The Culpepper Cattle Co.


02:00 am - 04:00 am, Today on WNYW Movies! (5.2)

Average User Rating: 9.14 (7 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites

About this Broadcast
-

Yarn about a greenhorn (Gary Grimes) whose first cattle drive is beset by a stampede, rustlers and horse thieves. Frank: Billy Green Bush. Luke: Luke Askew. Dixie: Bo Hopkins. Russ: Geoffrey Lewis. Missoula: Wayne Sutherlin. Pierce: John McLiam. Pete: Matt Clark. Filmed on location in Sonora, Mexico, and Santa Fe, N.M. Directed by Dick Richards.

1972 English Stereo
Western Drama Coming Of Age Adaptation

Cast & Crew
-

Gary Grimes (Actor) .. Ben Mockridge
Billy Green Bush (Actor) .. Frank Culpepper
Luke Askew (Actor) .. Luke
Bo Hopkins (Actor) .. Dixie Brick
Geoffrey Lewis (Actor) .. Russ
Wayne Sutherlin (Actor) .. Missoula
John Mcliam (Actor) .. Pierce
Matthew Clark (Actor) .. Pete
Raymond Guth (Actor) .. Cook
Anthony James (Actor) .. Nathaniel
Charles Martin Smith (Actor) .. Tim Slater
Larry Finley (Actor) .. Mr. Slater
Bob Morgan (Actor) .. Old John
Jan Burrell (Actor) .. Mrs. Mockridge
Hal Needham (Actor) .. Burgess
Jerry Gatlin (Actor) .. Wallop
Bob Orrison (Actor) .. Rutter
Walter Scott (Actor) .. Print
Royal Dano (Actor) .. Rustler
Paul Harper (Actor) .. Trapper
José Chávez (Actor) .. Cantina Bartender
Gregory Sierra (Actor) .. One-eyed Thief
John Pearce (Actor) .. Spectator
Dennis Fimple (Actor) .. Wounded Man in Bar
William O'connell (Actor) .. Piercetown Bartender
Arthur Malet (Actor) .. Doctor
Ted Gehring (Actor) .. Tascosa Bartender
Lu Shoemaker (Actor) .. Prostitute
Patrick Campbell (Actor) .. Dr. Ephraim

