Gunsmoke season 1
Gunsmoke | |
---|---|
Season 1 | |
Starring | |
No. of episodes | 39 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 10, 1955 August 25, 1956 | –
Season chronology | |
Gunsmoke is an American Western television series developed by Charles Marquis Warren and based on the radio program of the same name.[1] The series ran for 20 seasons, making it the longest-running Western in television history.[2][3]
The first episode of the first season aired in the United States on September 10, 1955, and the last episode aired on August 25, 1956.[4][5] All episodes were broadcast in the U.S. by CBS.[6]
The first season was a half-hour program filmed in black-and-white. One-hour episodes of the program were not introduced until season 7, and color episodes were not filmed until season 12.
Synopsis
[edit]Gunsmoke is set in and around Dodge City, Kansas, in the post-Civil War era and centers on United States Marshal Matt Dillon (James Arness) as he enforces law and order in the city. In its original format, the series also focuses on Dillon's friendship with three other citizens of Dodge City: Doctor Galen "Doc" Adams (Milburn Stone), the town's physician; Kitty Russell (Amanda Blake), saloon girl and later owner of the Long Branch Saloon; and Chester Goode (Dennis Weaver), Dillon's assistant.[7]
Cast and characters
[edit]Main
[edit]- James Arness as Matt Dillon
- Dennis Weaver as Chester
- Milburn Stone as Doc
- Amanda Blake as Kitty
Production
[edit]Season one was produced by Charles Marquis Warren, with Norman Macdonnell acting as associate producer.
Development
[edit]The actual pilot episode of the television series was aired as episode 26 during the first season. The sets used were totally different. The jailhouse has no door on the back wall replaced by the gun rack which usually sits on the side wall, Matt's desk is a high rolltop positioned against the wall as opposed to the flat desk more situated out into the room, the pot-belly stove and bulletin board with the wanted posters is missing, the safe is where the stove was, and the front door is not the same. The Long Branch saloon has a longer bar with a high shelve on the wall above it, the huge brass adornment that sits center stage is missing, unfamiliar taxidermy and wall decor, and the most notable change is a bartender that we have never seen in past or future episodes.[8]
The beginning boot hill introduction is also different, revealing for the first time Marshal Dillon walking down the hill towards the fake backdrop of Dodge City in the background.[8]
Matt uses a six-shooter with a much shorter barrel in this episode, not the seven and one-half inch barrel we normally see throughout the series.[8]
Casting
[edit]Some of the guest cast included actors who had performed in the radio series. Episode 2 is the first of 12 appearances of John Dehner, who also performed in approximately half of the 480 radio episodes of Gunsmoke. Episode 12, "Magnus", used Robert Easton, who had also played Magnus in the radio broadcast of the episode. Lawrence Dobkin played the character "Jacklin", in both the radio and television versions of episode 31, "How to Die for Nothing".
Jester Hairston, who appeared in episode 14, was the first black performer to appear in Gunsmoke.[citation needed]
Writing
[edit]Episode 11, "The Queue", is the first episode written by Sam Peckinpah, who wrote prolifically for Gunsmoke as well as other Western series of the era.
Episode 13, "Reed Survives" was the first television screenplay written by Les Crutchfield, who wrote 138 radio and television Gunsmoke stories and scripts, second only to the number written by the series co-creator, John Meston. Crutchfield created the character Festus Haggen. Three episodes written by him were aired after his death in 1966.
Some scripts were re-writes of scripts used in the radio series. Episode 4, "Home Surgery", was presented as a radio broadcast before it aired on television.
Storylines were sometimes taken from well-known literature. Episode 6, "Night Incident", is loosely based on Aesop's Fables, The Boy Who Cried Wolf.[9] Titles did not always directly reflect the reference. For example, episode 17, "Robin Hood", is not based on the legend of Robin Hood. The only similarities are they both robbed from the rich. In the episode, the protagonist kept and spent the money he stole and was not the "good guy".[10]
Production design
[edit]Wanted posters seen hanging in Matt Dillon's office are for "William H. Bonney", aka Billy the Kid and Black Bart, aka Charles Earl Bowles, a notorious stagecoach robber. Billy the Kid was born Henry McCarty on September 17 or November 23, 1859. This helps date the series from late 1877 to 1878 since Billy the Kid's first wanted poster identified him as 18 years old. Black Bart's first stagecoach robbery was July 26, 1875, and his last was November 3, 1883. Both dates fit within the aforementioned timeline.
Wanted posters for the Hole-in-the-Wall Gang and Lewt McCanles are added to the Marshal's bulletin board in episode 8, "Kite's Reward". Lewton "Lewt" McCanles was Gregory Peck's character in the 1946 Western film Duel in the Sun. These also appear in episode 25, "The Big Broad".
In episode 16, "Reward for Matt", the sign at the bottom of the stairs leading to Doc Adams's office was added and it remained there through the entire run of the series. It reads: "G. Adams, M.D. / Surgeon and / General Pract.".
