As actor James Garner observed in his memoir The Garner Files, Jack Warner didn't run
his television studio in order to make great art; he did it to make money as
cheaply as possible. And since westerns were the most popular genre of the day,
his studio produced a stable of shows to capitalize on the cowboy craze. But
perhaps the best of the lot was the generically titled Lawman, which, as pointed out in the previous post for its 1960
episodes, certainly had its share of cardboard characters and recycled plots,
but it also was the one show that closest approached the bar set by Gunsmoke as the grand daddy of adult
westerns. Unlike the other Warners westerns that featured various drifters
finding adventure wherever they roamed, Lawman
was firmly planted in the town of Laramie, Wyoming, as Gunsmoke was rooted in Dodge City, and recounted the exploits of
its Marshal Dan Troop who kept time with his saloon-owning lady friend Lily
Merrill (just lake Matt Dillon hung out with Miss Kitty), who is continually
thwarted in her attempts to get her man to propose. But after these parallels,
the comparison begins to break down: Lawman
deputy Johnny McKay is fairly one-dimensional compared with Dennis Weaver's
Chester Goode, and there is no equivalent to Milburn Stone's feisty Doc Adams.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhw1_3sJsD2yyMuctwVt0fnU-5zeQc-GsV2GAcQ1-hs3H5ALkEIsF-bfIBNY2gA7XOAx9sdf6S3rsH1bXA8P04r9yTAi8Uc7DHYrhQ55hLhLRZL-k4r2FOjlGtnKt4M6ICw36qwBtd1OsTU/s1600/Title+Without+Lawman.jpg)
Another example is "The Marked Man" (January 22,
1961)in which Tod Larson, the estranged brother of saloon girl Muriel Hanley,
comes to town and visits her at the Bird Cage, but she is none too pleased
because he has a tarnished past that she wants nothing to do with. His real
reason for the visit is to pick up a letter sent to her that identifies Troop
as his assassination target, paid for by the owner of a saloon that Troop shut
down. But when Larson meets and then shares a meal with Troop, he tries to back
out of the hit. The saloon owner threatens Muriel, so Larson is stuck between
the proverbial rock and hard place. With his sister being what he describes as
the only thing he's got despite her rejection of him, Larson chooses to
sacrifice himself rather than lead Troop to slaughter, knocking him out and
stealing his hat and coat, then riding to the spot where Troop was to be
ambushed. When Troop wakes up, he and McKay rush to where he knows the ambush
will take place but arrives too late. Troop returns to town and tries to
console Muriel by focusing on the good her brother did, but Lily remarks that
once he has consoled her he will have to console himself.
And in "The Persecuted" (April 9, 1961) Troop has
to face an aging gunslinger Burley Keller, who pretends that he wants to turn
his back on his past and settle peacefully in Laramie but is actually a
sadistic killer who goads men into drawing on him so that he can shoot them
down. He is also cruel to his wife of 10 years, saying that she is old and worn
out while he tries to talk Lily to leaving town with him. Troop ultimately has to
lure Keller into making the same mistake as his victims by insulting him
horribly until he is forced to draw and Troop has the justification he needs to
gun him down. In the end Troop invites Keller's widow to stay in town as she
boards a stagecoach, but she can only reply that she knew what kind of man her
husband was and loved him anyway, though she doesn't know why. The story
refuses to wrap things up in a tidy sense of closure, instead leaving the wound
open. Though Lawman had its share of
misguided youths and misfits who manage to turn their lives around, it also
took an unflinching look at lives ruined by greed and desperation. In
"Trojan Horse" (December 31, 1961) Troop tells government road agent
Duncan Clooney that he was right in calling nitroglycerine "the work of
the devil," but Clooney counters that men do more of the devil's work than
any explosive, to which Troop replies, "I'll drink to that."
