Maverick: Hostage


7:00 pm - 8:00 pm, Saturday, November 22 on WJKF WEST Network (9.3)

Average User Rating: 8.21 (24 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

Hostage

Season 1, Episode 8

Flat broke, but with visions of fat poker pots dancing in their heads, Bret (James Garner) and Bart (Jack Kelly) try to book passage on a floating gambling casino. Yvette: Laurie Carroll. Devereaux: Stephen Bekassy. Jubal: Mickey Simpson. Collins: Don Durant. Rick: Wright King.

repeat 1957 English HD Level Unknown Stereo
Western Comedy Satire

Cast & Crew
-

James Garner (Actor) .. Bret Maverick
Jack Kelly (Actor) .. Bart Maverick
Wright King (Actor) .. Rick
Laurie Carroll (Actor) .. Yvette Devereaux
Don Durant (Actor) .. Jody Collins
Stephen Bekassy (Actor) .. Henri Devereaux
Trevor Bardette (Actor) .. Inspector Marvin
Mickey Simpson (Actor) .. Jubal
John Harmon (Actor) .. Ziggy
Jean Del Val (Actor) .. Anton Rivage
James Dime (Actor) .. Townsman Throwing Water
Hal Gerard (Actor) .. Hotel Clerk
Roy Glenn (Actor) .. Dock Worker
Alphonse Martell (Actor) .. Maitre D'
Philo McCullough (Actor) .. Poker Player
Kansas Moehring (Actor) .. Carriage Driver
Monty O'Grady (Actor) .. Restaurant Patron
Murray Pollack (Actor) .. Police Officer
Hal Taggart (Actor) .. Poker Player
Roy E. Glenn Sr. (Actor) .. Straw Boss
Joe Walls (Actor) .. Restaurant Patron

