A blog about a cowboy...without a horse. (Or a cow for that matter). When you get right down to it I guess the only thing I still have is the cowboy hat, the boots and the Spurs. But, that's close enough to Cowboy for me.
Inspired Words to Remember
Colossians 1:27
To them God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.
I woke up one Saturday morning recently without much desire to get out of bed. I felt like being lazy, so I turned on the TV. There was nothing on the channels I normally watched, so I turned to the guide and found Gunsmoke. I watched it intently for the hour it was on. I don't normally watch westerns, but between you and Annie, my interests have been piqued. I've been told that the Shootist is one I need to my collection as well as Quigley Down Under, Bonanza and Gunsmoke. My dad enjoys Clint Eastwood westerns, so those will likely be added.
I'll be watching your "Cowboy in the Spotlight" section.
Perhaps one of the best admired actors of the western television era is the man in the spotlight. This not my story but certainly one worth reading and of interest to all who miss those days.
Dennis Weaver grew up on a Missouri farm, and was an outstanding athlete on his college track and field team. He competed in the decathlon and came close to making the US Olympic team in 1948. A struggling actor for many years, he eventually became a familiar character actor in films, mostly low-budget westerns, and played Marshal Dillon's friend and deputy Chester Goode for the first nine years of TV's Gunsmoke.
Weaver gave his Gunsmoke character a limp and a twangy accent, and said later that he added these endearing embellishments to prevent his performance from being overshadowed by the towering James Arness, who played Dillon. Being a TV sidekick was not a lucrative job in the 1950s, so between seasons Weaver augmented his income by touring in a singing trio with his castmates Milburn Stone and Amanda Blake. After leaving Gunsmoke, Weaver starred as the friendly veterinarian Kentucky Jones, as the paternal Everglades ranger with a bear on his hands in Gentle Ben, and as the New Mexico deputy marshal on loan to the New York Police in McCloud. In films, Weaver played the nervous manager of the Mirador Motel in Orson Welles' classic Touch of Evil. He also played a police captain in Jack Webb's original theatrical film of Dragnet, then played five different characters in five episodes of the subsequent series.
During a 1971 break from McCloud, Weaver was offered the lead in a television movie, playing a lonely traveling salesman chased and taunted on the highway by a crazed trucker. As the star, he was given veto power over the network's selection of a rookie director, but he agreed that the energetic young Steven Spielberg deserved a chance. The film, Duel, was released theatrically overseas, launched Spielberg's career, and is still considered one of the best films ever made for commercial television.
1 comments:
I woke up one Saturday morning recently without much desire to get out of bed. I felt like being lazy, so I turned on the TV. There was nothing on the channels I normally watched, so I turned to the guide and found Gunsmoke. I watched it intently for the hour it was on. I don't normally watch westerns, but between you and Annie, my interests have been piqued. I've been told that the Shootist is one I need to my collection as well as Quigley Down Under, Bonanza and Gunsmoke. My dad enjoys Clint Eastwood westerns, so those will likely be added.
I'll be watching your "Cowboy in the Spotlight" section.
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