She Came to the Valley


7:00 pm - 9:00 pm, Today on KSMI MyFamily TV (30.3)

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About this Broadcast
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The strong-willed wife (Ronee Blakley) of a rancher crosses paths with Pancho Villa (Freddy Fender). Pat: Dean Stockwell. Lester: Scott Glenn.

1977 English
Adventure Drama Action/adventure Western

Cast & Crew
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Ronee Blakley (Actor) .. Willy Westall
Freddy Fender (Actor) .. Pancho Villa
Dean Stockwell (Actor) .. Pat Westall
Scott Glenn (Actor) .. Bill Lester
Anna Jones (Actor) .. Amara Westall
Jennifer Jones (Actor) .. Srita Westall
Rafael Flores Jr. (Actor) .. Benito Torres
Les Brecht (Actor) .. Phil Allen
Frank Benedetto (Actor) .. Captain Hernandez
Sol Marroquin (Actor) .. Colonel Vaccaro
Evelyn Guerrero (Actor) .. Connie
Ruth Reeves (Actor) .. Miss Thirty Six
Klaus Eggers (Actor) .. Klaus
Detlev Nitche (Actor) .. Zimmer
Michael Hart (Actor) .. Henry
Dan Willis (Actor) .. Mr. Courtnay
John Hayes (Actor) .. Mr. Wright
Jesus Saenz (Actor) .. Mr. Torres
Juanita Rutledge (Actor) .. Mrs. Torres
Cindy Klein (Actor) .. Rosita
Miriam Moroles (Actor) .. Carmella
Martín Sánchez (Actor) .. Grandfather
Cedric Wood (Actor) .. Sergeant Williams
Robby Romero (Actor) .. Pepe
Mary Alice Artes (Actor) .. Fanny
Frank Ray Perilli (Actor) .. Emilio
Cleo Dawson (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
W.T. Ellis (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Maurine Duncan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
T.L. Duncan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Elizabeth S. Wimberly (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Lucy Wallace McClelland (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Margaret Price (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Frank Strickland (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Pat Putnam (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Betty Lerma (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Jacquelyn Band (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Kathe Cunha (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Yolanda Gonzales (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Richard Tedrow (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Curtis Davis (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Dorothy K. Breyfogle (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Claudio Flores (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Lenora Flores (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Minerva Black (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Stella Garcia (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Cora de la Garza (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Marc Perilli (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Ronee Blakley (Actor) .. Willy Westall
Born: January 01, 1946
Trivia: During the early '70s, country & western artist Ronee Blakley was a favorite singer/songwriter of Bob Dylan and had a fairly successful singing career. In film, she penned a few songs for Welcome Home Soldier (1972). She made a stellar acting debut in 1975 playing Barbara Jean, a tragic, frail singer (alleged to be loosely patterned after Loretta Lynn) who is nearly destroyed by fame in Robert Altman's Nashville. Blakley is said to have written much of the part herself and was so convincing in the role that it won her a nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She has continued to pursue a career in film, but has since been relegated to leading and supporting roles in low-budget and independent features ranging from Walter Hill's The Driver (1978) and Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) to Someone to Love (1987). In 1985, Blakley directed and starred in the docudrama I Played It for You.
