Scalplock


12:00 am - 02:00 am, Friday, July 10 on WPIX Grit TV (11.3)

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About this Broadcast
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A gambler (Dale Robertson) wins a railroad in a card game and tries to make it pay. Robert Random, Roger Torrey, John Anderson, Diana Hyland, Cliff Hall, Lloyd Bochner. Nehemiah: James Westerfield. Directed by James Goldstone.

1966 English Dolby 5.1
Western


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Did You Know..
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Dale Robertson (Actor)
Born: July 14, 1923
Died: February 27, 2013
Birthplace: Harrah, Oklahoma, United States
Parentimage: http://cps-static.rovicorp.com/2/Open/Getty_Images_406/Person/444387/104609088.jpg
Imagecredits: J. P. Aussenard/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty Images
Trivia: Ex-prizefighter Dale Robertson was brought to films by virtue of his vocal and physical resemblance to Clark Gable. After a year of bit parts at Warner Bros., Robertson graduated to leading-man gigs at 20th Century Fox. In 1957, Robertson was cast on the popular TV Western Tales of Wells Fargo which ran until 1962. Since that time, Robertson has starred or co-starred in a number of television weeklies, nearly always Western (both period and contemporary) in nature: The Iron Horse (1966-1968), Dynasty (1980-1982), and J.J. Starbuck (1989). In addition, Dale Robertson has headlined two TV-movie pilots based on the exploits of famed G-Man Melvin Purvis. Robertson made his final screen appearance in Martha Coolidge's 1991 period piece Rambling Rose, passing away from lung cancer over twenty years later at the age of 89.
Robert Random (Actor)
Roger Torrey (Actor)
Diana Hyland (Actor)
Born: January 25, 1936
Died: March 27, 1977
Trivia: American actress Diana Hyland took private acting lessons as a high school student, debuting professionally at age 17 at the Rabbit Run Theatre of Madison, Ohio. Once in New York, she worked part time as the switchboard operator of her apartment building, hitting pay dirt actingwise with an important role on TV's Robert Montgomery Presents. More TV work followed, as did summer stock appearances with the likes of Claudette Colbert and a tour with the stage play Look Back in Anger; Diana capped the '50s with a Broadway appearance in Sweet Bird of Youth, costarring Paul Newman and Geraldine Page. Like most New York-based actresses of the era, Diana did a soap opera stint (Young Dr. Malone), but after her character was abruptly killed off she headed for the ostensibly greener pastures of Hollywood. Her first job there, supporting Robert Redford in an Alcoa Premiere drama, earned Diana an Emmy nomination, leading to prolific guest-star work on such series as Dr. Kildare, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and Twilight Zone. Undeniably talented, Diana was best known in studio circles for her impatience and outspokenness, and in fact was reprimanded in print for this trait by columnist Hedda Hopper. Her film career was far less interesting than her TV work: The Chase (1966) is the only Diana Hyland performance seen on a regular basis on television these days, and it's hardly worthy of her or anyone else in the cast (which included Marlon Brando, Robert Redford and Jane Fonda). Except for a recurring role on Peyton Place in the mid '60s, Diana avoid regular primetime series work until 1976, when she signed to play Dick Van Patten's wife on Eight is Enough. That same year, she costarred in the TV movie Boy in the Plastic Bubble with John Travolta. Diana fell in love with Travolta, 17 years her junior, and the two moved in together. Thus 1977 should have been a professional and personal high water mark for Diana Hyland. But on March 27 of that year, Diana died of cancer, which devastated not only Travolta but the entire Eight is Enough cast. The five completed episodes starring Diana Hyland began telecasting on March 15, a scant twelve days before her death.
Todd Armstrong (Actor)
Born: July 25, 1937
Died: November 17, 1992
Birthplace: St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Trivia: Todd Armstrong was an early-'60s leading man who is best remembered for his work in the title role of the fantasy epic Jason and the Argonauts (1963). Born John Harris Armstrong in Missouri in 1937, he moved to California and studied acting at the Pasadena Playhouse in the second half of the 1950s. He had difficulty finding steady acting work, however, until he was discovered while working at his day job as a landscape gardener. Armstrong was at the home of Gloria Henry, a film and television actress who was signed to Columbia Pictures (where she was working on the series Dennis the Menace, playing the title character's mother). She was sufficiently impressed with his good looks to arrange for him to get a screen test at Columbia. He subsequently appeared in 13 episodes of the series Manhunt, starring Victor Jory. Armstrong had supporting roles in two movies during 1962: Walk on the Wild Side (where he was credited as Todd Anderson) and Five Finger Exercise. He broke into stardom in Jason and the Argonauts the following year; ironically, both his and co-star Nancy Kovack's voices were redubbed by other actors, owing to the fact that they were the only Americans in the otherwise all-British cast and would have sounded out of place amid a sea of English accents. Despite this handicap, he cut a commanding yet humane figure in the movie in the role of Jason, though all of the actors were eclipsed by Ray Harryhausen's special effects. Armstrong had one more leading role, in Bryan Forbes' King Rat (1965), and after that receded to supporting parts in pictures such as Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round (1966), and moved back into television work during the remainder of the 1960s and the 1970s.