And yet despite this unusual realism in depicting the evil
that men do, Troop's character is larger than life. He may not be able to save
everyone who needs saving, but he is shown to have superior knowledge and
judgment over any other authority figures who visit Laramie. Besides the
officious Lt. Davidson cited above, he runs afoul of U.S. Marshals inspector
Orville Luster in "By the Book" (December 24, 1961), who thinks that
Troop runs his town too wide open in allowing citizens to carry guns, gamble,
and drink. He forces McKay to lock up two benign drunks since they are
technically in violation of disturbing the peace, but Troop then sets them
free, angering Luster until the two bumblers foil a plot by a pair of hardened
outlaws to kill Luster.
He also locks horns with New York police Lt. Foster in
"The Man From New York" (March 19, 1961), who comes to Laramie
looking for a man who committed larceny three years before, even though the
culprit has begun repaying the money anonymously. Troop quickly figures out
that the man Foster is hunting is harness maker Fred Stiles, a solid citizen
since he moved to Laramie, and he refuses to arrest him. Stiles feels that he
has no choice but to flee, and Foster chases after him in a buggy that
overturns, pinning him. Stiles has the opportunity to shoot Foster but instead
uses his rifle to fire a warning shot to help Troop find Foster and take him
back to town for medical attention. Foster eventually comes around to agree
with Troop that a man can change and salvage his past, and he decides to leave
Laramie without Stiles.
Both of the preceding episodes make the point that the law
can be applied unfairly and that it takes a person of superior judgment to know
when it needs to be held firm and when it can be bent. Marshal Dan Troop is
shown to be such a person. As the show entered its fourth season, however, the
story lines became more conventional, much like the theme music, which was
toned down from the bolder arrangement used during the first three seasons.
However, two exceptional episodes maintain the edgier flavor of the Season 3 episodes
mentioned above. In "The Four" (October 1, 1961), a posse led by Herm
Forrest comes to town looking for a man named Lee Darragh. Troop and Lily at
first suspect that they are in town to cause some kind of mischief, such as a
robbery, but Forrest eventually explains that they are looking to capture
Darragh, a cold-blooded killer who can deceive people because of his boyish
youth. When Darragh finally shows up and Troop is forced to gun him down,
Forrest approaches Troop and asks if he can take home the body of his brother,
a twist that the viewer doesn't see coming but makes Forrest's earlier
depiction of Darragh all the more poignant. And in "The Catalog
Woman" (November 5, 1961) Troop is hunting a black widow figure who lures
lonely men with money into marriage through advertisements in a magazine, then
killing them. Troop even agrees to pose as a decoy suitor himself only to find
out that the widow is a man. Perhaps even more daring for the time, when the
first suitor, Walter Perkins, meets the stage bearing his future bride with a
bouquet of flowers, another man gets off before the widow and says to Perkins
in an effeminate tone, "Are those for me?" Certainly cross-dressing
and homosexuality were strictly taboo on the 1961 television landscape, but Lawman wasn't above bending the rules on
many fronts.
Though it has not been released on DVD as of this writing,
the series is currently showing weekdays on the Encore West cable TV channel.
The Actors
For the biographies for John Russell, Peter Brown, Peggie
Castle, Dan Sheridan, and Harry Cheshire, see the post for Lawman 1960.
Grady Sutton
Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee and raised in Florida, Grady
Harwell Sutton enjoyed a long and prolific career playing primarily befuddled
country bumpkins and southerners. Sutton got his start in films while on a
summer vacation in Hollywood with his roommate, the younger brother of director
William A. Seiter. Sutton was invited on to the set and allowed to serve as an
extra in The Mad Whirl, released in 1925.
That same year he appeared in the Harold Lloyd masterpiece The Freshman and thereafter appeared in a number of other
college-themed films. In 1933 he appeared alongside W.C. Fields in the
short The Pharmacist and thereby became a favorite of Fields, who
threatened to back out of The Bank Dick
if Sutton were not included in the cast. He also appeared with Fields in The Man on the Flying Trapeze and You Can't Cheat an Honest Man, danced
with Katherine Hepburn and stepped on her toes in Alice Adams, and was the bridegroom-to-be for Carole Lombard in My Man Godfrey. He also appeared in
classics such as Stage Door, Anchors Aweigh, A Star Is Born, and White
Christmas, often in uncredited roles. His television appearances began in
the early 1950s, starting with The Egg
and I, but his role as hotel clerk Ben Toomey on Lawman was his first recurring role.
