Given the plethora of westerns on the TV airwaves in the
early 1960s and the number of different scenarios they used as their formats,
it's perhaps understandable that a show like Laramie might have had something of an identity problem. Never able
to crack the top 30 in ratings during its four-year run, Laramie began in 1959 as a westernized version of My Three Sons (which, granted, actually
debuted a year later than Laramie)
featuring an all-male household with brothers Slim and Andy Sherman,
"adopted" brother Jess Harper, and housekeeper Jonesy. What was
missing was the patriarch figure, though if the show had had one it would have
been a direct copy of Bonanza on a
more modest scale--the Sherman ranch pales in comparison to the vastness of the
Ponderosa. But since this original cast didn't bring home the ratings, Jonesy
was jettisoned after Season 1, and Andy's character was also sent packing early
in Season 2, leaving the series with two adult males living together for the
duration of Season 2. As we chronicled in our entry for the 1960 episodes, this
arrangement led to some uncomfortable moments for the era with the boys being
forced to take on more domestic responsibilities and Jess being called a woman
for wearing an apron when a band of outlaws come calling in the episode
"Queen of Diamonds." Though this theme was not reprised in the
remaining Season 2 episodes that aired in 1961, the producers obviously felt
the need to offload the "woman's work" from its two male leads by
bringing in widowed housekeeper Daisy Cooper in the second episode of Season 3,
"Ladies' Day" (October 3, 1961). It's worth noting that The Rifleman's Luke McCain also had his
share of domestic duties and managed to pull them off in manly fashion, but he
shared them with his son, not another adult male. The producers also decided to
add another boy to the cast in the person of orphaned Mike Williams to replace
the departed Andy Sherman in the Season 3 opener "Dragon at the Door"
(September 26, 1961), though it's not clear what value the Mike character adds
to the equation--he isn't the central focus even in his debut episode and
thereafter mostly serves as a vehicle to introduce cute animal scenes via his
pet squirrel and deer fawn.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgSR3rqq8PTeT59Lhay-gqq3xy6awJUv57aiva5gCm5XZVHhN8F6fYePMRkiNgN10xPjhwR2_6wdprestD5TCTBvHzypWOivW9FdmVEFQ1Ihp0OiC-MYfk0XytRKubl4D_4jfI7va4M1Mzn/s1600/Laramie+new+title+color.jpg)
While Daisy is portrayed as a positive influence on Slim and
Jess, the other women they encounter are nothing but trouble, a familiar trope
of westerns of the period in which normal heterosexual couples are virtually
nonexistent. In "Cactus Lady" (February 21, 1961) Slim falls for
supposedly reformed outlaw-family daughter Troy McCanles and plans to marry her
until she is pulled back in by family loyalty (like Michael Corleone of The Godfather trilogy) and tells him it
would have never worked before riding off with her father and brothers. In
"Killers' Odds" (April 25, 1961) Slim has his eye on a local
rancher's daughter until she is swept away by a drifting marked man whom Slim
and Jess try to help by giving him a job on their ranch and helping him avoid
the assassins sent after him. Jess seems to find a woman he could go for in "Trigger
Point" (May 16, 1961) when he gets close to stagecoach passenger Lottie in
helping defend her and the other passengers from a ruthless band of robbers,
but after she decides at episode's end to move to Laramie to see if things can
work out between them we never see her again. Slim gets duped again by the
"Widow in White" (June 13, 1961) whose dead husband is believed to
have hidden $30,000 of stolen money on their property, though she claims to
know nothing about it. After he helps her fend off the other gang members who
come looking for the money, she turns her gun on him and lets him know he has
been played for a fool, but she can't pull the trigger and he is able to turn
the tables on her, grab her gun, and turn over the stolen money while she is
sent to jail. Like Slim in "Killers' Odds" Jess is undercut in his
bid for the affection of traveling Japanese entertainer Haru when she tells him
as her family's wagon is about to leave Laramie that she has agreed to marry
martial arts expert Tomomi, also traveling with her family, since he saved her
life from a band of drifters who threatened to kill her while searching for
what they believed was a shipment of opium. The same scenario plays out in
other episodes as well--every woman that Slim or Jess takes a shine to turns
out to either be crooked or has already pledged her heart to somebody else. But
it's all part of the ratings game--just like with the Cartwright sons, the producers
no doubt calculated that Slim and Jess have to remain single to keep their
young female viewers interested.
