List of Gunsmoke (TV series) episodes
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. The first episode aired in the United States on September 10, 1955, and the final episode aired on March 31, 1975.[2][3] All episodes were broadcast in the U.S. by CBS.[4] In the United Kingdom, Gunsmoke was originally broadcast under the title Gun Law.[5]
Gunsmoke was originally a half-hour program filmed in black-and-white. The series expanded to an hour in length with season seven and began filming in color in season 12. During its run, 635 episodes were broadcast, of which 233 were 30 minutes and 402 were 60 minutes in length. Of the hour-long episodes, 176 were in black-and-white and 226 were in color.[6] During season two, Gunsmoke became one of the 10 most popular programs on American television and moved to number one in the third season. It remained at number one until 1961 and stayed in the top 20 until 1964. The series returned to prominence in 1967 following a shift in its programming time from Saturday to Monday night. From there, Gunsmoke remained in the top 20 for the next seven years, dropping out only in its final season.[4] In May 1975, CBS cancelled the series. Alan Wagner, the network's vice president at the time, said, "It's better to get rid of a program one year too soon than one year too late."[7] Between 1987 and 1994, five television movies based on the series were aired by CBS.[8]
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.[9] In season eight (1962–63), a fifth regular character was added to the cast: blacksmith Quint Asper (Burt Reynolds), who remained until the end of season 10 (1964–65).[10] Dennis Weaver left the series during season nine (1963–64) and was replaced by Ken Curtis as Festus Haggen, who became deputy to Marshall Dillon.[11] Both Chester and Festus appear together in the season-nine episode "The Prairie Wolfer", and Festus had initially appeared the previous season, playing the same character as a quasi-outlaw helping Dillon track a killer in "Us Haggens". In season 11 (1965–66), another deputy, Clayton Thaddeus Greenwood (Roger Ewing), was added to the cast.[12] Ewing's character was replaced in season 13 (1967–68) by Newly O'Brien (Buck Taylor).[13] Amanda Blake left the series at the end of season 19 (1973–74) and was replaced in the final season by a new character, Miss Hannah, portrayed by Fran Ryan.[14]
As of May 5, 2020, all episodes of Gunsmoke have been released on DVD, while two other collections contain selected episodes from all 20 seasons. All five television movies have been released on DVD, as well.
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | Rank | Rating | Viewers (millions) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | ||||||
1 | 39 | September 10, 1955 | August 25, 1956 | — | — | — | |
2 | 39 | September 8, 1956 | June 29, 1957 | 7 | 32.7[a] | 12.72[15] | |
3 | 39 | September 14, 1957 | June 7, 1958 | 1 | 43.1 | 18.06[16] | |
4 | 39 | September 13, 1958 | June 13, 1959 | 1 | 39.6 | 17.40[17] | |
5 | 39 | September 5, 1959 | June 11, 1960 | 1 | 40.3 | 18.43[18] | |
6 | 38 | September 3, 1960 | June 17, 1961 | 1 | 37.3 | 17.60[19] | |
7 | 34 | September 30, 1961 | May 26, 1962 | 3 | 28.3 | 13.74[20] | |
8 | 38 | September 15, 1962 | June 1, 1963 | 10 | 27.0 | 13.58[21] | |
9 | 36 | September 28, 1963 | June 6, 1964 | 20 | 23.5 | 12.12[22] | |
10 | 36 | September 26, 1964 | May 29, 1965 | 27 | 22.6 | 11.91[23] | |
11 | 32 | September 18, 1965 | May 7, 1966 | 30 | 21.3 | 11.47[24] | |
12 | 29 | September 17, 1966 | April 15, 1967 | — | — | — | |
13 | 25 | September 11, 1967 | March 4, 1968 | 4 | 25.5[b] | 14.45[25] | |
14 | 26 | September 23, 1968 | March 24, 1969 | 6 | 24.9 | 14.50[26] | |
15 | 26 | September 22, 1969 | March 23, 1970 | 2 | 25.9 | 15.15[27] | |
16 | 24 | September 14, 1970 | March 8, 1971 | 5 | 25.5 | 15.32[28] | |
17 | 24 | September 13, 1971 | March 13, 1972 | 4 | 26.0 | 16.14[29] | |
18 | 24 | September 11, 1972 | March 5, 1973 | 7 | 23.6[c] | 15.29[30] | |
19 | 24 | September 10, 1973 | April 1, 1974 | 15 | 22.1 | 14.63[31] | |
20 | 24 | September 9, 1974 | March 31, 1975 | 28 | 20.5 | 14.04[32] | |
Television movies | September 26, 1987 | February 10, 1994 | — | — | — |
- ^ Tied with I've Got a Secret
- ^ Tied with Family Affair and Bonanza
- ^ Tied with The Mary Tyler Moore Show
Episodes
- All episodes are listed in order of airdate.
- Series # refers to that episode's number within the overall series.
- Season # refers to the order in which the episode aired within that particular season.
Half-hour era
Seasons 1 - 6
1955/56 through 1960/61
233 half-hour episodes (all black-and-white)
39 episodes for each of the first five seasons, with 38 episodes for the 6th season
Season 1 (1955–56)
Thirty-nine half-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Charles Marquis Warren; associate producer: Norman Macdonnell
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)
Note: The premiere episode was introduced by John Wayne.[33]
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)[34] of Dodge City must deal with fast trigger-happy outlaw Dan Grat (Paul Richards) who wants his way with the town. | ||||||
2i | 2 | "Hot Spell" | Charles Marquis Warren | E. Jack Neuman | September 17, 1955 | |
Matt must defend a gunman he despises from townspeople who want to lynch him 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 | |
To save his own life, murder witness Doc gives his word of honor to the killers (including Claude Akins) that he won't expose them. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Home Surgery" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | October 8, 1955 | |
Matt tries to save the life of a man dying of gangrene. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "Obie Tater" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Charles Marquis Warren | October 15, 1955 | |
A group of outlaws try to force an old prospector (Royal Dano) to give up his gold. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Night Incident" | Charles Marquis Warren | Charles Marquis Warren | October 29, 1955 | |
No one believes a boy's claims that he overheard an outlaw planning a robbery. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Smoking Out the Nolans" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Charles Marquis Warren | November 5, 1955 | |
A landowner asks Matt to remove a couple from a home on part of his land, which the couple insists they bought and paid for, and which they refuse to vacate. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "Kite's Reward" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | November 12, 1955 | |
An ex-outlaw's attempt to hang up his gun proves difficult (George Selk makes first credited appearance as Moss Grimmick). | ||||||
9 | 9 | "The Hunter" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Dunkel | November 26, 1955 | |
A legendary buffalo hunter (Peter Whitney) invites the wrath of Indians when he sets out to cross their sacred hunting grounds. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "The Queue" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | December 3, 1955 | |
Two men try to force a Chinese man out of Dodge. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "General Parsley Smith" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | December 10, 1955 | |
Parsley Smith (Raymond Bailey), a teller of tall tales, 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 | |
It's Christmas in Dodge and Chester isn't pleased when his brother Magnus arrives for a visit (Robert Easton appears). One of very few times a radio episode was adapted to TV with the same guest actor playing the role in both media. | ||||||
13 | 13 | "Reed Survives" | Charles Marquis Warren | Les Crutchfield | December 31, 1955 | |
A beautiful young wife (Lola Albright) manipulates a young hired hand into killing her older husband. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "Professor Lute Bone" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | January 7, 1956 | |
A peddler's miracle curative contains opium and proves fatal. | ||||||
15 | 15 | "No Handcuffs" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | January 21, 1956 | |
A man who claims he's innocent of a murder in a corrupt town breaks out of Matt's jail, and his trail leads Matt to the corrupt sheriff (Mort Mills appears). | ||||||
16 | 16 | "Reward for Matt" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | January 28, 1956 | |
A woman offers a $1,000 reward to the man who kills Matt Dillon. | ||||||
17 | 17 | "Robin Hood" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Daniel B. Ullman | February 4, 1956 | |
Witnesses are refusing to testify against an infamous outlaw (William Hopper) (Barry Atwater appears). | ||||||
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 retrieve horses stolen from his tribe. | ||||||
19 | 19 | "20-20" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | February 25, 1956 | |
An ex-lawman and old friend of Matt's arrives in Dodge with failing eyesight, and a man who wants to kill him. | ||||||
20 | 20 | "Reunion '78" | Charles Marquis Warren | Harold Swanton | March 3, 1956 | |
A well-liked hardware drummer is actually a man wanted for multiple murders. | ||||||
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 reform a young troublemaker (including James Nusser in a role other than Louie Pheeters). | ||||||
22 | 22 | "Tap Day for Kitty" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | March 24, 1956 | |
An old rancher (John Dehner) decides that he is going to marry Kitty. | ||||||
23 | 23 | "Indian Scout" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Dunkel | March 31, 1956 | |
When an old Indian scout (Eduard Franz) murders a man (DeForest Kelley), Matt pursues him into Comanche territory. | ||||||
24 | 24 | "The Pest Hole" | Charles Marquis Warren | David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | April 14, 1956 | |
Doc must find a way to thwart a typhoid epidemic in Dodge (Howard McNear appears). | ||||||
25 | 25 | "The Big Broad" | Charles Marquis Warren | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | April 28, 1956 | |
Matt has to figure a way around a six-foot-tall, 200-pound woman with a six-gun. | ||||||
26 | 26 | "Hack Prine" | Charles Marquis Warren | John Meston | May 12, 1956 | |
An old friend (Leo Gordon) of Matt's is now a gun-for-hire, in town to kill him. This is the actual pilot episode of the television Gunsmoke. | ||||||
27 | 27 | "Cooter" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | May 19, 1956 | |
A dishonest gambler (Vinton Hayworth) uses a mentally challenged man (Strother Martin) in a plot against Matt (Robert Vaughn appears). | ||||||
28 | 28 | "The Killer" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | May 26, 1956 | |
Matt has to stop a cold-blooded killer (Charles Bronson) who preys on over-matched opponents (including James Nusser in a role other than Louie Pheeters) (Dabbs Greer makes first credited appearance as 'Jonas'). | ||||||
29 | 29 | "Doc's Revenge" | Ted Post | John Dunkel | June 9, 1956 | |
Doc has a change of heart about a man he hates and wants to kill face to face when the man is later shot in the back (first credited appearance of Bert Rumsey as 'Bartender'). | ||||||
30 | 30 | "The Preacher" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | June 16, 1956 | |
A preacher (Royal Dano) disgusted by violence is harassed by bully Sam Keeler (Chuck Connors) 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 | |
The brother of a man Matt was forced to kill vows to kill Matt by any means necessary (Mort Mills appears). | ||||||
32 | 32 | "Dutch George" | Robert Stevenson | John Dunkel | June 30, 1956 | |
Matt is forced to arrest his childhood hero (Robert Middleton), who is now the leader of a gang of horse thieves (Tom Pittman appears). | ||||||
33 | 33 | "Prairie Happy" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | July 7, 1956 | |
A bitter old man tells fibs about Indians preparing to strike Dodge. | ||||||
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 are expecting (first credited appearance of Bert Rumsey as 'Sam'). | ||||||
35 | 35 | "The Guitar" | Harry Horner | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | July 21, 1956 | |
An ex-Union soldier (Aaron Spelling) is forced to use violence against a pair of diehard Rebels (Jacques Aubuchon appears). First episode without the "Boot Hill" intro. | ||||||
36 | 36 | "Cara" | Robert Stevenson | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | July 28, 1956 | |
Matt discovers that an old girlfriend is working on the opposite side of the law. | ||||||
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 (Paul Richards). | ||||||
38 | 38 | "Unmarked Grave" | Ted Post | David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | August 18, 1956 | |
An old woman (Helen Kleeb) grieving over the loss of her outlaw son tries to help another young outlaw escape justice (William Hopper and Than Wyenn appear). Boot Hill Intro returns for this episode and appears intermittently hereafter. | ||||||
39 | 39 | "Alarm at Pleasant Valley" | Ted Post | John Dunkel | August 25, 1956 | |
Homesteaders are ambushed on the way to Dodge (Dan Blocker appears as 'Lieutenant'). |
Season 2 (1956–57)
Thirty-nine half-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Charles Marquis Warren (episodes 40–49, 51–52, 57), Norman Macdonnell (episodes 50, 53–56, 58–78)
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)[35]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
40 | 1 | "Cow Doctor" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | September 8, 1956 | |
A wounded Doc may be forced to save the life of the man who wounded him (Tommy Kirk appears). | ||||||
41 | 2 | "Brush at Elkader" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | September 15, 1956 | |
Matt tracks a murderer (Paul Lambert) to a strange town (Elkader) where the people are unwilling to cooperate (Gage Clarke makes first appearance, but in a role other than Dodge House clerk Dobie or bank manager Botkin). | ||||||
42 | 3 | "Custer" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Gil Doud | September 22, 1956 | |
Matt refuses to turn in a rustler (Brian G. Hutton) for a court-martial. Boot Hill intro clearly shows grave markers with dates of 1882 & 1883, yet episode is set in 1876, the year of the Battle of the Little Bighorn. | ||||||
43 | 4 | "The Round Up" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | September 29, 1956 | |
Dodge City merchants celebrate the end of a round-up and unite against any acts of violence (Jacques Aubuchon appears). | ||||||
44 | 5 | "Young Man with a Gun" | Christian Nyby | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Winston Miller | October 20, 1956 | |
The brother of an outlaw (Fredd Wayne) Matt killed (by drawing first, as Doc notes aloud) swears revenge (Clegg Hoyt appears, Bert Rumsey credited as 'Bartender'). | ||||||
45 | 6 | "Indian White" | Ted Post | Story by : Tom Hanley Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | October 27, 1956 | |
A white boy who has been raised by Indians learns to live with his own race (Stanley Adams, Abel Fernandez, Clegg Hoyt, Alexander Lockwood, and Marian Seldes appear). | ||||||
46 | 7 | "How to Cure a Friend" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Winston Miller | November 10, 1956 | |
Matt is used by an old friend (Andrew Duggan) in a con game (Simon Oakland appears). | ||||||
47 | 8 | "Legal Revenge" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | November 17, 1956 | |
Doc comes upon a homesteader (Philip Bourneuf) with a busted leg and a gun to protect himself from his wife (Cloris Leachman). | ||||||
48 | 9 | "The Mistake" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Gil Doud | November 24, 1956 | |
Matt leaves Dodge City unprotected when he sets out to find a killer (Mike Connors) (Bert Rumsey credited as 'Bartender', but referred to by Chester as 'Sam Noonan'). | ||||||
49 | 10 | "Greater Love" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Winston Miller | December 1, 1956 | |
An outlaw (Claude Akins) threatens to kill Doc if he does not help his wounded buddy (Frank de Kova and Amzie Strickland appear). | ||||||
50 | 11 | "No Indians" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | December 8, 1956 | |
Matt and Chester act as decoys to ambush outlaws (including Mickey Simpson) that are masking their crimes as those of renegade Indians (Fintan Meyler and Herbert Rudley appear). | ||||||
51 | 12 | "Spring Term" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : William F. Leicester | December 15, 1956 | |
Matt discovers that he was the intended victim of a murder he is investigating (Stanley Adams, Jack Kruschen, Paul Newlan, Harry Townes, and H. M. Wynant appear). | ||||||
52 | 13 | "Poor Pearl" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | December 22, 1956 | |
Matt helps a woman (Constance Ford) whose suitors (including Denver Pyle) are about to duel for her affections. | ||||||
53 | 14 | "Cholera" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | December 29, 1956 | |
A landowner (Paul Fix) tries to terrorize homesteaders (Bartlett Robinson and Peg Hillias) off their land (Gordon Gebert, John Smith, and Stuart Whitman appear). | ||||||
54 | 15 | "Pucket's New Year" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | January 5, 1957 | |
