During the 1960-61 television season, the western was still
riding high, with 4 of the top 6 programs being of the western persuasion. One
of the most popular was Wagon Train,
produced by Revue Studios, finishing #2 for 1960-61 before ascending to the top
spot for 1961-62. While the western was still immensely popular, the sheer
number of westerns on the air had pretty much tapped the well dry in terms of
new concepts. There were already historically based series such as Bat Masterson and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, wandering gunfighters such as Cheyenne and Bronco, town marshals on Gunsmoke
and Lawman, cattle drivers on Rawhide, single parents on The Rifleman and Bonanza, a bounty hunter on Wanted:Dead or Alive, a gun for hire on Have Gun -- Will Travel, an aspiring lawyer on Sugarfoot, card-playing brothers on Maverick, a shotgun-toting detective on Shotgun Slade, and a reluctant deputy on The Deputy. What the western didn't have was animals. So
established western novelist Samuel A. Peeples, who the season before had created The Tall Man based on the legendary but historically questionable relationship
between Sheriff Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, came up with the idea of Frontier Circus, which TV Guide in its Fall 1961 Preview issue sarcastically
called "Wagon Train with
animals."
And, yes, like Wagon Train, the program focuses on a caravan traveling across the west and
encountering all sorts of adventures along the way. And many of the plots are
driven by characters the circus regulars encounter along the way, rather than
telling the story of the regular characters themselves, in this case ringmaster
Colonel Casey Thompson, straw boss Ben Travis, and scout and advance man Tony Gentry,
with animal handler Duffy added once the season started rolling. For example,
we aren't told in the first 10 episodes that aired in 1961 where Thompson's
"Colonel" title came from; we only know he has always had a dream of
leading a circus across the country. And Ben Travis' backstory is a mystery.
Tony Gentry, on the other hand, is a former Confederate soldier from Texas who
could have gone astray after the war, as men like Jess Evans in "The
Hunter and the Hunted" (November 2, 1961) have done, but was taken in by
Thompson. But unlike Wagon Train, the
series does not have an umbrella structure that defines each season or an
overall premise to unify the disparate, individual episodes. In Wagon Train, each season constitutes one
trip across the country from Missouri to California, bringing settlers west to
populate an increasingly white western United States. Though there is not a
rigid geographical structure for the sequence of episodes, they generally
progress across plains, deserts, and mountains before reaching the west coast. Frontier Circus has no such progression.
The one episode that alludes to these geographical reference points is
"Winter Quarters" (November 23, 1961), which finds the Thompson &
Travis Circus at the end of their performing season in Nevada. Usually they
would pack up and head back to Missouri to hole up during the winter, repairing
damaged equipment and developing new acts for the next season. But Thompson persuades his partners that they
should instead press on over the Sierra Mountains to California, which he
paints as all sunshine and gold. However, the next week they are near
Purgatory, Colorado ("Patriarch of Purgatory," November 30-1961), and
the week after that they are near Hamilton, North Dakota ("The Shaggy
Kings," December 7, 1961), so there is little rhyme or reason to their
peregrinations. And as far as an overall purpose, Thompson essentially admits
that his program is piggy-backing on the wagon trains depicted in "that
other series" in "The Shaggy Kings" when he explains to Travis
that they provide entertainment for all the struggling settlers who are
striving to carve out a new nation in the west.
White women, however, are given the most extended treatment
in a more varied complex of issues but rarely are they shown as men's equals.
In the aforementioned "Dr. Sam," Thompson feels that it isn't natural
for a woman to be a doctor and he feels betrayed that Applewhite did not tell
him she was female in their correspondence before showing up to work for him.
His sexism is treated as being humorous and he is eventually outvoted by the
other circus workers to allow Applewhite to stay, or more correctly to be
brought back when she leaves in a huff, and after she successfully performs a
brain operation on a fallen highwire performer, Thompson comes to accept her in
her role. But we also hear her nurse say that she is being held to a higher
standard than a man would--should she have failed to save the highwire
performer, everyone would have wondered whether a man could have succeeded. And
when she rides off with her nurse after her initial insulting exchange with
Thompson, she is immediately captured by Indians and must be rescued by
Thompson, showing that a woman is unable to fend for herself in the wild west.
By episode's end she is offered a residency at a New York hospital that she
decides to accept because she will be able to figuratively blaze trails for
medicine-minded females who come after her, but it's clear that this path is a
safer one than the one she leaves behind with the circus.
Thompson doesn't have a problem with his female sharp-shooter,
an Annie Oakley-like performer named Bonnie Stevens, in "The Smallest
Target" (October 12, 1961). She is even depicted as a better marksman than
her estranged husband. But like the 1960 My Three Sons episode "Lady Engineer" and the 1960 episode "The
Career Woman" from The Donna Reed Show, a successful career woman can never be fulfilled unless she has a
home and a family. Stevens' backstory is that she abandoned her husband and
newborn son to pursue a career full of adventure, but when she meets her now 10-year-old
son during one of the circus' stops, her motherly instincts well up inside her
and she can no longer remain separated from her boy. At the show's conclusion,
she and her husband have reconciled and she decides to leave the circus and
attend to the needs of her family, leaving her prize rifle with Thompson as a
memento. The message is clear: a woman might be able to do all the things a man
can do, but it won't make her happy unless she sticks to her traditional subservient
role.
Thelma Ritter plays another career woman in "Journey From Hannibal" (November 9, 1961) but one forced into running her husband's livery stable after he dies. Despite her independent nature and her refusal to fall for Thompson's sales pitch to pay her later for boarding an elephant he bought 4 months ago, she finally has to go along with his proposal to take her with him back to Bismarck, where the circus will earn enough to settle his account with her, because her hometown of Hannibal, Missouri is drying up and she is headed for bankruptcy if she stays where she is. In other words, she is a damsel in distress and Thompson is her knight in shining armor. Once she has made the long journey with him to Bismarck and is repaid, she says she will probably settle down somewhere and open another livery stable, which is perfectly acceptable within the patronizing framework of Frontier Circus because she is past child-bearing age.
Another damsel in distress is dance hall singer Karina
Andrews in the episode "Karina" (November 9, 1961), who has the
temerity to shoot her abusive husband after he beats her for refusing to take
the stage at his tawdry dance hall. Fearing that she will be hanged for murder,
she flees the scene and winds up hiding in the circus prop tent, where she is
discovered by Gentry, who immediately falls in love with her and puts her on a
pedestal as an angel though he knows nothing about her. However, though Karina
has the strength to shoot her own husband, she doesn't have enough to finish
the job: Her husband is not dead, and eventually he and his brother catch up
with the circus and attempt to spirit her back home. But Travis, Thompson, and
Gentry, with an assist from elephant keeper Duffy, successfully rescue her,
during which the husband is crushed between two wagons by the elephant. Though
she is tempted to remain with the circus and its idyllic family atmosphere, she
ultimately decides she must return to "reality" to clear her name,
leaving Gentry and Travis with only their idealized memories of who she is.
Other damsels in need of rescue include blind horse trainer
Maureen McBride in "Lippizan" (October 19, 1961) whose prize stallion
is killed when Travis mounts it to chase a robber who then shoots the horse
during his escape. Travis must then find and train a suitable replacement to
prevent McBride from being left destitute and heart-broken. In "Depths of
Fear" (October 5, 1961) Millie Carno must be rescued from her abusive
lion-taming husband by his former boss. And in "Patriarch of
Purgatory" (November 30, 1961) Susannah Hedges must be rescued from her
slave-owning miner father, who makes the mistake of kidnapping Travis and
Gentry but is no match for their daring escape plan. And yet none of these
rescued women ever wind up staying with the circus. As Dr. Christopher Sharrett
has observed in his treatise on The Rifleman, in the fantasy world of the western the female is generally made
unattainable, at least by the main characters, to preserve the freedom of their
boys club.
In any case, the knight-in-shining armor theme did not make Frontier Circus a winner. It lasted a
mere 26 episodes, ending its brief run in September 1962. Scriptwriter Dorothy
Fontana has suggested that one factor in the series' cancellation was the high production
costs required by the use of trained animals. Perhaps more consequential is
that despite the show's circus razzle dazzle, it had little new to offer to a
genre already a bit overworked.
The theme music and individual scores for several episodes
of Frontier Circus were composed by David
Buttolph, who was profiled in the 1960 post on Maverick.
The complete series has been released on DVD by Timeless Media Group.
The Actors
Chill Wills
Hailing
from small Seagoville in Dallas County, Texas, Chill Theodore Wills was given
his unusual first name by his parents as an ironic twist on the fact that he
was born on one of the hottest days of the year in 1903. Wills began his
entertainment career as a singer, performing from age 12 in tent shows and
vaudeville before forming the vocal group Chill Wills and His Avalon Boys in
the 1930s. Spotted by an RKO talent scout during a Hollywood performance, they
soon began appearing in low-budget westerns beginning with Bar 20 Rides Again in 1935, though Wills appeared as an uncredited
campfire singer in W.C. Fields' classic comedy It's a Gift the year before. After 5 more Avalon Boys appearances,
the group appeared in the Laurel & Hardy western farce Way Out West in 1937, in which Wills doubled as Stan Laurel's
singing voice. After the success of this film, Wills left the vocal group and
struck out on a solo career as an actor, landing background and supporting
roles throughout the rest of the 1930s and 1940s in feature films such as Lawless Valley, Boom Town, Tarzan's New York
Adventure, Meet Me in St. Louis, The Harvey Girls, and The Yearling. In 1950 he was cast as the
uncredited speaking voice of Francis the Talking Mule, and appeared in 6 such
features over the next 5 years. He had a memorable turn as Uncle Bawley in
1956's Giant, starring James Dean,
Elizabeth Taylor, and Montgomery Clift, and received an Oscar nomination for
Best Supporting Actor for his role as the character Beekeeper in John Wayne's
1960 epic The Alamo. However, his
over-the-top campaigning for the award turned off many of his Hollywood
colleagues, including Wayne. After he ran a series of ads that read, "Win,
lose, or draw, you're all my cousins and I love you," Groucho Marx
countered with an ad of his own that read, "Dear Mr. Chill Wills, I am
delighted to be your cousin but I voted for Sal Mineo." Wills started
doing guest appearances on television in 1958, with an episode each of Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Wagon Train and amassed only a half-dozen
such credits before being cast as circus co-owner Col. Casey Thompson on Frontier Circus in the fall of 1961.
After the series' brief run was over,
he returned to feature films, appearing in McLintock!,
The Wheeler Dealers, and The Cardinal all in 1963. Appearances in
a pair of two-part episodes on Route 66
and Rawhide and a single episode of Burke's Law were his only credits in
1964, but the following year he played Jim Ed Love in the Glenn Ford &
Henry Fonda feature The Rounders and
was cast in the same role when the movie was adapted into a TV series in 1966.
Like Frontier Circus, this series
last only a single season, after which it was back to sporadic guest
appearances and fewer film roles, such as in Fireball 500 and Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid, which included the film debut of
Bob Dylan. During this time Wills was also active politically for arch
conservative candidates like Barry Goldwater in his 1964 run for U.S. President,
and he served as M.C. during the California campaign appearances by
segregationist Alabama Governor George Wallace in 1968. Wills' last appearance
on screen was in the TV movie Stubby Pringle's Christmas in 1978. He
died that same year from cancer at the age of 76 on December 15th.
John Derek
Derek Delevan Harris was born in Hollywood, the son of
silent-era film director Lawson Harris and minor actress Dolores Johnson. As a
youth, his good looks drew the attention of movie mogul David O. Selznick and
name-giving agent Henry Willson, who dubbed him Dare Harris. After appearing in
minor roles in two 1944 films, Since You
Went Away and I'll Be Seeing You,
he was drafted into the army and served in the Philippines at the end of the
war. When he returned stateside, he sought out Humphrey Bogart, who gave him
the name John Derek and had him cast as young criminal Nick Romano in Knock on Any Door, which appeared in
1949. The same year he won praise playing Broderick Crawford's step-son in the
Oscar-winning All the King's Men, but
his acting career thereafter failed to capitalize on these early successes.
Instead of starring in Nicolas Ray's production of In a Lonely Place, which Bogart's production company had initially
acquired specifically for Derek, the story was rewritten to star Bogart, and
Derek wound up signing with Columbia and appearing in swash-buckling B movies
like Rogues of Sherwood Forest, Mask of the Avenger, Prince of Pirates, and The Adventures of Hajji Baba. His studio
wanted him cast in the lead for From Here
to Eternity, but director Fred Zinnemann threatened to quit unless
Montgomery Clift got the part. Though he had a few well-received roles in the
latter 1950s, playing Joshua in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments and Taha in Otto Premminger's Exodus, most of his material was second
rate.
During this period Derek would also begin a pattern for which he would be most remembered--marrying starlets and micro-managing their careers. He married French actress Patti Behrs in 1948 and divorced her 8 years later, after which he married the Swiss actress Ursula Andress, who at the time, according to Derek, spoke little English. He also later remarked that he didn't like her hair or eyebrows and that she needed to lose weight, and he prevailed upon her to change to meet his expectations, a controlling characteristic that would later have him called a Svengali. His casting as circus co-owner Ben Travis on Frontier Circus would be his last major role on film, other than co-starring with Andress in the 1966 World War II feature Once Before I Die, which would ironically be set in the Philippines and co-star his Frontier Circus friend Richard Jaeckel.
Once Frontier Circus was canceled, Derek instead turned to photography
and directing, in addition to managing the careers of his next three wives.
When Andress was called on to do a nude scene in the 1964 feature Nightmare in the Sun, Derek at first
agreed but then changed his mind and refused to let her do it, though he would
later photograph her nude for a Playboy
magazine pictorial for which he was paid $15,000. He divorced Andress in 1965
after she had an affair with French actor Jean-Paul Belmondo, though the two
remained good friends thereafter. His next wife was actress Linda Evans, whom
he married in 1968 (despite the fact that he initially didn't like the way she
dressed) and directed in the little-seen Childish
Things from 1969. In 1972 while directing a feature film that would
eventually be released in 1981 as Fantasies,
he fell in love with 16-year-old actress Mary Cathleen Collins, who was then
billed as Bo Shane. When Bo's agent threatened to file a morals charge against
Derek, he and Bo moved to Germany for two years. Once she turned 18, he
divorced Evans and married Bo. Though Derek would later say in a People magazine interview that Evans was
very understanding about the whole affair, she later said that she wanted to
die and was angry, and yet, like Andress, she remained good friends with him
and Andress and Bo through the rest of his life. Bo Derek's career didn't go
anywhere for 6 years, until she was cast as the object of Dudley Moore's desire
in Blake Edwards' 10. John Derek's
career also went nowhere during this period, his only work being a 1979
pornographic feature he co-produced with Bo called Love You! Bo Derek's appearance in 10, which made her an overnight sensation, was only brought about
because of Karen Callan, who had met the Dereks at a Hugh Hefner party and
recommended Bo to Edwards when he told her he was having trouble finding the
right actress for the role. According to Edwards, Bo told him at their first
meeting that Callan was acting as her agent, but John Derek cut her out of any
compensation from the movie and made unsubstantiated claims that Callan had
campaigned for a role in the movie in place of Julie Andrews, Edwards' wife,
which Edwards denies. Derek's clashes with directors and anyone else connected
with his wife's career eventually led him to reject the entire film industry
and vow that from then on, he and Bo would make their own films. The results
were disastrous--Tarzan, the Ape Man,
Bolero, and Ghosts Can't Do It, all directed by Derek, were widely ridiculed
and torpedoed Bo's career, as Edwards had predicted in the February 1980 People profile of the Dereks.
Nevertheless, Bo stood by her man until his death at age 71 from heart failure
on December 22, 1998.
Richard Jaeckel
Born
in Long Beach, New York, Richard Hanley Jaeckel's family moved to California
when he was a teenager. After graduating from Hollywood High School, he went to
work in the mail room at 20th Century Fox, where he was spotted in 1943 by a
casting director who wanted him to play a young Marine in Guadalcanal Diary. At first Jaeckel said he wasn't interested and
eventually agreed to play the role only on the condition that he could then
return to work in the mail room. But he next appeared in the Navy flyer drama Wing and a Prayer before serving in the
real Navy from 1944-48. After his service he returned to acting in a pair of
John Wayne war features The Sands of Iwo
Jima and Battleground. He would
be gunned down by Gregory Peck in the opening scene of The Gunfighter and play a lusty young boarder after Terry Moore in Come Back, Little Sheba in 1952. Two
years later he would make his television debut playing Billy the Kid in an
episode of Stories of the Century,
the first of many appearances on drama anthologies throughout the 1950s. Nor
did his feature film work diminish throughout the decade, appearing in such
top-flight films as Attack, 3:10 to Yuma, and The Naked and the Dead. Being cast as scout Tony Gentry on Frontier Circus in 1961 was the first of
many recurring TV roles.
After
the series' 26-episode run, he continued to find occasional TV guest spots on
shows such as Wagon Train, Combat!, and The Virginian, but it was his feature film work that won him the
most accolades, appearing in Town Without
Pity, 4 for Texas, and most
notably in The Dirty Dozen as tough
Sgt. Bowman, followed by the similarly themed The Devil's Brigade the following year. He received his one and
only Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor playing Paul Newman's brother
in 1970's Sometimes a Great Notion.
Newman picked him for the role after observing Jaeckel interacting with his
family at Malibu Beach and felt he was just the right actor to play his
on-screen brother. In 1972 he was cast as Lt. Pete McNeil in the detective
series Banyon and after appearing in
the 1973 TV movie Firehouse as Hank
Meyers, he was kept on in the same role when the premise was moved to TV in
1974. Other than Clint Eastwood's The
Drowning Pool in 1975, the quality of his feature films declined in the
1970s to such fare as Walking Tall II
and Mako: The Jaws of Death, but his
television work was steady, including another recurring role as Jack Klinger in
Andy Griffith's 1979 series Salvage 1.
He played Major Hawkins in the 1983 series At
Ease and then found steady work for 3 years playing Lt. Martin Quirk on Spenser: For Hire. His last regular role
and acting credits were playing rescue operation leader Captain Ben Edwards on Baywatch from 1989-94. In 1994 he was
forced to file for bankruptcy and lost his home and most of his possessions. He
was also diagnosed with melanoma and moved into the Motion Picture and
Television Retirement Center in Woodland Hills, California, where he stayed
until his death at age 70 on June 14, 1997.
J. Pat O'Malley
James Patrick Francis O'Malley was born in Burnley,
Lancashire, England and was first known as a singer who recorded over 400 songs
singing with Jack Hylton and his orchestra as well as a solo performer. Hylton
and O'Malley came to the United States in 1935 to record with American
musicians, and O'Malley wound up staying and shifting into acting and animation
voicework. His first feature film appearance came in the 1940 Victor Mature
romance Captain Caution, followed by Paris Calling in 1941, and Thumbs Up and Lassie Come Home, both in 1943. In 1949 he began working for Disney
in animated roles requiring a British accent, beginning with voicing Cyril
Proudbottom in the short The Wind in the
Willows and the feature The
Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad. He would go on to provide multiple
voices for Disney animated features Alice
in Wonderland, 101 Dalmations, Mary Poppins, and The Jungle Book as well as playing the character Perkins in the
Disney serial and related feature film The
Adventures of Spin and Marty. His television career began with an episode
of the drama anthology Stage 13 in
1950, and he amassed a steady stream of credits throughout the 1950s in more
drama anthologies and scripted series such as The Danny Thomas Show and Maverick.
He appeared 7 times as Judge Caleb Marsh in the western series Black Saddle in 1959-60 and played the
character Sgt.O'Reilly in the 7-part Disney serial The Swamp Fox in 1960-61 before being cast as animal handler Duffy
on Frontier Circus in the fall of
1961.
After the series ended his workload continued to be heavy on
scores of TV series and occasional feature film roles. He played Dick Van
Dyke's father Sam in two episodes of The Dick Van Dyke Show and would later play Carol Brady's father on the first
episode of The Brady Bunch. In
1963-64 he had a recurring role as Harry Burns on My Favorite Martian, followed by the role of Mr. Bundy on George
Burns' Wendy and Me in 1964-65. Despite
multiple appearances on everything from Gunsmoke
to Batman to Ironside, he didn't find his next regular role until he was cast as
Herbert Morrison on Touch of Grace in
1973, then appeared 9 times as Bert Beasley on Maude between 1975-77. As the 1970s turned over to the 1980s, he
continued to find work on series such as The
Dukes of Hazzard, Barney Miller,
and Fantasy Island, with his last
credits coming in a pair of Taxi episodes
in 1982. He died from heart disease at the age of 80 on February 27, 1985.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 1, Episode 1, "Depths of Fear": Aldo Ray (shown on the left, starred
in Pat and Mike, We're No Angels, The Naked
and the Dead, God's Little Acre,
and The Green Berets) plays alcoholic
former big-cat tamer Toby Mills. James Gregory (see the biography section for
the 1960 post on The Lawless Years) plays
sadistic lion tamer Jacob Carno. Bethel Leslie (appeared in 15 episodes of The Richard Boone Show and played
Claudia Conner on All My Children and
Ethel Crawford on One Life to Live)
plays his wife Millie. Vito Scotti (Jose on The Deputy, Capt. Gaspar Fomento on The
Flying Nun, Gino on To Rome With Love,
and Mr. Velasquez on Barefoot in the Park)
plays circus clown Jaybo. Frank Ferguson (Gus Broeberg on My Friend Flicka, Eli Carson on Peyton
Place, and Dr. Barton Stuart on Petticoat
Junction)plays circus wagon driver Fred. Bern Hoffman (Sam the bartender on
Bonanza) plays bully Bannister. Clegg
Hoyt (Mac on Dr. Kildare) plays a
mountain man.
Season 1, Episode 2, "The Smallest Target": Barbara
Rush (starred in When Worlds Collide,
It Came From Outer Space, Magnificent Obsession, and Robin and the 7 Hoods and played Lizzie
Hogan on Saints and Sinners, Marsha
Russell on Peyton Place, Eudora
Weldon on Flamingo Road, and Ruth
Camden on 7th Heaven) plays sharp-shooter
Bonnie Stevens. Brian Keith (shown on the right, starred in The
Parent Trap, The Pleasure Seekers,
With Six You Get Eggroll, and The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming
and played Matt Anders on The Crusader,
Dave Blassingame on The Westerner,
Uncle Bill Davis on Family Affair,
Steven Halliday on The Zoo Gang, Lew
Archer on Archer, Milton C.
Hardcastle on Hardcastle and McCormick,
Professor Roland G. Duncan on Pursuit of
Happiness, B.L. McCutcheon on Heartland,
and Walter Collins on Walter & Emily)
plays her abandoned husband Dan Osborne. Roy Barcroft (Col. Logan on The Adventures of Spin and Marty and Roy
on Gunsmoke) plays his ranch-hand
Pete Andrews.
Season 1, Episode 3, "Lippizan": Vera Miles (shown on the left, starred
in Wichita, The Searchers, The Wrong Man,
The FBI Story, and Psycho) plays blind horse-trainer
Maureen McBride. Gordon Jones (appeared in The
Green Hornet, Flying Tigers, My Sister Eileen, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, and McLintock! and played Mike Kelley on The Abbott and Costello Show, Pete Thompson on The Ray Milland Show, Hubie Dodd on So This Is Hollywood, and Butch Barton on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet) plays roustabout Rousty. H.M.
Wynant (Frosty on Batman and Ed
Chapman on Dallas) plays bandit Talby.
Kay E. Kuter (Newt Kiley on Petticoat
Junction and Green Acres) plays train
agent Will Cutler. Otto Kruger (appeared in Treasure
Island, Dracula's Daughter, Saboteur, Murder, My Sweet, and High
Noon) plays former Austrian horse soldier Gen. Frederic Jellich. Joan
Staley (Playboy Playmate who appeared in Cape
Fear, Roustabout, Valley of the Dragons, Johnny Cool, and The Ghost and Mr. Chicken and played Hannah on 77 Sunset Strip and Roberta Love on Broadside) plays circus girl Anna-Marie. Dick Wessel (see the
biography section for the 1960 post on Riverboat)
plays a blacksmith named Smith.
Season 1, Episode 4, "Dr. Sam": Irene Dunne (shown on the right, five-time
Oscar nominee for starring in Cimarron,
Theodora Goes Wild, The Awful Truth, Love Affair, and I Remember
Mama) plays physician Dr. Samantha Applewhite. Ellen Corby (Henrietta
Porter on Trackdown and Esther Walton
on The Waltons) plays her nurse Abby.
Norman Leavitt (Ralph on Trackdown)
plays bear transporter Mr. Willoughby. Sue England (Mildred Price on Bracken's World) plays circus performer
Mary. Jay Silverheels (appeared in Key
Largo, The Pathfinder, Drums Across the River, The Black Dakotas, and Walk the Proud Land and played Tonto on The Lone Ranger and in 4 Lone Ranger
feature films) plays Chief Red Cloud. Jon Locke (Officer Garvey on Highway Patrol and Sleestack Leader on Land of the Lost) plays trapeze artist
Jerry.
Season 1, Episode 6, "Karina": Elizabeth
Montgomery (shown on the right, played Samantha Stephens on Bewitched)
plays runaway dance-hall singer Karina Andrews. Tod Andrews (Maj. John
Singleton Mosby on The Gray Ghost)
plays her husband Jeff. Nora Marlowe (Martha Commager on Law of the Plainsman, Sara Andrews on The Governor and J.J., and Mrs. Flossie Brimmer on The Waltons) plays fortune teller Madame
Sonya. Barbara Stuart (Bessie on The
Great Gildersleeve, Alice on Pete and
Gladys, Bunny on Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.,
Peggy Ferguson on The McLean Stevenson
Show, Marianne Danzig on Our Family
Honor, and Alice on Huff) plays knife-thrower's
assistant Melda.
Season 1, Episode 7, "Journey From Hannibal": Thelma
Ritter (starred in All About Eve, Pickup on South Street, Rear Window, Pillow Talk, The Misfits,
Birdman of Alcatraz, and How the West Was Won) plays stable owner
Bertha Beecher. Arte Johnson (a regular performer on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In who played Bascomb Bleacher, Jr. on Sally, Cpl. Lefkowitz on Don't Call Me Charlie, Clive Richlin on Glitter) plays train agent Charles
Gippner. Clem Bevans (appeared in Sergeant
York, Saboteur, The Yearling, Mourning Becomes Electra, and Harvey)
plays train agent McPhee. James Flavin (Lt. Donovan on Man With a Camera and Robert Howard on The Roaring 20's) plays train conductor Boyle. Bill Zuckert (Arthur
Bradwell on Mr. Novak and Chief Segal
on Captain Nice) plays small-town
Sheriff Barrett.
Season 1, Episode 8, "Winter Quarters": Robert J.
Wilke (appeared in Best of the Badmen,
High Noon, The Far Country, and Night Passage and played Capt. Mendoza
on Zorro) plays disgruntled wagon
driver Jack Gance. Alex Cord (Jack Kiley on W.E.B.,
Mike Holland on Cassie & Co., and
Michael Coldsmith Briggs III on Airwolf)
plays horse thief Nino Sanchez. 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 roustabout Jake. Roy Barcroft (see
"The Smallest Target" above) plays rancher Gore.
Season 1, Episode 9, "Patriarch of Purgatory": Royal
Dano (appeared in The Far Country, Moby Dick, and The Outlaw Josey Wales) plays mine owner Jethro Hedges. Robert
Sampson (Sgt. Walsh on Steve Canyon,
Father Mike Fitzgerald on Bridget Love
Bernie, and Sheriff Turk Tobias on Falcon
Crest) plays his son Mark.
Season 1, Episode 10, "The Shaggy Kings": Dan
Duryea (shown on the left, starred in The Little Foxes, The Pride of the Yankees, Scarlet Street, and Winchester '73 and played China Smith on China Smith and The New
Adventures of China Smith and Eddie Jacks on Peyton Place) plays mountain man Tobias Tiber. Dick York (Tom
Colwell on Going My Way and Darrin
Stephens on Bewitched) plays former
gunfighter Jeb Randall. 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 duplicitous Comanche Michael Smith. Frank DeKova (Chief
Wild Eagle on F Troop and Louis
Campagna on The Untouchables) plays sharp-shooter
Karl Maynard. Jack Lambert (see the biography section for the 1960 post on Riverboat) plays gunman Hark Baker. Paul
Newlan (Police Capt. Grey on M Squad
and Lt. Gen. Pritchard on 12 O'Clock High)
plays circus physician Doc Turner. Alan Carney (Mike Strager in a series of RKO
comedies in the 1940s and appeared in The
Absent-Minded Professor, Son of
Flubber, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad
World, and Herbie Rides Again)
plays the circus cook. Dennis Cross (see the biography section for the 1960
post on The Blue Angels) plays Comanche
Chief Shining Knife.
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