Another type of relationship that gets the male leads into
trouble is the debt, which actually is used as the title of one such episode
(April 18, 1961). Since Jess is the one with the more checkered past, he is the
one more likely to have needed life-saving acts of kindness on his behalf. In
this case his former benefactor is accused murderer Harry Markle who is brought
to the Laramie jail by a bounty hunter while Jess is serving as temporary
deputy in Sheriff Corey's absence. Once the bounty hunter leaves, Markle
reveals that he was the one who saved Jess from a hanging 5 years ago, though
Jess never knew his savior's name and could never locate him afterward. Markle
doesn't demand that Jess release him as recompense but insists that he is
innocent of the murder charge against him and plants the seed of guilt in Jess'
mind just enough so that he is able to trick Jess, tie him up, and escape. Jess
now is caught between his debt to Markle for having saved his life and his damaged
reputation at having conspired to let a killer loose, if Markle is actually
guilty. His only recourse is to prove that Markle is innocent, which he does by
retracing his steps and ensconcing himself with the individuals who claim that
Markle committed a bank robbery and killed a guard while getting away. Jess
ends up taking a bullet in the ribs and narrowly escapes getting killed, a
heavy price to pay but one that essentially evens the score, removing the
burden of the debt. Slim runs into a similar situation in "Badge of the
Outsider" (May 23, 1961) where he is summoned by notorious outlaw Doc
Langley, who reminds him that he saved Slim's life when he was 6 years old, and
now wants him to clear his name in the death of one of Sheriff Corey's
deputies. Doing so leads Slim to almost being killed, of course, by Longley's
gang member Gip and his duplicitous girlfriend Cindy, who are out for Longley's
stash of stolen money. By proving that Gip was the one who killed the deputy
and being lucky enough to have Gip and Longley kill each other, Slim also
escapes his life-long burden of being beholden to another human being. Slim has
a similar experience in the very next episode, "Men in Shadows" (May
30, 1961), this time being asked to help wanted outlaw Dixie Howard who once
declined to shoot young Slim down during a card game years ago and now claims
to be going straight but isn't. Jess is again on the hook in "Man From
Kansas" (January 10, 1961) when he is saved during an Indian attack by
renowned Robin Hood figure Clay Jackson, who uses his influence on Jess to
avoid arrest after holding up a Laramie-bound stagecoach during which he worms
his way into the good graces of an unwitting farming couple. Slim suspects
Jackson all along and can't get Jess to see that he is being duped, blinded by
his sense of debt, until Slim figures out that Jackson needs money and plans to
get it from the farming couple, forcing Jess to follow him out to their ranch
to protect Slim from getting shot by the faster-drawing Jackson. Loyalty may be
an admirable quality when the subject is honest, but in the world of Laramie being beholden is decidedly
dangerous to one's well-being.
Besides the sometimes ambiguous lessons the series handed
out, it's biggest faults were a reliance on hackneyed, overused plots
("Cactus Lady" is a good example) and a scattershot format that
seemed to dabble in the formulas of half a dozen other series without ever
establishing an identity of its own. While Slim and Jess are supposedly
ranchers (a la Bonanza and The Rifleman), they also run a
stagecoach relay station (Tales of Wells
Fargo and Overland Trail),
occasionally serve as lawmen in support of Sheriff Corey (The Deputy, Lawman, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, and Gunsmoke), and travel cross-country
ostensibly on business (buying and selling horses and cattle) so that they run
into random rescue situations that are the province of the gun-toting drifter (Cheyenne, Have Gun -- Will Travel, Sugarfoot,
and Bronco). While it is not
depicted, in "Run of the Hunted" (April 4, 1961) Jess is explained
out of the episode so that we can focus on Slim by working on a cattle drive (Rawhide). The only scenarios the show
doesn't have Slim and Jess cover are the bounty hunter (Wanted: Dead or Alive) and the wagon train. Though Laramie has maintained a loyal following
over the years, it failed to connect with American audiences (the Japanese and
Germans loved Robert Fuller) at the
time because it tried to cover all the bases rather than forging a unique
identity.
The Actors
For the biographies of John Smith and Robert Fuller, see the
1960 post on Laramie.
Spring Byington
Spring Dell Byington was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado,
the daughter of an educator and school superintendent who died when Byington
was only 5. Her mother sent her two daughters to live with relatives while she
enrolled in the Boston University School of Medicine. Spring developed an
interest in acting while in high school and afterward toured the U.S. and
Canada with stock repertory groups. She joined such a group performing in
Buenos Aires, Argentina and wound up marrying the group's manager Roy Carey
Chandler, with whom she had two daughters before divorcing him in 1920, four
years after returning from Argentina. She then began working in New York
theater circles while her daughters stayed with friends, and she finally made
it to Broadway in 1924. There she was noticed by film studio RKO and was cast
as the mother Marmee in the 1933 feature Little
Women, which also starred Katherine Hepburn. She left the theater for the
world of film by 1935 and went on to have supporting roles in Werewolf of London, Mutiny on the Bounty, The
Charge of the Light Brigade, Jezebel,
You Can't Take It With You (for which
she received an Oscar nomination), The
Devil and Miss Jones, Meet John Doe,
Heaven Can Wait, and Angels in the Outfield. As her film
roles began to dry up in the late 1940s and early 1950s, she turned to radio
and was cast in the title role of the sit-com December Bride, continuing in the role of Lily Ruskin when the
program transitioned to television in 1954 and ran until 1959. She appeared in
her last feature film in 1960's Please
Don't Eat the Daisies with Doris Day before being cast as housekeeper Daisy
Cooper in Season 3 of Laramie.
