In his examination of the subversive origins of Roy Huggins'
western TV series Maverick, Dennis
Broe covers the way the show critiqued capitalism, the myth of the noble
conquest of the west by the white man, and the corrupt system of law and order
practiced by the United States both at home and abroad on the world stage. The
one theme running through all these topics is the insatiable greed of the human
species, which the Maverick brothers are able to exploit not only at the poker
table but also in a number of other cons and schemes that only work because
their marks are blinded by their own avarice.
But the great irony of Maverick's
existence is that it was produced at Warner Brothers, perhaps the most
rapacious studio then in business. Perhaps Jack Warner didn't know who he was
dealing with in the one-time member of the Communist party Huggins, but after
he cheated Huggins out of royalties for creating Maverick and Warner's other hit series of the time, 77 Sunset Strip, by falsely crediting
their pilots as having derived from released Warner feature films, Maverick evolved from a series about a
wandering gambler with a bit of larceny in his heart to a full-scale attack on
the foundations of American society. Warner also underpaid its actors and
writers, used stock footage from earlier motion pictures wherever possible, and
otherwise worked to maximize the company's profits at the expense of everything
else. Tired of being taken advantage of, both Huggins and James Garner left the show
and the studio by 1960, leaving Warner with the dilemma of how to sustain one
of its most popular, and therefore profitable, series.
The first step, as described in our post on the 1960
episodes, was to introduce Roger Moore (then under contract to Warner) as the
Maverick's English cousin Beau to replace Garner beginning in Season 4. But in
agreeing to take on the role, Moore had his contract reworked so that he could
leave after a year and citing the declining quality of the scripts over the
course of Season 4, Moore left the series after appearing in only 15 episodes
as Beau Maverick, the last being "Red Dog" (March 5, 1961) in which
Beau just happens to rest at an isolated spot designated by a collection of
outlaws as the meeting place to carry out a plot unknown to all but one of them,
and Beau has to play along until he figures out a way to wriggle out of the
predicament without getting killed.
Three weeks later Robert Colbert was brought on as
heretofore never mentioned third Maverick brother Brent in "The Forbidden
City" (March 26, 1961). According to Garner in his autobiography The Garner Files, when Colbert was told
that he would have to wear Garner's old costume and essentially have to pull
off a Garner impersonation, Colbert pleaded, "Put me in a dress and call
me Brenda, but don't do this to me!" Though Warner had obviously
contemplated adding Colbert before Moore's departure, given the publicity
photos of the two and Jack Kelly posing as a Maverick trio, they kept Colbert
for only one more episode, "Benefit of the Doubt" (April 9, 1961),
before basically ghosting him. Season 4 ended with a two-part story starring
Kelly, and Colbert was never informed that he was being dropped but never told
to report for Season 5 either.
For Season 5, Warner Brothers tried another sleight of hand
worthy of a Maverick--alternating new episodes starring Kelly with re-runs of
old Garner episodes but listing Garner in the opening credits for the new Kelly
episodes to make it appear that he was still somehow involved. Only 13 new
episodes were created for the final season. None of the machinations could save
the series, whose ratings plummeted after Huggins and Garner left. Warner had
essentially killed its golden goose, and by 1961-62 none of its cookie-cutter
productions ranked in the top 30 of the TV ratings.
But what is perhaps even more ironic is that even with
Huggins and Garner gone, the series continued to poke at the underbelly of a
corrupt establishment. Some of the Season 4 episodes, like the aforementioned
"Red Dog," seemed to wander far afield from the original Maverick ethos, most probably because
they were derived from earlier Warner properties that had nothing to do with
the series. But towards the end of Season 4, the stories begin to get back to
the series' original targets: "Flood's Folly" (February 19, 1961)
includes a corrupt judge who is trying to rig an estate to favor the woman he
is courting, not realizing that she is using him to help a wanted outlaw.
