The blog that brings you the latest news about western movies, TV, radio and print! Updated every weekend -- more often if anything good happens!
My new book, THE GREATEST WESTERNS EVER MADE, AND THE PEOPLE WHO MADE THEM is now available! It’s based on over 80 of my TRUE WEST articles, many expanded and updated! Buy it from Amazon, or wherever fine books are sold! Click the image to order!
OutWest!
HENRY ON TCM
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TRUE WEST - My most recent articles. (TW lets you read 3 articles for free per month)
May/June 2025 -- I have 4 articles in this month's issue, each dealing with a different aspect of the AMERICAN PRIMEVAL miniseries. To find links to all of my earlier True West articles, just keep scrolling.
Every Thursday Bobbi and Jim Bell host the podcast Rendezvous With a Writer, and interview an author. On the first Thursday of every month I join them, present the news in the world of Western films and TV, and take part in their guest’s interview.
For our June 2025 show, our guests are authors of books about Reno Divorce Dude Ranches. Sandra McGee, with her late husband, William L. McGee, is the author of the memoir, THE DIVORCE SEEKERS. Peggy Wynne Borgman is the author of the novel, THE BETTER HALF.
For our May 2025 show, our guest is Anne Hillerman, daughter of Tony Hillerman. She has continued writing her father’s series of Leaphorn, Chee and Manuelito, Reservation-based mysteries. Her 10th, SHADOW OF THE SOLSTICE, has just been published.
Although I haven't gotten a western made yet, there's interest in a western series I've created (on paper). If you'd like to take a look at the sort of things I write, please visit my website, www.henrycparke.com. Thanks for looking!
As Film Editor of TRUE WEST MAGAZINE, every month I explore the world of Western film and television. Below are links to my columns, beginning with the most recent.
As Film Editor of TRUE WEST MAGAZINE, in each issue I explore the world of Western film and television. Below are links to my columns, beginning with the most recent.
On July 30th, 2015, I was the guest of hosts Bobbi Jean Bell and Jim Christina on ‘Writer’s Block’, their L.A. TALK-RADIO talk-show about the art and craft of writing. You can click PLAY to hear it, or DOWNLOAD to download it.
ROUND-UP ON THE RADIO!
Last Christmastime I was a guest on AROUND THE BARN, and had a great time talking about the Round-up, my writing, and Gene Autry’s Christmas music. To listen, click HERE.
Other Stuff I Write
While this blog is strictly about Western stuff, I also write another blog, Stalling Tactics, which is about anything else. If you'd like to read my most recent post, COSTUME DRAMA TRAUMA, go HERE.
UPDATED 10:11 AM 2-16-18 -- SEE 'LOS ANGELES ITALIA FESTIVAL' ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER TO
STAR IN WESTERN ‘OUTRIDER’
Okay, he’s not the King
yet, but maybe the Kaiser of the Cowboys? The body-building champ, movie star
and former Governor of California, whose only previous Western was Hal
Needham’s 1979 comedy THE VILLAIN -- in which he played Handsome Stranger to
Ann-Margaret’s Charming Jones, and Kirk Douglas’s Cactus Jack -- will be heading
to the Amazon West, to star in the series OUTRIDER, for Producer Mace Neufield,
who previously produced GODS AND GENERALS.
Set in the late 1800s,
when Oklahoma was still Indian Territory, the story centers on a deputy
assigned to capture a famous outlaw, with the help of a ruthless Federal
Marshal (Schwarzenegger). As the tale progresses, alliances will shift, and the
demarcation between hero and villain will be obscured. The show will be co-written and exec-produced
by Trey Callaway and Mark Montgomery.
‘WESTWORLD’ RETURNS IN
APRIL!
As Superbowl fans learned
last Sunday, WESTWORLD will be starting its second season, on HBO, on April 22nd.
The teaser trailer, seen below, doesn’t give too much story away, but it does
confirm that it will be a western
WESTWORLD, not the eastern Samurai variation last season’s ending hinted at (Whew!). As with season one, HBO remains
tight-lipped. So fasten your seatbelts!
AUTRY ‘SERGEANT RUTLEDGE’
SCREENING 2/17 INTRO’ED BY ‘LEFTY BROWN’ DIR.
‘L.A. ITALIA FESTIVAL’
FEB. 25TH! UPDATED 10:12 AM 2-16-18 -- DIRECTOR/STAR RICHARD HARRISON WILL INTRODUCE HIS FILM 'TWO BROTHERS IN TRINITY'
In two weeks the L. A.