By the time Laramie
was canceled in 1963, Byington was 77 years old, so her career naturally began
winding down, though she did still make a few TV guest appearances on shows
such as Mister Ed, Dr. Kildare, Batman, I Dream of Jeannie
(as Larry Hagman's mother), and her final credit on a 1968 episode of The Flying Nun. Among her pursuits
outside of acting, she was said to have had a keen interest in science fiction,
tried learning to fly until her studio squashed her training due to insurance
concerns, and acquired a Brazilian coffee plantation late in life. She died
from cancer at the age of 84 on September 7, 1971 and had her body donated to
medical science for research.
Dennis Holmes
Born in Encino, California, Holmes made his first appearance
on film at the age of 6 weeks in the John Wayne war drama Operation Pacific, on which Holmes' grandfather Soldier Graham
worked as a gaffer. His acting career began in earnest 7 years later with
appearances on Wire Service, Studio 57, The Walter Winchell File, and General
Electric Theater. His feature film work began the following year with an
uncredited appearance in Violent Road,
followed by credited roles in Woman
Obsessed with Susan Hayward, Hound-Dog
Man with Fabian, Key Witness with
Dennis Hopper, and The Fiercest Heart
with Stuart Whitman and Juliet Prowse. But most of his work was in television,
playing neighborhood kids on Leave It to Beaver, Father Knows Best, and Bachelor Father. His role as orphan Mike
Williams beginning in Season 3 of Laramie
was his only recurring role.
After Laramie was
canceled, Holmes made only two more TV appearances on 1964 episodes of Wagon Train and The Virginian and then retired from acting. He has kept a low
profile since then but showed up at the June 2011 Memphis Film Festival for a
special segment sponsored by the web site Western Clippings, reuniting him with surviving Laramie
actors Robert Fuller and Robert Crawford, Jr. According to the book Television Western Players, 1960-75
Holmes married in 1981 and currently works and lives in Central California as a
computer expert.
Eddy Waller
Edward C. Waller was born in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in
1889. His interest in acting began while attending the University of Wisconsin,
and by 1923 he was known as a lead actor, director, and producer of the Grand
Players in Indianapolis. His Hollywood career began in 1929 with an appearance
in the short Meet the Missus but
didn't really get going until 1936, when he began appearing in approximately
half a dozen films per year, many uncredited. In his career he amassed some 250
film credits, usually in B-movies, though he would also occasionally land a
momentary uncredited appearance in such classics as The Grapes of Wrath and Sergeant
York. From 1947 to 1953 he appeared as Rocky Lane's sidekick Nugget Clark
in 32 feature films. In 1954 he scored his first recurring TV role as Jonathan
Beale on Waterfront, followed by
Deputy Marshal Rusty Lee on Steve
Donovan, Western Marshal and as Alan Hale, Jr.'s sidekick Red Rock Smith on
Casey Jones in 1957-58. During this
period he also landed occasional guest spots on series such as The Lone Ranger and The Cisco Kid and in B-movie features like The Night Runner, The
Restless Breed, and Day of the Badman.
He made his first appearance as stagecoach driver Mose Shell on Laramie in the series' third episode
"Circle of Fire" and appeared 18 more times over the program's 4-year
run.
Like Spring Byington, Waller was a bit long in the tooth
when Laramie was canceled in 1963. He
appeared as Matt Krebs in 4 episodes of Lassie
in 1963, as well as the Christmas special Lassie:
A Christmas Tale but retired from acting thereafter. He succumbed to a
stroke at the age of 88 on August 20, 1977.