"Triple Indemnity" (March 19, 1961) has Bart tangling with small-town
kingpin George Parker who has a hand in all the local businesses, especially a
life insurance company run by the town undertaker. "The Forbidden
City" (March 26, 1961) exposes the sheriff and mayor as being part of a
conspiracy to hide the fact that their wealth originated from making a corrupt
deal years ago to keep quiet about a wealthy landowner guilty of murder. And
"Benefit of the Doubt" (April 9, 1961) has Brent getting mixed up in
a corrupt sheriff's attempt to rob his own town's mail company to satisfy his
aspiring fiance. Finally, the two-part "The Devil's Necklace" (April
16 & 23, 1961) depicts greed and corruption on all sides as Bart escapes as
the only survivor of multiple plots by a madly ambitious army captain, a
renegade Apache brave, and a conniving scam-artist peddler.
In Season 5 the stakes are raised from individual bad actors
to corrupt institutions. "Dade City Dodge" (September 18, 1961) finds
Bart embroiled in a scam run by the leading citizens of Dade City, Texas who
for years have run a crooked poker game to fleece anyone unfortunate enough to
visit, with the sheriff receiving a cut of the take as well. "The Art
Lovers" (October 1, 1961) skewers not only the world of corrupt art
dealers but also their ignorant, nouveau-riche tycoon clients, who have no
qualms about buying what they believe to be stolen masterpieces but are unable
to recognize that the works are forgeries. "The Golden Fleecing"
(October 8, 1961) takes aim at investment banking and the easily manipulated
stock market, allowing scoundrels like Loftus Jaggers to rob innocent clients
of their assets by luring them into stock agreements and then short-selling and
feeding the market false information to drive the client to bankruptcy,
allowing the banker to swoop in and buy their assets for next to nothing.
"A Technical Error" (November 26, 1961) mocks the banking industry, a
favorite target of Huggins-era Maverick
episodes, when Bart unwittingly accepts ownership of a small-town bank to
settle the gambling debts of its owner, only to discover that the bank is
missing $20,000 that Bart must then replace to avoid being accused of fraud. He
manages to escape calamity by introducing a trading stamp program that the
townspeople are obsessed with even though the stamps are redeemable only for
literal junk, a racket very popular in the early 1960s because it gave the
illusion of getting something for nothing.
Undoubtedly the most popular Season 5 episode from 1961 is
the send-up of rival western Bonanza
in "Three Queens Full" (November 12, 1961) in which Jim Backus plays
the Wheelwright family patriarch whose top priority is to see that the family
name is never besmirched and that the true story is never revealed of how they
came to acquire their vast empire by stealing it from the Indians, a critique
of the very origins of the United States. It's surprising that even with
Huggins long gone Warner allowed the show to take shots at the foundations of
the society on which its very existence was built. Perhaps they felt that
parodying other TV shows and exposing other industries was far enough removed
not to be a threat, but more likely, just like the crooks the Mavericks were
always trying to outsmart, they were willing to try anything that would make a
buck.
The Actors
For the biographies of James Garner, Jack Kelly, and Roger
Moore, see the 1960 post on Maverick.
Robert Colbert
Born July 26, 1931 in Long Beach, CA, Robert Colbert's entry
into show business began when he was serving as a typist for the Military
Police on Okinawa while moonlighting as a radio DJ on KSBK in the evenings. A
female member of the Air Force Special Services thought his voice would be a
good fit for a local theatrical production of The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, and the experience gave Colbert the
acting bug. When he returned to the States he continued acting in theatrical
productions until spotted by actor Mickey Shaughessy, who referred him to a
talent agency. After a few bit parts in feature films from 1957-59, including
the Three Stooges farce Have Rocket --
Will Travel, Colbert was signed to Warner Brothers and began making guest
appearances on their programs such as Bourbon
Street Beat, Sugarfoot, and Bronco in 1959. He made dozens of
appearances on Warner TV shows over the next few years, including his debut on Maverick in 1960 until Warner decided to
use him to try to replace James Garner during Season 4.