An old buffalo hunter (Edgar Stehli) swears revenge on the skinner (Grant Withers) that left him to die (Richard Deacon appears as banker Botkin, Bert Rumsey credited as 'Bartender'). | ||||||
55 | 16 | "The Cover Up" | William D. Russell | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : William N. Robson | January 12, 1957 | |
Matt traps a cattleman (Tyler McVey) who shot two homesteaders (including Roy Engel) (Malcolm Atterbury and Vivi Janiss appear). | ||||||
56 | 17 | "Sins of the Father" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : John Dunkel | January 19, 1957 | |
An Indian woman (Angie Dickinson) faces prejudice for her father's raid on Dodge City (Peter Whitney and Paul Wexler appear). | ||||||
57 | 18 | "Kick Me" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Endre Bohem and Louis Vittes | January 26, 1957 | |
A bank robber (Robert H. Harris) murders his wife and frames Tobeel (Frank de Kova) for the crime (Paul Lambert appears). | ||||||
58 | 19 | "Executioner" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Gil Doud | February 2, 1957 | |
After a young gunfighter (Liam Sullivan) brazenly kills an over-matched rancher, the rancher's brother wants Matt to settle the score. | ||||||
59 | 20 | "Gone Straight" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | February 9, 1957 | |
Townspeople protect an outlaw (Carl Betz) they believe has reformed (Tige Andrews, Joe De Santis, John Dierkes, Marianne Stewart, and Ward Wood appear). | ||||||
60 | 21 | "Bloody Hands" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | February 16, 1957 | |
The shooting of several members of an outlaw gang, though in self defense, triggers an emotional crisis in Matt, haunted by memories of all the men he has killed (Lawrence Dobkin, Russell Johnson, and Gloria Marshall appear). | ||||||
61 | 22 | "Skid Row" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Gil Doud | February 23, 1957 | |
A woman (Susan Morrow) comes a long way from the east to Dodge, only to realize that her fiancé (Joseph Sargent) has lost all his money and does not wish to marry her (Guinn "Big Boy" Williams appears). | ||||||
62 | 23 | "Sweet and Sour" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | March 2, 1957 | |
A dance-hall girl (Karen Sharpe) manipulates her admirers (including John Alderson, Walter Reed, John Mitchum, and Ken Mayer) into facing each other in gunfights. | ||||||
63 | 24 | "Cain" | Ted Post | John Meston | March 9, 1957 | |
A former gunslinger's (Mark Roberts) past catches up to him (Harry Bartell, Paul Dubov, and Dan Riss appear). | ||||||
64 | 25 | "Bureaucrat" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Teleplay by : William F. Leicester | March 16, 1957 | |
An official (John Hoyt) from Washington sets out to tame Dodge City (Richard Avonde, William Bryant, Ned Glass, and Ken Lynch appear). | ||||||
65 | 26 | "Last Fling" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | March 23, 1957 | |
Kitty gets annoyed by a pair of old farmers (including Frank de Kova) who are each trying to have a fling with her (Susan Morrow and Anne O'Neal appear). | ||||||
66 | 27 | "Chester's Murder" | Ted Post | John Meston | March 30, 1957 | |
Matt reluctantly arrests Chester for murder (Peggie Castle and Murray Hamilton appear). | ||||||
67 | 28 | "The Photographer" | William D. Russell | John Dunkel | April 6, 1957 | |
A photographer (Sebastian Cabot) from the east seeks to immortalize the violent West (Ned Glass appears, Howard Culver appears in a role other than hotel clerk Uzzell). | ||||||
68 | 29 | "Wrong Man" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 13, 1957 | |
A cowboy vows revenge for the shooting of his friend, who was mistaken for a criminal (Don Keefer and Catherine McLeod, real-life husband and wife, appear as a husband and wife). | ||||||
69 | 30 | "Big Girl Lost" | Ted Post | John Meston | April 20, 1957 | |
A saloon girl does not want her ex-fiancé (Michael Pate) to know about her job (Judson Pratt appears as Long Branch owner Bill Pence). | ||||||
70 | 31 | "What the Whiskey Drummer Heard" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Teleplay by : Gil Doud | April 27, 1957 | |
Matt fakes his death to lure a gunman (Vic Perrin) out in the open (Robert Karnes appears, Bert Rumsey credited as 'Sam'). | ||||||
71 | 32 | "Cheap Labor" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | May 4, 1957 | |
A former gunslinger (Andrew Duggan) is goaded into a duel by his fiancee's (Peggy Webber) brother (Robert F. Simon) (Susan Morrow appears, and James Nusser appears in a role other than Louie Pheeters, credited as 'Bum'). | ||||||
72 | 33 | "Moon" | William D. Russell | John Meston | May 11, 1957 | |
Matt seeks evidence to convict a poker dealer (Phillip Pine) of murdering a gambler (Stafford Repp) (Rebecca Welles appears). | ||||||
73 | 34 | "Who Lives by the Sword" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | May 18, 1957 | |
A gunman (Harold J. Stone) manipulates two boys into facing him in a duel (Hal Baylor and Harry Woods appear). | ||||||
74 | 35 | "Uncle Oliver" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | May 25, 1957 | |
Matt goes after an outlaw (Earle Hodgins) who shot Chester (Paul Wexler appears). | ||||||
75 | 36 | "Daddy-O" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | June 1, 1957 | |
Kitty's father (John Dehner) arrives in Dodge to try and take her back to New Orleans (Cyril Delevanti appears, and Judson Pratt appears as Long Branch owner Bill Pence). This episode notes Miss Kitty's purchase of half-ownership in the Long Branch Saloon. | ||||||
76 | 37 | "The Man Who Would Be Marshal" | William D. Russell | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David Victor and Herbert Little, Jr. | June 15, 1957 | |
A retired Army officer (Herbert Rudley) asks Matt to appoint him deputy (Walt Barnes, June Carter Cash, Clancy Cooper, and Ned Glass appear). | ||||||
77 | 38 | "Liar from Blackhawk" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | June 22, 1957 | |
A gunman (John Doucette) tries to start a fight with a braggart (Denver Pyle) (Fred Graham and Strother Martin appear, Bert Rumsey credited as 'Sam'). | ||||||
78 | 39 | "Jealousy" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Sam Peckinpah | June 29, 1957 | |
A hot-tempered man (Jack Kelly) thinks Matt is pursuing his wife (Joan Tetzel) (Ken Drake and Than Wyenn appear). |
Season 3 (1957–58)
Thirty-nine half-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)[36]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
79 | 1 | "Crack-Up" | Ted Post | John Meston | September 14, 1957 | |
Matt must find out who sent a supposed professional killer (John Dehner) to Dodge and why. | ||||||
80 | 2 | "Gun for Chester" | Louis King | John Meston | September 21, 1957 | |
The man who threatened to kill Chester arrives in town. | ||||||
81 | 3 | "Blood Money" | Louis King | John Meston | September 28, 1957 | |
The friendship between Harry Spener (Vinton Hayworth) and Joe Harpe is jeopardized by the fact that there's a price on the latter's head. | ||||||
82 | 4 | "Kitty's Outlaw" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | October 5, 1957 | |
Kitty's old boyfriend (Ainslie Pryor) sets her up in a bank robbery. | ||||||
83 | 5 | "Potato Road" | Ted Post | John Meston | October 12, 1957 | |
A young man (Tom Pittman) claims that his father (Robert F. Simon) committed a murder (Jeanette Nolan and Morgan Woodward appear). | ||||||
84 | 6 | "Jesse" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 19, 1957 | |
Matt tries to help a young man find his father's killer (Edward Binns appears). | ||||||
85 | 7 | "Mavis McCloud" | Buzz Kulik | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | October 26, 1957 | |
A girl (Fay Spain) from the east comes to Dodge to experience life in the west (Robert Cornthwaite and Max Showalter, credited as Casey Adams, appear). | ||||||
86 | 8 | "Born to Hang" | Buzz Kulik | John Meston | November 2, 1957 | |
After he is saved from hanging, a drifter (Wright King) plots revenge against the men (including Anthony Caruso, Ken Lynch, and Mort Mills) who tried to lynch him (Dorothy Adams appears). | ||||||
87 | 9 | "Romeo" | Ted Post | John Meston | November 9, 1957 | |
Inspired by the play Romeo and Juliet, the children (Barbara Eden and Robert Vaughn) of feuding family patriarchs (Barry Kelley and Tyler McVey) fall in love (Bill Erwin and Robert McQueeney appear). | ||||||
88 | 10 | "Never Pester Chester" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | November 16, 1957 | |
Matt hunts down two drifters (including Buddy Baer) who dragged Chester and left him for dead (Paul Birch and Gary Vinson appear, and Woody Chambliss appears in a role other than Woody Lathrop). | ||||||
89 | 11 | "Fingered" | James Sheldon | John Meston | November 23, 1957 | |
The people of Dodge gets suspicious of Jim Cobbett (John Larch) when his second wife (Virginia Christine) vanishes just like his first (Karl Swenson appears). | ||||||
90 | 12 | "How to Kill a Woman" | John Rich | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David S. Peckinpah[A] | November 30, 1957 | |
Matt tracks down a gunman (Pernell Roberts) who robbed a stagecoach (Barry Atwater, Jolene Brand, and George Cisar appear, and Robert Brubaker makes first appearance as stagecoach driver Jim Buck). | ||||||
91 | 13 | "Cows and Cribs" | Richard Whorf | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | December 7, 1957 | |
The residents of Dodge are wondering where Joe Nadler (Val Avery) gets all his money – and where he goes to spend it (Mabel Albertson, Kathie Browne, Kit Guard, Bartlett Robinson, and Jud Taylor appear). | ||||||
92 | 14 | "Doc's Reward" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | December 14, 1957 | |
Even though Doc has confessed to murdering the man (Jack Lord) that shot his horse, Matt is unwilling to arrest him (Jean Fenwick appears). | ||||||
93 | 15 | "Kitty Lost" | Ted Post | John Meston | December 21, 1957 | |
Kitty gets deserted in a desolate plain by a suitor (Warren Stevens) she rejected (Brett King appears, and Stephen Ellsworth assumes role of Bill Pence). | ||||||
94 | 16 | "Twelfth Night" | John Rich | John Meston | December 28, 1957 | |
The remaining survivors (including James Griffith, Rose Marie, and William Schallert) of two feuding Ozark families face each other in Dodge. | ||||||
95 | 17 | "Joe Phy" | Ted Post | John Meston | January 4, 1958 | |
Marshal Joe Phy (Paul Richards) uses his reputation as a gunman to maintain order (Morey Amsterdam appears). | ||||||
96 | 18 | "Buffalo Man" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | January 11, 1958 | |
Matt and Chester get caught in the middle of a feud between Indians and buffalo hunters. Note: The fight scene near the end of this episode serves as the basis for an educational film produced by the American Cinema Editors, called Film Editing: Interpretation & Values, used by film students all around the world.[37][38] | ||||||
97 | 19 | "Kitty Caught" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | January 18, 1958 | |
Bank robbers (Pat Conway and Bruce Gordon)) take Kitty hostage (Charles Tannen appears, and William Keene appears as banker Botkin). | ||||||
98 | 20 | "Claustrophobia" | Ted Post | John Meston | January 25, 1958 | |
A pair of landgrabbers kill a homesteader's (Vaughn Taylor) mule and hogs to get his ranch (Joe Maross and Jimmy Noel appear). | ||||||
99 | 21 | "Ma Tennis" | Buzz Kulik | John Meston | February 1, 1958 | |
A woman claims to have killed her outlaw son (Ron Hagerthy) to prevent him from turning himself in (Corey Allen and Russ Bender appear). | ||||||
100 | 22 | "Sunday Supplement" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | February 8, 1958 | |
A pair (Werner Klemperer and Jack Weston) of journalists from the east cause trouble (Kit Guard, Theodore Newton, and Eddie Little Sky appear). | ||||||
101 | 23 | "Wild West" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | February 15, 1958 | |
Matt attempts to rescue a child's father (Philip Bourneuf) from kidnappers (Robert Gist and Murray Hamilton) (Phyllis Coates appears). | ||||||
102 | 24 | "The Cabin" | John Rich | John Meston | February 22, 1958 | |
Matt finds a cabin to shelter himself from a blizzard, only to learn it is occupied by a pair (Claude Akins and Harry Dean Stanton) of bank robbers (Patricia Barry appears). | ||||||
103 | 25 | "Dirt" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : David S. Peckinpah[A] | March 1, 1958 | |
A newlywed man (Wayne Morris) is shot moments after his wedding (Gail Kobe, June Lockhart, and Ian MacDonald appear). | ||||||
104 | 26 | "Dooley Surrenders" | John Rich | John Meston | March 8, 1958 | |
Matt sets out to clear Emmett Dooley (Strother Martin), who has been accused of murdering one of his hunting companions (Ken Lynch appears, and James Nusser appears in a role other than Louie Pheeters). | ||||||
105 | 27 | "Joke's on Us" | Ted Post | John Meston | March 15, 1958 | |
The widow (Virginia Gregg) and son of a man Jake Kaiser (Bartlett Robinson) lynched are out to get him (Kevin Hagen appears). | ||||||
106 | 28 | "Bottleman" | John Rich | John Meston | March 22, 1958 | |
Tom Cassidy (John Dehner), the town drunk, tries to pick a fight with Dan Clell (Ross Martin), who has just arrived in Dodge (Roxane Berard and Peggy McCay appear, and Barney Phillips appears as Bill Pence). | ||||||
107 | 29 | "Laughing Gas" | Ted Post | James Fonda | March 29, 1958 | |
A former gunslinger is being bothered by bullies. | ||||||
108 | 30 | "Texas Cowboys" | John Rich | John Meston | April 5, 1958 | |
Cowboys from Texas set out to avenge their murdered friend. | ||||||
109 | 31 | "Amy's Good Deed" | John Rich | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | April 12, 1958 | |
A bitter old woman plots to kill Matt as revenge for the death of her brother. | ||||||
110 | 32 | "Hanging Man" | John Rich | John Meston | April 19, 1958 | |
Matt suspects murder when a merchant is found hanged in his office. | ||||||
111 | 33 | "Innocent Broad" | John Rich | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | April 26, 1958 | |
A woman's boyfriend causes trouble for Matt with his constant fits of jealousy. | ||||||
112 | 34 | "The Big Con" | John Rich | John Meston | May 3, 1958 | |
Doc is taken hostage by three con artists. | ||||||
113 | 35 | "Widow's Mite" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 10, 1958 | |
A gambler marries an outlaw's widow for her husband's stolen money. | ||||||
114 | 36 | "Chester's Hanging" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 17, 1958 | |
Matt arrests a drifter for robbing and murdering a cattle buyer. | ||||||
115 | 37 | "Carmen" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 24, 1958 | |
An Army major threatens to put Dodge under martial law after soldiers are killed in a robbery. | ||||||
116 | 38 | "Overland Express" | Seymour Berns | John Meston | May 31, 1958 | |
An outlaw holds up a stagecoach carrying a murderer to trial. | ||||||
117 | 39 | "The Gentleman" | Ted Post | John Meston | June 7, 1958 | |
One of Kitty's hostesses has fallen in love with a gambler, but one of the girl's old boyfriends has his suspicions. |
Season 4 (1958–59)
Thirty-nine half-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)[39]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
118 | 1 | "Matt for Murder" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | September 13, 1958 | |
A witness claims to have seen Matt kill Red Samples' partner. | ||||||
119 | 2 | "The Patsy" | Richard Whorf | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | September 20, 1958 | |
One of the dance-hall girls accuses a man of murder. | ||||||
120 | 3 | "Gunsmuggler" | Richard Whorf | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | September 27, 1958 | |
Matt investigates an alleged Indian raid that seems to have wiped out a family. | ||||||
121 | 4 | "Monopoly" | Seymour Berns | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | October 4, 1958 | |
A stranger is purchasing all the local freight lines. | ||||||
122 | 5 | "Letter of the Law" | Richard Whorf | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | October 11, 1958 | |
Matt attempts to get a man and his expectant wife evicted from their home. | ||||||
123 | 6 | "Thoroughbreds" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | October 18, 1958 | |
Matt and Chester meet a man with two horses on the way back to Dodge who is not very friendly – until they see him spending money freely. | ||||||
124 | 7 | "Stage Hold-Up" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Teleplay by : Les Crutchfield | October 25, 1958 | |
A robber holds up a stagecoach carrying Matt, then turns up in Dodge. | ||||||
125 | 8 | "Lost Rifle" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | November 1, 1958 | |
A man who has had every motive to commit a murder swears that he is innocent. | ||||||
126 | 9 | "Land Deal" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | November 8, 1958 | |
Matt gets suspicious of a land agent's generous offer. | ||||||
127 | 10 | "Lynching Man" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | November 15, 1958 | |
The townspeople prepare for a lynching when a pair of saddle tramps kill a homesteader and steal his horse. | ||||||