Notable Guest Stars
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjS1Ts7U9MKzmWj-OP2a-rEE8gqluwtHyDgaoo3Q1Zt64-qL_VOHK36eCfdV5k87qXLC_UbaQRpwP-JWWLgqBF1xgt7Aje5YwLrFB1kQXzVZTD0QtTHRGuhjg9mKcMDL5vDKdGLhvsNiko/s1600/John+McIntire-Laramie.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRUuO1BIbeF8tUY4rzh3KjMC9cUeruqxdAnMLRhK6tPHIzSvUfoMpj5nCjbNwtIoRObgXGAyz5vJx4RSYMELoVsd978jfoLA5wuYvcGhvo8tE8NgQyIoB2XRzMilmOKaccyfsLn_9aPpFd/s1600/Adam+West-Laramie.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjMOsZah4GRBdJSOOJILA5iEYaaH0YQzxH6Q7dyFTY1KUtLgl935Vc5ZHU2XMxQ86suNxEJIUl3Y7Qwm2LZupnekjoK7eudpykci-hpMFuCfSoSiTxCHNzzUhP2FUeoROms_Oo3ctZILQbu/s1600/Roy+Roberts-Laramie.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhewyTJHwG_yMqThM3jPgbAP-JTKiJpLNB233TooJIRWtwFeGweKNX0aaLP2PmYEfvqqzuTq-1qdagOE81miN1Z458AuZIxlkqiPrEBNpoAr16a4F9OtH7p3vv7Ow7uj9WwEaeTUU-T0zp9/s1600/Edgar+Buchanan-Laramie.jpg)
Season 2, Episode 18, "The Lost Dutchman": Rayford
Barnes (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays mine seeker George Lake. Karen
Steele (starred in Marty, Westbound, and The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond) plays his wife Mary. Robert
Emhardt (Sgt. Vinton on The Kids From
C.A.P.E.R.) plays swindler Senator Lake. Robert Armstrong (starred in King Kong, The Son of Kong, Framed, Dive Bomber, Blood on the Sun, and Mighty
Joe Young and played Sheriff Andy Anderson on State Trooper) plays the Jackson City sheriff.
Season 2, Episode 19, "Cactus Lady": Anita Sands (later
became astrologer to the stars and a self-help guru) plays female outlaw Troy
McCanles. Arthur Hunnicutt (shown on the left, starred in The
Red Badge of Courage, The Last
Command, The Cardinal, and Cat Ballou) plays her father Ezra. Harry
Dean Stanton (appeared in Kelly's Heroes,
Dillinger, Cool Hand Luke, Repo Man,
Pretty in Pink, Alien, Paris, Texas and
played Jake Walters on Mary Hartman, Mary
Hartman) plays her brother Virgil. L.Q. Jones (Beldon on The Virginian, Sheriff Lew Wallace on The Yellow Rose, and Nathan Wayne on Renegade) plays her brother Homer. Grandon
Rhodes (Mr. Vanderlip on The George Burns
and Gracie Allen Show, Dr. Stevens on Lassie,
Dr. J.P. Martin on Bonanza, and the
judge 16 times on Perry Mason) plays preacher
Mr. Thomson. Katherine Warren (appeared in The
Lady Pays Off, The Glenn Miller Story,
and The Caine Mutiny) plays his wife.
Tom London (starred in Six-Shootin'
Sheriff, Song of the Buckaroo,
and Riders in the Sky) plays stage
driver Charlie.
Season 2, Episode 20, "Riders of the Night": Gregory
Walcott (see the biography section for the 1961 post on 87th Precinct) plays wounded robber Ben Yuma. Rhodes Reason (John
A. Hunter on White Hunter and Sheriff
Will Mayberry on Bus Stop) plays his brother
Phil. Richard Coogan (Marshal Matthew Wayne on The Californians) plays veterinarian Tom Kingsley. Mary Murphy (appeared
in The Wild One, Beachhead, The Mad Magician,
The Desperate Hours, and Junior Bonner) plays card dealer Sandy. James
Griffith (Deputy Tom Ferguson on U.S.
Marshal) plays gang member Gabe. Norman Leavitt (Ralph on Trackdown) plays a Sherman ranch hand.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEheHFmxQ7N7Mjf8jT9F6uQcEC9z61WYYChM6KTIeoorGXl20Wy_xW-C5CfNevZw3qCizusiSsJx7YHoEKR6FVonjwegut6Vlub0o7yvbpUkS4mOQq7gzb8oYC35N7_jEQj-PR5dGi886xI0/s1600/James+Coburn-Laramie.jpg)
Season 2, Episode 22, "Rimrock": Lyle Bettger (starred
in The Vanquished, Destry, and The Fastest Guitar Alive and played Sam Larsen on The Court of Last Resort and Harry
Driscoll on The Grand Jury) plays Rimrock
sheriff Grant McClintock. 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 his muscle Rink
Banners. Susan Cummings (shown on the left, played Georgia on Union
Pacific) plays saloon girl Holly Matthews. Tom London (see "Cactus
Lady" above) plays livery man Tim.
