites all of these odd strangers is based on the struggles of right vs. wrong, good vs. evil, and the triumph of the individual.  These poor shlubs seem never to have had a triumph in their lives.  But all of them, from the pathetic Momma’s boy, to the hypochondriac, to the cowardly lackey of the mobster-deodorant king, grow themselves a pair, looking out for themselves and for each other.  Their bonding comes not over whiskey and poker and campfires, as in their play, but over bowling and weed – but it gets them there, and they manage to create something that gives them great pride, and makes them better people, better men -- and one better woman -- for the experience.   


The Mysterious Stranger


While some of the comedy is broad, and a little coarse, it is based in reality, and there is also a fair amount of wistfulness and sadness, and plenty of heart.  It ends leaving you as much touched as amused.  I strongly recommend it.


The saloon


KAUBOJI is part of the 14th year of the Kino Croatia: New Film series of the American Cinematheque, a program run by filmmaker Matko Malinger.  The movie was followed by a musical performance, on a saloon set, by Croatian and Czech singers and musicians who did a dynamite version of the Bon Jovi classic DEAD OR ALIVE, and a spirited pseudo-western song called WHISKEY, which I’m guessing was in Croatian or Russian. 


The funeral


This led to a reception in the lobby which featured a tasty selection Croatian pastry, Croatian beer, Croatian wine, and even Croatian bottled water for those with a long drive ahead of them.  I found myself chatting with the talented guitarist from the musical performance, Milan Skorjanec, who surprised me by telling me he’d only had a couple of days to learn the songs.  An immigrant from Croatia, he’s an electrical engineer by trade, but still a musician by compulsion, and he grew up with many of the same Westerns as we in the States did.  And as he reminded me, Croatia has its own history and heritage with the Western movie.  Fans of the Winnetou films of the 1960s, starring Pierre Brice as the Apache chief, Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand, and Stewart Granger as Old Surehand, know they were based on German author Karl May’s stories, and made by German companies.  They may assume that the films were shot in Germany, but they were in fact lensed in Yugoslavia, is what once was, and is once again, Croatia.  Milan tells me they’re now shooting much of GAME OF THRONES in the same locations. 



Guitarist Milan Skorjanec



INDIAN MARKETPLACE AT THE AUTRY NOV. 8 &9



The 24th Annual American Indian Marketplace will be held at the Autry next Saturday and Sunday, showcasing more than two hundred artists representing more than forty tribes.  I attend this event every year, and am always astounded by the range of art on display.  Whether your interests run to silver, beadwork, leather, painting, pottery, drums, jewelry – you’ll find it here, in a 25,000-square foot tent.  Best of all, you’ll find the artists, who are happy to talk about their work.  It’s free to members, $12 for non-members, and less for students and children.  There are a number of other events involved, beginning on Friday night.  For more information, go HERE.


‘RAMONA’ LIVING HISTORY DAY SAT. NOV. 8 AT RANCHO CAMULOS!



From noon ‘til 4 you can time-travel to the days of the great Spanish ranchos as you stroll the grounds of Rancho Camulos, the very location that inspired Helen Hunt Jackson to write RAMONA, one of the most beloved romances in the history of California, and the subject of the annual Ramona Pageant (more about the pageant from an earlier Round-up HERE).



There will be costumed re-enactors, children’s activities, a book store, gift shop, food trucks, and best of all, a wonderful historical atmosphere in which to lose yourself!  I’ve attended this event several times and loved it.  HERE is a link to a write-up from one of my previous visits.    


‘LOST’ 1928 ‘RAMONA’ SCREENS SAT. NIGHT NOV. 7 AT ‘HOME OF RAMONA’!



Considered ‘lost’ for decades, the silent 1928 version of Helen Hunt Jackson’s RAMONA, starring the luminously beautiful Dolores del Rio, was recently discovered in the film archives of the Czech Republic!  I can imagine no more perfect place to see it – Helen Hunt Jackson’s brief visit to Rancho Camulos, in Piru, California, inspired the story, and provided its setting – and D. W. Griffith even shot the first film version at the Rancho, starring Mary Pickford.  Following tapas and wine, the film will screen in the Rancho’s 1930 schoolhouse, to a live musical accompaniment, and will be followed by a panel discussion of RAMONA experts, led by film historian Hugh Munro Neely.  The price is $50 per person, and you may learn more, and purchase tickets, by going HERE.

BRACE YOURSELF – ‘HELL ON WHEELS’ RETURNS SAT. WITH ‘BLEEDING KANSAS’!



Following a maddening one-month hiatus, HELL ON WHEELS returns to AMC Saturday night, November 8th with BLEEDING KANSAS.  I just saw it last night, and it is very good – but in what is often a very tough show, it is the most sanguineous episode I can recall.  You’ll learn what happened after Church-lady Ruth fired on Sid.  You’ll find out why Thomas Durant is nicknamed ‘Doc’.  You’ll see what happens when Mickey McGinnes’ friends from the New York’s Dead Rabbits gang come to Cheyenne.   Like I said, it’s a tough one, so you might want to have a stiff drink first.  Or bite a bullet.  After this one, just two more episodes left for season four!

If you need to a catch up, HERE is a link that’ll show you several ways to do so. 