128 | 11 | "How to Kill a Friend" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | November 22, 1958 | |
Matt tells a pair of gamblers to get out of Dodge, but they hire a gunman to kill him. | ||||||
129 | 12 | "Grass" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | November 29, 1958 | |
A rancher takes Matt's advice and arms himself against Indians, then shoots a cowboy dressed as an Indian. | ||||||
130 | 13 | "The Cast" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | December 6, 1958 | |
A rancher blames Doc for the death of his wife. | ||||||
131 | 14 | "Robber Bridegroom" | Richard Whorf | John Meston | December 13, 1958 | |
A girl refuses to testify against the robbers who kidnapped her. | ||||||
132 | 15 | "Snakebite" | Ted Post | John Meston | December 20, 1958 | |
One of the drifters who killed a man's dog is found dead. | ||||||
133 | 16 | "Gypsum Hills Feud" | Richard Whorf | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | December 27, 1958 | |
Matt and Chester get caught in the middle of a bloody mountain feud between the Peavys and the Cades. | ||||||
134 | 17 | "Young Love" | Seymour Berns | John Meston | January 3, 1959 | |
The widow of a cattleman falls in love with the man who supposedly killed her husband. | ||||||
135 | 18 | "Marshal Proudfoot" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Tom Hanley Screenplay by : John Meston | January 10, 1959 | |
Chester's uncle thinks he is the marshal of Dodge City. | ||||||
136 | 19 | "Passive Resistance" | Ted Post | John Meston | January 17, 1959 | |
An elderly sheepherder who is against violence refuses to tell Matt the identity of the two cattleman who killed his sheep, burned his house, and left him for dead. | ||||||
137 | 20 | "Love of a Good Woman" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | January 24, 1959 | |
A recently released convict jeopardizes his parole when he sets out to kill Matt. | ||||||
138 | 21 | "Jayhawkers" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | January 31, 1959 | |
A drover asks Matt and Chester to help him protect his boss' herd from a renegade raid. | ||||||
139 | 22 | "Kitty's Rebellion" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | February 7, 1959 | |
An old friend's brother attempts to 'save' Kitty from life as a saloonkeeper. | ||||||
140 | 23 | "Sky" | Ted Post | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | February 14, 1959 | |
A young man steals a horse when he is accused of murder. | ||||||
141 | 24 | "Doc Quits" | Edward Ludlum | John Meston | February 21, 1959 | |
Doc suspects the new town doctor of being a charlatan. | ||||||
142 | 25 | "The Bear" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | February 28, 1959 | |
A former saloon girl's upcoming marriage is jeopardized by her old boyfriend. | ||||||
143 | 26 | "The Coward" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | March 7, 1959 | |
Matt's double is murdered, leaving the residents of Dodge very confused. | ||||||
144 | 27 | "The F.U." | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | March 14, 1959 | |
Onie Baker is found dead after a quarrel with Al Clovis, who has gone missing. | ||||||
145 | 28 | "Wind" | Arthur Hiller | John Meston | March 21, 1959 | |
Matt suspects the new saloon girl of being affiliated with a crooked gambler. | ||||||
146 | 29 | "Fawn" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 4, 1959 | |
Matt frees a white woman and her daughter from slavery by the Indians. | ||||||
147 | 30 | "Renegade White" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : John Meston Screenplay by : Les Crutchfield | April 11, 1959 | |
After getting out of jail, Ord Spicer begins selling rifles to Indians. | ||||||
148 | 31 | "Murder Warrant" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 18, 1959 | |
Matt protects a suspected killer from a trigger-happy deputy. | ||||||
149 | 32 | "Change of Heart" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 25, 1959 | |
Brisco Casis tries to stop his brother from marrying a saloon girl. | ||||||
150 | 33 | "Buffalo Hunter" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 2, 1959 | |
The head of a buffalo-hunting party is unwilling to tell Matt what he knows about the murders of two of his skinners. | ||||||
151 | 34 | "The Choice" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 9, 1959 | |
A pair of strangers are on Matt's 'wanted list'. | ||||||
152 | 35 | "There Never Was a Horse" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | May 16, 1959 | |
A nasty gunfighter kills a drunk to force Matt into a showdown. | ||||||
153 | 36 | "Print Asper" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 23, 1959 | |
Print Asper wishes to leave his ranch to his sons, but his attorney has other plans. | ||||||
154 | 37 | "The Constable" | Arthur Hiller | John Meston | May 30, 1959 | |
A ranch foreman threatens to boycott Dodge City commerce if his cowboys are not left alone. | ||||||
155 | 38 | "Blue Horse" | Andrew V. McLaglen and Ted Post | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | June 6, 1959 | |
Matt is delivering a prisoner to Dodge when he is thrown, and must stay with his quarry while Chester gets help. | ||||||
156 | 39 | "Cheyennes" | Ted Post | John Meston | June 13, 1959 | |
Matt hunts down the Indians who are killing settlers. |
Season 5 (1959–60)
Thirty-nine half-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)[40]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
157 | 1 | "Target" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | September 5, 1959 | |
A gypsy girl's father disapproves of a young man's romance with her. | ||||||
158 | 2 | "Kitty's Injury" | Buzz Kulik | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | September 19, 1959 | |
Kitty sustains injury from falling off a horse. | ||||||
159 | 3 | "Horse Deal" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | September 26, 1959 | |
Matt seems to be too lazy to catch horse thieves when ranchers are being sold stolen horses. | ||||||
160 | 4 | "Johnny Red" | Buzz Kulik | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | October 3, 1959 | |
Matt suspects a new arrival of being a ruthless criminal. | ||||||
161 | 5 | "Tail to the Wind" | Christian Nyby | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | October 10, 1959 | |
A rancher who has been threatened refuses Matt's help. | ||||||
162 | 6 | "Annie Oakley" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | October 17, 1959 | |
A woman who has been feeling neglected by her husband manipulates him into fighting a neighbor. | ||||||
163 | 7 | "Kangaroo" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 24, 1959 | |
A family of psychopaths takes Chester hostage. | ||||||
164 | 8 | "Saludos" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | October 31, 1959 | |
Three cowboys are suspected of shooting a woman who is half Native American. | ||||||
165 | 9 | "Brother Whelp" | R.G. Springsteen | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | November 7, 1959 | |
A man returns to Dodge to kill his brother as revenge for marrying his fiancée. | ||||||
166 | 10 | "The Boots" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | November 14, 1959 | |
A young man is unaware that his hero was once a gunslinger. | ||||||
167 | 11 | "Odd Man Out" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | November 21, 1959 | |
Matt suspects foul play when an old farmer claims his wife left him. | ||||||
168 | 12 | "Miguel's Daughter" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | November 28, 1959 | |
Although Kitty has prevented two men from molesting Chavela Ramirez, the girl's father wants revenge. | ||||||
169 | 13 | "Box o' Rocks" | R.G. Springsteen | Les Crutchfield | December 5, 1959 | |
A coffin at a funeral is found to be filled with rocks. | ||||||
170 | 14 | "False Witness" | Ted Post | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | December 12, 1959 | |
A man claims he can identify a murderer just to get attention. | ||||||
171 | 15 | "Tag, You're It" | Jesse Hibbs | Les Crutchfield | December 19, 1959 | |
A notorious gunfighter comes to Dodge, making the townspeople curious as to who he's after. | ||||||
172 | 16 | "Thick 'n' Thin" | Stuart Heisler | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | December 26, 1959 | |
Two old ranch partners have a falling out. | ||||||
173 | 17 | "Groat's Grudge" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | January 2, 1960 | |
A former Rebel sets out to settle the score with a cowboy he thinks killed his wife during Sherman's march through Georgia. | ||||||
174 | 18 | "Big Tom" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | January 9, 1960 | |
A scheming fighting manager sets up a dangerous boxing match. | ||||||
175 | 19 | "Till Death Do Us" | Jean Yarbrough | Les Crutchfield | January 16, 1960 | |
A killer targets an eccentric old man and his wife. | ||||||
176 | 20 | "The Tragedian" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | January 23, 1960 | |
An out-of-work actor gets in trouble for playing marked cards. | ||||||
177 | 21 | "Hinka Do" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | January 30, 1960 | |
The new saloonkeeper in Dodge is a woman who knows how to handle a six-shooter. | ||||||
178 | 22 | "Doc Judge" | Arthur Hiller | John Meston | February 6, 1960 | |
With Matt out of town, Doc only has Chester to protect him when his life is threatened. | ||||||
179 | 23 | "Moo Moo Raid" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | February 13, 1960 | |
Two trail bosses argue over how to get across a swollen river. | ||||||
180 | 24 | "Kitty's Killing" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | February 20, 1960 | |
Kitty risks herself to stop an attempted murder. | ||||||
181 | 25 | "Jailbait Janet" | Jesse Hibbs | Les Crutchfield | February 27, 1960 | |
One of a bandit's children kills a man during a robbery. | ||||||
182 | 26 | "Unwanted Deputy" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | March 5, 1960 | |
A convicted murderer's brother runs against Matt for marshal. | ||||||
183 | 27 | "Where'd They Go" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | March 12, 1960 | |
A storekeeper accuses a farmer of robbing him, but has no proof. | ||||||
184 | 28 | "Crowbait Bob" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | March 26, 1960 | |
Kitty is named the sole heir in Crowbait Bob's will. | ||||||
185 | 29 | "Colleen So Green" | Jean Yarbrough | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | April 2, 1960 | |
A Southern belle uses her charm to take over Dodge. | ||||||
186 | 30 | "The Ex-Urbanites" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 9, 1960 | |
Chester takes care of Doc when they are ambushed by a pair of outlaws. | ||||||
187 | 31 | "I Thee Wed" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Meston | April 16, 1960 | |
A man keeps beating his wife after she pays the fine for his jail time. | ||||||
188 | 32 | "The Lady Killer" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 23, 1960 | |
Matt suspects Kitty's new saloon girl is a hired killer. | ||||||
189 | 33 | "Gentleman's Disagreement" | Jesse Hibbs | Les Crutchfield | April 30, 1960 | |
A showdown is set to take place between the blacksmith and a gunman who used to court his wife. | ||||||
190 | 34 | "Speak Me Fair" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | May 7, 1960 | |
On a hunting trip, Matt, Doc and Chester find a savagely beaten Indian boy. | ||||||
191 | 35 | "Belle's Back" | Jesse Hibbs | Les Crutchfield | May 14, 1960 | |
Belle Ainsley returns to Dodge, but does not receive a warm welcome. | ||||||
192 | 36 | "The Bobsy Twins" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | May 21, 1960 | |
Twin brothers try to kill all Indians. | ||||||
193 | 37 | "Old Flame" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | May 28, 1960 | |
An old girlfriend asks Matt to protect her from her husband. | ||||||
194 | 38 | "The Deserter" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | June 4, 1960 | |
A soldier and a civilian conspire to steal an Army payroll. | ||||||
195 | 39 | "Cherry Red" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | June 11, 1960 | |
Matt is reluctant to tell Cherry O'Dell that her husband's been killed. |
Season 6 (1960–61)
Thirty-eight half-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell; associate producer: James Arness
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)[41]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
196 | 1 | "Friend's Pay-Off" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | September 3, 1960 | |
A dying man claims that a friend of Matt's is a bank robber. | ||||||
197 | 2 | "The Blacksmith" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Norman MacDonnell Screenplay by : John Meston | September 17, 1960 | |
Dodge's blacksmith plans his wedding to his mail-order bride. | ||||||
198 | 3 | "Small Water" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | September 24, 1960 | |
Matt is forced to kill a man for resisting arrest, only to incur the wrath of the man's family. | ||||||
199 | 4 | "Say Uncle" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 1, 1960 | |
A young man suspects his uncle of murdering his father. | ||||||
200 | 5 | "Shooting Stopover" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | October 8, 1960 | |
Matt tries to bring a killer to Wichita on a stagecoach carrying a woman, a preacher and a huge shipment of gold. | ||||||
201 | 6 | "The Peace Officer" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Norman MacDonnell Screenplay by : John Meston | October 15, 1960 | |
A former sheriff plans his revenge on Matt for firing him. | ||||||
202 | 7 | "Don Matteo" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | October 22, 1960 | |
Esteban Garcia arrives in Dodge to kill Grave Tabor, who has already been kicked out. | ||||||
203 | 8 | "The Worm" | Arthur Hiller | John Meston | October 29, 1960 | |
A buffalo hunter comes to Dodge not only to sell his hides, but also to pick a fight. | ||||||
204 | 9 | "The Badge" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | November 12, 1960 | |
Matt is wounded and taken hostage by a pair of outlaws. | ||||||
205 | 10 | "Distant Drummer" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | November 19, 1960 | |
Matt has trouble with a couple of troublesome mule skinners. | ||||||
206 | 11 | "Ben Tolliver's Stud" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Norman MacDonnell Screenplay by : John Meston | November 26, 1960 | |
A ranch hand is accused of stealing a horse by his former boss. | ||||||
207 | 12 | "No Chip" | Jean Yarbrough | John Meston | December 3, 1960 | |
A feud ensues when the Dolans' cattle stray onto the Mossmans' land. | ||||||
208 | 13 | "The Wake" | Gerald Mayer | John Meston | December 10, 1960 | |
A drifter tries to give his friend a proper burial. | ||||||
209 | 14 | "The Cook" | Ted Post | John Meston | December 17, 1960 | |
A drifter's cooking is preferred over the food at a local café. | ||||||
210 | 15 | "Old Fool" | Ted Post | John Meston | December 24, 1960 | |
A widow pursues a married man. | ||||||
211 | 16 | "Brother Love" | Franklin Adreon | John Meston | December 31, 1960 | |
A dying storekeeper's last word is Matt's only clue to finding the man who killed him. | ||||||
212 | 17 | "Bad Sheriff" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | January 7, 1961 | |
A desperado impersonates a sheriff and turns in a fellow outlaw. | ||||||
213 | 18 | "Unloaded Gun" | Jesse Hibbs | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | January 14, 1961 | |
Matt catches a fever while tracking down outlaws. | ||||||
214 | 19 | "Tall Trapper" | Harry Harris Jr. | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | January 21, 1961 | |
The morning after a couple take shelter with a trapper, the woman is found beaten to death. | ||||||
215 | 20 | "Love Thy Neighbor" | Dennis Weaver | John Meston | January 28, 1961 | |
Peter Scooper starts a feud between his family and the Galloways when he takes potatoes from the Galloway farm. | ||||||
216 | 21 | "Bad Seed" | Harry Harris | Story by : Norman MacDonnell Screenplay by : John Meston | February 4, 1961 | |
A girl asks Matt to save her from her alcoholic father. | ||||||
217 | 22 | "Kitty Shot" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | February 11, 1961 | |
Kitty gets shot trying to stop a fight in her saloon. | ||||||
218 | 23 | "About Chester" | Alan Crosland Jr. | Story by : Frank Paris Screenplay by : John Meston | February 25, 1961 | |
Doc has gone missing and it is up to Chester to find him. | ||||||
219 | 24 | "Harriet" | Gene Fowler Jr. | John Meston | March 4, 1961 | |
A girl comes to Dodge on foot after she witnesses her father's murder. | ||||||
220 | 25 | "Potshot" | Harry Harris Jr. | John Meston | March 11, 1961 | |
Bank robbers bushwhack Chester on their way to Dodge. | ||||||
221 | 26 | "Old Faces" | Harry Harris | John Meston | March 18, 1961 | |
There is something familiar about Tom Cook's new bride. | ||||||
222 | 27 | "Big Man" | Gerald Mayer | John Meston | March 25, 1961 | |
Matt must prove his innocence when he is accused of beating a man to death. | ||||||
223 | 28 | "Little Girl" | Dennis Weaver | Story by : Kathleen Hite Screenplay by : John Meston | April 1, 1961 | |
Matt and Chester find a burnt-down shack and a girl who claims her father died in the blaze. | ||||||