Italia Festival, the 13th annual celebration of Italian culture and
especially Italian cinema, will begin on Sunday, February 25th, at
the Chinese 6 Theatres in Hollywood,
and run for a week, through Saturday, March 3rd, Oscar eve. This
year’s festival will be dedicated to legendary Italian directors Franco
Zeffirelli and Lina Wertmuller. There
are screenings of dozens of Italian movies, both new and classics, all free, on
a first come, first seated basis. There are also special programs that require
reservations, and the red carpet is often packed with stars. The schedule of
films was announced last night, and there is just one Italian Western on the
bill. On Saturday, at 4:50 pm, TWO BROTHERS IN A PLACE CALLED TRINITY, starring
Richard Harrison, will be screened. The program notes, “Harrison wrote,
produced and directed the film, and understandably, it is his personal favorite
among the Italian westerns he appeared in.” It doesn’t say whether or not
Harrison will attend; I’ll try to find out. To find out about all of the films
being screened, and their times, go HERE.
TCM FESTIVAL – LOOKING
FORWARD AND BACK
I was surprised to find this shot of me and Shirley
Jones on the Red Carpet at the TCM site!
The annual TCM Classic
Movie Festival returns to the Chinese Theatre Complex and elsewhere around
Hollywood, starting April 26th, and running through the 29th.
This year’s theme will be that all-too-often ignored aspect of movies, the
written word. According to TCM, “From original screenplays to unique
adaptations to portrayals of writers real and imagined, we will celebrate the
foundation of great film: the written word.”
The Fest will open with a screening at the Chinese IMAX of THE
PRODUCERS, with writer/director Mel Brooks attending. Other guests already
announced include writer/director Robert Benton, and actress Marsha Hunt.
Dick Cavett introducing a film
Last year, although the
number of Westerns featured was small, what there was, was choice. DAWSON CITY –
FROZEN TIME is a fascinating documentary by Bill Morrison. A boomtown in the
heart of the Yukon Gold Rush that started in1898, Dawson’s movie theatres were
not only the hub of entertainment, they were the end of the line for movie
prints that had made their way around the world. In 1978, a construction crew bulldozed
an old sports club, and found hundreds of reels of film buried, some of them
preserved, in the permafrost, most of them films thought to be lost forever.
And that’s only the beginning of the story. The film is available from
Kino-Lorber.
A frame from POLLY OF THE CIRCUS (1917)
partly decomposed, from DAWSON CITY
1952’s THOSE REDHEADS
FROM SEATTLE was re-premiered at the Fest, not just restored, but seen in 3-D
for the first time since its release. This lively movie from Paramount’s famous
‘Dollar Bills’, Bill Pine and Bill Thomas, was the first 3-D musical. It stars
Gene Barry, Rhonda Fleming, Agnes Moorhead, and a bevy of singers and dancers,
including the Bell Sisters, one of whom, to the audience’s delight, attended.
It tells the story of a family of women that head to -- you guessed it -- Dawson
City during the Gold Rush to be entertainers. This one is also available from
Kino-Lorber. With their story overlap, I’m surprised REDHEADS and DAWSON aren’t
offered as a set.
Paramount Studio Head Archivist
Andrea Kalas presented a talk, and clips from dozens of Republic Pictures in
all imaginable genres. Paramount has acquired the entire Republic Library
(minus, I assume, Gene Autry’s films, as he acquired all of them), and have for
seven years been restoring them at the rate of 100 a year. Needless to say,
this left all the Western fans in attendance salivating, but at the moment, no
definite plans for releasing the films has been announced.
Peter Bogdonovich and Illeana Douglas
And speaking of things
not yet announced, thus far only eighteen films have been announced for this
year’s Fest, and there’s not a Western in the bunch. But last year they showed
83 films, so there’s plenty of space to squeeze in some oaters. Stand by for
updates as we get closer to the event.
SPEND ST. PATRICK’S DAY
WITH KENT MCCRAY!
Kent McCray with High Chaparral stuntwoman
Jackie Fuller
On Saturday, March 17th,
Kent McCray, who produced or production-managed BONANZA, THE HIGH CHAPARRAL,
and THE LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, will be au the Autry, speaking about his
career, and signing his new autobiography, KENT MCCRAY: THE MAN BEHIND THE MOST
BELOVED TELEVISION SHOWS. A Q&A will be hosted by Dean Butler, who played
Almanzo Wilder on LITTLE HOUSE, and other guests from McCray shows are
expected. In addition to his extensive Western work, McCray spent years
managing Bob Hope’s travels to entertain our troops around the globe. His
friendship with Michael Landon, developed on the BONANZA set, led to a
producing partnership on LITTLE HOUSE and HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN.