THAT’S A WRAP!


Tommy Lee Jones and Hillary Swank in THE HOMESMAN


Hope you had a great Halloween, and enjoy the week ahead.  I saw THE HOMESMAN this week and loved it, and I’ll be reviewing it next week!  THE HOMESMAN was first a wonderful novel by Glendon Swarthout, and I hope to have with my review, my interview with Glendon’s son, novelist Miles Swarthout, who adapted to the screen Glendon’s previous novel, THE SHOOTIST, and who has just published a SHOOTIST sequel novel, THE LAST SHOOTIST.

Happy Trails,

Henry

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


Sunday, October 26, 2014

‘BUFFALO SOLDIER’ REVIEW, PLUS FT. TICONDEROGA TREASURES FOR SALE, AND MORE!



BUFFALO SOLDIER – A Theatre Review


Clockwise from top left, Tony Williams,Wasim No'Mani.
Kendall Johnson and Daniel Billet


Playing through November 30th, at the Monroe Forum Theatre at the El Portal in North Hollywood, Mitch Hale’s BUFFALO SOLDIER is a taught eighty minutes of suspense, as growing menace strips the brave, sometimes haughty false-faces of a group of soldiers over one long night.  Set in the summer of 1874, four cavalry soldiers are doing reconnaissance in Comanche territory.  Three of them are black former slaves.  Corporal Jofum Wymo (Tony Williams) is a scout who wears a mix of soldier blue and Indian leather.  He’s the most experienced soldier; but he’s haunted by dreams.  Private Benjamin Kewconda (Kendall Johnson) has the least experience, and the least commitment to the job.  He’s got a likeable irreverence, but you worry how he’ll handle himself when the going gets tough.  Sergeant Isaac Williams (Will Catlett) takes immense pride in his position; he respects the Corporal’s experience, and has contempt for the Private’s insubordination.  In charge is Captain Caleb Cooney, the only white man in the group, and he’s not a man to inspire overwhelming confidence.   


l to r, Kendall Johnson, Tony Williams, Will Catlett


The Corporal stumbles upon a lone brave (Wasim No’Mani), and takes him into custody.  How to deal with the prisoner – and possibly many braves just outside the light of their campfire – becomes a crucial question when the soldiers learn that he is not just a brave: he’s Chief Quanah Parker, and the Comanche will not give him up without a fight.

To say that playwright Mitch Hale is committed to this story is putting it mildly.  He spent six years researching the history before he wrote his first draft.  First produced in Seattle in 1994, he’s continued to rewrite it ever since.  His inspiration was acting in the Vietnam-themed play TRACERS in 1987, and being struck by the outsized role blacks, other minorities, and poor whites took in the actual fighting.  He wondered how far back this pattern went, and learned about the heroic and largely unsung heroism of the black Cavalry soldiers, dubbed Buffalo Soldiers by the Indians because of the texture of their hair. 


Wasim No'Mani


While the story’s core can be seen as informed with an awareness of parallels to the Vietnam War, BUFFALO SOLDIER is not a Vietnam story in the guise of a Western.  It stands firmly and confidently in its own boots.  As a matter of fact, the closest dramatic comparison is to Alfred Hitchcock’s LIFEBOAT, screenplay by John Steinbeck and Jo Swerling, with its boatload of passengers coping with captured Nazi sailor Walter Slezack.

It’s a gripping, suspenseful and emotionally involving story, and at the risk of sounding racist, it is all the more remarkable as the product of a self described “short skinny white guy from Denver,” who describes in his introductory Playbill notes having his name called for Best Play at the 1995 NAACP Theater Awards.  “Applause, applause, applause, I dash up the aisle, and as soon as I hit the stage – thundering silence.” 

Sara Wagner skillfully directs the excellent ensemble cast in the 99-seat theatre, the audience nearly surrounding the stage, bringing an intimacy with the performances that is at times startling.  Evening performances are Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m.  Matinees are Saturdays and Sundays at 3 p.m.  Tickets are $35, and the show runs through November 30th
To learn more, or to purchase tickets, call 818-508-4200, or go HERE 


FT. TICONDEROGA TREASURES UP FOR BID!


Midshipman's dirk

On Saturday, November 1st, at 10 a.m., you’ll have the chance to bid on some unique artifacts of American History.  Skinner, Inc., auctioneers, will be offering up items from the Fort Ticonderoga Museum, the New York State outpost that was a crucial site to Robert Rogers in the French & Indian War, and to General George Washington during the American Revolution.  More than 350 lots will be offered, all available both in person and online. 


Rising breech Carbine


If you are like me, your immediate reaction is concern – is the Museum in trouble?  I am assured that it is not, and these items are being sold to expand the acquisition fund of the Museum, whose collection was begun in 1931, making it one of our earliest historic preservation and reconstruction projects.


Reverend Hezekiah Smith documents


In addition to items directly related to the Fort’s history, the auction also features artifacts from the Civil War right up through World War II including pistols and muskets, rare Confederate carbines, and historic documents.  Among the fascinating documents are those of Reverend Hezekiah Smith, who later helped found Brown University.  His papers include a commission signed by John Hancock, and an invitation to dine with General George Washington. 