After Lawman was canceled in 1962, he continued to mix feature film and
TV work, the former including appearances in the Doris Day musical Billy Rose's Jumbo, the Rat Pack western
farce 4 for Texas, My Fair Lady, a pair of Elvis Presley
vehicles--Tickle Me and Paradise Hawaiian Style--the Peter
Sellers comedy I Love You Alice B. Toklas,
and the Raquel Welch sex-change farce Myra
Breckenridge. He found his second recurring TV role playing the character
Sturgis on The Phyllis Diller Show,
and made his last appearance on film in the Ramones musical Rock 'n' Roll High School in 1979. He
moved into the Motion Picture and Television Home and Hospital in 1994 and died
there of natural causes on September 17, 1995 at the age of 89.
Vinton Hayworth
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He continued appearances
on a number of series thereafter, including Laramie, Perry Mason, and
Gunsmoke but also had a number of
small recurring roles on other series, playing Mr. Sutherland 5 times on Hazel between 1961-65, Dr. Faber 4 times
on Green Acres between 1965-67, and
as a judge 3 times on Dragnet between
1967-69. When Barton McLane passed away while playing Gen. Peterson on I Dream of Jeannie in 1969,
Hayworth's Gen. Winfield Schaeffer, who
started appearing on the show the previous year, replaced him. Uncle to both
Ginger Rogers and Rita Hayworth (his wife Jean Rogers was the sister of
Ginger's mother; his sister Volga Hayworth was Rita's mother), Hayworth
suffered a heart attack and died 5 days before the air date of his final Jeannie appearance on May 21, 1970 at
the age of 63.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 3, Episode 17, "Fireshouse Lil": Sheldon
Allman (Norm Miller on Harris Against the
World) plays bank robber Edward Dirckes.
Season 3, Episode 18, "The Frame-Up": Dabbs Greer
(shown on the left, see the biography section of the 1960 post on Gunsmoke) plays shady lawyer Les Courtney. Randy Stuart (see the
biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays his client Jessica Kindle. William
Mims (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays troublemaker Rich
Matthews.
Season 3, Episode 19, "The Marked Man": Andrew
Duggan (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 hired assassin Tod Larson. Larry J. Blake (the unnamed jailer on Yancy Derringer and Tom Parnell on Saints and Sinners) plays barfly Chuck
Slade.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgXHeNguNDP83H6lWun4q6u3WyHxf1vBhJujI3SGzAcmjJp6pWYkL4Q8VuKHrrKOq_khx9VKmTp1I9rQpCDIeaAMVEvgOKT0Q1EbMwCm6CKuAxvl88GiJF6qdOSBk2u3-TyYO9fPDlK3ugD/s1600/DeForest+Kelley-Lawman.jpg)
Season 3, Episode 21, "Homecoming":
Marc Lawrence (appeared in The Ox-Bow
Incident, Tampico, Key Largo, The Asphalt Jungle, and The
Man With the Golden Gun and directed 16 episodes of Lawman) plays escaped convict Frank Walker. Adrienne Marden (Mary
Breckenridge on The Waltons) plays his
wife Mary. Ray Stricklyn (Dr. James Parris on The Colbys and Senator Pickering on Wiseguy) plays his son Eddy.
Season 3, Episode 22, "Hassayampa": John Anderson
(shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays temperance crusader
Hassayampa Edwards. 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 shyster bar owner Dusty McCade. George Wallace (starred in Radar Men From the Moon, Destry, and Forbidden Planet and played Judge Milton Cole on Hill Street Blues and Grandpa Hank
Hammersmith on Sons and Daughters)
plays his partner Clyde Morton.
Season 3, Episode 23, "The Promoter": John Van
Dreelen (starred in The Leech Woman, 13 Ghosts, and Topaz) plays whiskey promoter Malcolm Tyler DeVries. Frank Gerstle (Dick
Gird on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp)
plays saloon owner David Farris.