Freddy Fender (Actor) .. Pancho Villa
Born: June 04, 1937
Died: October 14, 2006
Trivia: Musician and occasional actor Freddy Fender represented a veritable anomaly: a Hispanic star of country & western, who effortlessly broke the "racial barrier" in that musical genre much as Charley Pride did -- almost concurrently -- as an African-American country singer. Born Baldemar Huerta in San Benito, TX, to an impoverished Latino family (the child of migrant laborers), Fender took to the guitar as a young child, and dropped out of secondary school at the age of 16 to enlist in the armed forces. After his service ended, Huerta, then 21, recorded a series Spanish hits (including versions of "Don't Be Cruel" and "Jamaica Farewell") under his birth name. Not one year later, he made the crossover to English-language material and white audiences by changing his name to Freddy Fender -- Fender from the headstock on his guitar, and Freddy because he liked the way it sounded with Fender. In 1960, he released the single "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights," which shot up to number one, but a three-year stint in prison for marijuana possession ensued, followed by years of musical inactivity. Fender rebounded to stardom in the '70s at the hands of Crazy Cajun music label founder Huey Meaux, and landed one of his biggest hits, the country staple "Before the Next Teardrop Falls." Many successful LPs and singles followed throughout the 1970s, into the early '80s, until about 1983, when his hits began to dry up. Fender's obituaries would widely report that he turned to a movie career largely after his musical success died, though this is somewhat inaccurate. He actually debuted onscreen in 1977, as Johnny (a bit part) in Robert M. Young's adaptation of the Miguel Piñero play Short Eyes, a drama about an imprisoned child molester. He doubled it up that same year with a turn as Pancho Villa in Albert Band's low-budget Western programmer She Came to the Valley. Fender's next major role did not arrive for another decade, when he played Mayor Sammy Cantu in Robert Redford's finely felt magic realist parable The Milagro Beanfield War. Fender made his last onscreen appearance as Tebano the Younger in Luis Valdez's 1992 picture La Pastorela, a contemporization of the traditional Spanish Christmas play about the shepherds visiting baby Jesus in Bethlehem. Additional filmed appearances by Fender include a number of concerts, such as the 1986 Great Country: Live from Church Street and the 2003 Freddy Fender Live!, a performance conducted and filmed at the Riverside casino in Laughlin, NV. In 1990, Fender formed the Tex-Mex band the Texas Tornados, but after three albums with that ensemble, the group disbanded and Fender struck out on his own, once again, as a solo musician. On October 14, 2006, Fender died of lung cancer, at the age of 69, in his home of Corpus Christi, TX.
Dean Stockwell (Actor) .. Pat Westall
Born: March 05, 1936
Died: November 07, 2021
Birthplace: Hollywood, California, United States
Trivia: Fans of the science fiction television series Quantum Leap will know supporting and character actor Dean Stockwell as the scene-stealing, cigar chomping, dry-witted, and cryptic hologram Al. But to view him only in that role is to see one part of a multi-faceted career that began when Stockwell was seven years old.Actually, his ties with show business stretch back to his birth for both of his parents were noted Broadway performers Harry Stockwell and Nina Olivette. His father also provided the singing voice of the prince in Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1931). Stockwell was born in North Hollywood and started out on Broadway in The Innocent Voyage (1943) at age seven. Curly haired and beautiful with a natural acting style that never descended into cloying cuteness, he made his screen debut after contracting with MGM at age nine in Anchors Aweigh (1945) and continued on to play sensitive boys in such memorable outings as The Mighty McGurk (1946), The Boy With Green Hair (1948), and The Secret Garden (1949). He would continue appearing in such films through 1951 when he went into the first of several "retirements" from films. When Stockwell resurfaced five years later it was as a brooding and very handsome 20-year-old who specialized in playing introverts and sensitive souls in roles ranging from a wild, young cowboy in Gun for a Coward (1957) to a murderous homosexual in Compulsion (1958) to an aspiring artist who cannot escape the influence of his domineering mother in Sons and Lovers (1960). Stockwell topped off this phase of his career portraying Eugene O'Neill in Long Day's Journey Into Night (1962). Stockwell would spend the next three years as a hippie and when he again renewed his career it was in such very '60s efforts as Psych-Out (1968) and the spooky and weird adaptation of a Lovecraft story, The Dunwich Horror. During this period, Stockwell also started appearing in television movies such as The Failing of Raymond (1971). In the mid-'70s, the former flower child became a real-estate broker and his acting career became sporadic until the mid-'80s when he began playing character roles. It was in this area, especially in regard to comic characters, that Stockwell has had his greatest success. Though he claims it was not intentional, Stockwell has come to be almost typecast as the king of quirk, playing a wide variety of eccentrics and outcasts. One of his most famous '80s roles was that of the effeminate and rutlhess sleaze, Ben, in David Lynch's Blue Velvet (1986). Stockwell had previously worked with Lynch in Dune and says that when the director gave him the script for Velvet, his character was not specifically mapped out, leaving Stockwell to portray Ben in any way he felt appropriate. The actor's intuition has proven to be one of his greatest tools and helped create one of modern Hollywood's most creepy-crawly villains. Whenever possible, Stockwell prefers working by instinct and actively avoids over-rehearsing his parts. His career really picked up after he landed the part of Al in Quantum Leap. Since the show's demise, Stockwell has continued to appear on screen, starring on series like Battlestar Galactica.