Season 2, Episode 23, "Run of the Hunted": Charles
Bronson (shown on the right, starred in The Magnificent Seven,
The Dirty Dozen, Once Upon a Time in the West, The
Valachi Papers, and four Death Wish
movies and played Mike Kovac on Man With
a Camera, Paul Moreno on Empire,
and Linc Murdock on The Travels of Jamie
McPheeters) plays ranch inheritor Cory Lake. R.G. Armstrong (Police Capt.
McAllister on T.H.E. Cat and Lewis
Vendredi on Friday the 13th) plays his
uncle Jud Lake. Harry Lauter (see "Killer Without Cause" above) plays
Jud's son Harry. Kevin Hagen (John Colton on Yancy Derringer, Inspector Dobbs Kobick on Land of the Giants, and Dr. Hiram Baker on Little House on the Prairie) plays Jud's son David. 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 sanitarium owner Tolan. Richard Kiel (starred in The Phantom Planet, Eegah,
The Longest Yard, The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, and Pale Rider and played Moose Moran on Barbary Coast) plays Tolan's henchman Rake. Percy Helton (Homer
Cratchit on The Beverly Hillbillies)
plays auctioneer Wes Snyder.
Season 2, Episode 24, "Two for the Gallows": Donald
Woods (John Brent on Tammy and Craig Kennedy
on Kennedy, Criminologist) plays wanted
killer Morgan Bennett. Warren Oates (starred in In the Heat of the Night, The
Wild Bunch, and Stripes and played
Ves Painter on Stoney Burke) plays juvenile
delinquent Pete Dixson. Richard Evans (Paul Hanley on Peyton Place) plays his brother Len.
Season 2, Episode 25, "The Debt": Harry Carey, Jr.
(starred in Red River, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Mister Roberts, and The Searchers and played Bill Burnett on The Adventures of Spin and Marty) plays accused murderer Harry
Markle. 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 bounty hunter Hanson. Roy Barcroft (Col. Logan on The Adventures of Spin and Marty and Roy on Gunsmoke) plays stable owner Fred T. Cotter. Ellen Corby (Henrietta
Porter on Trackdown and Esther Walton
on The Waltons) plays his wife
Hortense. Emile Meyer (starred in Shane,
Drums Across the River, Blackboard Jungle, Sweet Smell of Success, and Paths
of Glory and played Gen. Zachary Moran on Bat Masterson) plays Dogget Sheriff Pearson. Monica Lewis (shown on the left, popular
singer who starred in Excuse My Dust,
Affair With a Stranger, and The D.I.) plays saloon girl Clovis.
Vaughn Taylor (see "The Passing of Kuba Smith" above) plays
bookkeeper Pettis. Dick Elliott (see the biography section for the 1961 post on
The Andy Griffith Show) plays a
traveling jewelry salesman. Richard Reeves (Mr. Murphy on Date With the Angels) plays a barfly. Bartlett Robinson (see
"The Passing of Kuba Smith" above) plays the Dogget telegrapher.
Season 2, Episode 26, "Killers' Odds": John Lupton
(Tom Jeffords on Broken Arrow and
Frank on Never Too Young) plays revenge
victim Fred Powers. Russell Johnson (shown on the far right, starred in It Came From Outer Space, This
Island Earth, and Johnny Dark and
played Marshal Gib Scott on Black Saddle,
Professor Roy Hinkley on Gilligan's
Island, and Assistant D.A. Brenton Grant on Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law) plays hired assassin Stanton. Lee
Van Cleef (shown on the near right, starred in High Noon, The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms, For a Few Dollars More, and The
Good, The Bad and the Ugly) plays hired assassin Dawson. Paul Carr (Bill
Horton on Days of Our Lives, Casey
Clark on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea,
Ted Prince on Dallas, and Martin
Gentry on The Young and the Restless)
plays barfly Pete.
Season 2, Episode 27, "Bitter Glory": Dick Foran (Fire
Chief Ed Washburne on Lassie and Slim
on O.K., Crackerby!) plays veteran
soldier Billy Jacobs. Dianne Foster (starred in Night Passage, The Last
Hurrah, and The Deep Six) plays his
wife Ellie. Ed Nelson (Michael Rossi on Peyton
Place and Ward Fuller on The Silent
Force) plays gambler Cal Mason. Paul Birch (Erle Stanley Gardner on The Court of Last Resort, Mike Malone on
Cannonball, and Capt. Carpenter on The Fugitive) plays Jacobs' commanding
officer Major Stanton. Chubby Johnson (Concho on Temple Houston) plays a stagecoach driver. Doris Packer (see the
biography section for the 1960 post on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis) plays a stagecoach passenger. Dick Elliott (see
"The Debt" above) plays another stagecoach passenger. Katherine
Warren (see "Cactus Lady" above) plays Jacobs' mother. Ryan O'Neal (shown on the left, starred
in Love Story, What's Up, Doc?, Barry Lyndon,
Paper Moon, A Bridge Too Far, and The
Main Event and played Tal Garrett on Empire,
Rodney Harrington on Peyton Place,
Bobby Tannen on Good Sports, Robert
Roberts, Jr. on Bull, Jerry Fox on Miss Match, and Max Keenen on Bones) plays Jacobs' brother Johnny.
Season 2, Episode 28, "The Tumbleweed Wagon": Jack
Elam (shown on the right, 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 captured gang leader Charley Fox. Elisha Cook, Jr. (starred in The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, The Great
Gatsby (1949), and The Killing
and played Francis "Ice Pick" Hofstetler on Magnum P.I.) plays card sharp Doc. Walter Sande (see "The
Passing of Kuba Smith" above) plays a "marshal." Jon Locke (Officer
Garvey on Highway Patrol and Sleestack
Leader on Land of the Lost) plays stagecoach
robber Billy Pore. Steve Darrell (Sheriff Hal Humphrey on Tales of Wells Fargo) plays farmer's son Joe Warner. Richard
Farnsworth (starred in The Grey Fox, The Natural, Misery, and The Straight
Story) plays prison wagon guard Hank. Tom London (see "Cactus
Lady" above) plays farmer Johnson.
Season 2, Episode 29, "Trigger Point": Frank Ferguson
(Gus Broeberg on My Friend Flicka,
Eli Carson on Peyton Place, and Dr.
Barton Stuart on Petticoat Junction)
plays stagecoach driver Scotty. Gregory Walcott (shown on the left, see "Riders of the
Night" above) plays gang leader Shelly Stack. Jan Merlin (see "Stolen
Tribute" above) plays gang member JoJo. Rand Brooks (Lucky Jenkins in 12
western feature films and on Hopalong
Cassidy and Cpl. Boone on The
Adventures of Rin Tin Tin) plays gang member Carr. Willard Waterman (Throckmorton
P. Gildersleeve on The Great Gildersleeve
and Mac Maginnis on The Real McCoys)
plays liquor salesman Bender. Lori Nelson (Greta Hanson on How to Marry a Millionaire) plays army wife Grace. Mary Murphy (see
"Riders of the Night" above) plays stage passenger Lottie.
Season 2, Episode 30, "Badge of the Outsider": Roy
Barcroft (see "The Debt" above) plays notorious outlaw Doc Langley. Paul
Fix (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Rifleman) plays his right-hand man Davey. 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 gang member Gip. Jan Shepard (Nurse Betty on Dr. Christian) plays Langley's girlfriend Cindy. Norman Leavitt (see
"Riders of the Night" above) plays Sherman ranch hand Jud.
Season 2, Episode 31, "Men in Shadows": Rod
Cameron (shown on the right, see the biography section for the 1960 post on Coronado 9) plays wanted outlaw Dixie Howard. Ken Christy (Bill
Franklin on Meet Corliss Archer)
plays stagecoach driver Banta. Dennis Patrick (see "Stolen Tribute"
above) plays bounty hunter Kramer. Edward Mallory (Bill Horton on Days of Our Lives) plays stage shotgun
rider Kelly.
Season 2, Episode 32, "Strange Company": James
Brown (appeared in Going My Way, Sands of Iwo Jima, The Sea Hornet, and A Star Is
Born (1954) and played Lt. Rip Masters on The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin and Det. Harry McSween on Dallas) plays stagecoach driver Lon
MacRae. Denver Pyle (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 former lawman Bailey. Carl Benton Reid
(starred in The Little Foxes, In a Lonely Place, Lorna Doone, and The Left
Hand of God and played The Man on Burke's
Law) plays banker Herb. Dick Wessel (see the biography section for the 1960
post on Riverboat) plays explosives
expert Sam Higgins. William Bryant (McCall on Combat!, President Ulysses S. Grant on Branded, Col. Crook on Hondo,
Lt. Shilton on Switch, and the
Director on The Fall Guy) plays
gunslinger Durango. Mark Dana (SAC Clayton MacGregor on The F.B.I.) plays gambler Bracket.
Season 2, Episode 33, "Widow in White": Sue
England (shown on the left, played Mildred Price on Bracken's World)
plays widow Sheila Dawson. Ross Elliott (Freddie the director on The Jack Benny Program and Sheriff
Abbott on The Virginian) plays her
foreman Jim Collins. Richard Coogan (see "Riders of the Night" above)
plays small-town Sheriff Cliff. Ben Johnson (starred in Shane, The Wild Bunch, Chisum, and The Getaway and played Sleeve on The Monroes) plays ranch hand Tarp. Rayford Barnes (see "The
Lost Dutchman" above) plays ranch hand Birch.
Season 3, Episode 1, "Dragon at the Door": Ed
Nelson (see "Bitter Glory" above) plays drifter Sable. Nobu McCarthy
(appeared in The Geisha Boy, Love With the Proper Stranger, The Karate Kid, Part II, and Pacific Heights) plays Japanese traveling
entertainer Haru. Joanne Miya (appeared in West
Side Story and played Janet Okada on Arrest
and Trial) plays her sister Kiko.
Season 3, Episode 2, "Ladies' Day": William Bryant
(see "Strange Company" above) plays bounty hunter Bud Deever. Gloria
Talbott (shown on the right, see "The Passing of Kuba Smith" above) plays his wife Sally
Malone. Jock Mahoney (see "Man From Kansas" above) plays wanted
outlaw Sam Willet. Carl Benton Reid (see "Strange Company" above)
plays circuit Judge Henry. Norman Leavitt (see "Riders of the Night"
above) plays stagecoach clerk George.
Season 3, Episode 3, "Siege at Jubilee": Lin
McCarthy (starred in Yellowneck, The D.I., and Face of a Fugitive and played Bill Talbot on Modern Romances) plays wanted outlaw Hobey Devon. John Alderson (Sgt.
Bullock on Boots and Saddles and
Wyatt Earp on Doctor Who) plays his partner
Burrows. Ruta Lee (appeared in Seven
Brides for Seven Brothers, Funny Face,
and Witness for the Prosecution and
played Rona on 1st and Ten: The
Championship and Pauline Spencer on Coming
of Age) plays card dealer Opal Crane. Ted de Corsia (Police Chief Hagedorn
on Steve Canyon) plays prison warden
Matthew Witmore. Denver Pyle (see "Strange Company" above) plays stagecoach
driver Bates. Percy Helton (see "Run of the Hunted" above) plays
Devon conspirator Clemson Frazer. L.Q. Jones (see "Cactus Lady" above)
plays Burrows henchman Truk.
Season 3, Episode 4, "The Mountain Men": 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 vengeful patriarch Ben Sanford. Jason Evers (see
"The Debt" above) plays his son Carl. Alex Cord (Jack Kiley on W.E.B., Mike Holland on Cassie & Co., and Michael Coldsmith
Briggs III on Airwolf) plays his son
John.
Season 3, Episode 5, "The Fatal Step": Dennis
Patrick (see "Stolen Tribute" above) plays stagecoach robber Wes
Darrin. Gary Clarke (shown on the right, played Dick Hamilton on Michael
Shayne, Steve Hill on The Virginian,
and Capt. Richards on Hondo) plays his
inside conspirator Tad Kimball. Raymond Bailey (Milburn Drysdale on The Beverly Hillbillies, Dean Magruder
on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis,
D.A. John Carvell on The Untouchables,
and Mr. Beaumont on My Sister Eileen)
plays stagecoach executive Burch. Allison Hayes (see the biography section for
the 1960 post on Bat Masterson) plays
saloon girl Francie. Robert J. Wilke (appeared in Best of the Badmen, High Noon,
The Far Country, and Night Passage and
played Capt. Mendoza on Zorro) plays Billings
Marshal Gil Fletcher. Olan Soule (Aristotle "Tut" Jones on Captain Midnight, Ray Pinker on Dragnet (1952-59), and Fred Springer on Arnie) plays a Billings hotel clerk. Harry
Harvey (see "Run of the Hunted" above) plays the Billings postmaster.
Tom Fadden (Duffield on Broken Arrow,
Silas Perry on Cimarron City, and Ben
Miller on Green Acres and Petticoat Junction) plays a traveling
farmer.
Season 3, Episode 6, "The Last Journey": Rod
Cameron (see "Men in Shadows" above) plays ex-con John Cole. Sandra
Knight (ex-wife of Jack Nicholson, appeared in Thunder Road, Frankenstein's
Daughter, and Blood Bath) plays his
step-daughter Mary. Richard Davalos (appeared in East of Eden, I Died a
Thousand Times, Cool Hand Luke,
and Kelly's Heroes and played Cpl.
Jeff Canfield on The Americans) plays
his former partner's son Danny Hode. Mort Mills (see "Rimrock" above)
plays his former partner Damon Johntry.
Season 3, Episode 7, "Deadly Is the Night": Lloyd
Nolan (shown on the left, played Michael Shayne in six movies, starred in Ebb Tide, Pier 13, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, The Street With No Name, and Airport, and played Martin Kane on Martin Kane, Special Agent Philip Conroy
on Special Agent 7, and Dr. Morton
Chegley on Julia) plays famous bank
robber Matt Dyer. George Wallace (see "Badge of the Outsider" above)
plays his henchman Alby. Harry Lauter (see "Killer Without Cause"
above) plays his henchman Rafe Andrews. Vinton Hayworth (see "Man From
Kansas" above) plays banker Mr. Thomas. Olive Carey (see the biography
section for the 1960 post on Lock Up)
plays outlaw's widow Ma Tolliver. Don C. Harvey (see "Mark of the
Manhunters" above) plays the Granite City sheriff.