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Season 3, Episode 25, "The Inheritance": Will
Wright (Ben Weaver on The Andy Griffith Show) plays miser Tecumsah Pruitt. Lurene Tuttle (appeared in Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, Ma Barker's Killer Brood, Psycho, The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, and The Fortune Cookie and played Doris
Dunston on Father of the Bride and
Hannah Yarby on Julia) plays his wife.
Fuzzy Knight (appeared in She Done Him
Wrong, The Lat Round-Up, The Trail of the Lonesome Pine, and The Oregon Trail and played Pvt. Fuzzy
Knight on Captain Gallant of the Foreign
Legion) plays store owner Mr. Morris. Guy Wilkerson (Panhandle Perkins in
22 westerns) plays his customer Slim.
Season 3, Episode 26, "Blue Boss and Willie Shay":
Sammy Davis, Jr. (shown on the left, "The Greatest Living Entertainer" starred in Porgy and Bess, Ocean's 11, Robin and the 7
Hoods, Sweet Charity, The Cannonball Run, and Cannonball Run II) plays cattle drover
Willie Shay. Richard Jaeckel (Tony Gentry on Frontier Circus, Lt. Martin Quick on Spenser: For Hire, and Capt. Ben Edwards on Baywatch) plays drover Al Janaker.
Season 3, Episode 27, "The Man From New York": Mike
Road (Marshal Tom Sellers on Buckskin,
Lt. Joe Switolski on The Roaring 20's,
and who provided the voice for Race Bannon on Johnny Quest and Ugh on Space
Ghost) plays New York police Lt. Foster. Richard Arlen (Lionel starred in The Virginian, Dangerous Paradise, Gun Smoke,
Island of Lost Souls, and Alice in Wonderland) plays harness maker
Fred Stiles.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiEeww8OITk5ME8i80eQL0t0CcZ4fZ_Rfsx-Hea8-nls8BqZeavUQF2QAqkYSYHBBL28YNHjzWFbS6YvTc-Ew14RUMEy45g1eDTcIU4FfWmk63YL2gPUEFtFVuJDjFd0cHvK8zRgOdwh4jY/s1600/John+Kellogg-Lawman.jpg)
Season 3, Episode 29, "Fugitive": Catherine McLeod
(Claire Larkin on Days of Our Lives)
plays fugitive's wife Meg Cormack. Dorothy Konrad (Mrs. Trilling on The Last Resort) plays store owner Mrs. Fields.
Season 3, Episode 30, "The Persecuted": Adam
Williams (appeared in Flying Leathernecks,
The Big Heat, Fear Strikes Out, and North
by Northwest) plays gunslinger Burley Keller. Jean Willes (appeared in Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Ocean's 11, and Gypsy) plays his wife Annie. Joseph Gallison (Dr. Neil Curtis on Days of Our Lives) plays his victim Roy
Barnes. Sandy McPeak (Pvt. Saunders on The
Gallant Men, Capt. Braddock on Blue
Thunder, J. Wendell Summerhayes on Wildside,
and Chief Bradley on Nasty Boys)
plays trailhand Ted Turner.
Season 3, Episode 31, "The Grubstake": Frank
Ferguson (Gus Broeberg on My Friend
Flicka, Eli Carson on Peyton Place,
and Dr. Barton Stuart on Petticoat
Junction) plays prospector Rainbow Jack. Heather Angel (shown on the left, starred in The Hound of the Baskervilles, Orient Express, The Three Musketeers(1935), Pride
and Prejudice, Lifeboat, and 5
Bulldog Drummond features and played Mrs. Dowell on Peyton Place and Miss Faversham on Family Affair) plays aging saloon girl Stephanie Collins. Robert
Cornthwaite (Professor Windish on Get
Smart) plays lawyer Edward Coughill.