But by 1962 Colbert, like Garner before him, had had enough
of Warner's shenanigans and asked to be released from his contract. He
continued to find steady guest roles on shows such as Wagon Train, Perry Mason,
and The Virginian, and even made a
return appearance on the Warner series 77
Sunset Strip in 1964. But by his own admission, Colbert never really sought
out star status:
I guess I would be considered an
underachiever by today's standards. I never went for the gusto of trying to
become a star. I never had a publicity agent. I never really made the rounds of
the Hollywood parties. I was just content to be under contract to Warner Bros.
and work all the time. I didn't do anything to hype my career, but I've never
had any major regrets about it. I liked the fact that I could live a normal
life, that I could walk down the street or travel on a plane without being
mobbed by fans. I was always working; that was good enough.
However, his profile was about to rise, if ever so slightly.
After he starred in a failed TV pilot for MGM called The Mayor in 1964, his agent arranged a meeting with producer Irwin
Allen, which led to Colbert being cast in one of the lead roles as Dr. Doug
Phillips on the 1966-67 science fiction series The Time Tunnel. That series was followed by less frequent guest
appearances on shows such as Hawaii Five-O,
Mannix, and Land of the Giants. But in 1973 he was cast in the role of Stuart
Brooks in the daytime soap opera The
Young and the Restless, a role he continued for 10 years. By the 1980s his
workload continued to decrease but included multiple appearances on Hunter and occasional feature film
roles, most notably in the farces Amazon
Women on the Moon and I'm Gonna Git
You Sucka. In the 1990s he made a couple of appearances on Reasonable Doubts and Baywatch before retiring from acting.
Today at age 87 he still makes occasional appearances at western and science
fiction conventions.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 4, Episode 16, "A
State of Siege": Ray Danton (shown on the left, starred in Chief Crazy Horse, Onionhead,
The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond, The George Raft Story, and Portrait of a Mobster and played Nifty
Cronin on The Alaskans) plays wealthy
landowner Don Felipe Archuleta. Lisa Gaye (Gwen Kirby on How to Marry a Millionaire) plays his fiance Soledad Lozaro. Slim
Pickens (starred in The Story of Will
Rogers, Dr. Strangelove, Blazing Saddles, The Apple Dumpling Gang, Beyond
the Poseidon Adventure, and The
Howling and played Slim on Outlaws,
Slim Walker on The Wide Country,
California Joe Milner on Custer, and
Sgt. Beauregard Wiley on B.J. & the
Bear) plays the stagecoach driver.
Season 4, Episode 17, "Family
Pride": Denver Pyle (shown on the right, played Ben Thompson on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Grandpa Tarleton on Tammy, Briscoe Darling on The Andy Griffith Show, Buck Webb on The
Doris Day Show, Mad Jack on The Life
and Times of Grizzly Adams, and Uncle Jesse on The Dukes of Hazzard) plays Beau's old friend Jerry O'Brien. Robert
Cornthwaite (Professor Windish on Get
Smart) plays scam artist John Crippen. Karl Swenson (Lars Hanson on Little House on the Prairie) plays imposter
General Josiah Warren. Anita Sands (later became astrologer to the stars and a
self-help guru) plays his grand-daughter Roseanne. Wallace Rooney (Andrew
Winters on The Doctors) plays general
store owner Mr. Wallace. Stacy Keach, Sr. (Carlson on Get Smart) plays the Silver City marshal. Olan Soule (Aristotle
"Tut" Jones on Captain Midnight,
Ray Pinker on Dragnet (1952-59), and
Fred Springer on Arnie) plays a hotel
clerk.
Season 4, Episode 18, "The
Cactus Switch": Edgar Buchanan (Uncle Joe Carson on The Beverly Hillbillies, Green
Acres, and Petticoat Junction,
Red Connors on Hopalong Cassidy,
Judge Roy Bean on Judge Roy Bean,
Bob/Doc Dawson on Tales of Wells Fargo,
Doc Burrage on The Rifleman, and J.J.
