Daniel Boone, Trail Blazer


2:10 pm - 3:40 pm, Tuesday, January 20 on KPDR Nostalgia Network (19.5)

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About this Broadcast
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British Redcoats provoke the Shawnee. Bruce Bennett. Blackfish: Lon Chaney Jr.

1956 English Stereo
Biography Drama Action/adventure Western

Cast & Crew
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Bruce Bennett (Actor) .. Daniel Boone
Lon Chaney Jr (Actor) .. Blackfish (as Lon Chaney)
Faron Young (Actor) .. Faron Callaway
Kem Dibbs (Actor) .. Simon Girty
Damian O'Flynn (Actor) .. Andy Callaway
Jacqueline Evans (Actor) .. Rebecca Boone
Nancy Rodman (Actor) .. Susannah Boone
Freddy Fernández (Actor) .. Israel Boone
Carol Kelly (Actor) .. Jemima Boone
Eduardo Noriega (Actor) .. Squire Boone
Fred Kohler Jr. (Actor) .. Kenton
Gordon Mills (Actor) .. John Holder
Claudio Brook (Actor) .. James Boone
Joe Ainley (Actor) .. Gen. Hamilton
Lee Morgan (Actor) .. Smitty
Lon Chaney Jr (Actor) .. Blackfish

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Bruce Bennett (Actor) .. Daniel Boone
Born: May 19, 1906
Lon Chaney Jr (Actor) .. Blackfish (as Lon Chaney)
Born: February 10, 1906
Died: July 12, 1973
Birthplace: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States
Trivia: Of English, French and Irish descent.At six months old, joined his parents for the first time onstage.Attended business college and worked in an appliance corporation.Developed makeup skills which he learned from his father.Started working in films in 1930 after his father's death.In 1935, changed his stage name to Lon Chaney Jr.Played classic movie monsters like a wolf man, Frankenstein's Monster, a mummy and a vampire (Dracula's son).
Faron Young (Actor) .. Faron Callaway
Born: February 25, 1932
Died: December 10, 1996
Trivia: Known in the country music field as the "singing sheriff" or the "hillbilly heartthrob" during the 1950s, Faron Young attempted to cash in on his country music celebrity to become a movie star. He made his film debut in a Republic Western playing a callow youth in Hidden Guns (1956). He followed this up with Daniel Boone (1956) and Raiders of Old California (1957). Young disappeared from films during the early '60s, but turned up again later in the decade to appear in a few musical exploitation films, including Nashville Rebel (1966). In addition to his successful musical career, Young also proved to be an astute businessman and he went on to found the Music City News. Late in his life, Young suffered from emphysema. Unable to stand its effects, the 64-year-old Young shot himself on December 9, 1996. He died the following day in Columbia Summit Medical Center.
Kem Dibbs (Actor) .. Simon Girty
Born: August 12, 1917
Died: March 28, 1996
Trivia: Stockbroker-turned-big screen hero, Kem Dibbs is best-remembered for playing Buck Rogers in the 1950s serial. He also appeared in a few major feature films, including High Society (1955), The Ten Commandments (1956), and How the West Was Won (1962). Occasionally, Dibbs appeared on television in such dramatic series as Playhouse 90 and Hallmark Hall of Fame.
Damian O'Flynn (Actor) .. Andy Callaway
Born: January 29, 1907
Trivia: American general purpose actor Damian O'Flynn made his first screen appearance in 1937's Marked Woman. O'Flynn went on to freelance at Warner Bros., RKO, Paramount, Monogram, and other studios, usually in secondary roles, but occasionally playing leads. While serving in WWII, he appeared along with several other actors-in-uniform in 20th Century Fox's Winged Victory, billed as Corporal Damian O'Flynn. A veteran of many a big-screen Western, he appeared regularly in the mid-'50s TV series Wyatt Earp as Doc Goodfellow. Damian O'Flynn remained active until 1964.
Jacqueline Evans (Actor) .. Rebecca Boone
Born: January 01, 1914
Died: January 01, 1989
Trivia: For over 30 years, Jacqueline Evans was a popular actress in Mexican comedies and daytime serials. She was born in England and in 1948 came to Mexico to run in the PanAmerican Races. She never left. In film, she frequently appeared with Tin-Tan, another popular actor. Evans also played in a few American and British films.
Nancy Rodman (Actor) .. Susannah Boone
Freddy Fernández (Actor) .. Israel Boone
Carol Kelly (Actor) .. Jemima Boone
Eduardo Noriega (Actor) .. Squire Boone
Born: January 01, 1918
Fred Kohler Jr. (Actor) .. Kenton
Born: July 08, 1911
Died: January 01, 1993