Powder horn described below


There are a lot of beautiful guns and eagle-pommel swords, but my favorite item is the French & Indian War powder horn, on which is etched, ‘By Powder & Ball / The French Shall Fall / Rufus Hill’. Go HERE to see the entire catalog, and to register to bid.  The auction will take place at 10 a.m. at 274 Cedar Hill Street, Marlborough, MA 01752.  All photos are courtesy of Skinner, Inc.



‘WEST TO BRAVO’ ARTIST & AUTHOR SIGNING SUN. NOV. 2 AT OUTWEST!



Artist Al P. Bringas, whose western art is on display at OutWest from October 25th through January 4th, and author Eric H. Heisner, will be shaking hands and signing Heisner’s new novel, WEST TO BRAVO, illustrated by Bringas, from 2 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, November 2nd.  BRAVO is a post-Civil War Cavalry tale plotted in the tradition of the great John Ford Cavalry Trilogy.  If you attend, dress like your favorite character from a John Ford western, or John Wayne western – or both – and have a chance to win a signed copy of the book!    The OutWest Western boutique and cultural center is at 22508 6th Street, Newhall, CA 91321.  Click HERE to learn more about the event!  




DEATH VALLEY ‘49ERS ENCAMPMENT NOV. 5TH -9TH



Head to Furnace Creek Ranch – and bring water and sunscreen – for a five-day celebration that will include a Western art show, wagon train, pioneer costume contest, Western music, woodcarving and needlework displays, horseshoe and gold-panning contests, trips to historic desert sites, and community breakfasts, and an 1849 poker tournament!  It’s at the Ranch in Death Valley National Park, and you can learn more by calling 831-818-4384, or visiting HERE



THAT’S A WRAP!

For a while I didn’t think I’d get this posted at all – the lights kept going out!  Then again, working by candlelight makes for a nice frontier atmosphere.  Have a great week, and next Sunday I’ll tell you about the Croatian Western I saw on Thursday, among other things!



By the way, as it’s almost Halloween, what’s your favorite scary Western?  JONAH HEX?  COWBOYS & ALIENS?  ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER?  It’s a thriller than a horror movie, but how about THE FIEND WHO WALKED THE WEST, with Hugh O’Brian, and soon-to-be master producer Robert Evans as the psycho?  My favorite is CURSE OF THE UNDEAD, with RAWHIDE’S Eric Fleming, and the great Aussie character actor Michael Pate as the vampire.  But I’ll bet you know of other good ones that I’ve missed.

Happy Trails,

Henry

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


Tuesday, October 21, 2014

WESTERN TV ORAL HIST. PROJECT, PLUS ‘BUFFALO SOLDIERS’ REVIVAL, CROATIAN COMEDY ‘COWBOYS’!



THE WESTERN TV ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM



Maxine Hansen at the Gene Autry
Entertainment offices


Gene Autry’s legacy extends into many fields.  His hundreds of radio shows, hundreds of popular music recordings, ninety-one starring movies and nearly 100 TV episodes have few parallels in the entertainment industry.  And that’s not even counting the movies and TV series he produced, the radio stations, television stations, and the Angels baseball team he owned.  And then there is the flagship of the Autry empire, The Autry Center for Western Studies, one of the world’s finest collections of the American West. 

But now, as the man has been gone sixteen years this past week, one wonders if there is a mission for Gene Autry Entertainment beyond burnishing his legend.  Maxine Hansen, executive assistant to Mrs. Autry, and a long-time employee of the man, has created one which Gene, a ground-breaking TV producer and star, would surely have embraced.  With the cooperation and collaboration of both Gene Autry Entertainment and The Autry Center, Maxine has created the 20th Century Television Western Oral History Program.  She has been interviewing both acting and behind-the-scenes talent from Western television’s golden age, and creating an archive that will serve researchers, and through them will benefit readers and audiences, for generations to come. This summer I had the opportunity to speak with Maxine about Gene, and her oral history program.

Her real enthusiasm for Westerns began when she was eight.  She’d panicked when she thought her parents had abandoned her – in fact her dad was just driving her mom to bingo – and when he came back, he calmed her down by putting her in his lap and watching the first episode of BONANZA together.

MAXINE: And when Michael Landon comes on, no more tears; I’m in love.  In my life, we had a lot of change; I lost my parents quite early.  We moved a lot.  And the constant was that you could always know that BONANZA would come on.  It was the knowledge that some things in life were okay.  

HENRY:  Like comfort food for the mind.

MAXINE:  Yeah!  The Ponderosa’s there; the four of them are strong.  It was good for me.

HENRY:  When was the first time you saw Gene Autry onscreen?

MAXINE:  Not until I started working for him.  Gene’s longtime friend, Johnny Grant, the Honorary Mayor of Hollywood, also worked at KTLA, and his secretary was a friend of mine.  She said, why you don’t come out and try for a job at KTLA. They interviewed me, and I got the job.  And it was basically as a receptionist, and also working for Gene’s longtime assistant Patricia Wakoski. So I came on September 1981, Jackie Autry had married Gene on July 19th, and that is really the first time, and then I was really getting into the movies, the baseball; everything.