Jackson on Cade's County) plays bank
robber and murderer Red Daniels. Robert Logan (J.R. Hale on 77 Sunset Strip and Jericho Jones on Daniel Boone) plays his son Ben. Peter
Hansen (shown on the left, played Lt. Col. Van Pelt on Gomer Pyle:
USMC, Major Drake on How the West Was
Won, and Lee Baldwin on Port Charles
and General Hospital) plays con man
Lawrence Deville. Fay Spain (starred in Dragstrip
Girl, Al Capone, and The Gentle Rain) plays his accomplice
Lana Cane. Harry Harvey (Sheriff Tom Blodgett on The Roy Rogers Show, Mayor George Dixon on Man Without a Gun, and Houghton Stott on It's a Man's World) plays jeweler Mueller. Chubby Johnson (Concho
on Temple Houston) plays stagecoach
driver Andy Gish. Carolyn Komant (Dixie on The
Roaring 20's) plays Beau's date Flossie. Lane Chandler (Tom Pike on Lawman) plays Green River Sheriff Bill
Wright.
Season 4, Episode 19, "Dutchman's
Gold": Jacques Aubuchon (starred in The
Silver Chalice, The Big Boodle,
and The Love God? and played Chief
Urulu on McHale's Navy) plays prospector
The Dutchman. Mala Powers (shown on the right, starred in Cyrano
de Bergerac, Rose of Cimarron,
and Tammy and the Bachelor and played
Rebecca Boone on Walt Disney's Daniel
Boone and Mona on Hazel) plays saloon
owner Charlotte Simmons. Frank Sully (Danny the bartender on The Virginian) plays her bartender
Charlie. Carlos Romero (Rico Rodriguez on Wichita
Town, Romero Serrano on Zorro,
and Carlo Agretti on Falcon Crest)
plays Mexican bandit Ricardo Padilla. Sheldon Allman (Norm Miller on Harris Against the World) plays saddle
tramp Vern Tripp.
Season 4, Episode 20, "The
Iceman": Andrew Duggan (shown on the left, played Cal Calhoun on Bourbon
Street Beat, George Rose on Room for
One More, Major Gen. Ed Britt on 12
O'Clock High, and Murdoch Lancer on Lancer)
plays gubernatorial candidate Calvin Powers. Shirley Knight (starred in Ice Palace, The Dark at the Top of the Stairs, Sweet Bird of Youth, Dutchman,
and As Good as It Gets and played Mrs.
Newcomb on Buckskin, Estelle Winters
on Maggie Winters, and Phyllis Van De
Kamp on Desperate Housewives) plays
his daughter Nancy. Virginia Gregg (starred in Dragnet, Crime in the Streets,
Operation Petticoat and was the voice
of Norma Bates in Psycho and the
voice of Maggie Belle Klaxon on Calvin
and the Colonel) plays his housekeeper Abbey. Bruce Gordon (see the
biography section for the 1961 post on The Untouchables) plays his opponent Rath Lawson. John Kellogg (Jack Chandler
on Peyton Place) plays Lawson's
henchman Ben Striker. James Seay (see the biography section for the 1960 post
on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp)
plays Sheriff Gil McCrary. Nelson Olmsted (Captain Masters, MD on The Phil Silvers Show) plays coroner Eli
Sayles.
Season 4, Episode 21, "Diamond
Flush": Carl Esmond (starred in Little
Men, Lover Come Back (1946), and Walk a Crooked Mile) plays French
nobleman Comte de Lisle. Dan Tobin (Terrance Clay on Perry Mason) plays imposter Ralph Ferguson. Anna Lee (shown on the right, starred in King Solomon's Mines, How Green Was My Valley, Flying Tigers, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, The
Sound of Music, and In Like Flint
and played Lila Quartermaine on General
Hospital) plays his wife Helene. Ted de Corsia (Police Chief Hagedorn on Steve Canyon) plays their co-conspirator
Amos Parker. Sig Ruman (starred in Ninotchka, A Night
at the Opera, To Be or Not to Be,
House of Frankenstein, and Stalag 17) plays jeweler August
Bockenheimer. Phil Tully (Charlie the bartender on The Deputy) plays Pinkerton agent Tim O'Rourke.