Scott Glenn (Actor) .. Bill Lester
Born: January 26, 1941
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Ex-marine and ex-newspaper reporter Scott Glenn was ideally suited to the action-oriented films that would become his lot in the 1980s and 1990s. After learning the rudiments of his craft at the Actors Studio and appearing off-Broadway, Glenn made his film bow in 1970's The Baby Maker. He was rescued from low-budget cycle flicks by director Robert Altman, who cast Glenn as Pfc. Glenn Kelly in Nashville (1975). As rangy and rugged off-camera as on, Glenn was one of the few film actors of recent years to flourish in western roles: among his more impressive credits within this genre are Cattle Annie and Little Britches (1981), Silverado (1985), My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys (1993), and, stretching a point a bit, Urban Cowboy (1980). Glenn has been equally laudable in such suit-and-tie roles as Jodie Foster's FBI chief in The Silence of the Lambs (1991), in "military" assignments like astronaut Alan Shepard in The Right Stuff (1981) and the U.S. sub commander in Hunt for Red October (1990). As a tribute to Robert Altman, the director who elevated him to "A" pictures back in 1975, Scott Glenn accepted a drastic cut in salary to portray "Himself" in Altman's The Player (1992). Over the next several years, Glenn remained active on screen, appearing in films like Training Day, The Virgin Suicides, The Bourne Ultimatum, W., and The Paperboy.
Anna Jones (Actor) .. Amara Westall
Jennifer Jones (Actor) .. Srita Westall
Born: March 02, 1919
Died: December 17, 2009
Birthplace: Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Trivia: Though often overshadowed by some of her female contemporaries as the years passed, Jennifer Jones came to embody one of the preeminent examples of a Hollywood star. With qualities that transcended preternatural beauty, she projected the sort of charisma that cannot be feigned, courting legions of fans in the process, as she graced one film after another with her presence. And then, just as suddenly as she had risen to greatness, Jones dropped out of the limelight and withdrew into anonymity, spending the last several decades of her life well outside of the public eye. Jennifer Jones began life in Tulsa, OK, as Phyllis Isley, the daughter of vaudeville performers. Ensconced in show business from the beginning, she dreamed of establishing herself as an actress from early childhood. As a young woman, Isley studied at New York's American Academy of Dramatic Arts and revealed incredible promise; during that tenure, she also met and grew enchanted with a young actor named Robert Walker; they did summer stock together, fell deeply in love, married, and parented two children, Robert Walker, Jr., and Michael Ross Walker. Then Hollywood beckoned to Isley, first with a supporting role in a Republic western, and then in the form of a talent agent from megaproducer David O. Selznick, the giant responsible for Gone With the Wind. Though the agent sensed greatness from the ingenue's initial reading and arranged a meeting between Isley and Selznick without hesitation, Isley reportedly felt ashamed by the Republic B picture and attempted to obscure its presence. She needn't have worried; the initial meeting between Selznick and Isley (whom he renamed Jennifer Jones) permanently changed both of their lives and made Jones a household name. For years, film historians have speculated (and fans have gossiped) about the initial exchanges that materialized between Jones and Selznick, the history of their relationship, and some of the tragedies surrounding it. Many of the exact details will never be known, but readily apparent were Selznick's vision of Jones as his next great star, Jones's decision to leave and then divorce Walker and marry Selznick, and Walker's understandable difficulty in handling these events. By all accounts an emotionally fragile individual (though an incredibly kind and sensitive one), Walker himself moved to Hollywood and experienced a brief period of stardom that peaked with a lead role in Hitchcock's 1951 Strangers on a Train, but he could never quite emotionally adjust to the end of his marriage, or the fact that Jones had left him and married the single most powerful and wealthy person in Hollywood. On a note of sad irony, the two appeared opposite one another as former lovers in a blockbuster produced