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Gary Grimes (Actor) .. Ben Mockridge
Born: June 02, 1955
Trivia: Curly haired American actor Gary Grimes is best remembered for his film debut in which he played the callow Hermie opposite Jennifer O'Neill's older, more sophisticated Dorothy in The Summer of '42 (1971). He appeared in several more films of the '70s, including The Culpepper Cattle Company (1972) and Gus (1976). But for a small role as the voice of one of the Beatles in the 1987 Canadian film Concrete Angels, Grime's acting career ended with the 1976 television miniseries Once an Eagle.
Billy Green Bush (Actor) .. Frank Culpepper
Born: November 07, 1935
Trivia: In films from 1971, Billy Green Bush has usually projected a good-ol'-boy image. Though there were the occasional villains in his TV and film manifest, Bush was most often seen as sheriffs and state troopers. His credits extend from such landmark 1970s efforts as Five Easy Pieces (1971) and Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974) to such 1990s potboilers as Friday the 13th Pt. IX: Jason Goes to Hell (1993). Bush has also twice essayed the role of Vernon Presley, first in the 1988 TV movie Elvis and Me, then in the short-lived weekly series Elvis (1990). Billy "Green" Bush is the father of twin actresses Lindsay Greenbush and Sidney Greenbush.
Luke Askew (Actor) .. Luke
Born: March 26, 1932
Died: March 29, 2012
Trivia: Askew is a supporting actor onscreen beginning with Cool Hand Luke (1967).
Bo Hopkins (Actor) .. Dixie Brick
Born: February 02, 1942
Birthplace: Greenville, South Carolina, United States
Trivia: Bo Hopkins has spent most of his career playing character roles, but he occasionally gets leading roles. Tall, light-haired, and possessing a distinctive drawl, he made his film debut in The Thousand Plane Raid (1969) following studies with drama instructor Uta Hagen in New York and training at the Desilu Playhouse school in Hollywood. He next appeared in Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch (1969). Hopkins went on to work with the director in two more films, including The Getaway (1972). Hopkins specializes in action features and Westerns and is often cast as a redneck. Some of his notable leading roles include that of a gunfighter whose best friend of 30 years turns out to be a woman in The Ballad of Little Joe (1993). Hopkins also appears frequently on television in films and as a series guest star.
Geoffrey Lewis (Actor) .. Russ
Wayne Sutherlin (Actor) .. Missoula
Born: July 06, 1938
John Mcliam (Actor) .. Pierce
Born: January 01, 1920
Died: April 16, 1994
Trivia: He was born John Williams, but there already was a John Williams in show business (several of them, in fact), so the Canadian-born actor selected John McLiam as his professional moniker. McLiam's man-on-the-street countenance could be molded into a vast array of characterizations, ranging from a cockney low-life (My Fair Lady) to a Southern redneck (Cool Hand Luke). The actor's bland normality was a key factor in his being cast as real-life murder victim Herbert Clutter in 1967's In Cold Blood. John McLiam accepted more TV guest-star assignments than can possibly be listed here; he was also a regular on the weekly series Men From Shiloh (1970) and Two Marriages (1983).
Matthew Clark (Actor) .. Pete
Born: November 25, 1936
Raymond Guth (Actor) .. Cook
Born: May 29, 1924
Anthony James (Actor) .. Nathaniel
Born: July 22, 1942
Trivia: American actor Anthony James has been playing unlovable, unsavory film roles since the late 1960s. James' lean-and-hungry appearance has usually led him to be cast as characters named Skinny (1975's Hearts of the West) or Slim (1992's The Unforgiven). His larger film assignments include Blue Thunder (1982, as Grundeltus) and Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear (1991, as Hector Savage). Anthony James should not be confused with the "Anthony James" who appeared in the 1949 British film Last Days of Dolwyn.
Charles Martin Smith (Actor) .. Tim Slater
Born: October 30, 1953
Trivia: Fuzzy-faced actor Charles Martin Smith took time off from his studies at Cal State to make his cinema debut in The Culpepper Cattle Company (1972). Specializing in nerdish, owl-eyed teenagers during the early stages of his career, Smith scored a hit as Terry "The Toad" Field in the two American Graffiti movies of the mid-1970s. He was afforded a rare star part as real-life Canadian author Farley Mowat in Never Cry Wolf (1983), delivering what amounted to a one-man show as he braved the treacherous Arctic to study the so-called predatory behavior of wolves. Other Smith performances worth noting include ill-fated FBI accountant Oscar Wallace in The Untouchables (1987) and AIDS researcher Henry Jaffe in the made-for-TV And the Band Played On. Turning director with the sloppy but endearing "horror musical" Trick or Treat (1986), Charles Martin Smith has gone on to man the megaphone on the love-'em-or-hate-'em comedies Boris and Natasha (1992) and Fifty/Fifty (1993).