Filming
[edit]Episode 30, "The Preacher", is an example of camera tricks and angles to make the 6' 7" James Arness appear smaller than Chuck Conners, who was 6' 5½" (1.9m) tall.
Film locations and angles were not always considered for accuracy. In the beginning scene of episode 39, "Alarm at Pleasant Valley", Matt and Chester see a distant fire, which includes a desert of majestic saguaros, not something that would be part of the Kansas prairie of Dodge City.
Episodes
[edit]No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Matt Gets It" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Charles Marquis Warren | September 10, 1955 | |
United States Marshal Matt Dillon (James Arness) is critically wounded while attempting to arrest a cocky gunslinger who runs uncontrolled in Dodge while he recovers but is completely amazed when the Marshal challenges him again. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Hot Spell" | Charles Marquis Warren | E. Jack Neuman | September 17, 1955 | |
Matt is duty-bound to protect a despised gunman from being hanged by a group of normally law-abiding ranchers for a crime he didn't commit. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Word of Honor" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Charles Marquis Warren | October 1, 1955 | |
Doc is sworn to secrecy by three kidnappers who killed a rancher's son. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Home Surgery" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | October 8, 1955 | |
Matt attempts to save a rancher's life by amputating his gangrenous leg. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "Obie Tater" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Charles Marquis Warren | October 15, 1955 | |
Townspeople and outlaws want to know where an old prospector has hidden his gold. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Night Incident" | Charles Marquis Warren | Charles Marquis Warren | October 29, 1955 | |
Nobody believes a young boy's tales of nighttime robberies and assaults, including Matt and the boy's mother. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Smoking Out the Nolans" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Charles Marquis Warren | November 5, 1955 | |
A rancher asks Matt to evict a couple from a home on part of his land, but the couple insists they purchased it legally and they're refusing to leave. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "Kite's Reward" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | November 12, 1955 | |
A bounty hunter is denied his reward after Matt convinces a wanted gunslinger to give up his gun for a better life. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "The Hunter" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Dunkel | November 26, 1955 | |
Marshal Dillon must stop a buffalo hunter from breaking a treaty by trespassing into Indian territory on a hunt for hides. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "The Queue" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | December 3, 1955 | |
A Chinese immigrant faces dishonor when two brothers cut off his pigtail. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "General Parsley Smith" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | December 10, 1955 | |
A Confederate Civil War General who's an incorrigible liar claims the new town banker is plotting to make off with the depositors' money. | ||||||
12 | 12 | "Magnus" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | December 24, 1955 | |
Chester is appalled when his "uncivilized" country-bumpkin brother comes to Dodge for a Christmas visit. | ||||||
13 | 13 | "Reed Survives" | Charles Marquis Warren | Les Crutchfield | December 31, 1955 | |
A young conniving rancher's wife orchestrates a clever plan to murder her older husband by seducing a recently hired drifter. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "Professor Lute Bone" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | January 7, 1956 | |
Professor Bone and his traveling medicine show come to Dodge pedaling an elixir with potentially deadly side effects. | ||||||
15 | 15 | "No Handcuffs" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | January 21, 1956 | |
A wanted man wrongly accused of murder in a nearby town escapes to Dodge which necessitates Matt and Chester to investigate his claims of corruption. | ||||||
16 | 16 | "Reward for Matt" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | January 28, 1956 | |
A vengeful rancher's wife puts a $1,000 bounty on Matt's head after he shoots down her husband. | ||||||
17 | 17 | "Robin Hood" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Daniel B. Ullman | February 4, 1956 | |
Matt devises a plan to capture a charismatic outlaw who has a reputation for only robbing the rich. | ||||||
18 | 18 | "Yorky" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | February 18, 1956 | |
Matt saves the life of a white boy raised by Indians, who was shot trying to fulfill his coup, by retrieving horses stolen from his Arapaho tribe. | ||||||
19 | 19 | "20-20" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | February 25, 1956 | |
Matt's friend and mentor, an aging ex-lawman arrives in Dodge, but he's followed by a man who wants revenge for the killing of his brother two years before. | ||||||
20 | 20 | "Reunion '78" | Charles Marquis Warren | Harold Swanton | March 3, 1956 | |
A Long Branch saloon girl witnesses a killing in self-defense involving a man from her past, but she refuses to testify which jeopardizes his innocence. | ||||||
21 | 21 | "Helping Hand" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | March 17, 1956 | |
Matt attempts to help a quarrelsome young man turn his life around, after a group of ranch hands try to hang him for cattle rustling. | ||||||
