The Rifleman
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The Rifleman | |
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File:The Rifleman TV Series-611880410-main.jpg
DVD case for The Rifleman, 1958
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Genre | Western |
Created by | Sam Peckinpah (uncredited), Arnold Laven |
Starring | Chuck Connors Johnny Crawford Paul Fix |
Composer(s) | Herschel Burke Gilbert |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 5 |
No. of episodes | 168 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Levy-Gardner-Laven[1] Arthur H. Nadel (associate) |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production company(s) | Four Star Productions |
Distributor | Peter Rodgers Organization |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Picture format | Black-and-white |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | September 30, 1958 April 8, 1963 |
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Chronology | |
Related shows | Law of the Plainsman |
External links | |
[{{#property:P856}} Website] |
The Rifleman is an American Western television program starring Chuck Connors as rancher Lucas McCain and Johnny Crawford as his son Mark McCain. It was set in the 1880s in the fictional town of North Fork, New Mexico Territory. The show was filmed in black and white, in half-hour episodes. The Rifleman aired on ABC from September 30, 1958, to April 8, 1963, as a production of Four Star Television. It was one of the first primetime series on US television to show a single parent raising a child.
The program was titled to reflect McCain's use of a Winchester Model 1892 rifle, a historical anachronism, as the show was set in the 1880s, and customized to allow repeated firing by cycling its lever action. He demonstrated this technique in the opening credits, as well as a second modification that allowed him to cycle the action with one hand using a technique known as "spin-cocking".[2]
Contents
Overview
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The series centers on Lucas McCain, a Union veteran of the American Civil War and widower. McCain had been a lieutenant in the 11th Indiana Infantry Regiment, and he had received a battlefield commission at the Battle of Five Forks just before the end of the war.[3] (This conflicts with episode 3/25, "The Prisoner", in which a former Confederate cavalry major states that he was Lieutenant McCain's prisoner after the Battle of Fort Donelson.[4]) Having previously been a homesteader, McCain buys a ranch outside the fictitious town of North Fork, New Mexico Territory, in the pilot episode. His son Mark and he had come from Enid, Oklahoma, following the death of his wife, Margaret (née Gibbs), when his son was six years old.[citation needed] The citizens of North Fork are sometimes willing to subject themselves to tyranny, showing themselves to be cowards in several episodes.
The series was set during the 1880s; a wooden plaque next to the McCain home states that the home was rebuilt by Lucas McCain and his son Mark in August 1881.[5]
A common thread in the series is that people deserve a second chance; Marshal Micah Torrance is a recovering alcoholic, and McCain gives a convict a job on his ranch in "The Marshal". Royal Dano appeared in "The Sheridan Story" as a former Confederate soldier who is given a job on the McCain ranch and encounters General Philip Sheridan, the man who cost him his arm in battle. Learning why the man wants him dead, Sheridan arranges for medical care for his wounded former foe, quoting Abraham Lincoln's last orders to "... bind up the nation's wounds".[6]
Despite his status as the series' protagonist, Lucas McCain is not without fault; He has a tendency to be stubborn and bossy, and has a bit of an inflated ego. In "Death Trap", an episode with Philip Carey as former gunman (and old adversary) Simon Battles, he is unwilling to believe the man has changed and become a doctor. It takes a gunfight (with Battles fighting alongside him) to make him admit he is wrong. In "Two Ounces of Tin", with Sammy Davis Jr. as Tip Corey (a former circus trick-shot artist turned gunman), McCain angrily orders him off the ranch when he finds him demonstrating his skills to Mark. Corey suggests he is a hypocrite, because McCain has an equally deadly reputation in the Indian Territory of Oklahoma, where he first acquired the nickname "the Rifleman", and where his wife had died during a smallpox epidemic.[citation needed]
Cast
Main
- Chuck Connors as Lucas McCain, a rancher, a Union Army veteran of the American Civil War, father, and widower
- Johnny Crawford as Mark McCain, Lucas's son
- Paul Fix as Micah Torrance, marshal of North Fork, New Mexico
Recurring
- Bill Quinn as Frank Sweeney, the North Fork Saloon bartender (38 episodes)
- Patricia Blair as Mallory House hotel owner Lou Mallory (22 episodes)
- Joe Higgins as blacksmith Nels Swenson (21 episodes)
- Harlan Warde as banker John Hamilton (18 episodes)
- Joan Taylor as general store owner Milly Scott (18 episodes)
- Hope Summers as general store owner Hattie Denton (16 episodes)
- John Harmon as hotel clerk Eddie Halstead (12 episodes)
- Chris Alcaide as a regular baddie (10 episodes)
Eight actors played the town doctor during the series (usually known as "Doc Burrage"): Paul Fix (first episode only; he returned to the cast as Micah), Edgar Buchanan, Fay Roope, Rhys Williams, Jack Kruschen, Robert Burton, Ralph Moody and Bert Stevens. In addition to Joe Higgins, several actors also played blacksmith Nels (sometimes credited as Nils) Swenson, including Richard Alexander, John Dierkes, Henry Rowland and Karl Swenson.