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

James Garner (Actor) .. Bret Maverick
Born: April 07, 1928
Died: July 19, 2014
Birthplace: Norman, Oklahoma, United States
Trivia: The son of an Oklahoma carpet layer, James Garner did stints in the Army and merchant marines before working as a model. His professional acting career began with a non-speaking part in the Broadway play The Caine Mutiny Court Martial (1954), in which he was also assigned to run lines with stars Lloyd Nolan, Henry Fonda, and John Hodiak. Given that talent roster, and the fact that the director was Charles Laughton, Garner managed to earn his salary and receive a crash course in acting at the same time. After a few television commercials, he was signed as a contract player by Warner Bros. in 1956. He barely had a part in his first film, The Girl He Left Behind (1956), though he was given special attention by director David Butler, who felt Garner had far more potential than the film's nominal star, Tab Hunter. Due in part to Butler's enthusiasm, Garner was cast in the Warner Bros. TV Western Maverick. The scriptwriters latched on to his gift for understated humor, and, before long, the show had as many laughs as shoot-outs. Garner was promoted to starring film roles during his Maverick run, but, by the third season, he chafed at his low salary and insisted on better treatment. The studio refused, so he walked out. Lawsuits and recriminations were exchanged, but the end result was that Garner was a free agent as of 1960. He did quite well as a freelance actor for several years, turning in commendable work in such films as Boys' Night Out (1962) and The Great Escape (1963), but was soon perceived by filmmakers as something of a less-expensive Rock Hudson, never more so than when he played Hudson-type parts opposite Doris Day in Move Over, Darling and The Thrill of It All! (both 1963).Garner fared rather better in variations of his Maverick persona in such Westerns as Support Your Local Sheriff (1969) and The Skin Game (1971), but he eventually tired of eating warmed-over stew; besides, being a cowboy star had made him a walking mass of injuries and broken bones. He tried to play a more peaceable Westerner in the TV series Nichols (1971), but when audiences failed to respond, his character was killed off and replaced by his more athletic twin brother (also Garner). The actor finally shed the Maverick cloak with his long-running TV series The Rockford Files (1974-1978), in which he played a John MacDonald-esque private eye who never seemed to meet anyone capable of telling the truth. Rockford resulted in even more injuries for the increasingly battered actor, and soon he was showing up on TV talk shows telling the world about the many physical activities which he could no longer perform. Rockford ended in a spirit of recrimination, when Garner, expecting a percentage of the profits, learned that "creative bookkeeping" had resulted in the series posting none. To the public, Garner was the rough-hewn but basically affable fellow they'd seen in his fictional roles and as Mariette Hartley's partner (not husband) in a series of Polaroid commercials. However, his later film and TV-movie roles had a dark edge to them, notably his likable but mercurial pharmacist in Murphy's Romance (1985), for which he received an Oscar nomination, and his multifaceted co-starring stints with James Woods in the TV movies Promise (1986) and My Name Is Bill W. (1989). In 1994, Garner came full circle in the profitable feature film Maverick (1994), in which the title role was played by Mel Gibson. With the exception of such lower-key efforts as the noir-ish Twilight (1998) and the made-for-TV thriller Dead Silence (1997), Garner's career in the '90s found the veteran actor once again tapping into his latent ability to provoke laughs in such efforts as Space Cowboys (2000) while maintaining a successful small-screen career by returning to the role of Jim Rockford in several made-for-TV movies. He provided a voice for the popular animatedfeature Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001) and appeared in the comedy-drama The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (2002). Garner enjoyed a career resurgance in 2003, when he joined the cast of TV's 8 Simple Rules, acting as a sort of replacement for John Ritter, who had passed away at the beginning of the show's second season. He next appeared in The Notebook (2004), which earned Garner a Screen Actors Guild nomination and also poised him to win the Guild's Lifetime Achievement Award. His last on-screen role was a small supporting role in The Ultimate Gift (2007). In 2008, Garner suffered a stroke and retired acting. He died in 2014, at age 86.
Jack Kelly (Actor) .. Bart Maverick
Born: September 16, 1927
Died: November 07, 1992
Trivia: The son of actress Nan Kelly Yorke, Jack Kelly was the younger brother of stage and film star Nancy Kelly. Like Nancy, Jack was a professional from an early age, acting in radio and on stage before the age of 10, and in films from 1937 (he is quite prominent in a brace of 1939 20th Century-Fox films, Young Mr. Lincoln and The Story of Alexander Graham Bell). He reemerged as a leading man in the early 1950s, appearing in such films as Forbidden Planet (1956, as the ill-fated Lieutenant Farnam). Signed by Warner Bros. in 1955, Kelly starred as Dr. Paris Mitchell in the weekly TV version of the 1942 film King's Row. He went on to play gamblin' man Bart Maverick on the longer-running Warners western series Maverick. Though his popularity never matched that of his co-star James Garner, Kelly still developed a fan following as Bart; he remained with the series from 1957 until its cancellation in 1962, appearing opposite such Garner successors as Roger Moore and Robert Colbert. Kelly dabbled in a little bit of everything after that: hosting the anthology series NBC Comedy Playhouse (1973), emceeing the game show Sale of the Century (1969-71), and playing hard-nosed Lt. Ryan on the Teresa Graves series Get Christie Love (1974) and Harry Hammond on The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries (1977-79). He revived the Bart Maverick character on 1978's The New Maverick and the 1990 TV movie The Gambler Returns: Luck of the Draw. Chances are that, had he lived, Jack Kelly would have been invited to co-star again with Garner in the 1994 Mel Gibson theatrical-feature version of Maverick.
Wright King (Actor) .. Rick
Born: January 11, 1923