22 | 22 | "Tap Day for Kitty" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | March 24, 1956 | |
An unpleasant and rather ugly elderly rancher up and decides that he is going to marry Kitty. | ||||||
23 | 23 | "Indian Scout" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Dunkel | March 31, 1956 | |
An elderly Army scout married to an Indian woman is suspected of intentionally leading his troop into a Comanche ambush and now becomes the target of the townspeople's anger. | ||||||
24 | 24 | "The Pest Hole" | Charles Marquis Warren | David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | April 14, 1956 | |
Doc investigates the beginning of a typhoid epidemic that hits Dodge and panics the townspeople. | ||||||
25 | 25 | "The Big Broad" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | April 28, 1956 | |
A belligerent and imposing female bully uses her situation as a woman to push around the men of Dodge. | ||||||
26 | 26 | "Hack Prine" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | May 12, 1956 | |
A friend from Matt's past, a gunfighter for hire, comes to Dodge with a job offer and unbeknownst to both of them, that job is to kill the Marshal. | ||||||
27 | 27 | "Cooter" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | May 19, 1956 | |
A dishonest gambler and coward in his own right, uses a mentally challenged man as a puppet in a plot against Matt. | ||||||
28 | 28 | "The Killer" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | May 26, 1956 | |
Matt comes up with a risky plan to stop the killing spree of a psychopathic murderer, who only provokes gunfights with individuals he knows have no chance in defending themselves against him. | ||||||
29 | 29 | "Doc's Revenge" | Ted Post | John Dunkel | June 9, 1956 | |
Doc becomes enraged when he sees a man from his past and swears to Chester that he's going to kill him. | ||||||
30 | 30 | "The Preacher" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | June 16, 1956 | |
A preacher disgusted by all the violence surrounding him has lost faith and is tormented by a bully, who despises his timid nature. | ||||||
31 | 31 | "How to Die for Nothing" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | June 23, 1956 | |
A Texas trail herder swears to avenge his brother's death, who Matt shot and killed in self-defense. | ||||||
32 | 32 | "Dutch George" | Robert Stevenson | John Dunkel | June 30, 1956 | |
Matt may finally have the crucial evidence he needs to arrest an infamous horse thief, who makes a big mistake when he steals a young man's horse for himself. | ||||||
33 | 33 | "Prairie Happy" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | July 7, 1956 | |
When the citizens of Dodge panic, Matt tries to restore order and squash rumors of a planned Pawnee attack. | ||||||
34 | 34 | "Chester's Mail Order Bride" | Robert Stevenson | David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | July 14, 1956 | |
When Chester's mail-order bride arrives, neither she nor Chester are what the other is expecting. | ||||||
35 | 35 | "The Guitar" | Harry Horner | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | July 21, 1956 | |
Two cowboys buy drinks and show a diminutive ex-soldier a good time, but when the fun ends they plan to hang him for fighting on the Union's side of the war. | ||||||
36 | 36 | "Cara" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | July 28, 1956 | |
Matt realizes that an old girlfriend is working on the opposite side of the law and is planning on robbing the bank with her new boyfriend. | ||||||
37 | 37 | "Mr. and Mrs. Amber" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | August 4, 1956 | |
A self-described religious prophet makes life miserable for his sister and her husband. | ||||||
38 | 38 | "Unmarked Grave" | Ted Post | David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | August 18, 1956 | |
A distraught middle-aged woman projects her motherly instincts on Matt's new prisoner, after she learns of her own son's outlaw past and violent death. | ||||||
39 | 39 | "Alarm at Pleasant Valley" | Ted Post | John Dunkel | August 25, 1956 | |
While on their way back to Dodge, Matt and Chester come to the aid of a homesteader family who're attacked by a small band of marauding Kiowa Indians. |
Release
[edit]Broadcast
[edit]Season one aired Saturdays at 10:00-10:30 pm (EST) on CBS.[6]
Home media
[edit]The first season was released on DVD by Paramount Home Video on July 17, 2007.
Reception
[edit]Awards and nominations
[edit]Award | Year[a] | Category | Nominee(s) / Work | Result | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primetime Emmy Awards | 1956 | Best Action or Adventure Series | Gunsmoke | Nominated |
- ^ Indicates the year of ceremony.
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 74–75.
- ^ Brooks & Marsh 2007, p. 570–571.
- ^ McNeil 1996, p. 351–352.
- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 444, 742.
- ^ Costello 2006, p. 255, 539.
- ^ a b Brooks & Marsh 2007, p. 570.
- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 87–102.
- ^ a b c "Hack Prine". Gunsmoke. Season 1. Episode 26. May 12, 1956. CBS.
- ^ "Night Incident". Gunsmoke. Season 1. Episode 6. October 29, 1955. CBS.
- ^ "Robin Hood". Gunsmoke. Season 1. Episode 17. February 4, 1956. CBS.
References
[edit]- Barbaras, SuzAnne & Gabor (1990). Gunsmoke: A Complete History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-89950-418-3.
- Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle F. (2007). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-49773-4.
- Costello, Ben (2006). Gunsmoke: An American Institution. Chandler, Arizona: Five Star Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-1-58985-014-9.
- McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television: the Comprehensive Guide to Programming from 1948 to the Present. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-02-4916-8.