HENRY:  So you worked for Gene since 1981.  You must have known him very well.

MAXINE:  I did.  When I came on, I was very shy; I was thirty going on seventeen.    And Gene was very funny, trying to make me laugh; very kind, very sweet man.  His secretary unfortunately passed away in 1985.   He was looking for a new assistant.  And Mrs. Autry, Jackie, took me in the back office to talk to me, and I thought she was going fire me. (laughs)  And she said, would you like to be Gene’s assistant?  And I took the job.  And from the beginning, it was an amazing relationship.  He’d mainly come in and work with Pat (Sidekick and best friend Pat Buttram), and then when I had to take over, he had to trust me, I had to trust him.  Sometimes he’d call me and say, “Honey, I’m going to replace you with a younger woman, like maybe Brooke Shields.”  And I’d say, “Oh Gene, you know older women, we’re much better.”  And he’d just cackle and laugh.  It became that kind of a really good relationship together; he was a very funny man, a very good sense of humor.

HENRY:  Speaking of his sense of humor, everyone I’ve known who knew Gene gave me the impression that he toned down his humor for the public, that he was a much funnier man in private then in public.  Is that right?

MAXINE:  I would say so.  At public events I would go to with him, it was very interesting what would happen.  He would look for someone who was uncomfortable or maybe in trouble physically, or a child, and he would make a bee-line for them, and make them comfortable.  One-for-one, every time I saw that.  One of the last times we were together was at a baseball game.  And he was already sick; he’s not feeling that well.  And he says, “You know, so-and-so just had dental surgery, and I’m concerned about him.  Let’s give him a call and see how he’s doing.”  He had a wicked sense of humor, and in public I don’t think he portrayed it that much.  I remember, I typed a letter once, and I left out a word that left it…flavorful.  And he cackled, he got a kick out of it. 

HENRY:  Now it’s been sixteen years since Gene passed away.  How have your duties for the company changed?

MAXINE:  They’ve actually expanded.  When I started I handled his correspondence, and Mrs. Autry’s correspondence, and the files, and the fan club.  I arranged their calendar, and there was always baseball – who was going to sit upstairs with him in the suite, who was going to sit in the field seats.  It’s broadened now into bookkeeping duties.  Because although he passed away, everything continued.  We have four music companies that license his songs, he has the copyright to his films, which are being restored and released, and his TV shows.  So there’s parts of that that I handle, there’s FLYING A PICTURES, there’s a trust, there’s the estate, and it’s broadened into handling his history, too.  After he passed away, and we knew that 2007 would be his 100th birthday, (Autry Entertainment President) Karla Buhlman brought up that we needed a definitive, no holds-barred (biography), and the name that came up was Holly George Warren, who gave Gene his last interview for The New York Times.  They got along famously, and she was the right person to do it.  She’d worked for THE ROLLING STONE, and had some books under her belt.  At that point, it became imperative to really document Gene’s history.  When I first came on, I was a receptionist.  I wasn’t thinking, preserve the history. A couple of times I sat down to ask, ‘Who is it in this picture?’  There are so many questions I didn’t ask him – I would have loved to interview him, and now I’d know what to ask.  Then, I didn’t.  So I’ve worked diligently since then to preserve their history.  And I’m talking about the hardcore history: on June 5th, whatever year, Gene was someplace.  He made so-and-so money in royalties.  As far as his feelings, that’s what I miss, and what I didn’t want to miss with the oral history program. 

HENRY:  And the fact that you didn’t get to sit down and do the interview with Gene that you would have liked to, brings us to your new project.  

MAXINE:  Well, from 1950 to 1975 – I’ll include LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE in there – that time frame, there were remarkable television Westerns.  And the shows resonated with people so much, that I started to think of something to do to preserve it.  In 2012 I held a VIRGINIAN event that brought together the remaining members of THE VIRGINIAN cast --

HENRY:  That was that wonderful event at The Autry Museum --

MAXINE:  Yes.  And it was tremendously successful.  And I saw again what I saw with Gene; the letters that Gene would get were so emotional and so touching.  And what I saw with THE VIRGINIAN cast, and what I experienced with BONANZA, I thought, you know, it’s late, it’s way late in the chain, but I’m going to start documenting these people.  Because I know, in the fifties and sixties, when they were doing interviews, it was a different game.  The writer would put in what he wanted to put in – maybe the story was already set, it was fluffy --

HENRY:  It wasn’t real journalism; it was press releases.

MAXINE: Exactly.  And I wasn’t interested in who they dated.  I wanted to know where they came from, how they got where they were, and technically, what happened on the set.  How did they learn their lines?  I wanted to find this whole thing out so that future researchers would be able to look at this body (of information) and say, ‘Oh; I get it.’  Because these were remarkable people.  If these actors, and these people behind the scenes, these writers, producers – if this didn’t resonate with people, it wouldn’t have lasted as long as it has; it wouldn’t have the emotional impact that it does with people still.  And I wanted to preserve that.

HENRY:  And a lot of the shows from that era are still running, between INSP, ME-TV, GET-TV, AMC, ENCORE WESTERN, you get a lot of the old black & whites like WAGON TRAIN, RAWHIDE, and later shows like HIGH CHAPARRAL; a lot of the shows that were important to people in the fifties and sixties still are.  Now, what exactly are you doing to preserve these?