Season 3, Episode 32, "Whiphand": Leo Gordon (shown on the right, played Big
Mike McComb on Maverick) plays rancher
Bull Nickerson. Peggy McCay (Anna Rose on Room
for One More, Iris Fairchild on General
Hospital, Mrs. Malloy on Gibbsville,
Marian Hume on Lou Grant, and
Caroline Brady on Days of Our Lives) plays
his wife Cassie. Jack Beutel (starred in The
Outlaw, Best of the Badmen, and Jesse James' Women and played Deputy
Jeff Taggart on Judge Roy Bean) plays
his ranch-hand Ryder. Med Flory (played clarinet in the Ray Anthony orchestra
and founded and plays alto sax in the group Super Sax, appeared in Gun Street, The Nutty Professor (1963), and The
Gumball Rally, and played Sheriff Mike McBride on High Mountain Rangers) plays traveling peddler Jed Pennyman.
Season 3, Episode 33, "The Threat": Russ Conway (Fenton
Hardy on The Hardy Boys: The Mystery of
the Applegate Treasure, Gen. Devon on Men Into Space, and Lt. Pete Kile on Richard
Diamond, Private Detective) plays land-grabber Herm Villiers. Whit Bissell
(starred in He Walked by Night, Creature From the Black Lagoon, I Was a Teenage Werewolf, I Was a Teenage Frankenstein, and Hud and who played Bert Loomis on Bachelor Father, Calvin Hanley on Peyton Place, and Lt. Gen. Heywood Kirk
on The Time Tunnel) plays Laramie
visitor Edgar Chase.
Season 3, Episode 34, "The Trial": Shirley Knight
(shown on the left, 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 orphan Tendis Weston. Tim Graham (Homer Ede on National Velvet) plays her uncle Charlie.
Ray Teal (see Jim Teal on Lassie and Sheriff
Roy Coffee on Bonanza) plays Kansas
Judge Leonard Whitehall. 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 stagecoach
driver Barney.
Season 3, Episode 35, "Blind Hate": Jason Evers (starred
in The Brain That Wouldn't Die, House of Women, The Green Berets, and Escape
From the Planet of the Apes and played Pitcairn on Wrangler, Prof. Joseph Howe on Channing,
and Jim Sonnett on The Guns of Will
Sonnett) plays ranch-hand Shag Warner. Ted de Corsia (Police Chief Hagedorn
on Steve Canyon) plays his boss Lem
Pastor. Mala Powers (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) player Pastor's
daughter Lucy. John Qualen (starred 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 physician Doc Shea.
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Season 3, Episode 37, "Conditional Surrender": Robert
F. Simon (Dave Tabak on Saints and Sinners,
Gen. Alfred Terry on Custer, Frank
Stephens on Bewitched, Uncle Everett
McPherson on Nancy, Capt. Rudy Olsen
on The Streets of San Francisco, and
J. Jonah Jameson on The Amazing Spiderman)
plays outlaw patriarch Pa Beason. Hampton Fancher (Deputy Lon Gillis on Black Saddle and co-wrote the screenplay
and was executive producer on Blade
Runner) plays his son Lester. Claire Griswold (wife and former student of
Sydney Pollack) plays his daughter Iona.
Season 3, Episode 38, "Cold Fear": Frank Overton (shown on the left, starred
in Desire Under the Elms, To Kill a Mockingbird, and Fail-Safe and played Major Harvey
Stovall on 12 O'Clock High) plays former
Arizona marshal incognito Brad Turner. Margaret Field (mother of actress Sally
Field) plays his wife Ann.
Season 3, Episode 39, "The Promise": Stuart
Randall (Sheriff Art Sampson on Cimarron
City, Al Livermore on Lassie, and
Sheriff Mort Corey on Laramie) plays Fort
Laramie commander Col. Strappin. Ken Lynch (appeared in I Married a Monster From Outer Space, Anatomy of a Murder, and Dead
Ringer and played Lt. Thomas Brand on Checkmate,
Det. Lt. Tom Handley on Arrest and Trial,
Lt. Barney Keller on Honey West, and
Police Sgt. Grover on McCloud) plays condemned
criminal Jed Barrister. Don Haggerty (Jeffrey Jones on The Files of Jeffrey Jones, Eddie Drake on The Cases of Eddie Drake, Sheriff Dan Elder on State Trooper, and Marsh Murdock on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays gambler Simm Bracque.