Season 4, Episode 22, "Last
Stop: Oblivion": Buddy Ebsen (shown on the left, played Sheriff Matthew Brady on Corky and White Shadow, Sgt. Hunk
Marriner on Northwest Passage, Jed
Clampett on The Beverly Hillbillies,
Barnaby Jones on Barnaby Jones, and
Roy Houston on Matt Houston) plays Oblivion
waystation owner Nero Lyme. Virginia Christine (was the Folger's Coffee woman
in commercials and starred in The Mummy's
Curse, The Killers, and Night Wind and played Ovie Swenson on Tales of Wells Fargo) plays his wife
Verna. Rayford Barnes (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays
their son Dirk. Suzanne Lloyd (Raquel Toledano on Zorro) plays stagecoach passenger Laura Nelson. Maurice Manson
(Frederick Timberlake on Dennis the Menace,
Josh Egan on Hazel, and Hank Pinkham
on General Hospital) plays retired
undertaker Bascombe Sunday. Hampton Fancher (Deputy Lon Gillis on Black Saddle and co-wrote the screenplay
and was executive producer on Blade
Runner) plays hot-headed young gun Tate McKenna. Paul Birch (Erle Stanley
Gardner on The Court of Last Resort,
Mike Malone on Cannonball, and Capt.
Carpenter on The Fugitive) plays
Medicine Forks Sheriff Miller. Donald "Red" Barry (played Red Ryder
in the movie serial The Adventures of Red
Ryder, and played Lt. Snedigar on Surfside
6, The Grand Vizier and Tarantula on Batman,
Capt. Red Barnes on Police Woman, and
Jud Larabee on Little House on the
Prairie) plays wanted killer Durst. Bud Osborne (played stagecoach drivers
in dozens of westerns and in episodes of The
Cisco Kid, Annie Oakley, The Range Rider, Hopalong Cassidy, The Lone
Ranger, The Adventures of Wild Bill
Hickok, The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin,
Rescue 8, Zorro, Bronco, Law of the Plainsman, Johnny Ringo, Cheyenne, The Texan, and Rawhide) plays stagecoach driver Sam
Overman.
Season 4, Episode 23, "Flood's
Folly": Alan Baxter (appeared in Saboteur,
Close-Up, and Paint Your Wagon) plays Beau's old friend Judge John Scott. Jeanne
Cooper (Grace Douglas on Bracken's World
and Katherine Chancellor Murphy on The
Young and the Restless) plays Scott's client Martha Flood. Michael Pate (shown on the right, starred
in Face to Face, Julius Caesar, Hondo, and
Tower of London and played Chief
Vittoro on Hondo and Det. Sgt. Vic
Maddern on Matlock) plays wanted
murderer Chet Whitehead.
Season 4, Episode 24, "Maverick
at Law": Gage Clarke (see the biography section for the 1961 post on Gunsmoke) plays disgruntled bank teller
Myron Emerson. Ken Mayer (Maj. Robbie Robertson on Space Patrol) plays Ten Sleep Sheriff J. Starrett.
Season 4, Episode 25, "Red
Dog": Mike Road (Marshal Tom Sellers on Buckskin, Lt. Joe Switolski on The
Roaring 20's, and provided the voice for Race Bannon on Johnny Quest and Ugh on Space Ghost) plays desperado Buckskin
Charlie King. John Carradine (shown on the left, starred in Stagecoach,
The Grapes of Wrath, House of Frankenstein, House of Dracula, The Ten Commandments, and Sex
Kittens Go to College and played Gen. Joshua McCord on Branded) plays crooked Judge Reese. Lee Van Cleef (starred in High Noon, The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms, For
a Few Dollars More, and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly) plays notorious
gunman Wolf McManus. Joseph Gallison (Dr. Neil Curtis on Days of Our Lives) plays young gunslinger Kid Curran. Sherry
Jackson (Terry Williams on Make Room for
Daddy) plays his wife Erma.
Season 4, Episode 26, "The
Deadly Image": Gerald Mohr (narrator on 19 episodes of The Lone Ranger, Christopher Storm on Foreign Intrigue, voice of Mr. Fantastic
and Reed Richards on Fantastic 4)
plays ex-con Gus Tellson. Abraham Sofaer (starred in Christopher Columbus, Quo
Vadis, and Elephant Walk) plays his
blind father-in-law Papa Rambeau. Dawn Wells (shown on the right, played Mary Ann Summers on Gilligan's Island) plays Papa's
grand-daughter Caprice. Robert Ridgely (Lt. Frank Kimbro on The Gallant Men, the announcer on The Woody Woodbury Show, and Cliff
Hamilton on Domestic Life and was the
voice of Tarzan on Tarzan, Lord of the
Jungle, Flash Gordon on Flash Gordon,
and General Ross on The Incredible Hulk)
plays U.S. cavalry Lt. Reed. Bartlett Robinson (Frank Caldwell on Mona McCluskey) plays his commanding
officer Capt. Ranson. Kelly Thordsen (Colorado Charlie on Yancy Derringer) plays outlaw henchman Hemmett.