James Westerfield (Actor)
Born: March 22, 1913
Died: September 20, 1971
Trivia: Character actor James Westerfield made comparatively few films, as his first love was the stage; he produced, directed and acted in a number of Broadway productions, and was the recipient of two New York Drama Critics awards. In films from 1941 (he's easily recognizable as a traffic cop in Orson Welles' The Magnificent Ambersons), he was generally cast as villains, notably as a recurring rapscallion on the 1963 TV series The Travels of Jamie McPheeters. Disney fans will remember Westerfield as the flustered small-town police officer (variously named Hanson and Morrison) in such fanciful farces as The Shaggy Dog (1959), The Absent Minded Professor (1960) and Son of Flubber (1963). James Westerfield was married to actress Fay Tracy.
James Goldstone (Actor)
Born: June 08, 1931
Died: November 05, 1999
Trivia: After attending Dartmouth and Bennington, James Goldstone made his directorial debut in episodic television; in the 1960s, he was one of the earliest stalwarts of the TV-movie genre, helming the pilots for the TV series Star Trek, Ironside and The Senator. His entree into theatrical features was the 1969 James Garner vehicle A Man Called Gannon. In his subsequent films, notably Red Sky at Morning (1971) and They Only Kill Their Masters (1972), Goldstone successfully combined motion-picture production values with TV-movie pacing. Bowing out of big-screen pictures with the ignominious Irwin Allen When Time Ran Out (1980), James Goldstone returned to television, directing such made-for-TV features as Kent State (1981) (which earned him an Emmy award), Charles and Diana: A Royal Love Story (1982) and The Bride in Black (1990).
John Anderson (Actor)
Born: October 20, 1922
Died: August 07, 1992
Trivia: Dour, lantern-jawed character actor John Anderson attended the University of Iowa before inaugurating his performing career on a Mississippi showboat. After serving in the Coast Guard during World War II, Anderson made his Broadway bow, then first appeared on screen in 1952's The Crimson Pirate. The actor proved indispensable to screenwriters trafficking in such stock characters as The Vengeful Gunslinger, The Inbred Hillbilly Patriarch, The Scripture-Spouting Zealot and The Rigid Authority Figure. Anderson's many screen assignments included used-car huckster California Charlie in Psycho (1960), the implicitly incestuous Elder Hammond in Ride the High Country (1962), the title character in The Lincoln Conspiracy (1977) and Caiaphas in In Search of Historic Jesus (1980). A dead ringer for 1920s baseball commissioner Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, Anderson portrayed that uncompromising gentleman twice, in 1988's Eight Men Out and the 1991 TV biopic Babe Ruth. A veteran of 500 TV appearances (including four guest stints on The Twilight Zone), John Anderson was seen as FDR in the 1978 miniseries Backstairs in the White House, and on a regular basis as Michael Spencer Hudson in the daytime drama Another World, Virgil Earp in The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (1955-61) and the leading man's flinty father in MacGiver (1985-92).
Lloyd Bochner (Actor)
Born: July 29, 1924
Died: October 29, 2005
Trivia: After racking up impressive stage credits in Canada and the U.S., actor Lloyd Bochner familiarized himself with American televiewers in the supporting role of Captain Nicholas Lacey in the prime-time TV serial One Man's Family (1952). Dozens of guest-star assignments later, Bochner again showed up on a weekly basis as police chief Neil Campbell in Hong Kong (1960). His later TV series stints included The Richard Boone Show (1963, as a member of Boone's "repertory company"), and Dynasty (1981-1982 season, as Cecil Colby). In films from 1963's Drums of Africa, Bochner has been seen in such characterizations as Marc Peters in the Carol Lynley version of Harlow (1965) and Dr. Cory in The Dunwich Horror (1969). By far, Bochner's most memorable assignment was the 1962 Twilight Zone episode "To Serve Man," as the scientist who learns all too late that "It's a cookbook!"; nearly 30 years later, he parodied this deathless moment in Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear (1991). Lloyd Bochner is the father of Emmy-winning actor Hart Bochner.
James Doohan (Actor)
Born: March 03, 1920
Died: July 20, 2005
Birthplace: Vancouver, British Columbia
Parentimage: http://cps-static.rovicorp.com/2/Open/Getty/James%20Doohan/1825238.jpg
Imagecredits: Robert Mora/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty Images
Trivia: Canadian-born actor James Doohan trained for his career at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse and built much of his reputation upon his uncanny skill at foreign dialects. It was director James Goldstone who in 1965 suggested that Doohan audition for the supporting role of chief engineer of the U.S.S. Enterprise on Star Trek. After trying out a variety of accents during the audition, Doohan latched onto a Scottish brogue which tickled the fancy of Trek producer Gene Roddenberry. Thus, the chief engineer was dubbed Scotty -- or, more formally, Lt. Montgomery Scott (Montgomery happened to be Doohan's middle name). The actor remained in the role until Star Trek's cancellation in 1969, subsequently reviving the character for the 1974 cartoon series and the many theatrical films. Though he most assuredly had a career outside of Scotty (among many other projects, he was one of the stars of the 1979 Saturday-morning TV series Jason of Star Command), Doohan has frequently been called upon to play variations of the character in film and TV projects ranging from National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1 to Knight Rider 2000.
Sandra Smith (Actor)

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