Trivia: The son of famed movie villain Fred Kohler and actress Maxine Marshall, American actor Fred Kohler Jr.'s own film career began in 1930. Big and brawny, the younger Kohler was a natural for outdoor films, westerns in particular. In 1935, producer William Berke starred Kohler in a brace of "B" horse operas, Toll of the Desert and The Pecos Kid. But like his father before him, Fred seemed more at home on the wrong side of the law. He played minor heavies and utility roles at several studios, mainly Paramount and RKO. He frequently showed up in the films of directors Cecil B. DeMille and John Ford; in Ford's Young Mr. Lincoln, he played small-town lout Scrub White, whose murder sets in motion the film's classic courtroom finale. He remained active until 1968, nearly always in westerns. On two occasions, Kohler and his father appeared in the same film: the more memorable of the two was RKO's Lawless Valley, in which they played father-and-son outlaws. In a priceless scene, Fred Kohler Jr. responds to one of his father's wicked schemes by shouting "Aw, that's crazy!," whereupon Fred Sr. growls "Careful, son, you're talkin' to your dad, ya know!"
Gordon Mills (Actor) .. John Holder
Born: May 15, 1935
Claudio Brook (Actor) .. James Boone
Born: August 28, 1927
Trivia: A Mexican supporting actor, Brook was onscreen from the '60s.
Joe Ainley (Actor) .. Gen. Hamilton
Lee Morgan (Actor) .. Smitty
Born: June 12, 1902
Died: January 30, 1967
Trivia: A tough-looking, often mustachioed supporting player in B-Westerns of the 1940s, Lee Morgan could portray lawmen and thugs with equal conviction. Morgan's career lasted well into the television Western era where he added such programs as The Cisco Kid and The Gene Autry Show to his long list of credits. He should not be confused with the legendary African-American jazz musician of the same name.
Lon Chaney Jr (Actor) .. Blackfish
Born: February 10, 1906
Died: July 12, 1973
Trivia: The son of actors Lon Chaney and Cleva Creighton, Creighton Tull Chaney was raised in an atmosphere of Spartan strictness by his father. He refused to allow Creighton to enter show business, wanting his son to prepare for a more "practical" profession; so young Chaney trained to be plumber, and worked a variety of relatively menial jobs despite his father's fame. After Lon Sr. died in 1930, Creighton entered movies with an RKO contract, but nothing much happened until, by his own recollection, he was "starved" into changing his name to Lon Chaney Jr. He would spend the rest of his life competing with his father's reputation as The Man With a Thousand Faces, hoping against hope to someday top Lon Sr. professionally. Unfortunately, he would have little opportunity to do this in the poverty-row quickie films that were his lot in the '30s, nor was his tenure (1937-1940) as a 20th Century Fox contract player artistically satisfying. Hoping to convince producers that he was a fine actor in his own right, Chaney appeared as the mentally retarded giant Lennie in a Los Angeles stage production of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men. This led to his being cast as Lennie in the 1939 film version -- which turned out to be a mixed blessing. His reviews were excellent, but the character typed him in the eyes of many, forcing him to play variations of it for the next 30 years (which was most amusingly in the 1947 Bob Hope comedy My Favorite Brunette). In 1939, Chaney was signed by Universal Pictures, for which his father had once appeared in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923) and The Phantom of the Opera (1925); Universal was launching a new cycle of horror films, and hoped to cash in on the Chaney name. Billing Lon Jr. as "the screen's master character actor," Universal cast him as Dynamo Dan the Electric Man in Man Made Monster (1941), a role originally intended for Boris Karloff. That same year, Chaney starred as the unfortunate lycanthrope Lawrence Talbot in The Wolf Man, the highlight of which was a transformation sequence deliberately evoking memories of his father's makeup expertise. (Unfortunately, union rules were such than Lon Jr. was not permitted to apply his own makeup). Universal would recast Chaney as the Wolf Man in four subsequent films, and cast him as the Frankenstein Monster in The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942) and the title role in Son of Dracula (1943). Chaney also headlined two B-horror series, one based upon radio's Inner Sanctum anthology, and the other a spin-off from the 1932 film The Mummy. Chaney occasionally got a worthwhile role in the '50s, notably in the films of producer/director Stanley Kramer (High Noon, Not As a Stranger, and especially The Defiant Ones), and he co-starred in the popular TV series Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans. For the most part, however, the actor's last two decades as a performer were distinguished by a steady stream of cheap, threadbare horror films, reaching a nadir with such fare as Hillbillies in a Haunted House (1967). In the late '60s, Chaney fell victim to the same throat cancer that had killed his father, although publicly he tried to pass this affliction off as an acute case of laryngitis. Unable to speak at all in his last few months, he still grimly sought out film roles, ending his lengthy film career with Dracula vs. Frankenstein(1971). He died in 1973.

Before / After
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Charro!
12:20 pm