My next Round-up will
feature an interview with McCray. And HERE is a link to the current True West Magazine, about McCray’s
recent celebration of HIGH CHAPARRAL’s 50th Anniversary.
TWO-GUN HART – BY JEFF
McARTHUR
A Book Review by Henry C.
Parke
It’s not so surprising
that a young man’s early association with Western actor William S. Hart would
inspire him to become a real-life western lawman. It’s not the first time a man
changed his name in tribute to his idol – magician Eric Weiss dubbed himself
Harry Houdini after French illusionist Robert-Houdin. The stunner is the name
that he changed: lawman and prohibition agent Richard ‘Two-Gun’ Hart had been
Christened in Sicily as Vicenzo Capone, and his brother, Al Capone, would make
quite a name for himself on the other side of the law!
Jeff McArthur tells a
fascinating, and entirely fresh, story of a man who reinvented himself totally,
yet could never totally escape his family’s influence. Hart was a remarkable
complex man, and his successes and struggles throughout the Great Depression
are, by turns, inspiring and infuriating.
As a teenager, I was
obsessed with Depression-era gangsters, and I devoured every word I could find
on Al Capone. There is more information on the life of Scarface Al, and insight
into his character and personality here, than I have ever seen before, and with
a good reason. For the first time, the Capone family has opened up to an
author, and granted unprecedented access to MacArthur.
Whether your interest is
in lawmen, criminals, or simply humanity, you will be astonished. TWO-GUN HART
is published by Bandwagon Books.
HEAVIES PLAY HEROES IN
ALPHA RELEASE
Tom Tyler had a few standout
sympathetic roles, as Captain Marvel in the Republic serial, and as Stony
Brooke in some of the THREE MESQUITEERS entries. But most of his other
outstanding, and best remembered roles were villains: Luke Plummer, the man who
killed John Wayne’s brother in 1939’s STAGECOACH; King Evans in William Wyler’s
THE WESTERNER (1940); and as the seemingly soulless gunman in POWDERSMOKE RANGE
(1935). Likable, strong-jawed Kermit Maynard was as good an actor, and
handsomer, than his superstar brother Ken Maynard, but no one else could do
what Ken could with a horse. Kermit played countless drovers and henchmen and stagecoach
drivers. But once in a blue moon, these
supporting players got a chance to shine, and in a new double-bill from Alpha
Video, each man proves that he could carry a movie on their own.
In RIDIN’ THRU (1934),
Tom Tyler and sidekick Ben Corbett come to the aid of a
rancher-turned-dude-rancher friend whose horses are being rustled, and
determine they’re being led away by a mysterious white stallion. In FIGHTING
TROOPER (1934) Kermit Maynard stars as a Mountie sergeant whose superior, and
personal antagonist, is murdered. While undercover, investigating a likely
suspect, fur trapper LeFarge (LeRoy Mason), he grows to suspect LeFarge is
being framed.
Also from Alpha is the long-thought-lost
B Western DESERT MESA (1935), starring Wally West, a stuntman-turned-actor who
pretty quickly turned back to stuntman. It's a story about two men, West and an old
rancher (William McCall), whose paths cross as both seek the same man, who
ruined their lives by killing West’s father and McCall’s wife. Not a great
movie, but a surprisingly good print, it’s curious to note that as late as
1935, some poverty row Westerns felt almost like silents, between the stilted
performances and West’s mascara. One of the more natural performances, as an
unbilled sidekick named Art, is the film’s producer and director Art Mix, real
name Victor Adamson, who was sued by Tom Mix to stop borrowing his last name. It’s double billed with THE TEXAS TORNADO,
aka RANCH DYNAMITE, from 1932, starring Lane Chandler as a Texas Ranger who
takes on the identity of a Chicago gangster to infiltrate a gang. Master
stuntman Yakima Canutt plays a henchman, and does stunt doubling in the
spirited fights. It’s written and directed by Oliver Drake, who decades later
would co-author Canutt’s excellent autobiography, STUNTMAN.
…and that’s a wrap!
For your amusement, here
are a few not quite 2” by 3” Swedish gum cards. My favorite is the one that
identifies our most decorated soldier of World War II, and a fine Western
actor, as Audrey Murphy. Things get lost in translation.
In the next Round-up,
I’ll have my interview with Kent McCray, and a look at two upcoming Spaghetti Westerns from the folks who brought you 6 BULLETS TO HELL! And I’ll be updating this Round-up as
titles become available for the TCM Classic Movie Festival.
Happy Trails!
Henry
All Original Contents
Copyright February 2018 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
A decade ago, Christian
Bale played the reluctant temporary deputy escorting outlaw Ben Wade (Russell
Crow) to a train in the remake of Elmore Leonard’s 3:10 TO YUMA. In HOSTILES,
he’s more than reluctant; he’s defiant. A heroic, much-honored veteran of both
the Civil War and Indian Wars, Cap. Joseph J. Blocker (Bale), is ordered to
escort captive Cheyenne Chief Yellow Hawk (Wes Studi) back to his homeland in
Montana, presumably to die. Having lost many friends at the hands of Yellow
Hawk and his men, Blocker refuses, and it is only the threat of court martial,
and loss of his pension, by Col. Briggs (Stephen Lang), that induces Blocker to
transport Yellow Hawk and his family through deadly territory.
Jonathan Majors & Wes Studi
The movie becomes, in a
sense, a ‘road picture’, with Blocker and Yellow Hawk gradually coming to grips
with their intersecting pasts and their terrible memories. There are chance
encounters along the way. En route they meet up with Rosalie Quaid (Rosamund
Pike, Oscar-nominated for GONE GIRL), a settler whose husband and three
daughters have been piteously butchered by Comanches. Her mind shattered by her
pain, she is brought along, and begins healing along the way. Soldiers and
Cheyenne must do battle with Comanches, enemies of both. They’re also asked to
transport a soldier to a court for trial and presumably a hanging – Sgt.
Charles Wills (Ben Foster) hacked a family to pieces with an axe. Wills has a
history with Blocker – they soldiered together – and Wills is eager to convince
Blocker that his crimes are no worse than Blocker committed, and that they’re a
pair of angels next to Yellow Hawk. Interestingly, Foster, who all but walked
away with last year’s HELL OR HIGH WATER, as the bank-robbing brother with no
off-switch, has a history with Bale, as he played Crow’s obsessively-loyal
right-hand in 3:10 TO YUMA. Come to think of it, he all but walked off with that movie as well.
Rosamund Pike
HOSTILES, written and
directed by Scott Cooper, based on a manuscript by the late Donald E. Stewart,
an Oscar-winner for 1983’s MISSING, is a deeply felt story, peopled by
soldiers, Indians and civilians who express their feelings with utmost caution. Despite the familiar premise, the flow of the
story, and the people who populate it, are happily unfamiliar. The cavalry
soldiers assisting Blocker include a young Frenchman (Timothee Chalamet –
currently starring in CALL ME BY YOUR NAME), a sergeant recently treated for
melancholy (Rory Cochrane), and a loyal black corporal (Jonathan Majors)
ironically in charge of chaining the Indians. It’s full of both quiet passages,
and jarring, unflinching violence – in some ways it’s the SAVING PRIVATE RYAN
of Westerns.
Christian Bale & Adam Beach
Scott Cooper made CRAZY
HEART with Jeff Bridges, but his Western credentials go back further, to his
acting career, in GODS AND GENERALS, with Stephen Lang, and the excellent
miniseries BROKEN TRAIL. Cinematographer Masanobu Takayanagi, who also shot
Cooper’s BLACK MASS, makes full, beautiful use of the New Mexico and Arizona
locations, and at times effectively thrusts the viewer deeper into the action
than we want to go. There is also frequently a classical look to the images –
his doorway compositions are not merely an homage to John Ford, but a
jumping-off point.
My one disappointment is
that the excellent Adam Beach, who plays Yellow Hawk’s son, has virtually
nothing to do. But with a performance by Bale that runs from barely contained
fury to understated grace, and a story that is frequently grim, but never
without hope, HOSTILES is one of the finest Westerns in several years. From Entertainment Studios Motion Pictures, it
opens in theatres on January 19th.
TOMBSTONE – RASHOMON –
Alex Cox at the O.K. Corral!
There is probably no more
polarizing incident in the Old West than the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral or, as
those involved demurely referred to it, ‘the difficulties.’ 132 years after the
Earp and Cowboy factions faced each other, all that can be agreed upon is that 30
seconds after it started, Billy Clanton, and Frank and Tom McLaury were dead. There is no consensus as to whether or not it
was avoidable, and who was at fault.
“I was a kid at grammar
school in England, and in the school library was a copy of Stuart N. Lake’s
book, WYATT EARP -- FRONTIER MARSHALL,” remembers wildly-independent filmmaker
Alex Cox – whose previous Westerns include 1986’s punk neo-Spaghetti STRAIGHT
TO HELL and ‘87’s classical WALKER. “I read that, and of course it’s a total
hierography of Earp. But it was well-written, entertaining, and it got me
interested in the subject.” His favorite of the films on the subject is John
Ford’s 1946 MY DARLING CLEMENTINE. “It’s so beautiful. It doesn’t have a lot to
do with the events; it’s a made-up story, for the purpose of entertaining and
myth-making.” He also liked 1971’s DOC, “the anti-Earp version. And I kinda like
TOMBSTONE – it’s a bit long, but it tells a bigger version of the story, so you
know who Johnny Behan is, and Curly Bill Brocious, and all these guys who don’t
normally make it into the story.”
Christine Doidge as Kate, Eric Schumacher as Doc
To tell his own version,
Cox took inspiration from Akira Kurosawa’s RASHOMON, 1951’s Best Foreign Film
Oscar-winner. The story of a crime is told repeatedly from several different
perspectives, and it’s up to the viewer to decide what to believe. RASHOMON,
whose title refers to the gate of a walled city, was remade as a Western, THE
OUTRAGE, in 1964, starring Paul Newman in the Toshiro Mifune role.
The premise is explained
in the film’s opening title: “On 27 October, 1881, a time-travelling video crew
arrived in Tombstone, Arizona, to film the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
Realizing they were a day late, they started interviewing the survivors.”
Adam Newberry as Wyatt
Cox’s research is as journalistic
as his premise is whimsical. The various tellings come directly from Judge
Spicer’s hearings, and the coroner’s report. Those who testify include Wyatt
Earp, Ike Clanton, Johnny Behan, and saloon-owner Roderick Hafford. Cox also
uses newspaper interviews with Doc Holliday, and a letter ‘Big Nose Kate’
Haroney wrote to her niece. Talking-head interviews lead to filmed versions of
each participant’s memories, which overlap, and oppose each other. Among events
leading up to the shootout, Wyatt offered Ike Clanton a reward for turning in
three men for stage-robbery and murder. But their versions of the proposed
deal, and involvement of Doc Holiday, differ radically. And when it comes to the walk-down, and
Sheriff Johnny Behan’s words, do we believe Wyatt’s version, that Behan said
he’d disarmed the Cowboys, or Behan’s version, that he said he was there to
disarm them?
The
casting-for-resemblance is striking: Adam Newberry as sulky Wyatt, Eric
Schumacher as manic Doc, and Benny Lee Kennedy as Ike seem to have emerged from
the pages of The Tombstone Epitaph. Kennedy’s
Ike is unexpectedly sympathetic, but Christine Doidge, as Kate, walks off with
the movie as a character who is by turns hilarious, tragic, savvy and innocent.
Doidge recalls, “Alex had given (Kate) a real space to be herself. Which is
great, because he could have easily written this film without her, or with her
in one scene; I think having Kate’s perspective is important.”
Hafford's - Richard Anderson as Hafford,
Benny Lee Kennedy as Ike
It wasn’t a film easily
put together. After a “disastrous” crowd-funding campaign, Cox spent a month preparing
at Old Tucson, accomplishing the impossible. “We shot a five-week movie in a
week.” Having recently taught a learn-by-doing film-production class at
University of Colorado Boulder, making the feature BILL THE GALACTIC HERO, he
hired several ex-students as crew.
The real Hafford's Saloon
Cinematographer Alana Murphy remembers, “I
was an assistant camera for HERO. I
suppose I made an impression. When I graduated in 2015, Alex said, hey, I’ve got
a project I might want your help with - very mysterious.” A year later she was cinematographer
on her first feature. She loved working with Cox. “He starts with a lot of
inspiration; he gave me a lot of homework, a lot of films to watch, that
inspired. That’s how I got to know him, through the source material.” The biggest challenge? “The heat. We were having technical issues
with batteries not lasting very long. And we were working on a bigger scale
then I’m used to.”
Production Designer
Melissa Erdman marveled at Cox’s ability to pull it off. “Alex really had great
planning skills in the way that the film was structured. So we had an ‘A’ unit
and a ‘B’ unit operating pretty much the entire shoot: the B unit was doing the
interviews, and the A unit was shooting the various reenactments.” Recreating
the interior of Roderick Haffords’ Corner Saloon, famous for hundreds of
pictures of birds on its walls, required major planning. “We had a pretty limited team – it was me,
and my art director, who helped to construct the inside of Hafford’s. We had
two days of load-in, and most of the stuff came pre-painted, and then putting
the bar together, and then getting all the birds put up. I had three people
cutting out birds for two days.”
Cox, like Kurosawa, has
no intention of telling the viewer if any version of the shoot-out is the
unvarnished truth, but he gives each speaker, without pre-judging, a chance to
state his or her case. While some differences are flagrant, some are
surprisingly subtle. Doidge remembers that after the shootout, as Kate remembers
it, “When Doc comes back, grazed by a bullet, I’m there, and I’m horrified. And in Doc’s version he’s just sitting on the
bed by himself. I’m not there.”
TOMBSTONE – RASHOMON will
be available on video in 2018 – stay tuned for details!
SILENTS DESCENDS ON THE AUTRY - AND OTHER AUTRY NEWS
For years The Autry has had their monthly ‘What is a Western?’ screening series –
they’re showing STAGECOACH on January 20th -- and every second month
they screen a Gene Autry double feature. They’re now adding a new film series,
The Silent Treatment, featuring silent Westerns with a live piano accompaniment
by Cliff Retallick, starting on January 27th with James Cruze’s
epic, THE COVERED WAGON (1923).
Also at the Autry, on
Tuesday, January 16th, Rob Word’s Cowboy Lunch and Word on Western
series, Rob will look at the role of women and children in Western films, and Rob
always gets terrific guests.
HENRY PARKE WINS WWA'S 'TWEET US A WESTERN' CONTEST!
I don’t mean to brag, but
like Ralphie’s old man, I just won a Major Award. I won first place in the
Western Writers of America’s ‘Tweet Us A Western’ contest, where you were challenged to
write a complete Western story in 280 characters or less – the length of a
tweet. My winning entry was as follows:
“Eureka!” shouted the old
sourdough, sluicing the last of Columbia River silt from his pan to reveal the
glitter of color. He straightened.
'Thwack!' The Indian's
arrow pierced his back between the shoulders. For a moment he knew his gold
rush was over. Then he knew nothing.
...AND THAT'S A WRAP!
...and my New Years resolution is to get the Round-Up out a lot more frequently in 2018. I've got a huge backlog of stories and interviews, and books and movies to review, and I'll get to them as soon as I can. In the meantime, please check out the February 2018 True West, where we asked readers to help us choose the Most Historically Accurate Westerns. And in my column, I take a look at continuing popularity of The High Chaparral series. Have a wonderful 2018!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright January 2018 by Henry C. Parke - All Rights Reserved
KRIS
KRISTOFFERSON ON HIS WESTERNS & THE HIGHWAYMEN
Status Media & Entertainment, the same folks who brought you 2016’s TRADED,
where vengeful father Michael Pere was turning the Old West inside out to find
his abducted daughter, have returned with a new Western, based on events in the
early career of soon-to-be legendary lawman Wild Bill Hickok, entitled HICKOK,
starring Luke Hemsworth in the title role.
Back in the saddle is director Timothy Woodward Jr., cinematographer
Pablo Diaz, production designer Christian Ramirez, and costume designer Nikki
Pelley.
I
was invited to visit the set on the second day of shooting, at Peter Sherayko’s
Caravan West Ranch, and spoke to all
of those fine folks – you’ll be reading that article very soon in the Round-up.
But I was particularly excited to speak with the legendary actor, singer,
songwriter and Rhodes Scholar, Kris Kristofferson, who would be playing the
supporting role of Abilene Mayor George Knox. It was a busy day, and Kris was a
busy man, but at around 7 p.m. I was invited to the make-up trailer to talk
with Kris about both the current movie, and his career in Westerns.
HENRY:
I was wondering what attracts you to Westerns? I know your first movie, THE
LAST MOVIE, was more or less a Western, this one is, and you’ve done so many in
between. What’s special about the genre to you?
KRIS:
Well, I grew up in Brownsville Texas, down at the very bottom of Texas, and I
had my first horse when I was five years old. And I had horses all the time
until I was a teenager, and we moved to California. I’ve always felt
comfortable riding a horse.
HENRY:
Do you watch a lot of Western movies growing up?
KRIS:
Yes, I did. We went to a Western movie every week.
HENRY:
What particularly attracted you to this movie?
KRIS:
Well, I liked the story, I like the script, and I like the guys that I’m
working with, the director, Tim Woodward. And a Western is something we can
have some kind of fun with.
Kris with his wife Lisa Meyers
HENRY:
Of course, he directed you in TRADED, a very nice film, and you were very good
in it.
KRIS:
Thank you.
HENRY:
You’ve worked with the very best directors – Peckinpah, Dennis Hopper, Martin
Scorcese.
What makes a great director?
KRIS:
It’s someone who knows the script, and knows the potential of the story,
whatever it is. And never forgets it during the filming; doesn’t get
sidetracked.
HENRY:
Which is your favorite, of your Westerns?
KRIS:
Boy, I don’t know. I loved working with Sam Peckipah, and we did a couple of
things together. But there’s another, HEAVEN’S GATE. I think it was a really beautiful film that
got clobbered.
HENRY:
Why do you think it got beat up on when it first came out?
KRIS:
I think it had to do with our director. It just seemed like that was not an
uncommon thing, to get in a film, and all the rivals running it down in the
papers and everywhere. And it was so long a production that there was plenty of
time to get down on Michael Cimino.
HENRY:
You’ve been joined both in music and onscreen with The Highwaymen.
KRIS:
They were my heroes. And the notion that they would one day be my friends and
working partners – I look back on it as probably the best ten years of my life.
Willie (Nelson) and Waylon (Jennings) and John (Johnny Cash).
HENRY:
Are you still close with Willie Nelson?
KRIS:
(laughs) Oh yes! He’s a hero, and just a plain funny person. He’s probably the
best musician I know. He plays the guitar like Segovia. And just a funny man.
HENRY:
You all worked together on that 1986 STAGCOACH remake. I heard that it was originally
supposed to be a musical – is that correct?
KRIS:
I couldn’t tell you; I remember that it had a lot of trouble getting started,
and we ended up in the stagecoach for most of it. I look back on those years
with The Highwaymen as a real blessed time in my life. With my heroes; and we
were really good together.
HENRY:
You were wonderful together; I loved the music you produced, and I enjoyed the
movies.
KRIS:
Yeah, I did too. And everybody, Waylon, Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, were
perfect all the time. I’m not saying they weren’t all crazy too. We had a
wonderful ten years.
DON’T MISS ‘AMERICAN
INDIAN ARTS MARKETPLACE’ SUN. AT THE AUTRY!
1st Prize - Buffalo Mask with intricate beeding
I’m just back from The Autry’s
annual American Indian Arts Marketplace where
over 200 artists from over forty tribal affiliations are showing and selling
their art at the from 10 a.m. ‘til 5 p.m. Sunday, November 12th. The work is in every medium imaginable –
paintings, sculpture, jewelry – wonderful silver work, pottery, beadwork,
basketry, photography, paintings, textiles, wooden carvings, from very
traditional to very modern.
There are also family
activities, various demonstrations, informative talks – if you are interested
in American Indian culture you don’t want to miss this event. I’ll have a full article in the next Round-up.
Be prepared to walk a distance – the Marketplace, and the L.A. Zoo next door,
attracted huge crowds today. And bring your appetite – the Indian Fry Bread is
excellent as always.
EXTRAS CASTING FOR AMC’S
‘THE SON’ SEASON TWO!
If you are in the Austin,
Texas area, and 18 or over, you might get a gig as an extra in season two of
AMC’s terrific Western series, THE SON. It’s the story of Eli McCullough,
founder of a Texas cattle and oil empire, seen in two different times in his
life: as a young captive of the Comanches, played by Jacob Lofland, and as a
grown man and head of the family, played by Pierce Brosnan. They are looking
for all ethnic groups. Here’s a link to
the BACKSTAGE casting notice:
Good luck, and please let
us know if you get a part!
BRUCE DERN TO HOST A
THANKSGIVING WEEK OF WESTERNS ON HDNET MOVIES!
Just in case you didn’t
think you had enough to be thankful for, Bruce Dern, the wonderful actor who
made a million enemies (and as many friends) when he killed John Wayne in THE
COWBOYS, will be hosting sixteen Westerns on HDNET-Movies during Thanksgiving
week, his introductions filmed at the Autry Museum. It’s a really delightful jambalaya of films –
CHATO’S LAND with Charles Bronson, DUEL AT DIABLO with Sidney Poitier and James
Garner, all three MAGNIFICENT 7 sequels, two Peckinpahs, DEATH RIDES A HORSE
with Lee Van Cleef, HOUR OF THER GUN, COMES A HORSEMAN, THE KENTUCKIAN… My only disappointment is that they’re only
showing one of Bruce’s own, POSSE, with Kirk Douglas.
They start on Monday, Nov. 20th, and
run through Sunday, the 26th. For the full schedule, go HERE. And you can read my TRUE
WEST article on the making of THE COWBOYS, featuring my interview with Bruce
Dern, HERE.
‘GODLESS’
COMES TO NETFLIX NOV. 22nd!
In
the 1880s, in the town of La Belle, New Mexico, a mining disaster abruptly wipes
out the male population. And when word gets out that the town’s women are
fending for themselves, it doesn’t take long for bad men to take notice. This
six episode series from writer/director Scott Frank and exec producer Steve
Sodergergh, stars Michelle Dockery, Lady Mary Crawley from DOWNTON ABBEY; Jeff
Daniels; Sam Waterston; and Kim Coates from SONS OF ANARCHY. Check out the
trailer!
‘YOUNG
GUNS’ RELOADED?
Morgan
Creek is considering rebooting the YOUNG GUNS franchise as a series and a
feature. The original films, 1988’s YOUNG GUNS and 1990’s YOUNG GUNS II
rejuvenated interest in the Western movie by focusing on the young Regulators
of the Lincoln County War, and made stars of Emilio Estevez as Billy the Kid,
Kiefer Sutherland as Doc Scurlock, as well as Charlie Sheen, Loud Diamond
Phillips, and Dermot Mulroney. Although
not much is known about Morgan Creek’s plans, Deadline: Hollywood says talks are underway with a streaming
service. Remarkably, a list of 48
episode titles have been released!
‘A WORD ON WESTERNS’
CELEBRATES ‘GUNSMOKE NOV. 21 AT THE AUTRY
On Tuesday, November 21st,
at the Wells Fargo Theatre at the Autry Museum, producer, writer,
historian and Western crazy Rob Word will host another of his A Word on Westerns events, this time
celebrating arguably the greatest of Western TV series, GUNSMOKE! Among his guest will be actors Bruce Boxleitner, Charles Dierkop, Jacqueline
Scott, Tom Reese, Jan Shepard, director Jerry James, and the man who guested
more often on GUNSMOKE than any other, Morgan Woodward. 19 episodes, 17
characters, and Matt Dillon killed almost every one of them!
The
2nd annual Tumbleweed Township Festival will be held on Saturday and
Sunday, November 18th and 19th, at 3855 Alamo Street in
Simi Valley, California. This is a Wild West living history re-creation run by
folks who also run renaissance fairs. You are encouraged, though not required,
to come in costume (not that superhero
junk, Western costume!) and among the
real-life characters you may find yourself interacting with are Laura Ingalls Wilder,
Harriet Tubman, Joaquin Murrieta, Annie Oakley, Cole Younger, Calamity Jane,
and Nat Love. For more information, visit the official website HERE. Tickets are $15 a day at the gate, and a buck
less online.
THE
WORLD OF LAURA INGALLS WILDER, THURS, NOV 16, IN BROOKLYN
When
I was growing up, in Brooklyn as it happens, every girl I knew was reading
Laura Ingalls’ Little House on the
Prairie books. I was not – I was a
boy after all (still am), and those cute Garth Williams illustrations with
girls in bonnets holding dolls was too girly for me. I didn’t read one until I
was thirty, and then I devoured them – it’s the best series of books about
pioneer life that I’ve ever read. I’ve
also grown to appreciate Garth Williams’ illustrations.
At
the Old Stone House & Washington Park, location of one of the greatest
battles of the American Revolution, at 3rd Street between 4th & 5th Avenues
in Park Slope, Brooklyn, author Marta McDowell explores Wilder's deep
connection with the natural world, following the wagon trail of the beloved
Little House series. She'll discuss Wilder's life and inspirations, pinpoint
the Ingalls and Wilder homestead claims on authentic archival maps, and talk
about the growing cycle of plants and vegetables featured in the series. You
can learn more, and buy $20 tickets, HERE.
AND
THAT’S A WRAP!
The
new True West is out with my article
on the Kinder, Gentler Side of Sam Peckinpah – I spoke with Mariette Hartley,
L.Q. Jones, Max Evans, James Drury, about making RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY and BALLAD OF
CABLE HOGUE.
I
spent much of this past week at the American
Film Market in Santa Monica, where hundreds of independent producers and
distributors and filmmakers from all over the world meet to do business, and I
was thrilled to track down about a dozen new Westerns and Western projects that
I’ll be writing about soon here, and in True
West. Most are American, but not all – one rolled camera this week in
Luxembourg!
P.S. - At the American Indian Arts Marketplace I ran into actor Zahn McClarnon, who was terrific in THE SON, playing Toshaway, mentor to the captive young Eli McCullough (Jacob Lofland). When I told him I thought it was his best role to date, he grinned. "Wait until you see the new season of WESTWORLD." Something more to look forward to!
Happy
Veterans Day!
Henry
All
Original Material Copyright November 2017 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights
Reserved