Season 3, Episode 8, "The Accusers": Charles Drake
(starred in Winchester '73, Harvey, It Came From Outer Space, Bonzo
Goes to College, and I Was a
Shoplifter and played John Burden on Rendezvous)
plays Slim's stagecoach company boss Allen Winter. Joanne Linville (Amy
Sinclair on The Guiding Light) plays his
mistress Carla Morton. Kelly Thordsen (see "Man From Kansas" above)
plays stagecoach driver Dusty. Carmen Phillips (Lily on The Lieutenant) plays saloon girl Sally. Norman Leavitt (see
"Riders of the Night" above) plays a hotel clerk.
Season 3, Episode 9, "Wolf Cub": Robert Blake (shown on the right, played
Mickey in over 30 Our Gang shorts and Little Beaver in 23 westerns, starred in Black Rose, Pork Chop Hill, The Purple
Gang, In Cold Blood, Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here, and Electra Glide in Blue, and played Det.
Tony Baretta on Baretta and Father
Noah Rivers on Hell Town) plays Blackfoot
chief's son Lame Wolf. Frank DeKova (Chief Wild Eagle on F Troop and Louis Campagna on The Untouchables) plays his father Red Wolf. Kenneth MacDonald (played the
judge 32 times on Perry Mason, played Col. Parker on Colt .45, and appeared in several Three
Stooges shorts) plays U.S. Cavalry Capt. Reeves. Arthur Hunnicutt (see
"Cactus Lady" above) plays Indian scalp hunter Earl Droody.
Season 3, Episode 10, "Handful of Fire": George
Macready (Martin Peyton on Peyton Place)
plays renegade army Col. John Barrington. Karen Sharpe (Laura Thomas on Johnny Ringo) plays his daughter Madge. Myron
Healey (Doc Holliday on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays her boyfriend Lt. Paul Harmon. John Pickard (Capt.
Shank Adams on Boots and Saddles and
Sgt. Maj. Murdock on Gunslinger)
plays Barrington's right-hand man Sgt. Bailey. Ross Elliott (see "Widow in
White" above) plays one of Barrington's men Cpl. Harris. Herb Vigran (Judge
Brooker on Gunsmoke) plays army mess
Sgt. Wells. Robert Stevenson (bartender Big Ed on Richard Drum and Marshal Hugh Strickland on Stagecoach West) plays Barrington's court martial prosecutor.
Season 3, Episode 11, "The Killer Legend": Pat
Conway (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on Tombstone Territory) plays framed gunslinger Tom Wade. Dick Foran (see
"Bitter Glory" above) plays gambler Milt Lane. Harry Lauter (see
"Killer Without Cause" above) plays card cheat Joe Bartell. Kevin
Hagen (see "Run of the Hunted" above) plays his brother Roy. Hal
Smith (see the biography section for the 1961 post on The Andy Griffith Show) plays hotel clerk George. Eddie Baker (one
of the original Keystone Kops who played the bailiff 9 times on Perry Mason and was the first
secretary/treasurer of the Screen Actors Guild) plays Sheriff Corey's father
Mort Corey, Sr.
Season 3, Episode 12, "The
Jailbreakers": Charles Aidman (narrator on the 1985-87 version of The Twilight Zone) plays Slim's friend
Gil Martin. R.G. Armstrong (see "Run of the Hunted" above) plays Cheyenne
Marshal Al Dawson. Jan Shepard (see "Badge of the Outsider" above)
plays saloon girl Lila Stevens. Will Wright (Mr. Merrivale on Dennis the Menace and Ben Weaver on The Andy Griffith Show) plays Laramie Dr.
Burns. Francis de Sales (Lt. Bill Weigand on Mr. & Mrs. North, Ralph Dobson on The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet, Sheriff Maddox on Two Faces West, and Rusty Lincoln on Days of Our Lives) plays Sheriff Corey's
assistant Jerry.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiqUJbhVyz0Z8nq5Erqs-8HLnyoCH23z3uIyrVdLmHbXVPAcXGAKCf2Ovrxn8sw8x4c3GmVeNV8jbr2s4ZUscL9sojJDikV4H9Gib88Zpu0fylJKh7ibBNHMR5itv-aSpqtnvE1eotIQG2a/s1600/Lyle+Bettger-Laramie.jpg)