Carolyn Komant (see "Mark of Cain" above)
plays eloper Nancy Fuller.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNncPb3QTq0klwWYTItFIcrVmedFPbWjxHtCbElAyX90Hqq-v4KIusQXjIbNi9uHN2s7F0q63sYhYk24_DGkHa1iYEDFsrmZTry0r-0Qi9ZzRblWVPH6S4bjS71B3YFz6U5p5JZ8UfBAD8/s1600/Peter+Breck-Lawman.jpg)
Season 4, Episode 2, "The Juror": Jack Hogan (starred
in The Bonnie Parker Story, Paratroop Command, and The Cat Burglar and played Kirby on Combat!, Sgt. Jerry Miller on Adam-12, Chief Ranger Jack Moore on Sierra, and Judge Smithwood on Jake and the Fatman) plays accused train
robber Ben Cawley. Larry J. Blake (see "The Marked Man" above) plays storekeeper Mr. Parker.
Season 4, Episode 3, "The Four": Jack Elam (shown on the left, played Deputy
J.D. Smith on The Dakotas, George
Taggart on Temple Houston, Zack
Wheeler on The Texas Wheelers, and
Uncle Alvin Stevenson on Easy Street)
plays posse leader Herm Forrest. Norman Alden (Grundy on Not for Hire, Johnny Ringo on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Captain Horton on Rango, Tom Williams on My Three Sons, and Coach Leroy Fedders on Mary
Hartman, Mary Hartman) plays posse member Charley. Johnny Weissmuller, Jr.
(son of swimmer and actor Johnny Weissmuller) plays posse member Willy. Joseph
Gallison (see "The Persecuted" above) plays their quarry Lee Darragh.
Dorothy Konrad (see "Fugutive" above) plays storekeeper Mrs. Bangle.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi-M9QI9Fl1vYuPIH5N8L_RI43lp1TTtL3hsOEBfZ7mkagjgZawmLjwM61kQp3GDW7Bu8DNS2zls6i75F26GPZA-np0wz1ceCPFrNpHFsof9RZsd93vNBIPfM3ueHmv_4DUK1WzrPGs28T7/s1600/James+Westerfield-Lawman.jpg)
Season 4, Episode 5, "Owny O'Reilly, Esquire": Joel
Grey (shown on the left, starred in Cabaret, Man on a Swing, The Seven Percent Solution, and Remo
Williams: The Adventure Begins and played Lemuel Idzik on Oz) returns as diminutive youngster Owny
O'Reilly. 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 incarcerated killer Jack Saunders. Barry
Kelley (starred in The Asphalt Jungle,
The Manchurian Candidate, and The Love Bug and played Mr. Slocum on Pete and Gladys and Mr. Hergesheimer on Mister Ed) plays Wyoming Governor
Johnson. Roberta Shore (Laura Rogan on Walt
Disney Presents: Annette, Henrietta Gogerty on The Bob Cummings Show, and Betsy Garth on The Virginian) plays his daughter Millie.
Season 4, Episode 6, "The Substitute": Kathleen
Freeman (Katie on Topper, Marilly on Mayor of the Town, Bertha Krause on The Bob Cummings Show, Flo Shafer on The Beverly Hillbillies, Kate Harwell on
Funny Face, and Iris Belmont on Lotsa Luck) plays Laramie matron Mavis
Martingale. Jan Arvan (Nacho Torres on Zorro
and Paw Kadiddlehopper on The Red Skelton
Hour) plays her husband Homer. Whit Bissell (see "The Threat"
above) plays educated drunk Al Skinner.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGPp70dv7glDRII4t6lP-Vt8-ILTn0Z-E2qRIZaGBV1PobXBOzZlAL28Hl0Ej_040kt5Yabz9SmX1__hCfiFoLKeZ28XQGQND6bQiqaxXv9nQ3ED1EiYNFQeAEIwyw-SFmlwTj6JtugwRL/s1600/Peter+Whitney-Lawman.jpg)
Season 4, Episode 8, "The Catalog Woman": Herb
Vigran (Brooker on Gunsmoke) plays frugal
rancher Walter Perkins. William Fawcett (Clayton on Duffy's Tavern, Marshal George Higgins on The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, and Pete Wilkey on Fury) plays Laramie townsman John. Richard
Carlyle (Casey on Crime Photographer)
plays con man posing as Mrs. Agatha Wingate.
