The Gabby Hayes Show


01:00 am - 01:30 am, Today on KNOV The Walk TV (41.3)

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About this Broadcast
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The Gabby Hayes Show is a general purpose western television series in which the film star and Roy Rogers confidant, George "Gabby" Hayes, narrated each episode, showed clips from old westerns, or told tall tales for a primarily children's audience.

1954 English
Western

Cast & Crew
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Wright King (Actor) .. Danny
Andrew Duggan (Actor) .. Maj. Jones
Truman Smith (Actor) .. Pops - the Waiter
John Randolph (Actor) .. Sam Bass
Clifford Sales (Actor) .. Buck

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Wright King (Actor) .. Danny
Born: January 11, 1923
Andrew Duggan (Actor) .. Maj. Jones
Born: December 28, 1923
Died: May 15, 1988
Birthplace: Franklin, Indiana
Trivia: Born in Indiana and raised in Texas, Andrew Duggan attended Indiana University on a speech and drama scholarship. He was starred there in Maxwell Anderson's The Eve of St. Mark, which was being given a nonprofessional pre-Broadway tryout; on the basis of this performance, Duggan was cast in the professional Chicago company of the Anderson play. Before rehearsals could start, however, Duggan was drafted into the army. After wartime service, Duggan began his acting career all over again, working at his uncle's Indiana farm in-between Broadway and stock engagements. In Hollywood in the late 1950s, Duggan was co-starred in the Warner Bros. TV series Bourbon Street Beat and was featured in such films as The Bravados (1958), Seven Days in May (1964) and In Like Flint (1967). He also was starred on the 1962 TV sitcom Room for One More and the 1968 video western Lancer. Because of his marked resemblance to Dwight D. Eisenhower, Duggan was frequently cast as generals and U.S. presidents. Andrew Duggan's last screen appearance was in The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover.
Truman Smith (Actor) .. Pops - the Waiter
Born: November 27, 1791
John Randolph (Actor) .. Sam Bass
Born: June 01, 1915
Died: March 15, 2004
Trivia: CCNY and Columbia University alumnus John Randolph was first seen on Broadway in the 1937 opus Revolt of the Beavers. Randolph served in the Air Force in World War II, then resumed what seemed at the time to be an increasingly successful, near-unstoppable acting career. But in 1951, Randolph found himself on a specious "Commie sympathizers" list. After appearing as a hostile witness before the House UnAmerican Activities Committee, Randolph was effectively blacklisted from movies, TV and radio commercials for the next twelve years. Fortunately, he could always rely upon the theatre to provide him an income, though it was touch-and-go for a while when a Broadway show in which he was appearing was picketed by anti-Red zealots. Throughout the 1950s, Randolph was featured in such major stage productions as Come Back Little Sheba, The Visit, Sound of Music and Case of Libel. In 1963, he was at long last permitted to guest-star on a network TV program, The Defenders. Appropriately, it was in an episode titled "Blacklist," which condemned the knee-jerk policy of banning artists because of their political views; ironically, Randolph was very nearly denied the part when the network complained that he hadn't been "cleared." Though he'd played a small part in 1948's The Naked City, Randolph's movie career began in earnest in 1965. In John Frankenheimer's Seconds, he was cast as aging businessman Arthur Hamilton, who through the magic of plastic surgery is given a fresh new identity (he emerges from the bandages as Rock Hudson)! Since his career renaissance, Hamilton hasn't stopped working before the cameras. He has been featured in films like Gaily Gaily (1969), Little Murders (1971), King Kong (1976), Heaven Can Wait (1978) Prizzi's Honor (1985; as Pop Prizzi); in TV movies like Wings of Kitty Hawk (1978; as Alexander Graham Bell) and The American Clock (1993); and as a regular in the TV series Angie (1979) Annie McGuire (1988) and Grand (1990). Though he'd probably rather you not mention it, Randolph is a dead ringer for former attorney general John Mitchell; accordingly, he played Mitchell in the TV miniseries Blind Ambition, and was heard but not seen in the same role in the 1976 theatrical feature All the President's Men. Despite the upsurge in his film and TV activities, Randolph has never abandoned the theatre: in 1986, he won a Tony Award for his work in Neil Simon's Broadway Bound. As if to slap the faces of those self-styled patriots who denied him work in the 1950s, Randolph has in recent years accepted the German Democratic Republic's Paul Robeson Award, and has served on the National Council for US-Soviet friendship. John Randolph has also served on the board of directors of all three major performing guilds: SAG, AFTRA and Equity. After taking on a variety of grandfatherly roles, including Jack Nicholson's father in Prizzi's Honor and Tom Hanks' grandfather in You've Got Mail), Randloph passed away at 88-years-old in April of 2004.
Larry Buchanan (Actor)
Born: January 01, 1924
Died: December 02, 2004
Trivia: After making documentaries for evangelist Oral Roberts in the early 1950s, Buchanan assisted George Cukor on The Marrying Kind; he also appeared in several '50s films in small roles, including Henry King's The Gunfinghter. In the 1960s he began helming a series of low-budget films, exploiting race (Free, White And 21, High Yellow), sex (Under Age) and the Kennedy assassination (Naughty Dallas, a striptease-fest filmed in Jack Ruby's Carousel Club; The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald). He also made a series of even-cheaper remakes of 1950s AIP science-fictioners: The Eye Creatures, In The Year 2889, Creature of Destruction, and Zontar, the Thing from Venus. His other efforts include the crime film A Bullet for Pretty Boy; the Marilyn Monroe biopics Goodbye, Norma Jean and Good Night, Sweet Marilyn; and the tale of interplanetary sexual frustration, Mars Needs Women.
Clifford Sales (Actor) .. Buck

Before / After
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Bonanza
12:00 am