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The Westerner | |
---|---|
Genre | Western |
Created by | Sam Peckinpah |
Written by | Jack Curtis Bruce Geller Tom Gries Robert Heverly Sam Peckinpah |
Directed by | Sam Peckinpah André de Toth Tom Gries |
Starring | Brian Keith |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Hal Hudson |
Producer | Sam Peckinpah |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 25 mins. |
Production company | Four Star Productions |
Original release | |
Network | NBC |
Release | September 30 – December 30, 1960 |
The Westerner is an American Western television series that aired on NBC from September 30 to December 30, 1960. Created and produced by Sam Peckinpah, who also wrote and directed some episodes, the series was a Four Star Television production. [1] The Westerner stars Brian Keith as amiable, unexceptional cowhand/drifter Dave Blassingame, and features John Dehner as rakish Burgundy Smith, who appeared in three episodes.
Dave Blassingame is a cowboy and drifter who is handy with a gun and his fists, travelling through an often lawless country trying to get enough money together to buy his own ranch.
His dog Brown is played by Spike, trained by Frank Weatherwax and best known for playing the title role in Old Yeller . Brown figures prominently in a number of episodes, appears in all of them, and always appears following Blassingame during the end credits.
Guest stars included Malcolm Atterbury, Ben Cooper, Katy Jurado, and John M. Pickard, Sam Jaffe, and one episode (the first, "Jeff") memorably featured Warren Oates as a drunk quietly passing out at a table. Other guest stars, like Ms. Jurado, would later go on to appear in some of Peckinpah's feature films. These included John Anderson ( Ride the High Country ), R. G. Armstrong ( Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid ), Dub Taylor ( The Wild Bunch , The Getaway ), and Mary Murphy ( Junior Bonner ).
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pilot | "Trouble at Tres Cruces" | Sam Peckinpah | Sam Peckinpah | March 26, 1959 | |
This was episode 24 of season 3 of Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre. | |||||
1 | "Jeff" | Sam Peckinpah | Robert Heverly, Sam Peckinpah | September 30, 1960 | |
2 | "School Days" | André De Toth | Robert Heverly, Sam Peckinpah | October 7, 1960 | |
3 | "Brown" | Sam Peckinpah | Bruce Geller | October 21, 1960 | |
4 | "Mrs. Kennedy" | Bernard L. Kowalski | John Dunkel, Sam Peckinpah | October 28, 1960 | |
5 | "Dos Pinos" | Don McDougall | E. Jack Neuman | November 4, 1960 | |
6 | "The Courting of Libby" | Sam Peckinpah | Bruce Geller | November 11, 1960 | |
7 | "Treasure" | Ted Post | Cyril Hume | November 18, 1960 | |
8 | "The Old Man" | André De Toth | Jack Curtis, Sam Peckinpah | November 25, 1960 | |
9 | "Ghost of a Chance" | Bruce Geller | Milton S. Gelman | December 2, 1960 | |
10 | "Line Camp" | Tom Gries | Tom Gries | December 9, 1960 | |
11 | "Going Home" | Elliot Silverstein | Jack Curtis | December 16, 1960 | |
12 | "Hand on the Gun" | Sam Peckinpah | Bruce Geller | December 23, 1960 | |
13 | "The Painting" | Sam Peckinpah | Bruce Geller | December 30, 1960 |
The musical score was largely the work of Four Star's Herschel Burke Gilbert.
The pilot for The Westerner appeared on CBS's Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre .
For rerun syndication it was grouped with three other short-lived Western series from the same company, Black Saddle starring Peter Breck, Johnny Ringo starring Don Durant, and Law of the Plainsman starring Michael Ansara, under the umbrella title The Westerners, bracketed with hosting sequences featuring Keenan Wynn. [2]
A two-DVD set of the complete series including the pilot episode was released by Shout! Factory in February 2017. [3]
The critically acclaimed series ran for 13 episodes, but it was cancelled because of low ratings (due to being placed in the same time slot as The Flintstones and Route 66 ). [4]
An attempt to update and revive the hardbitten series aired as a January 1963 episode of The Dick Powell Theater , "The Losers", directed by Peckinpah and featuring Lee Marvin as Dave Blassingame and Keenan Wynn as Burgundy Smith, but set in the modern West. Rosemary Clooney portrayed the leading lady.