MAXINE:  I have a certain target of people that I want to get, and it expands.  I bring a subject  here and we do a video interview.  If not, we do a phone interview.  I have a wonderful gentleman, he’s a six or seven time Grammy nominee, he’s the one that restores all of Gene’s music with Karla.  His name is Bob Fisher, and he handles the audio and video portion of it.  And what I do, I really study my person, their background, their history.  And then I get a series of twenty to thirty questions.  I sit the person down, and ask them how it all started.  What entertainment they were interested in, what fired their imagination, how they got them started.  How they got in the business, how that led finally to a role in a Western.  How did they approach the role?  What was going on on the set, all the way to what they are doing now.  And it’s not just the actors.  I’ve gotten a couple of producers, and a couple of stunt people – and I’m getting another one, Dean Smith very shortly. 

HENRY:  He’s great!

MAXINE: He’s amazing.  I’m just trying to branch out in any way I can to get an exact picture of what was going on. 

HENRY:  As far as interview subjects, I was very sorry to hear yesterday about the death of actor Dickie Jones, whose career goes back to being the voice of PINNOCHIO in 1940.  He appeared in several Gene Autry movies, and starred in two of his Flying A TV series, BUFFALO BILL JR.  --

MAXINE: -- and THE RANGE RIDER with Jock Mahoney.

HENRY: We tried to get together for an interview several times, but it never happened.

MAXINE:  I did interview him, and I’m so glad I did. It was done some years ago – 2002, 2003 – somewhere around there, and very in-depth.  Dick was one of the most beautiful people I have ever known.  We’d actually spoken about a week ago – I’d sent him a copy of another interview we’d done somewhere along the line – and we talked, and he was doing well.  He would occasionally take me and Karla out on a lunch date for hot dogs, but we hadn’t done a hot dog date in a long time.   He was a cherished friend of Gene’s.  We have a couple of people like that, him, Johnny Western, who are our treasures.  

HENRY:  Speaking of Johnny Western (who wrote and sang HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL and many more), have you spoken to him yet?

MAXINE: (excitedly) Yes I did!  And that’s another remarkable one.  Did you know he was up for the role of Little Joe on BONANZA? 

HENRY:  No, I didn’t know he did that much acting.  I saw him on one episode of HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL.

MAXINE:  Whenever we’re at an event; he’ll play the BONANZA theme for me.  There again, a remarkable talent, and you get another aspect, which is the songwriter, plus the bonus, a person who performed with Gene in the latter part of the personal appearances. 

HENRY:  Are there other people involved in Gene’s shows that you’ve interviewed?

MAXINE:  Jimmy Hawkins. 

HENRY:  He was Tag on ANNIE OAKLEY?

MAXINE:  Right; another amazing guy.  Really, that was a very good interview; he was very very detailed.  Very fresh with his memories, and that was amazingly helpful because he could tell us about the studio, FLYING A.  He was able to share pictures with us.  And he talked about IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE, too.  Then ANNIE OAKLEY, and he also did some personal appearances, and he had some wonderful stories about Gene that he shared, too.  I’m trying to get a fellow – Jimmy Hawkins turned me on to him --who was a production assistant on ANNIE OAKLEY, and also on PERRY MASON.  That’s another one I’m trying to do, to get different sides of the whole story. 

HENRY:  Of course you’re also focusing on other series.  Have you gotten anyone from BONANZA?

MAXINE:  I haven’t gotten anyone from BONANZA.  I interviewed Harry Flynn, who is a publicist for Michael Landon in the later years.  But I wanted to get that viewpoint from someone who knew Michael Landon.  I originally wanted to get Dan Blocker’s son, and Michael Landon Jr., who would have been young when their fathers did this, but I’m not sure I want to go there.  I do want to get Kent McCrea and his wife Susan (production managers on BONANZA and HIGH CHAPPARAL, producers on LITTLE HOUSE).  I am in touch with them and hopefully when their schedule permits, I’ll get them. 

HENRY:  If I could make a suggestion of someone to get.  I talked to her briefly, but I’m hoping to do more.  Did you know Mariette Hartley is the only actress to have a romance with every one of the Cartwright boys, and Pa? 

MAXINE: (startled) Mariette Hartley?

HENRY: She told me, she was romanced by everyone at the Ponderosa except Hop Sing. 