by Selznick, the 1944 Since You Went Away. Tragically, Walker struggled for years to cope with the divorce, and his life ended at the age of 32, when, following a nervous breakdown and an institutionalization, he received a fatal dose of sodium amatol from a psychiatrist.Jones did the bulk of her early work under new husband Selznick's aegis, and for 15-20 years her career thrived. Selznick preferred casting her in romantic material (often with a tragic undercurrent), and his instincts struck a chord with the public. After receiving an Oscar for her turn as the scorned and martyred Catholic saint Bernadette in the 1943 religious drama The Song of Bernadette, she starred opposite Joseph Cotten in the 1948 fantasy romance Portrait of Jennie (also a huge hit), played Emma Bovary in Vincente Minnelli's 1949 Madame Bovary, and the tragic title character in William Wyler's Theodore Dreiser adaptation Carrie (1952). Yet Jones also unveiled a wicked flair for comedy on a number of occasions, notably as an English cockney plumber in Ernst Lubitsch's magnificent 1946 farce Cluny Brown, and as an English lord's wife plagued by pathological lying in the unfairly maligned John Huston comedy Beat the Devil (1953). Jones continued her acting work into the late '60s, and she racked up a series of four additional Oscar nods for various performances, yet her screen appearances grew less and less frequent. Her private life and marriage to Selznick reportedly brought its share of complications, and the couple's first pregnancy ended in a miscarriage; following Selznick's death in June 1965, Jones endured a lengthy period of severe depression. The actress remarried philanthropist Norton Simon in the early '70s, and co-ran a foundation that he chaired, with the assistance of various celebrity friends. The second marriage lasted until Simon's death in the summer of 1993. Jones accepted one of her final screen roles in the 1974 disaster opus The Towering Inferno, a part for which she drew a substantial amount of acclaim. The actress died in December 2009 at the age of 90.
Rafael Flores Jr. (Actor) .. Benito Torres
Les Brecht (Actor) .. Phil Allen
Frank Benedetto (Actor) .. Captain Hernandez
Sol Marroquin (Actor) .. Colonel Vaccaro
Evelyn Guerrero (Actor) .. Connie
Ruth Reeves (Actor) .. Miss Thirty Six
Klaus Eggers (Actor) .. Klaus
Detlev Nitche (Actor) .. Zimmer
Michael Hart (Actor) .. Henry
Dan Willis (Actor) .. Mr. Courtnay
John Hayes (Actor) .. Mr. Wright
Born: March 01, 1930
Jesus Saenz (Actor) .. Mr. Torres
Juanita Rutledge (Actor) .. Mrs. Torres
Cindy Klein (Actor) .. Rosita
Miriam Moroles (Actor) .. Carmella
Martín Sánchez (Actor) .. Grandfather
Cedric Wood (Actor) .. Sergeant Williams
Robby Romero (Actor) .. Pepe
Mary Alice Artes (Actor) .. Fanny
Frank Ray Perilli (Actor) .. Emilio
Cleo Dawson (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
W.T. Ellis (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Maurine Duncan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
T.L. Duncan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Elizabeth S. Wimberly (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Lucy Wallace McClelland (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Margaret Price (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Frank Strickland (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Pat Putnam (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Betty Lerma (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Jacquelyn Band (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Kathe Cunha (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Yolanda Gonzales (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Richard Tedrow (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Curtis Davis (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Dorothy K. Breyfogle (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Claudio Flores (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Lenora Flores (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Minerva Black (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Stella Garcia (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: July 06, 1942
Cora de la Garza (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Marc Perilli (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest

Before / After
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The Wager
6:30 pm