One of the episodes of The Westerner, "Line Camp" guest-starring Robert Culp, was the basis for the 1968 film Will Penny starring Charlton Heston. Slim Pickens plays essentially the same role, as a feisty derby-wearing cook, in both the television episode and the movie.
Brian Keith briefly played the same character again in 1991's The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw , which featured a number of 1950s and 1960s television Western series leads reprising their roles in quick cameo appearances (Gene Barry as Bat Masterson, Hugh O'Brian as Wyatt Earp, Jack Kelly as Bart Maverick, Clint Walker as Cheyenne Bodie, David Carradine as Kung Fu's Caine, Chuck Connors as The Rifleman , and so on).
David Samuel Peckinpah was an American film director and screenwriter. His 1969 Western epic The Wild Bunch received an Academy Award nomination and was ranked No. 80 on the American Film Institute's top 100 list. His films employed a visually innovative and explicit depiction of action and violence as well as a revisionist approach to the Western genre.
Robert Alba Keith, known professionally as Brian Keith, was an American film, television, and stage actor who in his six-decade career gained recognition for his work in films such as the Disney family film The Parent Trap (1961); Johnny Shiloh (1963); the comedy The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966); and the adventure saga The Wind and the Lion (1975), in which he portrayed President Theodore Roosevelt.
Francis Xavier Aloysius James Jeremiah Keenan Wynn was an American character actor. His expressive face was his stock-in-trade; and though he rarely carried the lead role, he had prominent billing in most of his film and television roles.
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John Dehner, also credited Dehner Forkum, was an American stage, radio, film, and television actor. From the late 1930s to the late 1980s, he amassed a long list of performance credits, often in roles as sophisticated con men, shady authority figures, and other smooth-talking villains. His credits just in feature films, televised series, and in made-for-TV movies number almost 300 productions. Dehner worked extensively as a radio actor during the latter half of that medium's "golden age,” accumulating hundreds of additional credits on nationally broadcast series. His most notable starring role was as Paladin on the radio version of the television Western Have Gun – Will Travel, which aired for 106 episodes on CBS from 1958 to 1960. He continued to work as a voice actor in film, such as narrating the film The Hallelujah Trail. Earlier in his career, Dehner also worked briefly for Walt Disney Studios, serving as an assistant animator from 1940 to March 1941 at the company's facilities in Burbank, California. He appeared in Columbo episodes "Swan Song" (1974) with Johnny Cash, and as Commodore Otis Swanson in "Last Salute to the Commodore" (1976). He appeared in a two part episode of Mission: Impossible.
Four Star Television, also called Four Star International, was an American television production company. Founded in 1952 as Four Star Productions by prominent Hollywood actors Dick Powell, David Niven, Charles Boyer and Joel McCrea, it was inspired by Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz founding Desilu Productions a year earlier. McCrea left soon after its founding to continue in films, television and radio, and was replaced by Ida Lupino as the fourth star—although Lupino did not own stock in the company.
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Johnny Ringo is an American Western television series starring Don Durant that aired on CBS from October 1, 1959, until June 30, 1960. It is loosely based on the life of the notorious gunfighter and outlaw Johnny Ringo, also known as John Peters Ringo or John B. Ringgold, who tangled with Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and Buckskin Franklyn Leslie.
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Now being filmed in Hollywood! 125 different Keenan Wynn wrap-arounds are being produced and carefully integrated into each of THE WESTERNERS episodes ... giving this series A FIRST RUN LOOK! [...] Fall '65 start! For stripping, once-a-week, or as a back-to-back hour (with special Keenan Wynn bridges). [...] starring Brian Keith as Dave Blasingame, Michael Ansara as Sam Buchart, Peter Breck as Clay Culhane, Don Durant as Johnny Ringo.