224 | 29 | "Stolen Horses" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Norman MacDonnell Screenplay by : John Meston | April 8, 1961 | |
Matt and Chester track down a horse thief. | ||||||
225 | 30 | "Minnie" | Harry Harris | John Meston | April 15, 1961 | |
A woman named Minnie Higgins falls in love with Doc. | ||||||
226 | 31 | "Bless Me Till I Die" | Ted Post | Story by : Ray Kemper Screenplay by : John Meston | April 22, 1961 | |
A man nearly kills a couple on their way to Dodge. | ||||||
227 | 32 | "Long Hours, Short Pay" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 29, 1961 | |
A gunrunner gets the Pawnees mad in order to sell his weapons. | ||||||
228 | 33 | "Hard Virtue" | Dennis Weaver | John Meston | May 6, 1961 | |
A man gets a job, unaware that his boss is trying to make a move on his wife. | ||||||
229 | 34 | "The Imposter" | Byron Paul | Story by : Kathleen Hite Screenplay by : John Meston | May 13, 1961 | |
A man claims to be a sheriff from Texas, but a murder gets everyone suspicious about him. | ||||||
230 | 35 | "Chester's Dilemma" | Ted Post | Story by : Vic Perrin Screenplay by : John Meston | May 20, 1961 | |
Chester learns a terrible secret about a girl who is sweet on him. | ||||||
231 | 36 | "The Love of Money" | Ted Post | John Meston | May 27, 1961 | |
A retired lawman falls for a saloon hostess on his way to a new life. | ||||||
232 | 37 | "Melinda Miles" | William D. Faralla | John Meston | June 3, 1961 | |
A woman is torn between the man she loves and the one her father picked for her. | ||||||
233 | 38 | "Colorado Sheriff" | Jesse Hibbs | John Meston | June 17, 1961 | |
Matt and Chester must find out who shot two strangers from Colorado. |
One-hour black-and-white era
Seasons 7 - 11
1961/62 through 1965/66
176 black-and-white full-hour episodes
(all two-parters counted as two individual hour-long episodes)
Season 7 (1961–62)
Thirty-four one-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell; associate producer: Frank Paris
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty)[42]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
234 | 1 | "Perce" | Harry Harris | John Meston | September 30, 1961 | |
An outlaw named Perce McCall helps Matt fend off three gunmen, much to everyone's surprise. | ||||||
235 | 2 | "Old Yellow Boots" | Ted Post | John Meston | October 7, 1961 | |
Since a fortune-hunting cowboy is engaged to a wealthy woman, he is suspected of murdering her brother, who objected to their union. | ||||||
236 | 3 | "Miss Kitty" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | October 14, 1961 | |
When Kitty takes a young boy off the stagecoach one night, Matt attempts to figure out his identity. | ||||||
237 | 4 | "Harper's Blood" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 21, 1961 | |
A man tries to balance the "bad blood" between his sons upon learning that his wife's grandfather was a murderer. | ||||||
238 | 5 | "All That" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 28, 1961 | |
A rancher tries to save his property from foreclosure. | ||||||
239 | 6 | "Long, Long Trail" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Kathleen Hite | November 4, 1961 | |
Matt accompanies a young woman on a treacherous journey across the desert where they face sandstorms, thirst and Indians. | ||||||
240 | 7 | "The Squaw" | Gerald Mayer | John Dunkel | November 11, 1961 | |
A fun-loving man tries to make up for lost time after his wife dies. | ||||||
241 | 8 | "Chesterland" | Ted Post | Kathleen Hite | November 18, 1961 | |
Chester purchases a piece of land when he gets engaged. | ||||||
242 | 9 | "Milly" | Richard Whorf | Story by : Hal Moffett Screenplay by : John Meston | November 25, 1961 | |
Milly Glover decides to marry the first available in order to support herself and her brother. | ||||||
243 | 10 | "Indian Ford" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Dunkel | December 2, 1961 | |
Matt helps an Indian-hating officer find a white girl, hoping the search will not end in violence. | ||||||
244 | 11 | "Apprentice Doc" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | December 9, 1961 | |
Doc is kidnapped by a gang of outlaws to treat one who has been injured and another turns out to be an expert in medicine. | ||||||
245 | 12 | "Nina's Revenge" | Tay Garnett | John Meston | December 16, 1961 | |
Nina Sharky hatches a plan to get away from her tight-fisted father and fortune-hunting husband. | ||||||
246 | 13 | "Marry Me" | Dennis Weaver | Kathleen Hite | December 23, 1961 | |
Sweet Billy Cathcart tries to find a woman for his big brother since family custom dictates that the oldest get married first. | ||||||
247 | 14 | "A Man a Day" | Harry Harris | John Meston | December 30, 1961 | |
Outlaws threaten to kill someone every day unless Matt gets out of town. | ||||||
248 | 15 | "The Do-Badder" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | January 6, 1962 | |
A pair of drifters plot to ambush a prospector who is on his way to Dodge after striking big. | ||||||
249 | 16 | "Lacey" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | January 13, 1962 | |
A man is suspected of murdering his fiancée's father. | ||||||
250 | 17 | "Cody's Code" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | January 20, 1962 | |
A wounded outlaw jeopardizes Cody Durham's courtship with Rose Loring. | ||||||
251 | 18 | "Old Dan" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Kathleen Hite | January 27, 1962 | |
Doc tries to keep an alcoholic off the bottle. | ||||||
252 | 19 | "Catawomper" | Harry Harris | Story by : James Favor Screenplay by : John Meston | February 10, 1962 | |
A woman tries to make her boyfriend jealous when she has had enough of his attitude. | ||||||
253 | 20 | "Half Straight" | Ted Post | John Meston | February 17, 1962 | |
Matt is stalked by a hired killer. | ||||||
254 | 21 | "He Learned About Women" | Tay Garnett | Story by : John Rosser Screenplay by : John Meston | February 24, 1962 | |
Matt goes after a band of comancheros who raided a camp and kidnapped a girl. | ||||||
255 | 22 | "The Gallows" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | March 3, 1962 | |
Matt is certain that the man convicted of murder, he is taking to the gallows, is innocent. | ||||||
256 | 23 | "Reprisal" | Harry Harris | John Meston | March 10, 1962 | |
A woman plots her revenge on Matt for killing her husband in a gunfight. | ||||||
257 | 24 | "Coventry" | Christian Nyby | John Meston | March 17, 1962 | |
A man and his expectant wife are stranded on the prairie and Dean Beard is unwilling to help them, especially since he has been ostracized after being acquitted of murder. | ||||||
258 | 25 | "The Widow" | Ted Post | John Dunkel | March 24, 1962 | |
A widow (Joan Hackett) arrives in Dodge to collect the remains of her husband, who was killed in an Indian massacre. | ||||||
259 | 26 | "Durham Bull" | Harry Harris | Story by : Jack Shettlesworth Screenplay by : John Meston | March 31, 1962 | |
A gang's luck turns around when they come to Dodge. | ||||||
260 | 27 | "Wagon Girls" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 7, 1962 | |
Matt meets a mail-order bride on the prairie who claims that she is trying to run away from a ruthless wagon master. | ||||||
261 | 28 | "The Dealer" | Harry Harris | Story by : Les Crutchfield Screenplay by : John Dunkel | April 14, 1962 | |
A woman resents her suitor more than ever when he kills her father in self-defense. | ||||||
262 | 29 | "The Summons" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | April 21, 1962 | |
An outlaw kills his partner for a huge reward, except there was never a price in the first place. | ||||||
263 | 30 | "The Dreamers" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 28, 1962 | |
A miner tries to use his new-found wealth to win over Kitty. | ||||||
264 | 31 | "Cale" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | May 5, 1962 | |
A young rider is wounded when he is suspected of being a horse thief's accomplice. | ||||||
265 | 32 | "Chester's Indian" | Joseph Sargent | Kathleen Hite | May 12, 1962 | |
While on a fishing trip, Chester shoots an Indian who was courting a white teenage girl, whom Matt tries to save from her ruthless father. | ||||||
266 | 33 | "The Prisoner" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Robert E. Thompson | May 19, 1962 | |
A military prison escapee shows up in Dodge. | ||||||
267 | 34 | "The Boys" | Harry Harris | John Meston | May 26, 1962 | |
A snake-oil pitchman hatches a scheme to swindle the citizens of Dodge. |
Season 8 (1962–63)
Thirty-eight one-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell; associate producer: Frank Paris
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Burt Reynolds (Quint Asper)[43]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
268 | 1 | "The Search" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | September 15, 1962 | |
A suspected horse thief tries to survive in the wilderness when he gets hurt fleeing from his pursuers. | ||||||
269 | 2 | "Call Me Dodie" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | September 22, 1962 | |
Matt meets a girl who ran away from an orphanage that functions like a prison. | ||||||
270 | 3 | "Quint Asper Comes Home" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | September 29, 1962 | |
A half-Indian named Quint Asper vows revenge on all white men when a pair of drifters kill his father and threaten his mother. | ||||||
271 | 4 | "Root Down" | Sobey Martin | Kathleen Hite | October 6, 1962 | |
A woman attempts to lure Chester into marriage. | ||||||
272 | 5 | "Jenny" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 13, 1962 | |
An outlaw's girl takes a shine to Matt. | ||||||
273 | 6 | "Collie's Free" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | October 20, 1962 | |
After spending eight years in prison, Collie Patten plots his revenge on Matt. | ||||||
274 | 7 | "The Ditch" | Harry Harris | Les Crutchfield | October 27, 1962 | |
Matt tries to prevent a range war as a rancher takes steps to cut off the homesteaders' water supply. | ||||||
275 | 8 | "The Trappers" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Dunkel | November 3, 1962 | |
The friendship between two trappers is ruined when one leaves the other to die during an Indian attack. | ||||||
276 | 9 | "Phoebe Strunk" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | November 10, 1962 | |
Phoebe Strunk and her murderous clan terrorize Dodge. | ||||||
277 | 10 | "The Hunger" | Harry Harris | Jack Curtis | November 17, 1962 | |
Matt comes to the rescue when a father and son abuse the mother and daughter. | ||||||
278 | 11 | "Abe Blocker" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | November 24, 1962 | |
Matt pursues a frontiersman who is using force to take homesteaders' land. | ||||||
279 | 12 | "The Way It Is" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | December 1, 1962 | |
Kitty meets an injured traveler after Matt breaks a date with her. | ||||||
280 | 13 | "Us Haggens" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | December 8, 1962 | |
Matt hunts down outlaw Black Jack Haggen and is assisted by the killer's nephew Festus, who has his own reasons for wanting to find his uncle. | ||||||
281 | 14 | "Uncle Sunday" | Joseph Sargent | John Meston | December 15, 1962 | |
Chester's uncle Sunday comes to visit, and Chester's plan to shorten that visit does not exactly work out. | ||||||
282 | 15 | "False Front" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Hal Moffett Screenplay by : John Meston | December 22, 1962 | |
A gambler makes a bet that a man who has never used a gun can pass as a gunslinger. | ||||||
283 | 16 | "Old Comrade" | Harry Harris | John Dunkel | December 29, 1962 | |
A fall guy learns that his father, a general, is dying. | ||||||
284 | 17 | "Louis Pheeters" | Harry Harris | John Meston | January 5, 1963 | |
The town drunk witnesses a man killing his wife's alleged lover. | ||||||
285 | 18 | "The Renegades" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | January 12, 1963 | |
Quint tries to convince an Army officer that white renegades are responsible for starting the latest Indian uprising. | ||||||
286 | 19 | "Cotter's Girl" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | January 19, 1963 | |
Matt attempts to civilize a teenage mountain girl. | ||||||
287 | 20 | "The Bad One" | Charles Martin | Gwen Bagni | January 26, 1963 | |
Matt must find out why a woman is refusing to identify a stagecoach robber. | ||||||
288 | 21 | "The Cousin" | Harry Harris | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | February 2, 1963 | |
Matt's foster brother forces him into a showdown. | ||||||
289 | 22 | "Shona" | Ted Post | John Meston | February 9, 1963 | |
As the citizens of Dodge deal with the strain of Indian raids, a farmer brings his ailing Indian wife into town for treatment. | ||||||
290 | 23 | "Ash" | Harry Harris | John Meston | February 16, 1963 | |
The friendship between business partners is jeopardized when one of them sustains a head injury, changing his personality. | ||||||
291 | 24 | "Blind Man's Bluff" | Ted Post | John Meston | February 23, 1963 | |
While searching for a murderer, Matt is beaten so badly he cannot see straight. | ||||||
292 | 25 | "Quint's Indian" | Fred Jackman, Jr. | Story by : Marian Clark Screenplay by : John Meston | March 2, 1963 | |
Quint is accused of horse theft and beaten by a group of vigilantes. | ||||||
293 | 26 | "Anybody Can Kill a Marshal" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | March 9, 1963 | |
A pair of outlaws hire a drifter to do what they could not: kill Matt Dillon. | ||||||
294 | 27 | "Two of a Kind" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Merwin Gerard | March 16, 1963 | |
Matt gets caught in the middle of a feud between two immigrants. | ||||||
295 | 28 | "I Call Him Wonder" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | March 23, 1963 | |
The bigoted citizens of Dodge refuse to hire a drifter just because he has picked up an orphaned Indian boy. | ||||||
296 | 29 | "With a Smile" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Story by : Bud Furillo & George Main Screenplay by : John Meston | March 30, 1963 | |
A powerful rancher's spoiled son gets violent when a pretty girl rebuffs his affections. | ||||||
297 | 30 | "The Far Places" | Harry Harris | John Dunkel | April 6, 1963 | |
Matt tries to ease the tension between a rancher and her son. | ||||||
298 | 31 | "Panacea Sykes" | William Conrad | Kathleen Hite | April 13, 1963 | |
The elderly Panacea Sykes is a conniving thief bent on robbing Kitty. | ||||||
299 | 32 | "Tell Chester" | Joseph Sargent | Frank Paris | April 20, 1963 | |
A girl Chester likes has no idea that the man she has her eye on is already married. | ||||||
300 | 33 | "Quint-Cident" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Kathleen Hite | April 27, 1963 | |
Quint incurs the wrath of a widow he turned down. | ||||||
301 | 34 | "Old York" | Harry Harris | John Meston | May 4, 1963 | |
Matt comes face to face with the outlaw who saved his life long ago. | ||||||
302 | 35 | "Daddy Went Away" | Joseph Sargent | Story by : John Rosser Screenplay by : Kathleen Hite | May 11, 1963 | |
A widow returns Chester's affections. | ||||||
303 | 36 | "The Odyssey of Jubal Tanner" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Paul Savage | May 18, 1963 | |
A saloon girl and a drifter team up to find the man who murdered the girl's fiancė and shot the drifter. | ||||||
304 | 37 | "Jeb" | Harry Harris | Paul Savage | May 25, 1963 | |
A man buys an allegedly stolen horse from a farm boy, which proves to be a big mistake. | ||||||
305 | 38 | "The Quest for Asa Janin" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Paul Savage | June 1, 1963 | |
Matt becomes convinced that Dave Ingalls is innocent of murder, so he sets out to find the real killer before Ingalls is wrongfully hanged. |
Season 9 (1963–64)
Thirty-six one-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell; associate producer: Frank Paris
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Dennis Weaver (Chester), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Ken Curtis (Festus), Burt Reynolds (Quint Asper)[44]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
306 | 1 | "Kate Heller" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | September 28, 1963 | |
A young man commits murder and ambushes Matt. | ||||||
307 | 2 | "Lover Boy" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 5, 1963 | |
A ladies' man takes up with a married woman. Last episode in which Ken Curtis appears as a character other than Festus. | ||||||
308 | 3 | "Legends Don't Sleep" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | October 12, 1963 | |
After getting out of prison, an infamous gunman meets a cocky young man eager to cash in on his reputation. | ||||||
309 | 4 | "Tobe" | John English | Paul Savage | October 19, 1963 | |
Tobe Hostader befriends a saloon girl whose ex-boyfriend is near. | ||||||
310 | 5 | "Easy Come" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | October 26, 1963 | |
Elmo Sippy is superficially pleasant, but is actually a psychopathic killer, devoid of restraint or remorse. | ||||||
311 | 6 | "My Sister's Keeper" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | November 2, 1963 | |