MAXINE:  That’s great!  I’m going to look that up!  I have to tell you, I’m a purist.  Anything after Pernell Roberts left…   Pernell Roberts, Michael Landon, I would have loved to interview them.  I’d love to know how Pernell Roberts approached scripts.  You know, a lot of these fellows were not horsemen.  James Drury and Doug McClure were horsemen, but Gary Clarke has a wonderful story about a horse named Babe. His interview was sheer joy.   To someone who has fallen off two horses – I can really relate.  Clu Gulager was my first interview; I’d love to interview him again.  He’s a fascinating man.  You know, let me jump back a minute.  When Gene would sign autographs, we’d go through them together, and he’s say, “What do you think I should sign?  Does that look okay?”  Very caring and conscientious.  Clu, the same type of thing.  But I’ve seen him do things like, instead of ‘Liz, best wishes,’ and he’d write, ‘Dear Liz – you don’t mind if I call you that, do you?’  Each woman who came to him when the VIRGINIAN cast was here, they had these smiles on their faces.  Including me.  There’s just something about that gentleman, and there’s a lot of depth and complexity to him that, in that interview with him, I didn’t really zero in on.   Two of my other favorite interviews – Ed Spielman, who created KUNG FU and also THE YOUNG RIDERS.  And Frank Price, who produced THE VIRGINIAN, and then went on to be the head of Columbia Pictures.  I didn’t think I’d get him, but by some miracle I got him twice.  And his wife, actress Katherine Crawford, who is just the most beautiful woman you would ever want to see.  But he was fascinating, because he started in live television.  He was like two minutes late for the interview.  He comes in – “I’m sorry I’m late!”  “Don’t worry about it.”  “I get it from live television.”  He started out (as a studio reader) reading scripts from the slush pile.  And who’s in the slush pile but Rod Serling.  He talks about coming out to Hollywood, and how TV’s coming in, film’s going out, the studios are shutting down and he can’t get a job.  It’s a fascinating interview.  I asked him, you’re a writer and a producer.  You’re an artist, but you’ve got to watch the budget.  How do you work that?  How they use the dialogue; how he created a whole VIRGINIAN script when they were (over) budget, got back on budget, and it was one of the most successful episodes.  That sort of thing is priceless, and everyone is adding a little bit to the story.

HENRY:  What other behind-the-scenes people have you spoken to?

MAXINE:  Jack Lilley for one.  Four generations of his family have been in livestock, wranglers, stuntmen.  Starting with his father, his family supplied horses, wagons, all the way to present times – they supplied them for LONE RANGER and A MILLION WAYS TO DIE IN THE WEST.  How do you select a horse, how do you train a horse (to work on-camera)?  He has a technique.  It’s in the horse’s eyes – and he explains it in the interview.  And it’s fascinating to hear how different stunts were done.  I’m trying to catch (interviews from) different shows now.  I don’t necessarily focus on a show, one person who was on one show, but I have a list.  I try to get different aspects.  One of the interviews I did early on, not for this project, was with Alex Gordon.  Did you know him?

HENRY:  No, I didn’t, but I’m familiar with his work, of course, producing REQUIEM FOR A GUNFIGHTER and THE BOUNTY KILLER, among others.

MAXINE:  He was with Gene forever.  Started out as a fan in England, then came over here.  Gene hired him as an advance-man for his tours.  Alex kind of looked like a little Alfred Hitchcock, and every woman who came into the office fell in love with him.  I was able to interview him about how does an advance-man work?  Alex did a tour for ANNIE OAKLEY, Gail Davis.  One time he and Gene and Gail Davis were at an event.  They served oysters.  Well, Alex hates oysters, but he was afraid to let Gene know, so when nobody’s looking he slips them in his pocket.  Then Gail Davis asks him to dance, and he’s dancing with Annie Oakley with oysters dripping out of his pocket! 

HENRY:  I used to read Alex’s column, The Pit and the Pen in FANGORIA magazine.   He used to produce a lot of little movies with old-time Western stars, like Rod Cameron and Dan Duryea.  Did he talk about them?

MAXINE:  What he said was, here was someone who used to have a lot of work, and then they didn’t have work, and he would hire them.  He’d hire them for films like THE SHE CREATURE (starring Chester Morris and Tom Conway) or ATOMIC SUBMARINE (starring Dick Foran, Tom Conway and Bob Steele).  And they’d sit down and tell him things.  One time I told him I’d been watching a HOLLYWOOD MYSTERIES episode about an unsolved murder.  I said, “I just don’t get how she really died, and nobody knows.” He said, “I know, and I’ll tell you, because the guy who was her boyfriend was in my movie, and he wanted to talk about it.  It was an accident, and here’s how it happened.”  It was fascinating.  I just interviewed a guy named Lucky (Ewing Miles) Brown.  He’s up there in years, but he’s still active. This guy was in OUR GANG, he did a number of westerns, he was in SHANE as a bad guy – all these uncredited things, but he’s telling me all about how things were done. 

HENRY:  My mother-in-law was in the OUR GANG comedies.  She had no lines – she was an extra –but she did dance with Alfalfa in the OUR GANG FOLLIES OF 1938.

MAXINE: That’s so cool.

HENRY:  But speaking of this underlines the importance of your project, to catch these people when we can.  When my wife and I started attending SONS OF THE DESERT events in the early 1980s, we met their producer, Hal Roach, who was celebrating his 100th birthday.  And there were people there like Iris Adrian and Eddie Quillan, who had worked with Laurel and Hardy.  Now if you go to the events, the last surviving OUR GANG kids are the only people left.