Guest stars
More than 500 actors made guest appearances in more than 970 credited roles during the five-year run of the series.[7] Guest stars included veteran actors: John Anderson, Richard Anderson, Lyle Bettger, Whit Bissell, Harry Carey Jr., John Carradine, Lon Chaney, Jr., Ellen Corby, John Dehner, Jack Elam, Med Flory, Dabbs Greer, Rodolfo Hoyos, Jr., L.Q. Jones, John Milford, Agnes Moorehead, Denver Pyle, Lee Van Cleef, Royal Dano and Adam West, most appearing multiple times in different roles. Several then-newcomers also appeared in the series, including Claude Akins, James Coburn (credited as "Jim"), Mark Goddard, Dan Blocker, James Drury, Dennis Hopper, Michael Landon, Warren Oates, Harry Dean Stanton, Robert Vaughn, Robert Culp (who starred in Four Star Productions' "Trackdown" from 1957 to 1959), Martin Landau and Richard Kiel. Other notable guest stars & character actors who made cameo appearances were Sammy Davis, Jr., future baseball Hall of Famers Duke Snider and Don Drysdale, comedian Buddy Hackett, George Macready, Pernell Roberts (who starred on Bonanza at the time), Bobby Crawford Jr. (the brother of series star Johnny Crawford; himself a star on Laramie from 1959-1960) and writer/director/producer Paul Mazursky.[7]
Episodes
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Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
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Season premiere | Season finale | |||
1 | 40 | September 30, 1958 | June 30, 1959 | |
2 | 36 | September 29, 1959 | May 31, 1960 | |
3 | 34 | September 27, 1960 | May 16, 1961 | |
4 | 32 | October 2, 1961 | May 7, 1962 | |
5 | 26 | October 1, 1962 | April 8, 1963 |
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Season 3 (1960–1961)
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Season 4 (1961–1962)
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Season 5 (1962–1963)
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References
- The Rifleman at epguides.com
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Rifleman at IMDb
Production
The Rifleman was partially filmed in Wildwood Regional Park in Thousand Oaks, California.[8][9]
Development
The series was created by Arnold Laven and developed by Sam Peckinpah, who became a director of Western movies. Peckinpah, who wrote and directed many early episodes, based many characters and plots on his own childhood on a ranch. His insistence on violent realism and complex characterizations, as well as his refusal to sugarcoat the lessons he felt the Rifleman's son needed to learn about life, put him at odds with the show's producers at Four Star. Peckinpah left the show and created a short-lived series, The Westerner, with Brian Keith.[citation needed]
Opening credits
The opening theme at the beginning of each episode depicted McCain walking down the street of a town while rapid-firing his Winchester 44-40 1892 model rifle that had been modified at the trigger and lever. The rifle's modification allowed McCain to fire the rifle only by hand pumping the lever, which had a setscrew imbedded in it to trip the weapon's trigger.[citation needed] At various points during the series, episodes would show McCain deftly handling and shooting the rifle ambidextrously.[10] When Connors auditioned for the show, the director suddenly threw a rifle at him; the former Major League Baseball player caught it and got the job.[11]
Rifle
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Westerns were popular when The Rifleman premiered, and producers tried to find gimmicks to distinguish one show from another. The Rifleman's gimmick was a modified Winchester Model 1892 rifle, with a large ring lever drilled and tapped for a set screw. The lever design allowed him to cock the rifle by spinning it around his hand. In addition, the screw could be positioned to depress the trigger every time he worked the lever, allowing for rapid fire, emptying the magazine in under six seconds during the opening credits on North Fork's main street.[12]
The trigger-trip screw pin was used in two configurations: with the screw head turned inside (close to the trigger), or more often, outside the trigger guard with a locknut on the outside (to secure its position). In some episodes, the screw was removed, when rapid-fire action was not required. When properly adjusted, the screw “squeezed” the trigger when the lever was fully closed. The rapid-fire mechanism was originally designed to keep Connors from puncturing his finger with the trigger as he quickly cycled the action of the rifle. With this modification, Connors pulling the trigger for each shot was not necessary, so he did not have to place his finger in harm's way.