A grief-stricken widower gets a job as a hired hand for two sisters. | ||||||
312 | 7 | "Quint's Trail" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | November 9, 1963 | |
Quint guides a family on a hazardous trail to Oregon. | ||||||
313 | 8 | "Carter Caper" | Jerry Hopper | John Meston | November 16, 1963 | |
A man gets beaten up for trying to steal another man's horse, and plots his revenge. | ||||||
314 | 9 | "Ex-Con" | Thomas Carr | John Meston | November 30, 1963 | |
An ex-convict comes to Dodge with the intention of shooting Matt dead. Note: This episode was pre-empted due to the coverage of the Assassination of John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. | ||||||
315 | 10 | "Extradition (Part 1)" | John English | Antony Ellis | December 7, 1963 | |
Matt tracks an accused murderer to Texas. | ||||||
316 | 11 | "Extradition (Part 2)" | John English | Antony Ellis | December 14, 1963 | |
Matt, the murderer, and the lieutenant ride back to the border -- followed by bandits. | ||||||
317 | 12 | "The Magician" | Harry Harris | John A. Kneubuhl | December 21, 1963 | |
A traveling medicine man is accused of cheating at cards. | ||||||
318 | 13 | "Pa Hack's Brood" | Jerry Hopper | Paul Savage | December 28, 1963 | |
Pa Hack tries to get his daughter married to a successful rancher, so he can lead an idle life. | ||||||
319 | 14 | "The Glory and the Mud" | Jerry Hopper | Gwen Bagni | January 4, 1964 | |
A young man tries to make a name for himself as a fast draw when Matt turns him down as deputy. | ||||||
320 | 15 | "Dry Well" | Harry Harris | John Meston | January 11, 1964 | |
A married woman is having affairs with men much younger than her husband. | ||||||
321 | 16 | "Prairie Wolfer" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Dunkel | January 18, 1964 | |
Someone or something is slaughtering cattle. | ||||||
322 | 17 | "Friend" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | January 25, 1964 | |
Matt heads to a nearby town to investigate a friend's death. | ||||||
323 | 18 | "Once a Haggen" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | February 1, 1964 | |
A friend of Festus' is accused of murdering the man who bested them at poker. | ||||||
324 | 19 | "No Hands" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | February 8, 1964 | |
Doc is threatened by the Ginnis clan when he fails to respond quickly to their demands for treatment. | ||||||
325 | 20 | "May Blossoms" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Kathleen Hite | February 15, 1964 | |
Festus' cousin Mayblossom comes to town to marry him because of a pact between their fathers. | ||||||
326 | 21 | "The Bassops" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Tom Hanley | February 22, 1964 | |
A family finds Matt and a prisoner handcuffed to one another - with the prisoner claiming to be the marshal. | ||||||
327 | 22 | "The Kite" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | February 29, 1964 | |
Matt must stop a killer from realizing his victim's daughter was a witness. | ||||||
328 | 23 | "Comanches Is Soft" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | March 7, 1964 | |
After spending a wild night in Wichita, Quint and Festus deal with a saloon girl who claims they invited her to Dodge. | ||||||
329 | 24 | "Father's Love" | Harry Harris | John Meston | March 14, 1964 | |
A woman learns that the man who tried to have his way with her is her husband's uncle. | ||||||
330 | 25 | "Now That April's Here" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | March 21, 1964 | |
The only ones who believe Festus' girlfriend witnessed a murder are the killers themselves. | ||||||
331 | 26 | "Caleb" | Harry Harris | Paul Savage | March 28, 1964 | |
Caleb Marr comes to Dodge in search of a meaningful life after finally acknowledging his failure at farming. | ||||||
332 | 27 | "Owney Tupper Had a Daughter" | Jerry Hopper | Paul Savage | April 4, 1964 | |
Owney Tupper starts behaving "responsibly" in order to retrieve his daughter from her aunt's custody. | ||||||
333 | 28 | "Bently" | Harry Harris | John A. Kneubuhl | April 11, 1964 | |
Chester doubts a man's deathbed murder confession, so he sets out to find the real killer. Chester's last episode. | ||||||
334 | 29 | "Kitty Cornered" | John Brahm | Kathleen Hite | April 18, 1964 | |
A rival saloon owner forces Kitty into a deadly competition. | ||||||
335 | 30 | "The Promoter" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | April 25, 1964 | |
An ex-farmer decides to become a fight promoter to make his fortune. | ||||||
336 | 31 | "Trip West" | Harry Harris | John Dunkel | May 2, 1964 | |
A timid bank clerk goes through a surprising change in personality when he is told he only has a short time to live. | ||||||
337 | 32 | "Scot Free" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | May 9, 1964 | |
Rob Scot leaves his family and prepares to start a new life with Nora Brand – after they dispose of her husband's body. | ||||||
338 | 33 | "The Warden" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | May 16, 1964 | |
Festus protects a young Indian maiden from a farmer who bought her from her father. | ||||||
339 | 34 | "Homecoming" | Harry Harris | Shimon Bar-David[B] | May 23, 1964 | |
The ex-husband of Hector Lowell's wife claims that the Lowells' home, land and business belong to him. | ||||||
340 | 35 | "The Other Half" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Dunkel | May 30, 1964 | |
A love triangle between a girl and twin brothers turns tragic. | ||||||
341 | 36 | "Journey for Three" | Harry Harris | Frank Paris | June 6, 1964 | |
A stranger accompanies two brothers on their trip to California. |
Season 10 (1964–65)
Thirty-six one-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Norman Macdonnell (episodes 342–348, 350, 352, 361, 367), Philip Leacock (episodes 349, 351, 353–360, 362–366, 368–377); associate producer: Frank Paris
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Milburn Stone (Doc), Ken Curtis (Festus), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Burt Reynolds (Quint Asper)[45]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
342 | 1 | "Blue Heaven" | Michael O'Herlihy | Les Crutchfield | September 26, 1964 | |
A young man and a fugitive team up as they run from their respective pursuers. | ||||||
343 | 2 | "Crooked Mile" | Andrew V. McLaglen | Les Crutchfield | October 3, 1964 | |
A girl's whip-wielding father does not approve of her romance with Quint. | ||||||
344 | 3 | "Old Man" | Harry Harris | John Meston | October 10, 1964 | |
Matt must find out who killed Joe Silva when an old man is framed for the crime. | ||||||
345 | 4 | "The Violators" | Harry Harris | John Dunkel | October 17, 1964 | |
A man's scalping leads the citizens of Dodge to suspect the Indians of doing the deed. | ||||||
346 | 5 | "Doctor's Wife" | Harry Harris | George Eckstein | October 24, 1964 | |
A new doctor arrives in Dodge and his wife starts a smear campaign against Doc Adams. | ||||||
347 | 6 | "Take Her, She's Cheap" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | October 31, 1964 | |
A grateful family gives Matt their daughter to be his bride. | ||||||
348 | 7 | "Help Me, Kitty" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | November 7, 1964 | |
Kitty and an unmarried expectant mother end up in the desert when bandits attack their stagecoach. | ||||||
349 | 8 | "Hung High" | Mark Rydell | John Meston | November 14, 1964 | |
A lawman-hater causes trouble for Matt and a retired marshal. | ||||||
350 | 9 | "Jonah Hutchinson" | Harry Harris | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 21, 1964 | |
After spending 30 years in prison, Jonah Hutchinson sets out to rebuild his ranching empire. | ||||||
351 | 10 | "Big Man, Big Target" | Michael O'Herlihy | John Mantley | November 28, 1964 | |
Pike Beechum plots to off his lover's husband. | ||||||
352 | 11 | "Chicken" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | December 5, 1964 | |
A meek man is given credit for killing four outlaws. | ||||||
353 | 12 | "Innocence" | Harry Harris | John Meston | December 12, 1964 | |
The hatred between two men is intensified by their affections for the same girl. | ||||||
354 | 13 | "Aunt Thede" | Sutton Roley | Kathleen Hite | December 19, 1964 | |
Festus' aunt Thede and a young woman both seek to get married. | ||||||
355 | 14 | "Hammerhead" | Christian Nyby | Antony Ellis | December 26, 1964 | |
A wealthy gambler comes to Dodge to buy horses, leading rival traders to have a race to demonstrate the speed of their steeds. | ||||||
356 | 15 | "Double Entry" | Joseph Sargent | Les Crutchfield | January 2, 1965 | |
Brad McCain tries to take advantage of his friendship with Matt. | ||||||
357 | 16 | "Run, Sheep, Run" | Harry Harris | John Meston | January 9, 1965 | |
A man causes trouble for a young couple when he buys a ranch from them and refuses to pay for a year. | ||||||
358 | 17 | "Deputy Festus" | Harry Harris | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 16, 1965 | |
Festus, acting as Matt's deputy, learns that the drunken trappers he put in jail are his cousins. | ||||||
359 | 18 | "One Killer on Ice" | Joseph H. Lewis | Richard Carr | January 23, 1965 | |
Two bounty hunters talk Matt into protecting them and their prisoner from ambush. | ||||||
360 | 19 | "Chief Joseph" | Mark Rydell | Story by : Thomas Warner Teleplay by : Clyde Ware | January 30, 1965 | |
A desperately ill chief causes tension when he lodges in the Dodge House. | ||||||
361 | 20 | "Circus Trick" | William F. Claxton | Les Crutchfield | February 6, 1965 | |
Festus's girlfriend joins a circus troupe. | ||||||
362 | 21 | "Song for Dying" | Allen Reisner | Harry Kronman | February 13, 1965 | |
A carefree minstrel faces the wrath of the vengeful Lukens clan. | ||||||
363 | 22 | "Winner Take All" | Vincent McEveety | Les Crutchfield | February 20, 1965 | |
Matt intervenes when an intese feud between the Renner brothers reaches its breaking point. | ||||||
364 | 23 | "Eliab's Aim" | Richard C. Sarafian | Will Corry | February 27, 1965 | |
Festus' nephew Eliab comes gunning for his right ear lobe. | ||||||
365 | 24 | "Thursday's Child" | Joseph H. Lewis | Robert Lewin | March 6, 1965 | |
Doc falls for a woman (Jean Arthur) who's haunted by her past. | ||||||
366 | 25 | "Breckinridge" | Vincent McEveety | Les Crutchfield | March 13, 1965 | |
A lawyer from the east questions Matt's every move. | ||||||
367 | 26 | "Bank Baby" | Andrew V. McLaglen | John Meston | March 20, 1965 | |
Bert Clum plots to rob pilgrim families in nearby camps. | ||||||
368 | 27 | "The Lady" | Mark Rydell | John Mantley | March 27, 1965 | |
A woman who used to be rich takes a job at the Long Branch while she and her niece are on their way to San Francisco. | ||||||
369 | 28 | "Dry Road to Nowhere" | Vincent McEveety | Harry Kronman | April 3, 1965 | |
Matt must find out why a gunman is stalking a temperance preacher. | ||||||
370 | 29 | "Twenty Miles from Dodge" | Mark Rydell | Clyde Ware | April 10, 1965 | |
A gang of outlaws abduct Kitty and her fellow stagecoach passengers. | ||||||
371 | 30 | "The Pariah" | Harry Harris | Calvin Clements, Sr. | April 17, 1965 | |
An immigrant's life improves when he kills an outlaw - at least for a while. | ||||||
372 | 31 | "Gilt Guilt" | Harry Harris | Kathleen Hite | April 24, 1965 | |
Doc treats a woman and her son for scurvy. | ||||||
373 | 32 | "Bad Lady from Brookline" | Michael O'Herlihy | Gustave Field | May 1, 1965 | |
A woman tries to raise her son in Dodge after her husband is killed in a gunfight. | ||||||
374 | 33 | "Two Tall Men" | Vincent McEveety | Frank Q. Dobbs & Robert Stewart, Jr. | May 8, 1965 | |
Festus goes after the bandits who robbed and assaulted Doc. | ||||||
375 | 34 | "Honey Pot" | Harry Harris | John Meston | May 15, 1965 | |
Newcomer Ben Stack makes a play for saloon girl Honey Dare. | ||||||
376 | 35 | "The New Society" | Joseph Sargent | Calvin Clements, Sr. | May 22, 1965 | |
Matt faces fear and hostility in Ridge Town where he investigates an old murder case. | ||||||
377 | 36 | "He Who Steals" | Harry Harris | John Meston | May 29, 1965 | |
A cowboy admires a buffalo hunter too much to admit that the buffalo hunter is also a thief. (Final John Meston script.) |
Season 11 (1965–66)
Thirty-two one-hour episodes, black-and-white
Producer: Philip Leacock; associate producer: John Mantley
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Roger Ewing (Thad)[46]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
378 | 1 | "Seven Hours to Dawn" | Vincent McEveety | Clyde Ware | September 18, 1965 | |
A treacherous gang of outlaws take over Dodge. Guest stars include John Drew Barrymore, Michael Vandever, Morgan Woodward, Al Lettieri, Allen Jaffe, and Johnny Seven. | ||||||
379 | 2 | "The Storm" | Joseph Sargent | Paul Savage | September 25, 1965 | |
A buffalo hunter is sentenced to be hanged for a murder he did not commit, the real culprits being the sons of Matt's old friend Adam Benteen(Forrest Tucker). | ||||||
380 | 3 | "Clayton Thaddeus Greenwood" | Joseph Sargent | Calvin Clements, Sr. | October 2, 1965 | |
Thad Greenwood (Roger Ewing) trails the four tough guys who caused his father (Paul Fix) to suffer a fatal heart attack. Guest stars include Jack Elam and Allen Jaffe. | ||||||
381 | 4 | "Ten Little Indians" | Mark Rydell | George Eckstein | October 9, 1965 | |
Matt must find out who hired the gunfighters that he has been facing in and out of Dodge. Guest stars include Nehemiah Persoff, John Marley, Warren Oates, Bruce Dern, and Zalman King. | ||||||
382 | 5 | "Taps for Old Jeb" | James Sheldon | Les Crutchfield | October 16, 1965 | |
Prospector Jeb Carter (Ed Begley) hires a bodyguard (Wayne Rogers) to protect his gold after years of searching finally pay off. Also features Morgan Woodward, Arthur Batanides, and Roger Ewing as Thad. | ||||||
383 | 6 | "Kioga" | Harry Harris | Robert Lewin | October 23, 1965 | |
Kioga, a young and wounded Pawnee Indian (Teno Pollick), comes to Dodge City to hunt down the fur trader (Neville Brand) who killed his father and attacked his sister. | ||||||
384 | 7 | "The Bounty Hunter" | Harry Harris | Paul Savage | October 30, 1965 | |
A bounty hunter (Robert Lansing) is drawn out of retirement to find the man who murdered a rich rancher's son. | ||||||
385 | 8 | "The Reward" | Marc Daniels | Gilbert Ralston, Scott Hunt & Beth Keele | November 6, 1965 | |
A convicted gold-mine swindler (James Whitmore) gets out of prison to resume mining – with money he is accused of stealing. | ||||||
386 | 9 | "Malachi" | Gary Nelson | William Putman | November 13, 1965 | |
Town drunk Malachi Harper (Harry Townes) poses as marshal just to impress his brother. | ||||||
387 | 10 | "The Pretender" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 20, 1965 | |
The Dano brothers (Tom Skerritt and Tom Simcox) return home from prison to a dying mother and a bitter father. Also featured are Nehemiah Persoff and Julie Sommars. | ||||||
388 | 11 | "South Wind" | Allen Reisner | Jack Bartlett | November 27, 1965 | |
A 12-year-old boy (Pat Cardi) goes into hiding after witnessing his father's murder. Also featured is Bruce Dern in a celebrated performance. | ||||||
389 | 12 | "The Hostage" | Vincent McEveety | Story by : Joe Ann Johnson Teleplay by : Clyde Ware | December 4, 1965 | |
Four convicts take Matt hostage on their way to Mexico. Guest starring future Kolchak the Nightstalker co-stars Darren McGavin and Simon Oakland. | ||||||
390 | 13 | "Outlaw's Woman" | Mark Rydell | Clyde Ware | December 11, 1965 | |
Matt is surprised to see that the fleeing train robber he shot is a woman (Lane Bradbury). | ||||||
391 | 14 | "The Avengers" | Vincent McEveety | Donn Mullally | December 18, 1965 | |
A judge and his two sons (James Gregory, John Saxon, and Les Brown Jr) plot their revenge when they suspect Festus and Kitty of murdering a member of their family. | ||||||
392 | 15 | "Gold Mine" | Abner Biberman | Scott Hunt & Beth Keele | December 25, 1965 | |
This lighthearted episode shines the spotlight on Kitty, who travels alone to the rough mining town of Pickaxe to claim a gold mine, meeting the eccentric Gibbijohn family and a deaf-mute boy. Guest starring John Anderson, Paul Carr and Tom Nardini. | ||||||
393 | 16 | "Death Watch" | Mark Rydell | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 8, 1966 | |
Matt attempts to protect wounded outlaw Johnny Drago (Frank Silvera) from a pair of bounty hunters. Guest starring Albert Salmi, Alfred Ryder, and Robert Foulk. | ||||||
394 | 17 | "Sweet Billy, Singer of Songs" | Alvin Ganzer | Gustave Field | January 15, 1966 | |
Festus' nephew Billy (Robert Random) comes to Dodge to find a wife. | ||||||
395 | 18 | "The Raid (Part 1)" | Vincent McEveety | Clyde Ware | January 22, 1966 | |
A band out of outlaws terrorize Dodge. Guest stars include Gary Lockwood, John Kellogg, Jim Davis, John Anderson, Michael Conrad, Richard Jaeckel, and Jeremy Slate. (This episode also boasts a Franz Waxman score.) | ||||||
396 | 19 | "The Raid (Part 2)" | Vincent McEveety | Clyde Ware | January 29, 1966 | |
The outlaws take Doc hostage after they rob the bank and set Dodge on fire. (Franz Waxman score) | ||||||
397 | 20 | "Killer at Large" | Marc Daniels | Calvin Clements, Sr. | February 5, 1966 | |
Festus flees Dodge after killing a medicine-show sharpshooter in a gunfight. Guest starring Geraldine Brooks, Tim O'Kelly, Stuart Erwin, and Cyril Delevanti. | ||||||