MAXINE:  That’s exactly what I’m talking about.  I went to a Golden Boot event one time.  Gene is at one table with his wife and I’m at another, and there is an elderly man sitting there.  And he’s very nice; he’s making sure I’m eating.  And he introduces himself; he’s Nat Levine.  “I got Gene in pictures,” which of course he did. (He built and ran Mascot Pictures, which produced Gene’s first starring role, the serial THE PHANTOM EMPIRE)  I said, “I’ll go get Gene,” and he said, “No, I don’t want to disturb him.”  I have my list of ‘why didn’t I?’ mistakes, and Nat Levine was one.  Pat Buttram was another one that I wanted to get, along with Gene.  I just have so many questions for them.  But you never regret yesterday.  You have to go along and get who you can now.  And I want these people to understand why I’m doing this.  I’m not into the 1950s Photoplay Magazine; I’m not trying to do a TV Guide story.    I’m trying to preserve a segment of a genre that was very important.  And I think still is important because of the factors that were involved in Westerns.  Why do I like westerns?  It’s not just good versus bad; it’s a capsule of all the best qualities in each of us. And all the hope; and all the courage.  And you’re racing with the wind.  And you can make a difference.  Do you see what I mean? And when you have actors who can bring these qualities to the table, these are the facts that must be preserved.  Not necessarily the mistakes – we all make mistakes.  You take a Pernell Roberts.  Yeah, he should have stayed with BONANZA, or come back; it would have been wonderful.  Doesn’t matter: six years of Adam Cartwright.   You know how many people love Adam Cartwright for what he stood for?

HENRY:  And six years when they were doing about forty episodes a year.  It’s a tremendous amount of work, when today, five or six years of a series might be fifty episodes.

MAXINE:  If that.  Take Jimmy Hawkins; he had all those shows to do, and appearances with Gene, too.  And that’s the same for THE VIRGINIAN cast too, they were mostly making public appearances too.  It’s fascinating to document this.

HENRY:  Now that you are documenting this, what is the ultimate plan for this archive of material you’re producing?

MAXINE:  The archive goes into the library and archive of the Autry Nation Center Museum of the American West.  And the researchers come, for a book, for a play.  From students to newspapers to people doing movies.  So they go in, the Museum is able to say, well, here’s what we have.  You’re documenting young people in the Westerns?  Take a look at the interviews with Jimmy Hawkins, Billy Mumy.  Our interviews are usually an hour and a half to two hours or more. 

HENRY:  So you’re not trimming them down to highlights. 

MAXINE:  No.  These aren’t dressed up, they’re raw footage.  We’re just letting it roll.  But we’re taking clips, maybe ten three-minute sound bites from each of them.  And we’re making a Vimeo catalog of them.

HENRY:  Do you ever foresee a time when you’d want to place these interviews on the internet, or would you always want to keep them in a research facility.

MAXINE:  In a research facility.  If you take a person’s life out of the jurisdiction of the Museum, then you’re just making it a free-for-all, and that’s not what I wanted to do.  I wanted it very structured and very safe. 

HENRY:  Do you have a schedule in the sense that you want to do a certain number of people per year, or is it you get people when you can get them?

MAXINE:  I get people when I can get them, balanced with my other work.  I have a list of people I want to do.  Jan Shepard is somebody I want to do.  She was in a number of Westerns; she was also on live TV.  She’s told me a number of stories, and I’m just drooling to get them.  Her husband, (Ray Boyle, a.k.a. Dirk London) was in WYATT EARP, and he also spent years in the prop department – I want to get him.  I kind of have a list like that.  I’ll tell you what I really want to do.  I want to go to the Motion Picture Home, and just sit down with a group of people there, like secretaries or hair-dressers.  

HENRY:  You mean like a round-table?  That’s a great idea!

MAXINE:  I’m just going to grab Bob Fisher, and we’re going to do that.  And I want to do some crossovers (between Westerns and science fiction).  You know, Morgan Woodward did some famous STAR TREK episodes, and I talked to him about that. 

HENRY:  Morgan Woodward was the villain in the first movie I wrote, SPEEDTRAP.  We closed Nickodell’s together.  The restaurant outside the Paramount gate; we were the last two customers when they closed.

MAXINE:  I remember that place!  Another crossover I got was Billy Mumy.  He was in everything – he did a few Westerns, but I wanted to get the viewpoint of that young actor who’s done a few Westerns, and then he’s doing LOST IN SPACE and BABYLON 5. 

HENRY: And my favorite TWILIGHT ZONE: It’s a Good Life.

MAXINE: Remember, Gene Roddenberry had to sell STAR TREK as WAGON TRAIN TO THE STARS. 

HENRY:  I didn’t know that.

MAXINE:  I wanted to get the crossover from that viewpoint.  I’d love to get William Shatner too, because he was in Westerns.

HENRY:  Spaghetti Westerns, too.

MAXINE:  What is the crossover – what are the common bonds that fire people about these two genres?  Because they really catch people.  I want to get Robert Fuller, some of the other people from WAGON TRAIN.  My next is going to be Dean Smith, who’s coming out here for the next Cowboy Lunch @ The Autry.  And Dean has a book.  Mrs. Autry calls him one of the good guys, a dear friend of Gene’s, and hers.  I do want to (cover) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, and get Melissa Gilbert.  And also…I would like to get Clint Eastwood.  Haven’t had the courage to knock on his door, but I will. 

HENRY:  Speaking of Clint Eastwood, he’s the last one I can remember left from RAWHIDE.