Larry Finley (Actor) .. Mr. Slater
Bob Morgan (Actor) .. Old John
Born: November 14, 1916
Jan Burrell (Actor) .. Mrs. Mockridge
Hal Needham (Actor) .. Burgess
Born: March 06, 1931
Died: October 25, 2013
Trivia: Following Korean War service as a paratrooper, Hal Needham drifted into movies as a bit player. His remarkable physical dexterity and willingness to "take it" enabled him to rise up the professional ladder from stuntman to stunt coordinator to 2nd unit director. A longtime chum of Burt Reynolds (himself an ex-stuntman), Needham was given his first chance to direct a theatrical feature with Reynolds' Smokey and the Bandit (1977); the film was a huge hit, assuring Needham future assignments as both director and scriptwriter. The 1980 Reynolds vehicle Hooper was widely recognized as Reynolds and Needham's tribute to the entire fraternity of Hollywood stunters. For television, Needham directed several installments 1989 Burt Reynolds adventure series B. L. Stryker (1989) and the pilot for the syndicated adventure semi-weekly Bandit (1994); there was also a 1992 animated cartoon series titled Stunt Dawgs, wherein the central character was named Needham. Founder of the troubleshooting aggregation Stunts Unlimited (which also served as the title of a 1980 TV movie), Needham has also served as chairman for another movie-industry organization, Camera Platforms International. In addition, Hal Needham is owner of the "world's fastest car," the Budweiser Rocket, now on display at the Smithsonian Institute. Needham was awarded an Honorary Oscar in 2012 for his innovations, just one year before he died at age 82.
Jerry Gatlin (Actor) .. Wallop
Trivia: Beginning in the '60s, stunt man and supporting actor Larry Gatlin often appeared in westerns.
Bob Orrison (Actor) .. Rutter
Walter Scott (Actor) .. Print
Born: September 03, 1943
Trivia: Burly stunt man Walter Scott appeared in a number of big-budget features of the '80s and '90s.
Royal Dano (Actor) .. Rustler
Born: November 16, 1922
Died: May 15, 1994
Trivia: Cadaverous, hollow-eyed Royal Dano made his theatrical entree as a minor player in the Broadway musical hit Finian's Rainbow. Born in New York City in 1922, he manifested a wanderlust that made him leave home at age 12 to travel around the country, and even after he returned home -- and eventually graduated from New York University -- he often journeyed far from the city on his own. He made his acting debut while in the United States Army during World War II, as part of a Special Services unit, and came to Broadway in the immediate postwar era. In films from 1950, he received his first important part, the Tattered Soldier, in John Huston's 1951 adaptation of Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage. Thereafter, he was often seen as a Western villain, though seldom of the cliched get-outta-town variety; in Nicholas Ray's Johnny Guitar (1954), for example, he fleshed out an ordinary bad-guy type by playing the character as a compulsive reader with a tubercular cough. He likewise did a lot with a little when cast as Mildred Natwick's deep-brooding offspring in Hitchcock's The Trouble With Harry. With his deep, resonant speaking voice and intense eyes, Dano could make a recitation of the telephone book sound impressive and significant, and some of his non-baddie characters include the prophet Elijah, who predicts the destruction of the Pequod and the death of Ahab, in Huston's Moby Dick (1956), Peter in The King of Kings (1961) and Mayor Cermak in Capone (1975); in addition, he played Abraham Lincoln in a multipart installment of the mid-'50s TV anthology Omnibus written by James Agee. On the small screen, the producers of The Rifleman got a huge amount of mileage out of his talent in five episodes in as many seasons, most notably in "Day of Reckoning" as a gunman-turned-preacher. He also appeared in memorable guest roles in the high-rent western series The Virginian, The Big Valley, and Bonanza, and had what was probably his best television role of all as the tragically insensitive father in the two-part Little House On The Prairie episode "Sylvia." Toward the end of his life, Royal Dano had no qualms about accepting questionable projects like 1990's Spaced Invaders, but here as elsewhere, he was always given a chance to shine; one of Dano's best and most bizarre latter-day roles was in Teachers (1982), as the home-room supervisor who dies of a heart attack in his first scene -- and remains in his chair, unnoticed and unmolested, until the fadeout.