398 | 21 | "My Father's Guitar" | Robert Totten | Hal Sitowitz | February 12, 1966 | |
A wandering guitarist named Jason (Beau Bridges) believes his father's guitar is more valuable than a person's life. Also features Steve Ihnat, Charles Dierkop, and Dub Taylor. | ||||||
399 | 22 | "Wishbone" | Marc Daniels | Paul Savage | February 19, 1966 | |
Matt goes after three bandits who robbed a stagecoach and killed the driver and guard. Meanwhile, Doc is bit by a rattlesnake. Guest starring Victor French, Lyle Waggoner, Lew Gallo, and Billy Beck. | ||||||
400 | 23 | "Sanctuary" | Harry Harris | Calvin Clements, Sr. | February 26, 1966 | |
A bank robber takes refuge in a church where he holds the pastor and two women hostage. Guest starring Sean Garrison, Jack Grinnage, Joan Blackman, and Virginia Gregg. | ||||||
401 | 24 | "Honor Before Justice" | Harry Harris | Story by : Frank Q. Dobbs & Robert Stewart, Jr. Screenplay by : Frank Q. Dobbs | March 5, 1966 | |
John Two-Bears (Noah Beery Jr) is sentenced to death by the Osage Council for a murder he did not commit. His daughter (France Nuyen) seeks Matt's help and intervention. Also featured are Barton MacLane and Michael Ansara. | ||||||
402 | 25 | "The Brothers" | Tay Garnett | Tom Hanley | March 12, 1966 | |
Matt captures a young criminal named Billy (Bobby Crawford), who must endure Matt's moralizing while waiting to be broke out of jail by his outlaw brother and hero Ed (Scott Marlowe). | ||||||
403 | 26 | "Which Doctor" | Peter Graves | Les Crutchfield | March 19, 1966 | |
Buffalo hunters kidnap Doc and Festus. Guest starring R.G. Armstrong, George Lindsey, Gregg Palmer, and Shelley Morrison (Trivia: directed by James Arness' kid brother Peter Graves just prior to his finding fame as Jim Phelps on Mission: Impossible.) | ||||||
404 | 27 | "Harvest" | Harry Harris | Les Crutchfield | March 26, 1966 | |
Ben Payson's daughter Betsy (Lesley Ann Warren) falls in love with one of the Scottish homesteaders who have threatened to take her family's land (James MacArthur). Guest starring George Kennedy and Karl Swenson. | ||||||
405 | 28 | "Byline" | Allen Reisner | Les Crutchfield | April 9, 1966 | |
Despite his illiteracy, Festus becomes a reporter for Dodge's new paper, The Dodge City Clarion. Guest starring Chips Rafferty and Denver Pyle. | ||||||
406 | 29 | "Treasure of John Walking Fox" | Marc Daniels | Story by : Leo Bagby Teleplay by : Clyde Ware | April 16, 1966 | |
John Walking Fox's (Leonard Nimoy) $50 gold piece starts gold fever in Dodge City, and makes the man a target of robbers. Also features Jim Davis, Richard Webb, and Lloyd Gough. | ||||||
407 | 30 | "My Father, My Son" | Robert Totten | Hal Sitowitz | April 23, 1966 | |
A gunslinger kills a young man out to gain a reputation, then faces the wrath of the dead man's family. Guest starring Western icons Lee Van Cleef and Jack Elam, along with John McLiam and Zalman King. | ||||||
408 | 31 | "Parson Comes to Town" | Marc Daniels | Verne Jay | April 30, 1966 | |
A stranger wearing a murdered preacher's coat causes tension in Dodge when he announces his intention to watch someone die. Guest star Sam Wanamaker. | ||||||
409 | 32 | "Prime of Life" | Robert Totten | Daniel B. Ullman | May 7, 1966 | |
Young Kyle Stoner (Jonathan Lippe) is a fast gun involved with a pair of thieves who beat up Festus. Guest starring Douglas Kennedy and Joe Don Baker. (Trivia: this is the final black-and-white episode.) |
One-hour color era
Seasons 12 - 20
1966/67 through 1974/75
226 color episodes (all full-hour)
(all two- or three-parters counted as two or three individual hour-long episodes)
Season 12 (1966–67)
Twenty-nine one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: Philip Leacock; producer: John Mantley
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Roger Ewing (Thad)
CBS cancelled the series due to low ratings. However, letters of protest and pressure from his wife persuaded William S. Paley, the network's chief executive, to re-instate Gunsmoke for a thirteenth season.[47][48]
Note: In 1997 TV Guide ranked "The Jailer" as episode No. 28 on its "100 Greatest Episodes of All Time" list.[49]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
410 | 1 | "Snap Decision" | Mark Rydell | Richard Carr | September 17, 1966 | |
Matt turns in his badge after being forced to kill a horse thief who was once his friend (first color episode). | ||||||
411 | 2 | "The Goldtakers" | Vincent McEveety | Clyde Ware | September 24, 1966 | |
An outlaw brings his cohorts to Dodge to melt down the shipment of gold they have stolen. | ||||||
412 | 3 | "The Jailer" | Vincent McEveety | Hal Sitowitz | October 1, 1966 | |
A powerful matriarch (guest star Bette Davis) plots her revenge on Matt for having her husband hanged six years ago. | ||||||
413 | 4 | "The Mission" | Mark Rydell | Richard Carr | October 8, 1966 | |
While in Mexico, Matt has his badge, horse and prisoner stolen by Americans. | ||||||
414 | 5 | "The Good People" | Robert Totten | James Landis | October 15, 1966 | |
Matt uses a young man's guilty conscience to find the men responsible for lynching a suspected rustler. | ||||||
415 | 6 | "Gunfighter, R.I.P." | Mark Rydell | Story by : Michael Fisher Screenplay by : Hal Sitowitz | October 22, 1966 | |
A gunslinger (Darren McGavin) hired to kill Matt reconsiders when a Chinese girl (France Nuyen) tends to his wounds. | ||||||
416 | 7 | "The Wrong Man" | Robert Totten | Story by : Robert Lewin Screenplay by : Clyde Ware | October 29, 1966 | |
A farmer (Carroll O'Connor) is charged with murdering the card shark who won his borrowed money. | ||||||
417 | 8 | "The Whispering Tree" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 12, 1966 | |
An ex-convict (John Saxon) returns home to find the loot he stashed. | ||||||
418 | 9 | "The Well" | Marc Daniels | Francis Cockrell | November 19, 1966 | |
When Dodge is struck by a drought, Festus looks for water and Matt uses a rainmaker to give the people hope. | ||||||
419 | 10 | "Stage Stop" | Irving J. Moore | Hal Sitowitz | November 26, 1966 | |
Doc takes a stand against bandits at a stage stop along with a pregnant woman and a blind man. | ||||||
420 | 11 | "The Newcomers" | Robert Totten | Calvin Clements, Sr. | December 3, 1966 | |
An immigrant must decide whether to pay off a blackmailer who claims to have seen the immigrant's son commit murder. | ||||||
421 | 12 | "Quaker Girl" | Bernard L. Kowalski | Preston Wood | December 10, 1966 | |
After being deputized, Thad deals with mistaken identity and a pair of outlaws as he takes a killer across the plains. | ||||||
422 | 13 | "The Moonstone" | Richard A. Colla | Paul Savage | December 17, 1966 | |
An ex-criminal fears that a conflict involving his girlfriend, brother and old partner will reveal his past. | ||||||
423 | 14 | "Champion of the World" | Marc Daniels | Les Crutchfield | December 24, 1966 | |
An ex-fighter and a con artist conspire to persuade Kitty into selling the Long Branch. | ||||||
424 | 15 | "The Hanging" | Bernard L. Kowalski | Story by : Calvin Clements, Jr. Teleplay by : Calvin Clements, Sr. | December 31, 1966 | |
Matt must determine how and when the partners of a murderer he has in custody will make their move. | ||||||
425 | 16 | "Saturday Night" | Robert Totten | Clyde Ware | January 7, 1967 | |
One of the drovers in a cattle drive plans to free Matt's prisoner. | ||||||
426 | 17 | "Mad Dog" | Charles R. Rondeau | Jay Simms | January 14, 1967 | |
Festus is mistaken for a hired gunman in the town of Bucklin. | ||||||
427 | 18 | "Muley" | Allen Reisner | Les Crutchfield | January 21, 1967 | |
Although a young outlaw has wounded Matt, he is unable to concentrate on finishing the marshal off because of his affections for a girl. | ||||||
428 | 19 | "Mail Drop" | Robert Totten | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 28, 1967 | |
A boy comes looking for his father, unaware that he is a wanted outlaw. | ||||||
429 | 20 | "Old Friend" | Allen Reisner | Clyde Ware | February 4, 1967 | |
Marshal Burl Masters trails the gang of outlaws who burned his town and ran off with his woman. | ||||||
430 | 21 | "Fandango" | James Landis | Don Ingalls | February 11, 1967 | |
A rancher is stalking Matt and his prisoner. | ||||||
431 | 22 | "The Returning" | Marc Daniels | James Landis | February 18, 1967 | |
An honest woman in need of money faces temptation when her outlaw husband goes on the lam, leaving her $20,000. | ||||||
432 | 23 | "The Lure" | Marc Daniels | Clyde Ware | February 25, 1967 | |
Kitty is abducted by an outlaw and tries to turn his daughter against him to escape. | ||||||
433 | 24 | "Noose of Gold" | Irving J. Moore | Clyde Ware | March 4, 1967 | |
A state official uses Matt's friendship with an outlaw for personal gain. | ||||||
434 | 25 | "The Favor" | Marc Daniels | Don Ingalls | March 11, 1967 | |
Kitty is torn between Matt and the man he is looking for – a vengeful killer who once saved her life. | ||||||
435 | 26 | "Mistaken Identity" | Robert Totten | Paul Savage and Les Crutchfield | March 18, 1967 | |
A fugitive learns that the man whose identity he is using is being brought in by Matt. Guest stars: Albert Salmi and Sam Melville | ||||||
436 | 27 | "Ladies from St. Louis" | Irving J. Moore | Clyde Ware | March 25, 1967 | |
A group of nuns bring their injured protector to Dodge – without mentioning he is a former criminal. | ||||||
437 | 28 | "Nitro! (Part 1)" | Robert Totten | Preston Wood | April 8, 1967 | |
A gang hires a drifter to mix nitroglycerin for them. | ||||||
438 | 29 | "Nitro! (Part 2)" | Robert Totten | Preston Wood | April 15, 1967 | |
The drifter hired by the gang mixes one last batch of nitroglycerin. |
Season 13 (1967–68)
Twenty-five one-hour episodes, color
Producer: John Mantley; associate producer: Joseph Dackow
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Buck Taylor (Newly)
Gunsmoke began its thirteenth season in a new time-slot (Mondays at 7:30 PM eastern time). With this the series returned to being among the top ten highest rated programs, where it remained for the next six seasons.[50]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
439 | 1 | "The Wreckers" | Robert Totten | Hal Sitowitz | September 11, 1967 | |
Kitty pins Matt's badge on an unconscious outlaw to protect the marshal from a holdup gang. | ||||||
440 | 2 | "Cattle Barons" | Gunnar Hellström | Clyde Ware | September 18, 1967 | |
Cattle barons fight over a large herd. | ||||||
441 | 3 | "The Prodigal" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | September 25, 1967 | |
A journalist looking for a sensational story talks Matt into reopening a murder case, where the marshal finds himself the prime suspect. | ||||||
442 | 4 | "Vengeance (Part 1)" | Richard C. Sarafian | Calvin Clements, Sr. | October 2, 1967 | |
Matt tries to help when a drifter plans to avenge his friends who were trampled by a rancher's horsemen. | ||||||
443 | 5 | "Vengeance (Part 2)" | Richard C. Sarafian | Calvin Clements, Sr. | October 9, 1967 | |
The drifter who is still bent on avenging his friends is arrested for murdering a town boss. | ||||||
444 | 6 | "A Hat" | Robert Totten | Ron Bishop | October 16, 1967 | |
A stray bullet ruins a frontiersman's hat, setting off a chain reaction of violence and retribution. | ||||||
445 | 7 | "Hard Luck Henry" | John Rich | Warren Douglas | October 23, 1967 | |
Festus goes to Pratt County with his clumsy cousin Henry to determine how a chest of gold should be divided among the Haggen clan. | ||||||
446 | 8 | "Major Glory" | Robert Totten | Story by : Clyde Ware and Richard Carr Teleplay by : Richard Carr | October 30, 1967 | |
A pair of Army deserters wait for the perfect opportunity to murder the sergeant who has been harassing him. | ||||||
447 | 9 | "The Pillagers" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 6, 1967 | |
A gang of outlaws kidnap Newly and Kitty based on their assumption that Newly is a doctor. | ||||||
448 | 10 | "Prairie Wolfer" | Robert Butler | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 13, 1967 | |
While Festus is acting marshal, a pair of trappers steal $20,000 from a fur trader who refused to buy their pelts. | ||||||
449 | 11 | "Stranger in Town" | E. Darrell Hallenbeck | Story by : Emily Mosher and John Dunkel Screenplay by : John Dunkel | November 20, 1967 | |
A hired killer gets distracted by his ex-wife and the son he never knew. | ||||||
450 | 12 | "Death Train" | Gunnar Hellström | Ken Trevey | November 27, 1967 | |
The passengers of a railroad car are quarantined for a fever that could spread. | ||||||
451 | 13 | "Rope Fever" | David Alexander | Chris Rellas | December 4, 1967 | |
A sheriff enjoys his new-found glory when he puts Festus in jail on a trumped-up murder charge. | ||||||
452 | 14 | "Wonder" | Irving J. Moore | Story by : Mary Worrell and William Blinn Screenplay by : William Blinn | December 18, 1967 | |
Matt helps an Indian boy find a drifter who is being bothered by disgruntled cowboys. | ||||||
453 | 15 | "Baker's Dozen" | Irving J. Moore | Charles Joseph Stone | December 25, 1967 | |
Doc fights to keep three orphaned babies from being separated. | ||||||
454 | 16 | "The Victim" | Vincent McEveety | Story by : Hal Sitowitz Screenplay by : Arthur Rowe | January 1, 1968 | |
Matt and a sheriff face off against a lynch mob. | ||||||
455 | 17 | "Deadman's Law" | John Rich | Calvin Clements, Jr. | January 8, 1968 | |
A group of vigilantes terrorizes Dodge as Festus goes looking for Matt. | ||||||
456 | 18 | "Nowhere to Run" | Vincent McEveety | Story by : Robert Totten Screenplay by : Ron Honthaner | January 15, 1968 | |
A pair of teenage thieves fear that their partner, who is stuck in a well, will give them away. | ||||||
457 | 19 | "Blood Money" | Robert Totten | Hal Sitowitz | January 22, 1968 | |
The father of a young gunfighter tries to end his son's career by wounding his gun hand. | ||||||
458 | 20 | "Hill Girl" | Robert Totten | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 29, 1968 | |
Newly rescues an ignorant hill girl, Merry Florene, from her uncivilized half-brothers Roland and Elbert. He brings her to Dodge City and arranges for a job at Jonas' general store. The two ruffians find her and try to force her to help them rob the store. This is the first of 4 episodes featuring the Merry Florene character. | ||||||
459 | 21 | "The Gunrunners" | Irving J. Moore | Hal Sitowitz | February 5, 1968 | |
An old trapper attempts to mete out justice to Army deserters who injured his adopted Indian son. | ||||||
460 | 22 | "The Jackals" | Alvin Ganzer | Calvin Clements, Jr. | February 12, 1968 | |
Matt trails the man who plotted the murder of an old friend to Mexico. | ||||||
461 | 23 | "The First People" | Robert Totten | Calvin Clements, Sr. | February 19, 1968 | |
A politically ambitious Indian agent falsely accuses Matt of participating in a murder committed on the reservation. | ||||||
462 | 24 | "Mr. Sam'l" | Gunnar Hellström | Harry Kronman | February 26, 1968 | |
A rainmaker offers hope when Dodge is struck by a drought. | ||||||
463 | 25 | "A Noose for Dobie Price" | Richard C. Sarafian | Antony Ellis | March 4, 1968 | |
Matt enlists the help of a former outlaw to find two condemned killers who escaped from jail. |
Season 14 (1968–69)
Twenty-six one-hour episodes, color
Producer / executive producer: John Mantley; associate producer: Joseph Dackow
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Buck Taylor (Newly)[51]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
464 | 1 | "Lyle's Kid" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | September 23, 1968 | |
Matt intervenes when a former lawman plans to use his son to settle a grudge. | ||||||
465 | 2 | "The Hidecutters[52]" | Bernard McEveety | Jack Turley | September 30, 1968 | |
Matt joins a cattle drive to prevent violence between a trail boss and his hands. | ||||||
466 | 3 | "Zavala" | Vincent McEveety | Paul Savage | October 7, 1968 | |
A young Mexican youngster has an ulterior motive for befriending Matt. | ||||||
467 | 4 | "Uncle Finney" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | October 14, 1968 | |
When Merry Florene's half-brothers return to Dodge to turn in their 103 year old Uncle Finney for fifty dollars, you know some shenanigans are afoot. This is the second of 4 episodes featuring the Merry Florene character. | ||||||
468 | 5 | "Slocum" | Leo Penn | Ron Bishop | October 21, 1968 | |
A Bible-spouting, moonshine-swilling rancher threatens Matt. | ||||||
469 | 6 | "O'Quillian" | John Rich | Ron Bishop | October 28, 1968 | |
Matt is forced to protect a troublemaking Irishman. | ||||||
470 | 7 | "9:12 to Dodge" | Marvin J. Chomsky | Preston Wood | November 11, 1968 | |
Matt and Doc have a tense train ride as they take a prisoner back to Dodge. | ||||||
471 | 8 | "Abelia" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 18, 1968 | |
Outlaws use a widow's home as their hideout. | ||||||
472 | 9 | "Railroad!" | Marvin J. Chomsky | Arthur Rowe | November 25, 1968 | |
Matt clashes with a railroad boss who is determined to buy a homesteader's land. | ||||||
473 | 10 | "The Miracle Man" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | December 2, 1968 | |
An Irish drummer falls for the woman he intended to swindle. | ||||||
474 | 11 | "Waco" | Robert Totten | Ron Bishop | December 9, 1968 | |
Fate seems to have other plans for Matt as he takes a prisoner back to Dodge. | ||||||
475 | 12 | "Lobo" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | December 16, 1968 | |
Matt and an old mountain man face off against angry cattlemen and greedy bounty hunters. | ||||||
476 | 13 | "Johnny Cross" | Herschel Daugherty | Calvin Clements, Sr. | December 23, 1968 | |
Newly intervenes when a pair of bounty hunters attempt to kill a desperado who swears that he is innocent. | ||||||
477 | 14 | "The Money Store" | Vincent McEveety | William Blinn | December 30, 1968 | |
Two children rob a bank. | ||||||
478 | 15 | "The Twisted Heritage" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Robert Heverly and Jack Turley Screenplay by : Paul Savage and Arthur Rowe | January 6, 1969 | |
Kitty clashes with the tyrannical mother of a rancher she just rescued. | ||||||
479 | 16 | "Time of the Jackals" | Vincent McEveety | Story by : Paul Savage Screenplay by : Paul Savage and Richard Fielder | January 13, 1969 | |
Matt finds himself marked for death as he looks for a killer. | ||||||
480 | 17 | "Mannon" | Robert Butler | Ron Bishop | January 20, 1969 | |
A former Quantrill Raider comes to Dodge to face Matt in a gunfight. | ||||||
481 | 18 | "Gold Town" | Gunnar Hellström | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 27, 1969 | |
Merry Florene is back, along with her remaining half-brother Elbert Moses and cousin Smiley. Merry pesters Newly while the boys scam Dodge City with a salted gold mine. This is the third of 4 episodes featuring the Merry Florene character. | ||||||
482 | 19 | "The Mark of Cain" | Vincent McEveety | Ron Bishop | February 3, 1969 | |
An ex-Confederate is haunted by his past. | ||||||
483 | 20 | "Reprisal" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Jack Hawn Screenplay by : Jack Hawn and Paul Savage | February 10, 1969 | |
Doc must choose between delivering a baby or saving the life of a man who committed a murder. | ||||||
484 | 21 | "The Long Night" | John Rich | Story by : Richard Carr Screenplay by : Paul Savage | February 17, 1969 | |
A group of bounty hunters intend to get even with Matt. | ||||||
485 | 22 | "The Night Riders" | Irving J. Moore | Calvin Clements, Sr. | February 24, 1969 | |
Festus faces a group of renegades bent on regaining land they lost during the Civil War. | ||||||
486 | 23 | "The Intruder" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | March 3, 1969 | |
Festus seeks help for his prisoner. | ||||||
487 | 24 | "The Good Samaritans" | Bernard McEveety | Paul Savage | March 10, 1969 | |
A family of former slaves give Matt shelter when he is injured. | ||||||
488 | 25 | "The Prisoner" | Leo Penn | Calvin Clements, Sr. | March 17, 1969 | |
Kitty is left in charge of a man about to be hanged for murder, but she believes that he is innocent and refuses to let another sheriff take him away. | ||||||
489 | 26 | "Exodus 21:22" | Herschel Daugherty | Arthur Rowe | March 24, 1969 | |
A former lawman goes after the men who murdered his wife. |
Season 15 (1969–70)
Twenty-six one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: John Mantley; producer: Joseph Dackow
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Buck Taylor (Newly)[53]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
490 | 1 | "The Devil's Outpost" | Philip Leacock | Story by : Bob Barbash Screenplay by : Bob Barbash and Jim Byrnes | September 22, 1969 | |
A wily outlaw is determined to free his younger brother from Matt's custody. | ||||||
491 | 2 | "Stryker" | Robert Totten | Herman Groves | September 29, 1969 | |
Matt is headed for a showdown with marshal-turned-outlaw John Stryker. | ||||||
492 | 3 | "Coreyville" | Bernard McEveety | Herman Groves | October 6, 1969 | |
Two feuding women refuse to reveal the identity of the killer Matt is looking for. | ||||||
493 | 4 | "Danny" | Bernard McEveety | Preston Wood | October 13, 1969 | |
An ailing con man plans to kill Matt to ensure his financial future. | ||||||
494 | 5 | "Hawk" | Gunnar Hellström | Kay Lenard & Jess Carneol | October 20, 1969 | |
A woman refuses to acknowledge that a half-Indian boy is her son. | ||||||
495 | 6 | "A Man Called Smith" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | October 27, 1969 | |
A widow is not what she seems to be. | ||||||
496 | 7 | "Charlie Noon" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | November 3, 1969 | |
Comanches follow Matt, his prisoner, an Indian widow and her white stepson. | ||||||
497 | 8 | "The Still" | Gunnar Hellström | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 10, 1969 | |
Merry Florene is back -but this time she has herself a good job as an interim school teacher in Dodge. But when her kinfolks arrive, we are again in for more buffoonery from her family members. This is the last of 4 episodes featuring the Merry Florene character. | ||||||
498 | 9 | "A Matter of Honor" | Robert Totten | Joy Dexter | November 17, 1969 | |
The town drunk is accused of a murder he witnessed. | ||||||
499 | 10 | "The Innocent" | Marvin J. Chomsky | Walter Black | November 24, 1969 | |
A missionary teacher heads for her first assignment. | ||||||
500 | 11 | "Ring of Darkness" | Bernard McEveety | Arthur Dales[C] | December 1, 1969 | |
A farmer faces a moral dilemma when he steals horses for a gang of outlaws to help his blind daughter. | ||||||
501 | 12 | "MacGraw" | Philip Leacock | Kay Lenard & Jess Carneol | December 8, 1969 | |
Ex-gunslinger Jake McGraw has returned to Dodge after twenty years in prison and for some reason has taken an interest in a saloon hostess and a young cowboy. | ||||||
502 | 13 | "Roots of Fear" | Philip Leacock | Arthur Browne, Jr. | December 15, 1969 | |
A dirt farmer and his kin plot to break into the bank when it's closed due to a panic. | ||||||
503 | 14 | "The Sisters" | Philip Leacock | William Kelley | December 29, 1969 | |
A scoundrel tries to con three nuns. | ||||||
504 | 15 | "The War Priest" | Bernard McEveety | William Kelley | January 5, 1970 | |
A drunken cavalry sergeant pursues an Indian warrior who takes Kitty hostage. | ||||||
505 | 16 | "The Pack Rat" | Philip Leacock | Story by : Arthur Browne, Jr. Teleplay by : Arthur Browne, Jr. and Jim Byrnes | January 12, 1970 | |
A young thief sets a fatal trap for Matt as the marshal takes an escaped prisoner to Dodge. | ||||||
506 | 17 | "The Judas Gun" | Vincent McEveety | Harry Kronman | January 19, 1970 | |
A hired gunman changes the balance of power in a family feud. | ||||||
507 | 18 | "Doctor Herman Schultz, M.D." | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Benny Rubin Teleplay by : Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 26, 1970 | |
A hypnotist uses his skill to steal money. | ||||||
508 | 19 | "The Badge" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | February 2, 1970 | |
After Matt is shot and taken prisoner by two bank robbers, he tricks one into turning against his partner. | ||||||
509 | 20 | "Albert" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | February 9, 1970 | |
A bank teller foils a robbery and keeps the money for himself, only to wind up helping the robbers with their next attempt. | ||||||
510 | 21 | "Kiowa" | Bernard McEveety | Ron Bishop | February 16, 1970 | |
Matt helps search for a group of raiders who abducted a rancher's daughter. | ||||||
511 | 22 | "Celia" | Philip Leacock | Harry Kronman | February 23, 1970 | |
Newly must prove that a girl is a con artist bent on swindling a blacksmith. | ||||||
512 | 23 | "Morgan" | Bernard McEveety | Kay Lenard & Jess Carneol | March 2, 1970 | |
Outlaws take over Dodge and wait for Matt to arrive with a large shipment of gold. | ||||||
513 | 24 | "The Thieves" | Philip Leacock | Thomas Thompson | March 9, 1970 | |
The bartender takes an interest in a juvenile delinquent on probation. | ||||||
514 | 25 | "Hackett" | Vincent McEveety | William Kelley | March 16, 1970 | |
An ex-convict seeks revenge on a farmer who ran out on him during a robbery years ago. | ||||||
515 | 26 | "The Cage" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | March 23, 1970 | |
Matt leads a posse to find a gang of gold thieves. |
Season 16 (1970–71)
Twenty-four one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: John Mantley; producer: Joseph Dackow (episodes 516–528), Leonard Katzman (episodes 529–539)
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Buck Taylor (Newly)
Note: "Pike", the two-part episode that ended the season, was later developed into a spin-off series entitled Dirty Sally.[54][55]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
516 | 1 | "Chato" | Vincent McEveety | Paul F. Edwards | September 14, 1970 | |
Matt heads to New Mexico to track down a wily killer with a knach for murdering lawmen. | ||||||
517 | 2 | "The Noose" | Vincent McEveety | Arthur Browne, Jr. | September 21, 1970 | |
A stranger comes to Dodge to avenge his father's hanging. | ||||||
518 | 3 | "Stark" | Robert Totten | Donald Sanford | September 28, 1970 | |
Bounty hunter Louis Stark blackmails his prisoner, whose father is a wealthy rancher. | ||||||
519 | 4 | "Sam McTavish, M.D." | Bernard McEveety | Bethel Leslie & Gerry Day | October 5, 1970 | |
Dr. Samuel (her father wanted a boy) McTavish answers Doc Adam's ad for a temporary replacement. | ||||||
520 | 5 | "Gentry's Law" | Vincent McEveety | Jack Miller | October 12, 1970 | |
A land baron considers his family above the law. | ||||||
521 | 6 | "Snow Train (Part 1)" | Gunnar Hellström | Preston Wood | October 19, 1970 | |
The Sioux are after the white man who sold them poisonous whisky. | ||||||
522 | 7 | "Snow Train (Part 2)" | Gunnar Hellström | Preston Wood | October 26, 1970 | |
Matt must find out who sold the Indians poisonous whisky when they take a trainload of passengers hostage. | ||||||
523 | 8 | "Luke" | Bernard McEveety | Jack Miller | November 2, 1970 | |
Outlaw Luke Dangerfield's dying wish is to see his daughter. | ||||||
524 | 9 | "The Gun" | Bernard McEveety | Donald Sanford | November 9, 1970 | |
A newspaperman from St. Louis exploits a teenage bank clerk who killed a notorious gunfighter. | ||||||
525 | 10 | "The Scavengers" | Robert Totten | Jim Byrnes | November 16, 1970 | |
A bounty is placed on Indians for allegedly massacring a camp site. | ||||||
526 | 11 | "The Witness" | Philip Leacock | Shimon Wincelberg | November 23, 1970 | |
A father gets rid of witnesses against his murderous son. | ||||||
527 | 12 | "McCabe" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | November 30, 1970 | |
Matt's prisoner McCabe is targeted by a lynch mob. | ||||||
528 | 13 | "The Noon Day Devil" | Philip Leacock | William Kelley | December 7, 1970 | |
A priest tries to save his murderous twin brother's soul. | ||||||
529 | 14 | "Sergeant Holly" | Bernard McEveety | William Kelley | December 14, 1970 | |
A sergeant sets out to find the man who framed him for stealing an Army payroll. | ||||||
530 | 15 | "Jenny" | Robert Totten | Jack Miller | December 28, 1970 | |
A bank robber hopes to recoup his losses after losing his money gambling. | ||||||
531 | 16 | "Captain Sligo" | William Conrad | William Kelley | January 4, 1971 | |
A retired whaler moves to Kansas and begins courting a widow. | ||||||
532 | 17 | "Mirage" | Vincent McEveety | Jack Miller | January 11, 1971 | |
Festus comes back from a desert shootout with no memory of what exactly took place. | ||||||
533 | 18 | "The Tycoon" | Bernard McEveety | Robert Vincent Wright | January 25, 1971 | |
Festus falls prey to a husband-hunter after coming into money. | ||||||
534 | 19 | "Jaekel" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : True Boardman & Thelma Boardman Screenplay by : Calvin Clements, Sr. | February 1, 1971 | |
A pardoned convict returns to the woman he killed for. | ||||||
535 | 20 | "Murdoch" | Robert Totten | Jack Miller | February 8, 1971 | |
An aging lawman sets out to get the Carver gang - unaware that his son is with them. | ||||||
536 | 21 | "Cleavus" | Vincent McEveety | Richard Scott | February 15, 1971 | |
An unlucky fellow jumps a dead man's claim and starts courting Kitty. | ||||||
537 | 22 | "Lavery" | Vincent McEveety | Donald Sanford | February 22, 1971 | |
A troublemaker, out on probation, reunites with his old gang. | ||||||
538 | 23 | "Pike (Part 1)" | Bernard McEveety | Jack Miller | March 1, 1971 | |
Crusty old Sally Fergus nurses a wounded young outlaw named Cyrus Pike back to health. This was the first of 3 episodes to feature the character Sally Fergus, known as "Dirty Sally". | ||||||
539 | 24 | "Pike (Part 2)" | Bernard McEveety | Jack Miller | March 8, 1971 | |
Having taken a shine to Cyrus while tending to his wounds, Sally tries to persuade him not to steal anymore. This was the second of 3 episodes to feature the character Sally Fergus, known as "Dirty Sally". |
Season 17 (1971–72)
Twenty-four one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: John Mantley; producer: Leonard Katzman; associate producer: Ron Honthaner
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Buck Taylor (Newly)[56]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
540 | 1 | "The Lost" | Robert Totten | Story by : Warren Vanders Screenplay by : Jack Miller | September 13, 1971 | |
Kitty befriends a wild child when she gets lost. (last Totten-directed episode) | ||||||
541 | 2 | "Phoenix" | Paul Stanley | Anthony Lawrence | September 20, 1971 | |
An ex-convict starts hiring himself out as a killer. | ||||||
542 | 3 | "Waste (Part 1)" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | September 27, 1971 | |
Matt's search for an outlaw leads him to a boy without a mother and wagonload of saloon girls. | ||||||
543 | 4 | "Waste (Part 2)" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | October 4, 1971 | |
Matt gets trapped in a deserted fort with the boy and saloon girls. | ||||||
544 | 5 | "New Doctor in Town" | Philip Leacock | Jack Miller | October 11, 1971 | |
The new town doctor finds it hard to be accepted as he tries to fill Doc Adams' shoes. | ||||||
545 | 6 | "The Legend" | Philip Leacock | Calvin Clements, Jr. | October 18, 1971 | |
A man heads down the same path as his outlaw brothers. | ||||||
546 | 7 | "Trafton" | Bernard McEveety | Ron Bishop | October 25, 1971 | |
An outlaw's compassion for his victims proves to be his downfall. | ||||||
547 | 8 | "Lynott" | Gunnar Hellström | Ron Bishop | November 1, 1971 | |
An easygoing former lawman fills in for Matt. | ||||||
548 | 9 | "Lijah" | Irving J. Moore | William Blinn | November 8, 1971 | |
A mountain man is accused of killing three people. | ||||||
549 | 10 | "My Brother's Keeper" | Paul Stanley | Arthur Dales[C] | November 15, 1971 | |
Festus tries to keep an old Indian alive, even though he wishes to die in peace. | ||||||
550 | 11 | "Drago" | Paul Stanley | Jim Byrnes | November 22, 1971 | |
A scout hunts down the man who murdered his female benefactor. | ||||||
551 | 12 | "The Bullet (Part 1)" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | November 29, 1971 | |
Doc tries to save Matt when the marshal gets wounded. | ||||||
552 | 13 | "The Bullet (Part 2)" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | December 6, 1971 | |
A group of bandits delay Matt's journey to Denver where the wounded marshal needs an operation. | ||||||
553 | 14 | "The Bullet (Part 3)" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | December 13, 1971 | |
Doc performs an emergency surgery on Matt to save the marshal's life. | ||||||
554 | 15 | "P.S. Murry Christmas" | Herb Wallerstein | William Kelley | December 27, 1971 | |
A drifter and seven orphans find a way to melt the cold heart of the orphanage headmistress at Christmastime. | ||||||
555 | 16 | "No Tomorrow" | Irving J. Moore | Richard Fielder | January 3, 1972 | |
A falsely accused homesteader fights to prove his innocence. | ||||||
556 | 17 | "Hidalgo" | Paul Stanley | Colley Cibber | January 10, 1972 | |
An outlaw shoots Matt and leaves him to die in the desert of Chihuahua. | ||||||
557 | 18 | "Tara" | Bernard McEveety | William Kelley | January 17, 1972 | |
A charming widow plays Newly against a gunman. | ||||||
558 | 19 | "One for the Road" | Bernard McEveety | Jack Miller | January 24, 1972 | |
A drunk escapes from his reproving daughter. This was the third of 3 episodes to feature the character Sally Fergus, known as "Dirty Sally". | ||||||
559 | 20 | "The Predators" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 31, 1972 | |
A 'mad' dog is killing cattle and sheep, while a vengeful gunman sets out to kill a man who shot him in the back four years ago. | ||||||
560 | 21 | "Yankton" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | February 7, 1972 | |
A saddle tramp uses a rancher's money to court his daughter. | ||||||
561 | 22 | "Blind Man's Buff" | Herb Wallerstein | Ron Honthaner | February 21, 1972 | |
A lonely widow takes care of a wounded man she finds outside her cabin. | ||||||
562 | 23 | "Alias Festus Haggin" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | March 6, 1972 | |
A case of mistaken identity ensues when Festus is believed to be wanted for murder. | ||||||
563 | 24 | "The Wedding" | Bernard McEveety | Harry Kronman | March 13, 1972 | |
A couple is determined to get married over her father's objections. |
Season 18 (1972–73)
Twenty-four one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: John Mantley; producer: Leonard Katzman; associate producer: Ron Honthaner.
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Ken Curtis (Festus), Buck Taylor (Newly)[57]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
564 | 1 | "The River (Part 1)" | Herb Wallerstein | Jack Miller | September 11, 1972 | |
Bandits chase Matt down Oregon's Rogue River. | ||||||
565 | 2 | "The River (Part 2)" | Herb Wallerstein | Jack Miller | September 18, 1972 | |
Matt's adventure on Oregon's Rogue River comes to a thrilling conclusion. | ||||||
566 | 3 | "Bohannan" | Alf Kjellin | William Kelley | September 25, 1972 | |
A faith healer is asked to cure a terminally ill boy. | ||||||
567 | 4 | "The Judgement" | Philip Leacock | Shimon Wincelberg | October 2, 1972 | |
A gunman plots revenge against the man who turned him in as an Army deserter. | ||||||
568 | 5 | "The Drummer" | Bernard McEveety | Richard Fielder | October 9, 1972 | |
A salesman is forced to face his past. | ||||||
569 | 6 | "Sarah" | Gunnar Hellström | Calvin Clements, Sr. | October 16, 1972 | |
An old flame of Matt's gets him involved with stage robbers. | ||||||
570 | 7 | "The Fugitives" | Irving J. Moore | Charles Joseph Stone | October 23, 1972 | |
Doc is kidnapped and forced to save an outlaw's life. | ||||||
571 | 8 | "Eleven Dollars" | Irving J. Moore | Paul Savage | October 30, 1972 | |
Festus sets out to settle an $11 estate. | ||||||
572 | 9 | "Milligan" | Bernard McEveety | Ron Bishop | November 6, 1972 | |
A farmer is accused of shooting someone in the back. | ||||||
573 | 10 | "Tatum" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | November 13, 1972 | |
A dying gunman endures a long, sad journey to see his estranged daughters. | ||||||
574 | 11 | "The Sodbusters" | Robert Butler | Ron Bishop | November 20, 1972 | |
A sodbuster fights a cattle baron for her water supply. | ||||||
575 | 12 | "The Brothers" | Gunnar Hellström | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 27, 1972 | |
An outlaw's brother seeks revenge on Kitty for shooting him. | ||||||
576 | 13 | "Hostage!" | Gunnar Hellström | Paul F. Edwards | December 11, 1972 | |
After Matt kills a member of the Dog Soldiers, the rest of the gang shoot Kitty for revenge. | ||||||
577 | 14 | "Jubilee" | Herb Wallerstein | Story by : Jack Freeman Screenplay by : Paul Savage | December 18, 1972 | |
A poor sodbuster leaves his farm to race his prized quarter horse. | ||||||
578 | 15 | "Arizona Midnight" | Irving J. Moore | Dudley Bromley | January 1, 1973 | |
A midget claims that he will turn into an elephant at midnight. | ||||||
579 | 16 | "Homecoming" | Gunnar Hellström | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 8, 1973 | |
A pair of outlaws return to Dodge to see their dying mother and take Kitty and Doc hostage. | ||||||
580 | 17 | "Shadler" | Arnold Laven | Jim Byrnes | January 15, 1973 | |
A condemned man posing as a priest is forced to help a stricken town. | ||||||
581 | 18 | "Patricia" | Alf Kjellin | Calvin Clements, Sr. | January 22, 1973 | |
Newly gets engaged to a leukemia victim. | ||||||
582 | 19 | "A Quiet Day in Dodge" | Alf Kjellin | Jack Miller | January 29, 1973 | |
Matt has a trying day as he deals with a vicious prisoner, a brawl at the Long Branch, a nine-year-old thief and Kitty giving him the silent treatment. | ||||||
583 | 20 | "Whelan's Men" | Paul F. Edwards | Ron Bishop | February 5, 1973 | |
A gang of outlaws take over Dodge while Matt is away, but a poker game with Kitty proves to be their undoing. | ||||||
584 | 21 | "Kimbro" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | February 12, 1973 | |
Matt's mentor in law enforcement is now on the skids. | ||||||
585 | 22 | "Jesse" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | February 19, 1973 | |
Festus runs into a friend who has escaped from prison. | ||||||
586 | 23 | "Talbot" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | February 26, 1973 | |
An outlaw's plans to rob the bank are sidetracked by his attraction to the woman whose husband he killed. | ||||||
587 | 24 | "This Golden Land" | Gunnar Hellström | Hal Sitowitz | March 5, 1973 | |
A Jewish family's faith is tested by the son's senseless death. |
Season 19 (1973–74)
Twenty-four one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: John Mantley; producer: Leonard Katzman; associate producer: Ron Honthaner
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Amanda Blake (Kitty), Buck Taylor (Newly)[58]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
588 | 1 | "Women for Sale (Part 1)" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | September 10, 1973 | |
Matt goes up against white-slave traders. | ||||||
589 | 2 | "Women for Sale (Part 2)" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | September 17, 1973 | |
Matt continues his pursuit of white-slave traders. | ||||||
590 | 3 | "Matt's Love Story" | Gunnar Hellström | Ron Bishop | September 24, 1973 | |
An amnesiac Matt falls in love with a young widow. | ||||||
591 | 4 | "The Boy and the Sinner" | Bernard McEveety | Hal Sitowitz | October 1, 1973 | |
A farm boy tries to stop a man from giving up his honor for booze. | ||||||
592 | 5 | "The Widow-Maker" | Bernard McEveety | Paul F. Edwards | October 8, 1973 | |
An ex-gunman is unable to put his reputation behind him. | ||||||
593 | 6 | "Kitty's Love Affair" | Vincent McEveety | Story by : Joan E. Gessler & Susan Kotar Screenplay by : Paul Savage | October 22, 1973 | |
A reformed gunfighter begins a courtship with Kitty. | ||||||
594 | 7 | "The Widow and the Rogue" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Harvey Marlowe and Paul Savage Screenplay by : Paul Savage | October 29, 1973 | |
Festus takes a charming, unethical petty thief back to Dodge, but must rely on him to protect a widow and her son. | ||||||
595 | 8 | "A Game of Death...An Act of Love (Part 1)" | Gunnar Hellström | Paul F. Edwards | November 5, 1973 | |
A cattleman seeks vengeance against the Indians he suspects of killing his wife. | ||||||
596 | 9 | "A Game of Death...An Act of Love (Part 2)" | Gunnar Hellström | Paul F. Edwards | November 12, 1973 | |
The Indians accused of murdering a cattleman's wife stand trial. | ||||||
597 | 10 | "Lynch Town" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Anne Snyder & Joann Carlino Screenplay by : Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 19, 1973 | |
An alcoholic judge is forced by Matt to hold an inquest into the death of a female saloonkeeper that resulted in the lynching of an innocent drifter. | ||||||
598 | 11 | "The Hanging of Newly O'Brien" | Alf Kjellin | Calvin Clements, Sr. | November 26, 1973 | |
A backwoods community wants to hang Newly for a failed emergency operation he performed. | ||||||
599 | 12 | "Susan Was Evil" | Bernard McEveety | William Keys | December 3, 1973 | |
Matt asks two women to take care of a wounded outlaw. | ||||||
600 | 13 | "The Deadly Innocent" | Bernard McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | December 17, 1973 | |
A mentally challenged young man struggles to live as an adult. | ||||||
601 | 14 | "The Child Between" | Irving J. Moore | Harry Kronman | December 24, 1973 | |
Newly tries to help care for the sick baby of a wanted man and his untrusting Indian wife. | ||||||
602 | 15 | "A Family of Killers" | Gunnar Hellström | William Keys | January 14, 1974 | |
Matt and a fellow marshal work together to track down a murderous family. | ||||||
603 | 16 | "Like Old Times" | Irving J. Moore | Richard Fielder | January 21, 1974 | |
A reformed safecracker tries to start his life over. | ||||||
604 | 17 | "The Town Tamers" | Gunnar Hellström | Paul Savage | January 28, 1974 | |
Matt and another marshal attempt to bring justice to a frontier town. | ||||||
605 | 18 | "The Foundling" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | February 11, 1974 | |
Matt must find a home for an abandoned baby girl. | ||||||
606 | 19 | "The Iron Blood of Courage" | Gunnar Hellström | Ron Bishop | February 18, 1974 | |
A gunfighter is hired to settle a disagreement over water rights. | ||||||
607 | 20 | "The Schoolmarm" | Bernard McEveety | Dick Nelson | February 25, 1974 | |
An unmarried schoolteacher finds that she is pregnant as a result of her being raped. | ||||||
608 | 21 | "Trail of Bloodshed" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Earl W. Wallace Screenplay by : Paul Savage | March 4, 1974 | |
A young farmer sets out to find the man who killed his father. | ||||||
609 | 22 | "Cowtown Hustler" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | March 11, 1974 | |
A has-been pool player (portrayed by Jack Albertson) looks for a way to regain others' respect. | ||||||
610 | 23 | "To Ride a Yeller Horse" | Vincent McEveety | Calvin Clements, Sr. | March 18, 1974 | |
A mother seeks to fulfill her dreams for her children. | ||||||
611 | 24 | "The Disciple" | Gunnar Hellström | Shimon Wincelberg | April 1, 1974 | |
Matt's life is changed when his gun arm is seriously wounded. |
Season 20 (1974–75)
Twenty-four one-hour episodes, color
Executive producer: John Mantley; producer: Leonard Katzman (episodes 612-624, 635), John G. Stephens (episodes 625-634); associate producer: Ron Honthaner
Regular cast: James Arness (Matt Dillon), Ken Curtis (Festus), Milburn Stone (Doc), Buck Taylor (Newly), Fran Ryan (Hannah)[59]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
612 | 1 | "Matt Dillon Must Die" | Victor French | Ray Goldrup | September 9, 1974 | |
A crazed killer bent on avenging his son's death captures Matt. | ||||||
613 | 2 | "Town in Chains" | Bernard McEveety | Ron Bishop | September 16, 1974 | |
A gang of bank robbers take over a town to do one last heist. | ||||||
614 | 3 | "The Guns of Cibola Blanca (Part 1)" | Gunnar Hellström | Paul Savage | September 23, 1974 | |
Outlaws hold Doc and a woman hostage at a desert stronghold. | ||||||
615 | 4 | "The Guns of Cibola Blanca (Part 2)" | Gunnar Hellström | Paul Savage | September 30, 1974 | |
Matt, Festus and Newly hatch a plan to rescue Doc and his female companion from the outlaws who have taken them hostage. | ||||||
616 | 5 | "Thirty a Month and Found" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | October 7, 1974 | |
Three drovers find their way of life jeopardized by the railroad. | ||||||
617 | 6 | "The Wiving" | Victor French | Earl W. Wallace | October 14, 1974 | |
A farmer sends his sons into town to pick up brides. | ||||||
618 | 7 | "The Iron Men" | Gunnar Hellström | John Mantley | October 21, 1974 | |
Matt takes on the task of rehabilitating a drunk ex-lawman. | ||||||
619 | 8 | "The Fourth Victim" | Bernard McEveety | Jim Byrnes | November 4, 1974 | |
There is a killer on the loose in Dodge. | ||||||
620 | 9 | "The Tarnished Badge" | Michael O'Herlihy | Robert Vincent Wright | November 11, 1974 | |
Matt deals with a sheriff (Victor French) who rules his town with an iron fist...and who does not take it well when he is asked to resign. Guest star: Nick Nolte | ||||||
621 | 10 | "In Performance of Duty" | Gunnar Hellström | William Keys | November 18, 1974 | |
A family of outlaws stay a step ahead of the law by killing anyone who sees them. | ||||||
622 | 11 | "Island in the Desert (Part 1)" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | December 2, 1974 | |
A half-crazy hermit rescues Festus. | ||||||
623 | 12 | "Island in the Desert (Part 2)" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | December 9, 1974 | |
The hermit forces Festus to make packs of gold across the desert. | ||||||
624 | 13 | "The Colonel" | Bernard McEveety | Arthur Dales[C] | December 16, 1974 | |
A town drunk who was once an officer of the Army deals with his daughter's upcoming marriage. | ||||||
625 | 14 | "The Squaw" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | January 6, 1975 | |
An outlaw on the run (John Saxon) must rely on an Indian woman cast off from her own tribe (Arlene Martel) if he is to survive in the badlands. | ||||||
626 | 15 | "The Hiders" | Victor French | Paul Savage | January 13, 1975 | |
Festus tries to talk a teenager into leaving a gang of men who cut the skins off dead cattle and steal from farmers. | ||||||
627 | 16 | "Larkin" | Gunnar Hellström | Jim Byrnes | January 20, 1975 | |
Newly tries to take a killer to Dodge with bounty hunters on his tail. | ||||||
628 | 17 | "The Fires of Ignorance" | Victor French | Jim Byrnes | January 27, 1975 | |
A teacher fights for children's right to education as he clashes with the father of one of his students. | ||||||
629 | 18 | "The Angry Land" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Herman Groves Screenplay by : Jim Byrnes | February 3, 1975 | |
An orphaned girl is turned away by her only relative. | ||||||
630 | 19 | "Brides and Grooms" | Victor French | Earl W. Wallace | February 10, 1975 | |
A farmer tries to get his sons married. This is a continuation of the story line of episode 6 "The Wiving". | ||||||
631 | 20 | "Hard Labor" | Bernard McEveety | Story by : Hal Sitowitz Screenplay by : Earl W. Wallace | February 24, 1975 | |
Matt is convicted for a crime he did not commit and is sentenced to a life of hard labor in the judge's silver mine. | ||||||
632 | 21 | "I Have Promises to Keep" | Vincent McEveety | Story by : William Putman Screenplay by : William Putman and Earl W. Wallace | March 3, 1975 | |
An ailing preacher is determined to build a church for the Comanches, despite the objecions of both whites and Indians. | ||||||
633 | 22 | "The Busters" | Vincent McEveety | Jim Byrnes | March 10, 1975 | |
A broncobuster has only two days to live after getting a fatal injury from getting thrown off a stallion. | ||||||
634 | 23 | "Manolo" | Gunnar Hellström | Story by : Harriet Charles and Earl W. Wallace Screenplay by : Earl W. Wallace | March 17, 1975 | |
A Basque sheepherder refuses to fight his father to prove his manhood. | ||||||
635 | 24 | "The Sharecroppers" | Leonard Katzman | Earl W. Wallace | March 31, 1975 | |
Festus ends up plowing crops for a family of farmers after accidentally shooting one of them in the leg and bringing him home. |
Television movies (1987–1994)
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|
Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge | Vincent McEveety | Jim Bynes | September 26, 1987 |
Gunsmoke: The Last Apache | Charles Correll | Earl W. Wallace | March 18, 1990 |
Gunsmoke: To the Last Man | Jerry Jameson | Earl W. Wallace | January 10, 1992 |
Gunsmoke: The Long Ride | Jerry Jameson | Bill Stratton | May 8, 1993 |
Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice | Jerry Jameson | Harry and Renee Longstreet | February 24, 1994 |
Home media releases
All twenty seasons of Gunsmoke and all five reunion films are available on DVD in Region 1. Two box sets—The 50th Anniversary Collection and The Director's Collection—have been released on DVD in Region 1.
Gunsmoke season DVD releases | ||||
Season | Episodes | Discs | Release date | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 39 | 6 | July 17, 2007 | [60] |
2 | Volume 1: 20 | 3 | January 8, 2008 | [61] |
Volume 2: 19 | 3 | May 27, 2008 | [62] | |
3 | Volume 1: 20 | 3 | December 9, 2008 | [63] |
Volume 2: 19 | 3 | May 26, 2009 | [64] | |
4 | Volume 1: 20 | 3 | October 5, 2010 | [65] |
Volume 2: 19 | 3 | December 14, 2010 | [66] | |
5 | Volume 1: 20 | 3 | October 11, 2011 | [67] |
Volume 2: 19 | 3 | December 13, 2011 | [68] | |
6 | Volume 1: 19 | 3 | August 7, 2012 | [69] |
Volume 2: 19 | 3 | October 16, 2012 | [70] | |
7 | Volume 1: 17 | 5 | December 11, 2012 | [71] |
Volume 2: 17 | 5 | February 5, 2013 | [72] | |
8 | Volume 1: 19 | 5 | May 7, 2013 | [73] |
Volume 2: 19 | 5 | May 7, 2013 | [73] | |
9 | Volume 1: 18 | 5 | August 6, 2013 | [74] |
Volume 2: 18 | 5 | August 6, 2013 | [74] | |
10 | Volume 1: 18 | 5 | August 12, 2014 | [75] |
Volume 2: 18 | 5 | August 12, 2014 | [75] | |
11 | Volume 1: 16 | 4 | December 2, 2014 | [76] |
Volume 2: 16 | 4 | December 2, 2014 | [76] | |
12 | Volume 1: 15 | 4 | September 20, 2016 | [77] |
Volume 2: 14 | 4 | September 20, 2016 | [77] | |
13 | Volume 1: 15 | 4 | May 22, 2018 | [78] |
Volume 2: 10 | 3 | May 22, 2018 | [79] | |
14 | Volume 1: 15 | 4 | February 5, 2019 | [80] |
Volume 2: 11 | 3 | February 5, 2019 | [81] | |
15 | Volume 1: 15 | 4 | October 1, 2019 | [82] |
Volume 2: 11 | 3 | October 1, 2019 | [83] | |
16 | 24 | 6 | December 10, 2019 | [84] |
Gunsmoke – 50th Anniversary DVD releases | ||||
Volume | Episodes | Discs | Release date | Ref |
1 | 17 | 3 | January 3, 2006 | [85] |
2 | 12 | 3 | January 3, 2006 | [86] |
1 & 2 | 29 | 6 | January 3, 2006 | [87] |
Gunsmoke – The Director's Collection DVD releases | ||||
Volume | Episodes | Discs | Release date | Ref |
— | 15 | 3 | November 14, 2006 | [88] |
Gunsmoke TV-movie DVD releases | ||||
Title | Discs | Release date | Ref | |
Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge | 1 | May 11, 2004 | [89] | |
Gunsmoke: The Last Apache | 1 | May 11, 2004 | [90] | |
Gunsmoke: To the Last Man | 1 | May 11, 2004 | [91] | |
The Gunsmoke Movie Collection | 3 | May 11, 2004 | [92] | |
Gunsmoke: The Long Ride | 1 | February 14, 2017 | [93] | |
Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice | 1 | September 13, 2016 | [94] |
Notes
See also
Footnotes
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 74–75
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 444, 742
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 255, 539
- ^ a b Newcomb, Horace (2010). "Gunsmoke". The Museum of Broadcast Communications. Archived from the original on 2009-10-10. Retrieved January 9, 2010.
- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 5
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 255–539
- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 154
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 541–557
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 87–102
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 114–116
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 116–118
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 126–127
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 147–148
- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 101
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1956–1957". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1957–1958". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1958–1959". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1959–1960". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1960–1961". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1961–1962". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1962–1963". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1963–1964". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1964–1965". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1965–1966". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1967–1968". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1968–1969". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1969–1970". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1970–1971". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1971–1972". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1972–1973". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1973–1974". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "TV Ratings: 1974–1975". ClassicTVHits.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 255–270
- ^ "James Arness, Marshal on 'Gunsmoke,' Dies at 88". NyTimes.com. June 3, 2011. Retrieved September 2, 2016.
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 270–285
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 285–299
- ^ Film Editing: Interpretation and Value (film). American Cinema Editors, Inc. 1959. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
- ^ McLellan, Dennis (May 30, 2003). "Fred Berger, 94; Film, TV Editor for 5 Decades Won Emmy for 'MASH' (sic)". Los Angeles Times. p. 87. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 300–312
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 312–324
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 325–337
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 337–353
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 353–370
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 370–384
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 384–400
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 400–416
- ^ Barbaras 1990, pp. 123–125
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 416–429
- ^ TV Guide Book of Lists. Running Press. 2007. p. 186. ISBN 978-0-7624-3007-9.
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 76, 429–442
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 442–457
- ^ Greenland, David R. (2013). The Gunsmoke Chronicles: A New History of Television's Greatest Western. BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1-59393-733-1.
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 458–470
- ^ Barbaras 1990, p. 669
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 470–484
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 484–496
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 496–508
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 508–522
- ^ Costello 2006, pp. 522–539
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season One". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Two (Volume 1)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Two (Volume 2)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Three (Volume 1)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Three (Volume 2)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Four". Retrieved October 15, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Four, Volume 2". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on September 16, 2011. Retrieved August 4, 2011.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Five, Volume 1". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on November 14, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Five, Volume 2". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on December 10, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Six, Volume 1". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Six, Volume 2". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Seven, Volume 1". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Season Seven, Volume 2". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14.
- ^ a b "Gunsmoke: Season Eight". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14.
- ^ a b "Gunsmoke: Season Nine". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14.
- ^ a b "Gunsmoke: Season Ten". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2014-12-28.
- ^ a b "Gunsmoke: Season Eleven". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2015-04-27.
- ^ a b "Gunsmoke: Season Twelve". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2017-02-06.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Thirteenth Season, Volume One". Retrieved May 29, 2018.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Thirteenth Season, Volume Two". Retrieved May 29, 2018.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Fourteenth Season, Volume One". Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Fourteenth Season, Volume Two". Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Fifteenth Season, Volume One". Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Fifteenth Season, Volume Two". Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Complete Sixteenth Season". Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: 50th Anniversary Collection (Volume 1)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: 50th Anniversary Collection (Volume 2)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: 50th Anniversary Collection (Volumes 1 & 2)". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Director's Collection". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Last Apache". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: To the Last Man". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "The Gunsmoke Movie Collection". Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: The Long Ride". Retrieved May 29, 2018.
- ^ "Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice". Retrieved May 29, 2018.
References
- Costello, Ben (2006). Gunsmoke: An American Institution. Chandler, Arizona: Five Star Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-1-58985-014-9.
- Barbaras, SuzAnne & Gabor (1990). Gunsmoke: A Complete History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-89950-418-3.
External links
- Arness, James. "The Official Web Site of James Arness". Retrieved March 22, 2010.
- Template:Cite web