MAXINE:  Yes.  And there are a couple left from WAGON TRAIN.  And it’s hard, because the clock is ticking.  This project should have been started so much earlier, but then there are people like you, and people like Boyd Magers (editor of Western Clippings).  And what you are doing, and what Boyd is doing, is incredible.  It just has to be documented.  I consider you and Boyd the top tier for preserving the history.  And I’m sort of like the sidekick, coming along.  I’m speaking very candidly now; not p.r.  I’m very glad that it’s being done, and it’s kind of a relief in my world.  

HENRY:  You’re very kind.  Maxine, is there anything else I should know about your work?

MAXINE:  I do want to say something about Gene.  Gene was a remarkable individual with a remarkable life.  I am so grateful – and one of the best things that ever happened to this office is Karla Buhlman, President of Gene Autry Entertainment.  She’s a goddess.  She has the knowledge, the capability, the intelligence and the dedication to restore all of Gene’s music and films and television shows, and working the radio shows; nobody else could have done it.

HENRY:  And nobody else is showing any interest in preserving radio shows, particularly.

MAXINE:  No, and down the line it will be important.  I think Gene would be proud of all that has been accomplished.  And I urge anybody who reads your column, who is in the business and did do Westerns, to either talk to you or Boyd or me, and to preserve their scripts and their stories.  Because even though some say the day of the western is done, I don’t think so.  Never.  Because the heart, the spirit of Gene, Roy, Monte Hale, the four Cartwrights, James Drury, Doug McClure, all those guys, the spirit still goes strong, and it will always be with us.  And in a world in turmoil, I think preserving this, and letting that spirit of goodness and decency and what can be, shine through, is extremely important. 

HENRY:  Thank you.  And I’ll just throw in something I find of great interest, speaking of the world in turmoil.  From time to time, when I think of it, I’ll check online to see who is reading Henry’s Western Round-up, in what countries.  And usually the largest number is in the U.S., and then other English speaking countries, like England and Australia; we’re read in over 94 countries.  But one thing I’ve noticed over the past four or five months, right after the U.S., the country where it’s most likely to be read at any given moment, is the Ukraine.  With all that those people have going on in their lives, I guess they find the same comfort in the stories of justice and hope, and the individual, that we have.  Very big in Russia, too.  

MAXINE:  That’s amazing. 

Since we spoke, she’s interviewed actresses Donna Martell and Fay McKenzie.  In that time we’ve also lost MAVERICK star James Garner, WAGON TRAIN star Denny Miller, and director Andrew V. McLaglen, who helmed more episodes of HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL than anyone else, 96 GUNSMOKES, and many fine features, TV movies and episodes.  As Maxine says, the clock is running.  The video below is Maxine’s Mission Statement.




CROATION WESTERN COMEDY ‘KAUBOJI’ (COWBOYS) SCREENS THURS. AT AERO!



The official Croatian entry for 2015’s Academy Awards, KAUBOJI was a hit stage play in Croatia, and has been adapted for the screen by the original playwright, Sasa Anocic, and the film’s director, Tomislav Mrsic.   Set in a drab and claustrophobic industrial town, it’s the story of eight outsiders who band together to create a play based on the conventions of classic Hollywood Westerns, and how they grow to see the play as a metaphor for their own lives and aspirations. 

This is an extremely rare opportunity to see this film – on a big screen no less! – and the presentation will be followed by a live musical performance and reception!  And dress up, because prizes will be awarded for the best cowboy and cowgirl get-ups!    KAUBOJI will screen on Thursday, October 23rd at the AERO THEATRE, 1328 Montana Avenue, Santa Monica, CA 90403.  Go HERE for more details!



Unlike the movie, this trailer doesn’t have subtitles, but at least it’ll give you a taste!




‘BUFFALO SOLDIER’ REVIVAL OPENS FRIDAY AT EL PORTAL NORTH HOLLYWOOD


Clockwise from bottom: Wasim No'mani, Kendall
Johnson, Tony Williams, Daniel Billet, 
Will Catlett


Mitch Hale’s play, which won the NAACP BEST PLAY AWARD FOR 1995, is at the El Portal from October 24th through November 30th.  Directed by Sara Wagner and produced by Johnny Brenner, BUFFALO SOLDIER’s subject matter is unfamiliar to many: an ‘all negro’ U.S. Cavalry Unit in the American West of the 1870s.  The plot concerns three of those soldiers and their white officer undertaking a hazardous mission in Comanche country, involving the legendary Quanah Parker. 

Playwright Hale told the Toluca Times that the idea came to him when he was acting in the Vietnam-themed play TRACERS in 1987.  “It got me thinking about the disproportionate amount of men of color in the armed services — especially in frontline duties. I knew there were black soldiers brought in to fight against the Native Americans and so I started researching. It was six years before I finally had a first draft.”

I’ll be reviewing BUFFALO SOLDIER in next week’s Round-up.  The El Portal Theatre is at 5269 Lankershim Boulevard, North Hollywood, CA 91601.  To learn more, and order tickets, call 818-508-4200, or go HERE .



THAT’S A WRAP!

I hope to run into you at BUFFALO SOLDIER or KOUBOJI!  Or doing research at The Autry!  Or all three!  Have a great week!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Content Copyright October 2014 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved