Rawhide: Incident at Spanish Rock


10:00 pm - 11:00 pm, Tuesday, October 28 on WJLP WEST Network (33.4)

Average User Rating: 8.76 (33 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

Incident at Spanish Rock

Season 2, Episode 11

Nolan walks into a trap when an attractive Mexican revolutionary tries to lure cowhand Frank Volara away from the drive.

repeat 1959 English Stereo
Western Drama Serial

Cast & Crew
-

Eric Fleming (Actor) .. Gil Favor
Sheb Wooley (Actor) .. Pete Nolan
Pepe Hern (Actor) .. Volara
Jacques Aubuchon (Actor) .. Carroyo
Frank De Kova (Actor) .. Villegro
Elena Verdugo (Actor) .. Mexican Revolutionary

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Eric Fleming (Actor) .. Gil Favor
Born: July 04, 1925
Died: September 28, 1966
Birthplace: Santa Paula, California
Trivia: The product of a profoundly unhappy home life, Eric Fleming ran away at age 11 to live the life of a Depression-era hobo. Making his way from California to New York, he worked at a series of dead-end jobs, at one point sweeping the floors of a whorehouse. After a stint with the Merchant Marine, he joined the Seabees at the outbreak of WWII. While lifting a 200-pound iron block, he miscalculated and the block fell directly on his face. Forced to undergo extensive plastic surgery, Fleming left the hospital with the craggy, weathered facial features that would ensure him steady if not always lucrative employment as an actor. Making his debut in a 1944 training film, he did stage work in Chicago and New York, and in 1951 starred on a DuMont TV network kiddie series Major Dell Conway of the Flying Tigers. While his Hollywood film roles were largely confined to standard he-man heroics in such sci-fiers as Conquest of Space (1955) and Queen of Outer Space (1956), he was afforded a wider acting range on stage, exhibiting his singing and dancing skills in the 1955 Broadway musical Plain and Fancy. In 1959 he was cast as trail boss Gil Favor on Rawhide, one of the most popular TV Western series of the era. Feeling that he was being upstaged by younger co-star Clint Eastwood, Fleming left Rawhide in 1966 to seek out film work. After playing a secondary role in the Doris Day comedy The Glass Bottom Beat, he headed to Peru to film the pilot episode of a TV adventure series, High Jungle. While filming a canoeing scene in the turbulent Hullaga River, Eric Fleming fell into the surging rapids and drowned; his mutilated body was not recovered until four days later.
Sheb Wooley (Actor) .. Pete Nolan
Born: April 10, 1921
Died: September 16, 2003
Trivia: After some 15 years on the country & western circuit, singer/actor Sheb Wooley finally cracked popular music's Top Ten in 1958. It was Wooley who introduced the world to the "One Eyed, One Horned, Flying Purple People Eater," which remained the number one song for six straight weeks and stayed in the Top Ten for three weeks more. Thereafter, Wooley's recording career fluctuated between blue-ribbon country & western ballads and silly novelty songs. As an actor, Wooley was seen in such films as Little Big Horn (1951), High Noon (1952), Giant (1956), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), and several other films with a sagebrush setting and equestrian supporting cast. From 1961 through 1965, Sheb Wooley played Pete Nolan, frontier scout for the never-ending cattle drive on the weekly TV Western Rawhide.
Pepe Hern (Actor) .. Volara
Born: June 06, 1927
Died: February 28, 2009
Birthplace: New
Trivia: American actor Pepe Hern played character roles in about 50 films and was frequently on television. He was typically cast as a Spaniard or Latino. His brother Tom Hernandez is also an actor.
Jacques Aubuchon (Actor) .. Carroyo
Born: October 30, 1924
Frank De Kova (Actor) .. Villegro
Born: January 01, 1910
Died: October 19, 1981
Trivia: Of Latin extraction, actor Frank DeKova possessed the indeterminate but sharply chiselled facial features that allowed him to play a wide range of ethnic types, from East Indian to American Indian. His first film appearance was as a gravel-voiced gangster in 1951's The Mob. He was busiest in westerns, closing out his film career with 1975's Johnny Firecloud. Frank DeKova has endeared himself to two generations of TV fans with his performance as peace-loving Hekawi Indian chief Wild Eagle on the 1960s TV sitcom F Troop.
Elena Verdugo (Actor) .. Mexican Revolutionary
Born: April 20, 1926
Trivia: "I started at 20th Century-Fox in 1902," was Elena Verdugo's flippant response to an interviewer who had the poor taste to ask her age. In truth, Verdugo descended from a Spanish family that had settled in California in 1776, made her first movie appearance as a dancer in Fox's 1940 musical Down Argentine Way after studying Latin-style terpsichore from the age of three. Educated by studio tutors, she spent her teen years playing Mexican peasants, gypsy girls, harem handmaidens and exotic South Sea islanders. Her co-stars ranged from Lou Costello (in 1946's Little Giant) to the Wolfman (aka Lon Chaney Jr. in 1945's House of Frankenstein). Verdugo's comic potential lay largely dormant until 1952, when she replaced Audrey Totter as star of the radio sitcom Meet Millie. She continued to portray Brooklynese secretary Millie Bronson on the subsequent TV version, which ran from 1954 to 1956. Verdugo then went into early retirement, reemerging in 1959 on the straw-hat circuit in such musicals as Oklahoma! and South Pacific. Beginning with her role as hotel manager Gerry in Redigo (1963), she entered into her TV-series supporting player phase; she went on to portray Audrey in The New Phil Silvers Show (1964), Lynn Hall in Many Happy Returns (1964) and Alice Henderson in Mona McCluskey (1965). Elena Verdugo is most fondly remembered as pragmatic but warmhearted nurse Consuelo Lopez on Marcus Welby MD (1969-76).

Before / After
-