Season 4, Episode 27, "Triple
Indemnity": Alan Hewitt (starred in That
Touch of Mink, Days of Wine and Roses,
The Misadventures of Merlin Jones,
and The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
and played Det. Bill Brennan on My
Favorite Martian) plays Parkerville kingpin George Parker. Ed Nelson
(Michael Rossi on Peyton Place and
Ward Fuller on The Silent Force)
plays his younger brother William. Peter Breck (shown on the left, played Clay Culhane on Black Saddle and Nick Barkley on The Big Valley) plays Bart's old friend
Doc Holliday. Laurie Mitchell (starred in Calypso
Joe, Queen of Outer Space, and Missile to the Moon) plays Holliday's
sweetheart Ellen. Mickey Simpson (Boley on Captain
David Grief) plays elixir peddler Cabella.
Season 4, Episode 28, "The
Forbidden City": Robert Foulk (Ed Davis on Father Knows Best, Sheriff Miller on Lassie, Joe Kingston on Wichita
Town, Mr. Wheeler on Green Acres,
and Phillip Toomey on The Rifleman)
plays Sunburst Sheriff Sam Shadley. Gertrude Flynn (appeared in War and Peace, Rome Adventure, and Funny
Girl and played Anna Sawyer on Days
of Our Lives) plays spinster Nettie Moss. Craig Duncan (Sgt.
Stanfield/Banfield on Mackenzie's Raiders)
plays poker player Val Joyce. Bill Erwin (Joe Walters on My Three Sons and Glenn Diamond on Struck by Lightning) plays a hotel clerk.
Season 4, Episode 29,
"Substitute Gun": Robert Rockwell (shown on the right, played Phillip Boynton on Our Miss Brooks, Sam Logan on The Man From Blackhawk, Tom Bishop on Diff'rent Strokes, and Wally Overmier on
Growing Pains) plays saloon owner Tom
Blauvelt. Coleen Gray (starred in Kiss of
Death, Nightmare Alley, The Killing, The Vampire, The Leech Woman,
and The Phantom Planet and played
Dean Ann Boyd Jones on Bright Promise
and Muriel Clifford on McCloud) plays
his wife Greta. Joan Marshall (Sailor Duval on Bold Venture) plays her sister Connie Malone. Carlos Romero (see
"Dutchman's Gold" above) plays rival saloon owner Clete Spain. Walter
Sande (appeared in To Have and Have Not,
A Place in the Sun, and Bad Day at Black Rock and played Capt.
Horatio Bullwinkle on The Adventures of Tugboat
Annie and Papa Holstrum on The
Farmer's Daughter) plays Spearhead Sheriff Coleman. Jackie Searl (began as
a child actor, appearing in Tom Sawyer
(1930), Huckleberry Finn (1931), Alice in Wonderland (1933), Great Expectations(1934), and Little Lord Fauntleroy) plays assassin
Wilbur "Smiley" Drake. Norman Leavitt (Ralph on Trackdown) plays undertaker Ezra Gouch.
Season 4, Episode 30,
"Benefit of the Doubt": George Wallace (see the biography section for
the 1961 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays Amber Flats Sheriff Joe Holley. Randy Stuart (see the
biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays dance hall girl Mavis Todd. Elizabeth
MacRae (shown on the left, played Lou-Ann Poovie on Gomer Pyle,
U.S.M.C. and Jozie on Search for Tomorrow)
plays her sister Emily. Mort Mills (Marshal Frank Tallman on Man Without a Gun, Sgt. Ben Landro on Perry Mason, and Sheriff Fred Madden on The Big Valley) plays sheriff-wannabe
McGaven. John Alderson (Sgt. Bullock on Boots
and Saddles and Wyatt Earp on Doctor
Who) plays mail office manager Zindler. Slim Pickens (see "A State of
Siege" above) plays stagecoach driver Roscoe. Trevor Bardette (see the
biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays waystation manager Bert Coleman. Steve
Raines (see the biography section for the 1960 post on Rawhide) plays posse member Sims.