Season 4, Episode 9, "The Cold One": Michael Pate
(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 escaped convict King Harris. Joyce Meadows (shown on the left, see "Detweiler's
Kid" above) plays his wife Barbara. Ric Marlow (wrote the lyrics to
"A Taste of Honey") plays Harris' henchman Willis. Percy Helton (Homer
Cratchit on The Beverly Hillbillies)
plays cowardly citizen Thatcher. Sandy McPeak (see "The Persecuted"
above) plays Marshal Troop helper Ed Lane.
Season 4, Episode 10, "Porphyria's Lover": Benny
Baker (appeared in Blonde Trouble, Stage Door Canteen, and Paint Your Wagon and played Pete the
bartender on F Troop) plays substitute
bartender Dave.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0CSlo3uE44YkRoyUz2ix2VPHxh4ly9fQxhAKDmJhT3PYrVojxzcTLxRIxUCDCjxkCZHl6SGjZ-tly4bfO_A_2We36wq-zZ6LKLAxPVWsIw3GrWZrW-jtvnlXOAk38YnswdhQTEZFLgUdP/s1600/Kent+Smith-Lawman2.jpg)
Season 4, Episode 12, "The Lords of Darkness": Arch
Johnson (starred in Somebody Up There
Likes Me, G.I. Blues, and The Cheyenne Social Club and played
Cmdr. Wivenhoe on Camp Runamuck)
plays Darkness patriarch Andrew Lord. Corey Allen (went on to direct multiple
episodes of Dr. Kildare, Police Woman, Dallas, Hunter, and Star Trek: The Next Generation) plays his
son William. Charles Maxwell (Special Agent Joe Carey on I Led 3 Lives and was the voice of the radio announcer on Gilligan's Island) plays the Darkness
marshal. Damian O'Flynn (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays
bar owner Sutter. Owen Bush (Ben on Shane,
John Belson on Sirota's Court, and
Crimshaw on Our House) plays the
Darkness bartender.
Season 4, Episode 13, "Tarot": Robert McQueeney (shown on the left, played Conley
Wright on The Gallant Men) plays gambler
Joe Wyatt. Bill Zuckert (Arthur Bradwell on Mr.
Novak and Chief Segal on Captain Nice)
plays payroll robber Luther.
Season 4, Episode 14, "The Prodigal Mother": Catherine
McLeod (see "Fugitive" above) plays prodigal mother Margaret Coleson.
Billy Booth (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on Dennis the Menace) plays her abandoned
son Tad. King Calder (see "The Squatters" above) plays Tad's adoptive
father Dave McCallan.
Season 4, Episode 15, "By the Book": Lyle Talbot (shown on the right, see
the biography section for the 1960 post on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet) plays inspector of U.S. marshals Orville
Luster. Walter Burke (starred in All the
King's Men, Jack the Giant Killer,
and Support Your Local Sheriff! and
played Tim Potter on Black Saddle)
plays carouser Ernie. Sheldon Allman (see "Firehouse Lil" above)
plays his buddy Teakwood. Richard Benedict (appeared in A Walk in the Sun, Crossfire,
and Ace in the Hole and directed
multiple episodes of Hawaiian Eye, Run for Your Life, Ironside, Medical Center,
Police Story, and Hawaii Five-O) plays outlaw Lou Silk.
Season 4, Episode 16, "Trojan Horse": Kenneth
Tobey (starred in Angel Face, The Thing From Another World, and It Came From Beneath the Sea and played
Chuck Martin on Whirleybirds and Russ
Conway on I Spy) plays government
road agent Duncan Clooney. Richard Bakalyan (starred in The Delicate Delinquent, The
Cool and the Crazy, Juvenile Jungle,
Hot Car Girl, Paratroop Command, and The
Computer Wore Tennis Shoes) plays his worker Eggers.
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