Paul Harper (Actor) .. Trapper
Born: December 08, 1933
Trivia: Character actor Paul Harper appeared in a few films, mostly westerns, from the late '60s through the early '70s. Before coming to film, he had been a long-time, active participant in regional theater. His son David W. Harper, also became an actor.
José Chávez (Actor) .. Cantina Bartender
Born: June 12, 1916
Gregory Sierra (Actor) .. One-eyed Thief
Born: January 25, 1941
Trivia: Angular Anglo-Latino actor Gregory Sierra began showing up on screen in 1971 in such films as The Wrath of God. Sierra quickly familiarized himself with TV viewers via his continuing role as Julio Fuentes in the weekly sitcom Sanford and Son. He left Sanford in January of 1975 to accept the part of detective sergeant Chano Amenguale on Barney Miller, a role he held down until the fall of 1976. Next up, Sierra starred as Dr. Tony Menzies on A.E.S. Hudson Street, a 1978 TV comedy that folded after six weeks despite positive critical comment. Two years later, he was cast as South American revolutionary "El Puerco" on the nighttime serial spoof Soap, figuring prominently in the series' up-in-the-air final episode in 1981. Gregory Sierra's more recent television roles have included Lt. Victor Maldonado on the NBC sci-fier Something is Out There (1988), and the ill-fated Lt. Lou Rodriguez on the trendy 1980's cop show Miami Vice.
John Pearce (Actor) .. Spectator
Born: November 07, 1927
Dennis Fimple (Actor) .. Wounded Man in Bar
Born: January 01, 1941
Died: August 23, 2002
Trivia: A longtime character actor who uniquely parlayed his job as a newspaper delivery man into a successful acting career, Dennis Fimple never failed to end his daily route by dropping a free newspaper and headshot at the office of General Services Studios' casting director. The gamble paid off, and the casting director eventually offered young Fimple a series of small roles in Petticoat Junction. Born to an electrician and beautician in Ventura, CA, and raised in nearby Taft, the aspiring young actor decided to pursue a career on stage and screen after portraying Tom Sawyer in a junior high school play. Enchanted with his ability to goof off on-stage without getting into trouble, Fimple would eventually earn a scholarship to San Jose State and major in speech and drama in addition to earning his teaching credential. Residing in the San Francisco Bay area and working in a Cheetos factory by day, the nighttime found the tireless Fimple appearing in dinner theaters. Realizing that in order to make it, a relocation was in order, Fimple packed his bags for Hollywood with initially discouraging results. A teacher by day and newspaper delivery man by night, Fimple would follow appearances in Petticoat Junction with roles in such popular small-screen series as Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. and Here Come the Brides. Roles in such features as Cactus in the Snow (1970) and Truck Stop Women (1974) followed shortly thereafter, and appearances in the following year's The Apple Dumpling Gang and the remake of King Kong (1976) found the rugged-looking actor's face gaining increasing exposure. Often cast as rough-and-tumble rural folk, Fimple remained a staple of television and film well into the new millennium. Following his final appearance in horror-rocker Rob Zombie's throwback fright-fest House of 1000 Corpses, Fimple died of natural causes at his Frazier Park, CA, home. He was 61.
William O'connell (Actor) .. Piercetown Bartender
Born: August 20, 1933
Arthur Malet (Actor) .. Doctor
Born: September 24, 1927
Trivia: British actor Arthur Malet came into prominence in the 1960s, playing old codgers while still relatively young. As banker Dawes Jr. in Disney's Mary Poppins (1964), he shared a funny musical moment with Dick Van Dyke; later on, he appeared on Van Dyke's television show, playing a doddering hotel plumber in the memorable episode wherein Laura Petrie (Mary Tyler Moore) gets her foot stuck in a bathtub faucet. Malet went on to play a village elder in Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein (1974), and was frequently seen as butlers in both films (Heaven Can Wait) and TV (Dallas, Easy Street). And in the otherwise ponderous Peter Pan sequel Hook (1991), Arthur Malet has a delightful scene in which, as the aged "Lost Boy" Tootles, he regains his childhood flying skills and circles merrily around Big Ben.
Ted Gehring (Actor) .. Tascosa Bartender
Born: April 06, 1929
Trivia: Character actor Ted Gehring first appeared onscreen in the late '60s.
Lu Shoemaker (Actor) .. Prostitute
Patrick Campbell (Actor) .. Dr. Ephraim
Born: January 01, 1925
Died: May 30, 2003

Before / After
-

Broken Arrow
04:00 am