Laurie Carroll (Actor) .. Yvette Devereaux
Don Durant (Actor) .. Jody Collins
Born: November 20, 1932
Died: March 15, 2005
Birthplace: Long Beach, California
Stephen Bekassy (Actor) .. Henri Devereaux
Trevor Bardette (Actor) .. Inspector Marvin
Born: January 01, 1902
Died: November 28, 1977
Trivia: American actor Trevor Bardette could truly say that he died for a living. In the course of a film career spanning three decades, the mustachioed, granite-featured Bardette was "killed off" over 40 times as a screen villain. Entering movies in 1936 after abandoning a planned mechanical engineering career for the Broadway stage, Bardette was most often seen as a rustler, gangster, wartime collaborator and murderous backwoodsman. His screen skullduggery carried over into TV; one of Bardette's best remembered video performances was as a "human bomb" on an early episode of Superman. Perhaps being something of a reprobate came naturally to Trevor Bardette -- or so he himself would claim in later years when relating a story of how, as a child, he'd won ten dollars writing an essay on "the evils of tobacco," only to be caught smoking behind the barn shortly afterward.
Mickey Simpson (Actor) .. Jubal
Born: January 01, 1912
Died: January 01, 1985
Trivia: Well-muscled former 1935 New York City heavyweight boxing champ Mickey Simpson was typically cast as a villain in numerous low-budget actioners, adventures, and Westerns of the '40s, '50s, and '60s. Before making his screen debut with a bit part in Stagecoach, Simpson had been Claudette Colbert's personal chauffeur. He served with the military during WWII and then returned to Hollywood to continue his busy onscreen career.
John Harmon (Actor) .. Ziggy
Born: June 30, 1905
Trivia: Bald, hook-nosed character actor John Harmon launched his film career in 1939. Harmon's screen assignments ranged from shifty-eyed gangsters, rural law enforcement officials and hen-pecked husbands. He was seen in films as diverse as Chaplin's Monsieur Verdoux (1947) and the "B" horror flick Monster of Piedra Blancas. Star Trek fans will remember John Harmon for his supporting role in the 1967 episode "City on the Edge of Forever."
Jean Del Val (Actor) .. Anton Rivage
Born: November 17, 1891
Died: March 13, 1975
Trivia: French character actor Jean Del Val was a regular in American films from at least 1927. In the early days of the talkies, he offered his services as translator and vocal coach for the French-language versions of American films. Many of his later roles were fleeting but memorable: he's the French aviator in Block-Heads (1938) who rescues over-aged doughboy Stan Laurel from the trenches ("Why, you blockhead. Ze war's been over for twenty years!") and the French radio announcer who opens Casablanca (1942) by spreading the news of the murder of two German couriers carrying letters of transit. He enjoyed a larger role in Columbia's So Dark the Night (1946), a film seemingly conceived as a showcase for the best of Hollywood's foreign-accented bit players. Active in films until the 1960s, Jean del Val played a crucial non-speaking role in Fantastic Voyage (1966): he's the comatose scientist whose arterial system and brain are explored by the miniaturized heroes.
James Dime (Actor) .. Townsman Throwing Water
Hal Gerard (Actor) .. Hotel Clerk
Roy Glenn (Actor) .. Dock Worker
Alphonse Martell (Actor) .. Maitre D'
Born: March 27, 1890
Died: March 18, 1976
Trivia: In films from 1926, former vaudevillian and stage actor/playwright Alphonse Martell was one of Hollywood's favorite Frenchmen. While he sometimes enjoyed a large role, Martell could usually be found playing bits as maitre d's, concierges, gendarmes, duelists, and, during WW II, French resistance fighters. In 1933, he directed the poverty-row quickie Gigolettes of Paris. Alphonse Martell remained active into the 1960s, guest-starring on such TV programs as Mission: Impossible.
Philo McCullough (Actor) .. Poker Player
Born: June 16, 1893
Died: June 05, 1981
Trivia: Actor Philo McCullough began his movie career at the Selig Company in 1912. At first, McCullough specialized in light comedy roles, often playing cads and bounders. After a brief stab at directing with 1921's Maid of the West, he found his true niche as a mustachioed, oily-haired, jack-booted heavy. During the 1920s he appeared in support of everyone from Fatty Arbuckle to Rin Tin Tin. Talkies reduced him to such bit parts as the "Assistant Exhausted Ruler" in Laurel & Hardy's Sons of the Desert (1933) and Senator Albert in Frank Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939). One of his few roles of consequence in the 1930s was the principal villain in the 1933 serial Tarzan the Fearless. Philo McCullough remained active until 1969, when he appeared with several other silent-screen veterans in They Shoot Horses, Don't They?.
Kansas Moehring (Actor) .. Carriage Driver
Born: June 09, 1897
Died: November 03, 1968
Trivia: A busy presence in B-Westerns and serials from 1920-1950, Carl "Kansas" Moehring spent his first decade in films supporting his good friend Hoot Gibson in scores of that silent Western star's best vehicles for Universal. Rarely billed after the changeover to sound, Moehring (who hailed from Ohio despite his nickname) was often one of the villain's henchmen, a stage driver, or on rare occasions -- such as the 1947 Johnny Mack Brown oater Trailing Danger -- a lawman. Moehring passed away at the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital.
Monty O'Grady (Actor) .. Restaurant Patron
Born: March 06, 1916
Died: March 08, 2000
Trivia: A member of the early Our Gang group, child actor Monty O'Grady appeared in Our Gang (1922), A Pleasant Journey (1923), Dogs of War (1923), and Every Man for Himself (1924). O'Grady was Splutters, one of Mary Pickford's fellow orphans in Sparrows, and Lafe McKee's little son in the Western Baited Trap (1926). Although he disappears from film credits after 1927, apparently Monty O'Grady continued to appear in films (and later television) for the remainder of his life, mainly as an extra. He died at the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, CA, oddly enough on the very same day as yet another silent screen child actor, Stanley Goethals.
Murray Pollack (Actor) .. Police Officer
Hal Taggart (Actor) .. Poker Player
Born: January 01, 1895
Died: January 01, 1971
Roy E. Glenn Sr. (Actor) .. Straw Boss
Born: June 03, 1914
Joe Walls (Actor) .. Restaurant Patron

Before / After
-

Colt .45
6:30 pm
Cheyenne
8:00 pm