Early in Gunsmoke's run Miss Kitty displayed her charms and her profession more openly, Chester limped behind the Marshal sometimes ineffectively, and Matt made mistakes, sometimes fatal ones. |
I remember how hard I took the news
that James Arness passed away three
years ago today on June 3, 2011 with his boots off, in his own bed in Los Angeles. After all he was mostly remembered as a one
note actor for just on part, albeit one he played for more than 20 years and all
633 episodes on television. He was
88 years old and had been in frail health for sometime. But with him passed a treasured part of my
childhood and teen years.
You see watching Gunsmoke
on Sunday nights was a ritual at our house.
Most of all, it was a bonding time with Dad. Mom’s roasted chicken
Sunday dinner was over by 4 pm at the latest.
We all found something to do until 6 pm—we were on Mountain Time in Cheyenne. By then Dad was out of his Sunday
knock-around clothes and into striped ski pajamas, a faded blue plaid bathrobe,
and well worn brown leather slippers. He
made himself a huge bowl of ice cream smothered in Hershey’s Syrup and sprinkled with salted Spanish peanuts and was
settled into his big maroon arm chair, feet up on the footstool when Marshal Dillon set foot on the dusty
streets of Dodge City, Kansas to face a desperado as the
opening credits rolled.
And my brother Tim and I would be right beside him in our own ski pajama, sitting
in our own miniature arm chairs, gobbling down our own ice cream. We made a night of it—first Gunsmoke, Have Gun Will Travel, and after a few years Bonanza. But Gunsmoke,
grittier and more realistic than all of them, with a flawed hero who could—and
did—often lose his man or a gunfight, was Dad’s favorite, and ours too. I am certain that more wisdom was transferred
from father to sons in those hours than any other time we spent with our often
reticent father.
Arness came to the CBS Television version of an
established radio hit when the voice of Matt Dillon, deep voiced William Conrad, was deemed to portly
for a TV hero. John Wayne, who had worked with Arness in films, most notably Big
Jim McLain, an anti-communist pot boiler set in Hawaii, the western Hondo,
Island in the Sky about transport pilots trying to survive after
a crash in icy Labrador, and Sea Chase, recommended his 6
foot 7 inch tall buddy for the part.
Arness played the part for twenty years in the TV series, and in a five
made for TV movies from 1987 to 1993.
Although he had a few other rolls, and a short lived series How
the West Was Won, James Arness, for all practical purposes was Marshal
Dillon.
Born as James Aurness on May 26, 1923 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the
future actor’s father was second generation Norwegian and his mother of German
decent. It was a solidly middle
class family, but one which endured the struggles of the Depression. James helped support his family with part
time jobs as a jewelry salesman, loading and unloading box cars, and even
lumberjacking in Idaho one summer.
He graduated from high school with indifferent grades and was drafted
into the Army in 1943.
He landed at Anzio, Italy as a rifleman in the 3rd Infantry
Division in January 1944. He was
severely wounded in the operation, but won a Bronze Star for bravery
under fire. He underwent several leg
surgeries before being discharged in early 1945. His war wounds bothered him the rest of his
life and made it painful for him to mount and dismount a horse.
After the war Aurness attended Beloit College on the GI
Bill. He soon found work as a radio
announcer in Minnesota. His interest in
performing piqued, He headed for Hollywood in 1947. He caught on with RKO. The studio promptly dropped the “u” from his
name. As James Arness his first roll was
as Loretta Young’s brother in the 1947 classic The Farmer’s Daughter.
He worked steadily in small rolls until teaming with Wayne for four
films. He also starred in two B-movie
science fiction films, The Thing
from Another World and the cult classic Them! His younger
brother followed him to Hollywood and got rolls in other sci-fi films
under the name Peter Graves.
But Gunsmoke made him a star in
1955. He portrayed Marshal Matt Dillon
through all 633 episodes—the longest running live action drama on Television
and the longest time an actor played the same lead role in a series.
When Gunsmoke came on the air,
there was nothing like on TV. In the movies
the popular western genre had grown up in the post war years with gritty films,
adult themes, political allegory, and even psychological depth. Films like The Ox Bow Incident, John Ford’s cavalry trilogy, Red River, Winchester 73, The
Gunfighter, and High Noon were serious works of art for serious
film goers. But TV was still awash in
the juvenile oaters in the vein of the old two-reelers—shows like Roy Rogers, Wild Bill Hickok, Annie
Oakley, the Cicsco Kid, The
Lone Ranger, and Hopalong
Cassidy which was actually recycled from the old Saturday matinee
flicks.
Gunsmoke creators hated all of that. They
wanted a show as gown up as the new breed of western movies, one which would
expose “the chaos and brutal violence” of the real frontier and be populated
with characters with complex lives and motivations. There might be the occasional archetypical
villain, but many of the criminals Marshall Dillon pursued were caught up in
circumstances beyond their control. Nor,
at least at first, was Dillon a flawless, self-sacrificing hero. He was often indecisive and torn with
doubts. He made mistakes—including
shooting the wrong men. He sometimes
failed to get his man or stop the crime.
He lost almost as many fights and gun battles as he won.
The show took off on the strength of a core cast that became classic.
Veteran character actor Milburn Stone played Doc Adams, a
sympathetic and philosophical man with hints of a haunted past who spent too
many hours nursing beers at the Long Branch Saloon. Lanky Dennis Weaver played the gimpy
deputy Chester Goode, earnest but ineffectual. Ironically he was given his unexplained limp
so that viewers would always see him as subordinate to Marshal Dillon, played
by a man with a genuine and serious leg injury.
Amanda Blake as Miss Kitty rounded out the cast
ensemble. On the radio show and in the
early seasons it was clear that Kitty was not just a “dance hall girl” but also
a prostitute. Although it was never explicitly
mentioned she could occasionally be seen descending the stairs with the
Marshall, who obviously enjoyed her services.
Other girls could be seen climbing the stairs with customers. But as the series gained in popularity, Miss
Kitty needed to be cleaned up for TV.
Her dresses grew less revealing, her make-up less garish, and she
morphed into a kind or respectable business woman as the proprietor of the Long
Branch. She had plenty of time to sit
with the Marshall and Doc Adams to discuss the affairs of the town over endless
steins of half finished beer. And she
pined away with unrequited love for her law man who remained seemingly
oblivious.
This ensemble lasted through the initial run of six seasons in a half
hour format. In the fall of 1961 the
show was expanded to an hour. Weaver
left soon in 1964 to pursue a wider career.
There were a string of helpers/sidekicks/deputies thereafter, most
notably Burt Reynolds as the “half breed” blacksmith Quint
Asper from 1962-65 and Ken Curtis,
recently the lead tenor of the Sons of the Pioneers as the
illiterate saddle tramp and small time criminal turned good-guy Festus Haggan.
In 1966 as rating for the long
running show began to lag a little, the introduction of color caused them to
bounce bat into the top 10. The show was
never out of the top 20 for the rest of its run until its last year after
Amanda Blake and Milburn Stone had both left the cast. In 1974-75 season it still ran a respectable
number 28.
The program has survived in
perpetual syndication and on cable. The
half hour programs were repackaged as Marshall Dillon. They still hold up as some of the best
scripted series television of all time.
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