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Boots and Saddles (TV series)

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Boots and Saddles
GenreWestern
Created byRobert A. Cinader
Written byDon Brinkley
Robert A. Cinader
John Hawkins
Gene Roddenberry
Directed byWilliam J. Hole, Jr.
Bernard L. Kowalski
StarringJohn M. Pickard
Patrick McVey
Gardner McKay
Theme music composerFred Steiner
ComposerFred Steiner
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes38
Production
ProducersGeorge Cahan
Robert Stillman
EditorIrving Berlin[1]
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time22–24 minutes
Production companyCalifornia National Productions
Original release
NetworkSyndication
ReleaseSeptember 19, 1957 (1957-09-19) –
May 29, 1958 (1958-05-29)

Boots and Saddles is an American Western television series created by Robert A. Cinader which aired in syndication from 1957 to 1958.

Synopsis

Set in 1871 at Fort Lowell, fictionalized in appearance, in the former Arizona Territory, near Tucson, Arizona, the series stars Jack Pickard as U.S. Fifth Cavalry Captain Shank Adams, Patrick McVey as Lieutenant Colonel Wesley Hayes, and Gardner McKay as Lieutenant Dan Kelly, who have to fight the Apaches.[2] Other roles were filled by David Willock as Lieutenant Binning, John Alderson as Sergeant Bullock, and Mike Hinn as scout Luke Cummings.

McKay later starred in the ABC series, Adventures in Paradise.

Selected episodes

  • In the first episode entitled "The Gatling Gun", a visiting general unaware of proper desert fighting techniques challenges Hayes' command with a powerful new weapon.
  • In the second episode, an arms trader named Jackson (Ned Glass) sells repeating rifles at high prices to Indians. Captain Adams forces Jackson to ride patrol to see the danger of his transactions.[2]
  • In "Terror at Fort Lowell", scouts face danger tracking Apache raids. In "The Deserter", a trooper named Grimes (Paul Picerni) leaves his patrol in the desert without any horses.
  • In "A Quiet Day at Fort Lowell", Captain Adams helps a soldier deal with his feelings of guilt resulting from an act of cowardice.
  • In another episode, "The Trooper’s Wife", a domineering woman arrives at the fort to reclaim her husband (Strother Martin). DeForest Kelley, later to star as "Dr. McCoy" on Roddenberry's Star Trek, appears as "Merriwether", a champion fighter from the Seventh Cavalry, in "The Marquis of Donnybrook".
  • In "The Duel", Lieutenant Kelly is challenged to a duel. lance v. saber, by an Apache chief.
  • Robert Knapp appeared twice as Private Hank Swanson in the episodes, "Terror at Fort Lowell" (1957) and "The Indian Scout" (1958).
  • Joe Conley, later storekeeper Ike Godsey on CBS's The Waltons, appears as Private Spanner in the episode "The Superstition", the story of a supposedly jinxed officer. A scout flees the fort fearful of Spanner’s "evil spirits".
  • In "Weight of Command", diphtheria strikes the fort.
  • In "The Decision" the soldiers give food to hungry Paiute Indians in violation of military rules and face discipline: "no good deed goes unpunished".
  • In the series finale, "The Captain’s Leave", Adams encounters a couple, with the wife pregnant, trying to cross the desert without sufficient supplies.

The series was produced by California National Productions.[2]

References

  1. ^ Not to be confused with the musical composer Irving Berlin
  2. ^ a b c d "Boots and Saddles". Classic TV Archives. Retrieved September 12, 2009.