Where the Red Fern Grows


10:00 am - 12:00 pm, Today on KNMT Positiv (24.5)

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About this Broadcast
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During the Great Depression, a boy works hard and saves up to buy two hunting dogs. Owner and animals soon bond as they go on a series of adventures together, which include participating in a local hunting competition.

1974 English
Drama Children Pets Adaptation

Cast & Crew
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Stewart Petersen (Actor) .. Billy
James Whitmore (Actor) .. Grandpa
Beverly Garland (Actor) .. Mother
Jack Ging (Actor) .. Father
Lonny Chapman (Actor) .. Sheriff
Jill Clark (Actor) .. Alice
Jeanna Wilson (Actor) .. Sara
Bill Thurman (Actor) .. Sam
Bill Dunbar (Actor) .. Ben
Rex Corley (Actor) .. Rubin
John Lindsey (Actor) .. Rainie
Garland McKinney (Actor) .. Pritchard
Robert Telford (Actor) .. Station Master
Charles Seat (Actor) .. Carl
Roger Pancake (Actor) .. Shopkeeper
Marshall Edwards (Actor) .. Preacher
Jeannie Wilson (Actor) .. Sara

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Stewart Petersen (Actor) .. Billy
Trivia: Lead actor, onscreen from 1975.
James Whitmore (Actor) .. Grandpa
Born: February 06, 2009
Died: February 06, 2009
Birthplace: White Plains, New York, United States
Trivia: Whitmore attended Yale, where he joined the Yale Drama School Players and co-founded the Yale radio station. After serving in World War II with the Marines, he did some work in stock and then debuted on Broadway in 1947's Command Decision. He entered films in 1949, going on to play key supporting roles; occasionally, he also played leads. For his work in Battleground (1949), his second film, he received a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination. He starred in the early '60s TV series "The Law and Mr. Jones." He won much acclaim for his work in the one-man stage show Give 'Em Hell, Harry!, in which he played Harry Truman; he reprised the role in the 1975 screen version, for which he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination. After 1980 his screen appearances were infrequent. He is the father of actor James Whitmore Jr.
Beverly Garland (Actor) .. Mother
Born: October 17, 1926
Died: December 05, 2008
Trivia: Had the Fates smiled upon her, the versatile Beverly Garland would have been one of the biggest female stars in films. She started out well, with a plum part in the noir classic DOA (1949), in which she was billed as Beverly Campbell. Alas, Garland was never one to keep her opinions to herself, and her pointed comments about some of her DOA colleagues turned her into a Hollywood pariah before her career had even begun. She eventually worked her way back up the ladder with supporting roles in theatrical features and guest-star assignments on television. Garland rapidly earned a reputation as a "good luck charm" for TV-pilot producers, who could usually count on a sale if Garland was featured in their product. She guested on the first episode of Medic as an expectant leukemia victim, and was co-starred in the pilots of no fewer than three Rod Cameron TV vehicles: City Detective, State Trooper and Coronado 9, all of which sold. In the mid-1950s, Garland was briefly the inamorata of quickie producer/director Roger Corman, who prominently cast her in such cheapies as It Conquered the World (1955) and Not of This Earth (1956). She starred in the 1957 syndicated TV series Policewoman Decoy, which permitted her to adopt a variety of convincing guises in the line of duty. From the 1960s on, Garland was everyone's favorite TV wife or mother: she played Bing Crosby's wife in The Bing Crosby Show (1964), Fred MacMurray's wife on the last three seasons (1969-72) of My Three Sons, Stephanie Zimbalist's mother in Remington Steele (1982-86) and Kate Jackson's mother on Scarecrow and Mrs. King (1983-87). Active into the 1990s, Beverly Garland supplemented her acting income with her job as spokesperson for a major Midwestern travel agency. She died in 2008 at age
Jack Ging (Actor) .. Father
Born: November 30, 1931
Trivia: Though weighing in at a sylphlike 155 pounds, Jack Ging starred for three years in the backfield of the University of Oklahoma football team. After a hitch in the Marines, Ging headed to Hollywood to break into the movies. He made his film debut in The Ghost of Dragstrip Hollow (1959), then secured the continuing role of Beau McCloud on TV's Tales of Wells Fargo (1961-62). From 1962 to 1964, Ging starred as clinical psychologist Paul Graham on the NBC weekly The Eleventh Hour. Jack Ging went on to play authoritative supporting roles in three TV series: Detective Chuck Morris in Dear Detective (1979), Lt. Ted Quinlan in Riptide (1984-85) and Sheriff Hollings in PS I Luv U (1991).
Lonny Chapman (Actor) .. Sheriff
Born: October 01, 1920
Died: October 12, 2007
Birthplace: Tulsa, Oklahoma
Trivia: University of Oklahoma alumnus Lonny Chapman inaugurated his professional acting career in 1948. While co-starring in the Broadway production of Come Back Little Sheba, Chapman arranged for his college chum Dennis Weaver to understudy for him. Weaver went on to TV fame as Chester on the Western series Gunsmoke, while Chapman prospered as a film character actor, playing such roles as Roy in East of Eden (1955), Rock in Baby Doll (1957), and Deke Carter in Hitchcock's The Birds (1963). On TV, Lonny Chapman starred as private eye Jeff Prior in the 1958 summer-replacement series The Investigator, and was featured as another detective, Frank Malloy, in the 1965 courtroom weekly For the People (1965).
Jill Clark (Actor) .. Alice
Jeanna Wilson (Actor) .. Sara
Bill Thurman (Actor) .. Sam
Born: November 04, 1920
Trivia: American actor Bill Thurman is one of several Southern performers specializing in "regional" pictures -- films made exclusively for distribution in the deep South by states' rights exhibitors. In the '60s, Thurman appeared in a group of inexpensive horror films, many of them remakes of earlier American-International Pictures releases, and most of them directed in a hurry by Larry Buchanan: titles in this series include Curse of the Swamp Creature (1966), Zontar, the Thing From Venus (1968) and In the Year 2889 (1968). The actor has had numerous roles in other exploitation quickies like Gator Bait (1975) and Slumber Party 57 (1977). Bill Thurman had one shining moment of glory in an A-picture, as the high school coach husband of frustrated Cloris Leachman in Peter Bogdanovich's The Last Picture Show (1972); but as late as 1986, Thurman was back at his old stand, appearing as Reverend Bill McWilley in Mountaintop Motel Massacre (1986).
Bill Dunbar (Actor) .. Ben
Rex Corley (Actor) .. Rubin
John Lindsey (Actor) .. Rainie
Garland McKinney (Actor) .. Pritchard
Robert Telford (Actor) .. Station Master
Charles Seat (Actor) .. Carl
Roger Pancake (Actor) .. Shopkeeper
Born: August 15, 1934
Marshall Edwards (Actor) .. Preacher
Jeannie Wilson (Actor) .. Sara
Born: February 04, 1947

Before / After
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