Season 4, Episode 31, "The
Devil's Necklace, Part 1": John Dehner (Duke Williams on The Roaring '20's, Commodore Cecil
Wyntoon on The Baileys of Balboa,
Morgan Starr on The Virginian, Cyril
Bennett on The Doris Day Show, Dr.
Charles Cleveland Claver on The New
Temperatures Rising Show, Barrett Fears on Big Hawaii, Marshal Edge Troy on Young Maverick, Lt. Joseph Broggi on Enos, Hadden Marshall on Bare
Essence, and Billy Joe Erskine on The
Colbys) plays scheming peddler Luther Cannonbaugh. Steve Brodie (see the
biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays ambitious U.S. Army Capt. Paul Score. Kasey
Rogers (shown on the right, played Julie Anderson on Peyton Place
and Louise Tate on Bewitched) plays his
wife Angel. John Hoyt (starred in My
Favorite Brunette, The Lady Gambles,
and Blackboard Jungle and played
Grandpa Stanley Kanisky on Gimme a Break!)
plays visiting commander Gen. Bassington. Rayford Barnes (see "Last Stop: Oblivion" above) plays Cpl. Sean Cassidy. Mark Tapscott (see the
biography section for the 1961 post on The Tall Man) plays an unnamed private. Rita Lynn (Ella Russo on The Detectives and Miss Kelly on Mr. Smith Goes to Washington) plays Fort
Distress' commanding officer's wife Edith Reidinger. Michael Forest (starred in
Ski Troop Attack, Atlas, and The Glory Guys and was the voice of Capt. Dorai on Street Fighter II: V and Olympus on Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue) plays Apache
ex-con Bob Tallhorse.
Season 4, Episode 32, "The
Devil's Necklace, Part 2": John Dehner (see "The Devil's Necklace,
Part 1" above) returns as scheming peddler Luther Cannonbaugh. Steve
Brodie (shown on the left, see "The Devil's Necklace, Part 1" above) returns as
ambitious U.S. Army Capt. Paul Score. John Hoyt (see "The Devil's
Necklace, Part 1" above) returns as visiting commander Gen. Bassington.
Chad Everett (starred in Get Yourself a
College Girl, Made in Paris, The Singing Nun, and Airplane II and played Deputy Del Stark
on The Dakotas, Dr. Joe Gannon on Medical Center, Paul Hagen on Hagen, Wyatt Earp III on The Rousters, Jack McKenna on McKenna, Jack Manhattan on Manhattan, AZ, and Vic on Chemistry) plays Bassington's
second-in-command Lt. Gregg. Rayford Barnes (see "Last Stop: Oblivion" above) returns as Cpl. Sean Cassidy. Mark Tapscott (see "The
Devil's Necklace, Part 1" above) returns as an unnamed private. Michael
Forest (see "The Devil's Necklace, Part 1" above) returns as Apache
ex-con Bob Tallhorse.
Season 5, Episode 1, "Dade
City Dodge": Mike Road (see "Red Dog" above) plays con man
Pearly Gates. Kathleen Crowley (shown on the right, played Terry Van Buren on Waterfront and Sophia Starr on Batman)
plays his partner Marla. Ken Lynch (see the biography section for the 1961 post
on Checkmate) plays Dade City Sheriff
Clark. Gage Clarke (see "Maverick at Law" above) plays Dade City
undertaker Luke Harper. Guy Wilkerson (played Panhandle Perkins in 22 westerns)
plays Dade City blacksmith Judd Kerns. Lane Chandler (see "The Cactus
Switch" above) plays a U.S. marshal.
