- Joined
- Apr 3, 2015
- Messages
- 841
- Reaction Score
- 4,995
I guess I'm in the minority but I like Silverado
Sorry, not the same person.Played left half for Ohio State didn't he?
Also had a recurring role on Rawhide, where Clint Eastwood started.Thanks for this interesting rock and toll trivia. I picked up some other trivia from this thread. Watching the High Noon clip I recognized the name Sheb Wooley in the cast. This is the same Sheb Wooley who had the big hit Purple People Eater in 1958. Then last night I watched Hoosiers (which someone on the BY mentioned was on) and there’s Sheb playing the high school principal who hires Coach Norman Dale. Isn’t it amazing all the useful stuff you can learn just by hanging around the Boneyard !
FWIW, I was listening to a talk radio show today and the topic, oddly enough, was best westerns. A caller made reference to the 'huckleberry' comment and said a huckleberry was a pallbearer.Does that make you a Huckleberry?
But it does have "western" in the title!Isn't that a war movie?

I have been told that the term "huckle bearer" was used in the South as a slang term for pall bearer. Have never heard it used personally. So does Doc Kilmer say huckle bearer rather than huckleberry? I have no clue. Anyway it was a pretty fair movie!FWIW, I was listening to a talk radio show today and the topic, oddly enough, was best westerns. A caller made reference to the 'huckleberry' comment and said a huckleberry was a pallbearer.
Fwiw, I was in Tombstone, AZ last Sunday and all the touristy t-shirts spelled it "huckleberry".I have been told that the term "huckle bearer" was used in the South as a slang term for pall bearer. Have never heard it used personally. So does Doc Kilmer say huckle bearer rather than huckleberry? I have no clue. Anyway it was a pretty fair movie!
Fwiw, I was in Tombstone, AZ last Sunday and all the touristy t-shirts spelled it "huckleberry".
And, when it comes to music for these Westerns - Ennio Morricone really nailed it with his compositions for the Dollars Trilogy:
You reminded me of one of my all time favorite Youtube Videos. Hope you enjoy it as much as I do!
Yep. Russell Hayden played Lucky. Was it Gabby Hayes who played California?Oh yes sir, I remember ol' Hoppy, and his saddle pals Lucky & California.His shows are aired every week on the Starz Encore Westerns channel.
Yep. Russell Hayden played Lucky. Was it Gabby Hayes who played California?
From 1935 to 1939, Gabby Hayes played the part of Windy Halliday, the humorous "codger" sidekick of Hopalong Cassidy (played by William Boyd). In 1939, Hayes left that role at Paramount Pictures, in a dispute over his salary. and moved to Republic Pictures. Since Paramount held the rights to the name Windy Halliday, they renamed him Gabby Whitaker, in virtually the same role. As Gabby, he appeared in more than 40 films between 1939 and 1946, usually with Roy Rogers (44 times), but also with Gene Autry (7) and Wild Bill Elliott.No, Andy Clyde.
From 1935 to 1939, Gabby Hayes played the part of Windy Halliday, the humorous "codger" sidekick of Hopalong Cassidy (played by William Boyd). In 1939, Hayes left that role at Paramount Pictures, in a dispute over his salary. and moved to Republic Pictures. Since Paramount held the rights to the name Windy Halliday, they renamed him Gabby Whitaker, in virtually the same role. As Gabby, he appeared in more than 40 films between 1939 and 1946, usually with Roy Rogers (44 times), but also with Gene Autry (7) and Wild Bill Elliott.
Hayes was also repeatedly cast as a sidekick of the Western stars Randolph Scott (six times) and John Wayne (fifteen times, some as straight or villainous characters).
He moved to television and hosted The Gabby Hayes Show, a Western series, from 1950 to 1954 on NBC and, in a new version in 1956, on ABC. The show was sponsored by Quaker Oats, whose products were prominently advertised during the show. Gabby would promote the puffed wheat product by saying to stand back from the screen and firing a cannon loaded with cereal at the screen as a tie in to their ad slogan ‘shot from a guns’. He introduced the show, often while whittling on a piece of wood, and would sometimes throw in a tall tale. Halfway through the show, he would say something else, and at the end of the show, also, but he did not appear as an active character in the stories.
View attachment 55143

Sorry, as a young kid, I watched The Gabby Hayes show, always remembered Quaker Oats, shot from guns.To quote Lynn Belvedere....."That is correct". But Steelerone's question was: who played California?
Edgar Buchannon was also one of Hoppy's saddle pals.
I personally love this topic. Need to mention Errol Flynn in Dodge City & San Antonio, and Glen Ford in Arizona. Clark Gable/Jane Russell in Tall Men, as well as Gary Cooper in Plainsman & The Westerner. Outlaw Josey Wales is my preferred Eastwood movie. Mountain Men w/Brian Keith & Heston, North to Alaska w/John Wayne, Big Country w/ Gregory Peck, Liberty Valance and Rio Grande as classics, the Maverick series, Gunsmoke, … FYI you can watch some episodes of old time shows on YouTube. I recently watched a RinTinTin, Shotgun Slade, and although not exactly a western, Swamp Fox episodes with Leslie Nielson. I'm also liking the Wyatt Earp series now that I understand an awful lot of it is based on actual events chronologically. Enjoyed How The West Was Won, and the James Arness series by the same name, all the Lonesome Doves, Centennial, The Sacketts, Deadwood...(had never realized until later that the real Seth Bullock was best friends with Teddy Roosevelt). Joel Macrea, Randolph Scott, Sam Elliott, Ward Bond, Audie Murphy, Guy Madison....
What a Hollywood disaster over a short time to lose Errol Flynn Oct 14, 1959 (age 50), Ward Bond Nov 5th, 1960 (age 57), Clark Gable 11 days later Nov 16, 1960 (age 59), Gary Cooper May 13, 1961 (Age 60). Amazing how many movies I have enjoyed with these greats and how young they died in quick succession.
Bama - In the early fifties my Aunt worked at a place in New Kensington called Hotel Kenmar. One Saturday she called the house and told me that Tex Ritter was at the bar. He was on a tour for one of his movies. I ran almost five blocks to get there and she told me he was in the bar. I went in and approached him for his autograph. I think I said, "Tex, could you give me your autograph?" He turned to the guy next to him and said "Get this little bastard out of here." I was never a Tex Ritter fan again.I was quite young when I first heard this song. I did not know for sure what a "craven coward" was, but it was really bad for sure.
Thanks. I forgot about the highlighted movies above. All 3 are among my favorites.
And he made a great villain in Gunfight At OK Corral.Anything with Walter Brennan in it. He was the best side man in Hollywood for 40 years.