Season 5, Episode 2, "The Art
Lovers": Jack Cassidy (shown on the left, Tony Award-winning father of David and Shaun
Cassidy and husband of Shirley Jones, played Oscar North on He & She) plays tycoon's nephew
Roger Cushman. John Hoyt (see "The Devil's Necklace, Part 1" above)
plays his uncle George Cushman. James Westerfield (appeared in The Shaggy Dog, The Absent-Minded Professor, and The Love God? and played John Murrel on The Travels of Jamie McPheeters) plays railroad tycoon Paul Sutton.
Gertrude Flynn (see "The Forbidden City" above) plays his wife Rheba.
Leon Belasco (Mr. Appopolous on My Sister
Eileen) plays art dealer Cosmo Nardi. John Alderson (see "Benefit of
the Doubt" above) plays unscrupulous ship Capt. Bly.
Season 5, Episode 3, "The Golden
Fleecing": Paula Raymond (starred in The
Tall Target, Texas Carnival, and The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms) plays investment
banker's daughter Adele Jaggers. Myron Healey (Doc Holliday on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays
her father's engineer Frank Mercer. John Qualen (appeared in The Three Musketeers(1935), His Girl Friday, The Grapes of Wrath, Angels
Over Broadway, Casablanca, Anatomy of a Murder, and A Patch of Blue) plays Quaker farmer
Henry Albright. Olive Sturgess (shown on the right, played Carol Henning on The Bob Cummings Show) plays his daughter Phoebe. Charles Meredith
(Dr. LeMoyne Snyder on The Court of Last
Resort) plays their neighbor Seth Carter. Richard Loo (appeared in The Purple Heart, Back to Bataan, Love Is a
Many-Splendored Thing, The Sand
Pebbles, and The Man With the Golden
Gun and played Master Sun on Kung Fu)
plays San Francisco importer Lee Hong Chang. Herb Vigran (Judge Brooker on Gunsmoke) plays stockbroker Mr. Butler.
Season 5, Episode 4, "Three
Queens Full": Jim Backus (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Mr. Magoo Show) plays wealthy patriarch
Joe Wheelwright. Joseph Gallison (see "Red Dog" above) plays his son
Small Paul. Frank Ferguson (Gus Broeberg on My
Friend Flicka, Eli Carson on Peyton
Place, and Dr. Barton Stuart on Petticoat
Junction) plays lawman Sheriff Mattson. Harry Lauter (Ranger Clay Morgan on
Tales of the Texas Rangers, Atlasande
on Rocky Jones, Space Ranger, and Jim
Herrick on Waterfront) plays saloon
owner Matthew Braze. Willard Waterman (see the biography section for the 1961
post on Dennis the Menace) plays marriage
broker Whittleseed. Kasey Rogers (see "The Devil's Necklage, Part 1"
above) plays actress Emma Walter. Merry Anders (Joyce Erwin on The Stu Erwin Show, Val Marlowe on It's Always Jan, Mike McCall on How to Marry a Millionaire, and
Policewoman Dorothy Miller on Dragnet
1967) plays former saloon girl Cissie Anderson.
Season 5, Episode 5, "A
Technical Error": Peter Breck (see "Triple Indemnity" above) returns
as Bart's friend Doc Holliday. Reginald Owen (appeared in A Christmas Carol (1938), Mrs.
Miniver, Woman of the Year, National Velvet, and Mary Poppins) plays bank president Major
Holbrook Sims. Jolene Brand (Anna Maria Verdugo on Zorro) plays bank employee Penelope Baxter. Alma Platt (Mrs.
Henehan on These Are My Children)
plays bank employee Miss Hennesey. Frank de Kova (shown on the right, played Chief Wild Eagle on F Troop and Louis Campagna on The Untouchables) plays notorious outlaw
Blackjack Hardy. Frank London (Shad on Johnny Staccato and Charlie on Peyton Place)
plays his younger brother Little Sonny. Paul Barselou (played various
bartenders in 9 episodes of Bewitched)
plays hotel clerk Ferguson. Gail Bonney (Goodwife Martin on Space Patrol and Madeline Schweitzer on December Bride) plays a townswoman
robbed of her trading stamps.