The rifle may have appeared in every episode, but it was not always fired; some plots did not require violent solutions (for example, one involving Mark's rigid new teacher). McCain attempts to solve as many problems as possible without resorting to shooting, yet still manages to kill 120 villains over the show's five-year run. Notably, McCain almost never carried a pistol, although he is a good shot with it, especially when he improvised a crude gunstock from a board, when facing a villain who had stolen his rifle.
The rifle used on the set of The Rifleman, an 1892 Winchester caliber .44-40 carbine with a standard 20-inch barrel, was an historical anachronism, as the show was set in 1881, 12 years before John Browning had designed the rifle. It appeared with two different types of levers. The backwards, round-D-style loop was used in the early episodes. Sometimes, the rifle McCain uses has a saddle ring. The lever style later changed to a flatter lever (instead of the large loop) with no saddle ring.
McCain fires 12 shots from his rifle during the opening credits - seven shots in the first close-up and five more as the camera switches to another view. The blank cartridges are shorter than standard cartridges, so the magazine can hold more of the blanks. The soundtrack contained a dubbed 13th shot, to allow the firing to end with a section of the theme music. The rifle was chambered for the .44-40 Winchester center fire cartridge, which was used in both revolvers and rifles.[13] He could supposedly fire off his first round in three-tenths of a second, which certainly helped in a showdown.
Gunsmith James S. Stembridge modified two Model 1892s for use in regular and close-up filming.[14] In addition, a Spanish-made Gárate y Anitúa "El Tigre" lever action, a near-copy of the Model 1892, was modified for use as a knockabout gun. The El Tigre is seen in scenes where the rifle is in a saddle scabbard and is not drawn, and in stunts where the rifle was thrown to the ground, used as a club, or in any stunt where a possibility of damage to the original Winchester 1892s existed.[15] These three rifles were the only ones used by Connors during the run of the series.
The now-defunct Stembridge Gun Rentals provided the rifles and ammunition. Ammunition was quarter-load 5-in-1 blank cartridges containing smokeless powder, which did not produce the thick clouds of smoke the genuine black powder cartridges of the 1880s did. Most (if not all) of the sound effects for the rifle shots were dubbed, which is why the rifle sounded so different from the other gunshots on the show.
The 1892 Winchester is a top-eject rifle (opening the action by pushing the finger-lever forward moves the bolt rearward and thereby opens the top of the receiver). Loaded rounds or empty cases from the chamber eject straight up when the lever is pushed fully open (forward). When Connors cycled the action by spinning the rifle to his side, the cartridge in the action could fall out. Therefore, the rifle was modified with a plunger, which would hold the round in place.
The Winchester Model 1892 rifle was designed by John Moses Browning, and other than general appearance, it has nothing in common with earlier lever-action rifles using the same class of cartridges. The significant improvement was the addition of vertical lugs that securely lock the bolt and receiver when the gun fires. Winchester originally produced this gun from 1892 to 1941; total production was slightly over 1,000,000; 27 variations in five chamberings were made over the course of production, but the basic design was largely unaltered. As with the earlier Model 1873, the light and handy Model 1892 was chambered for handgun cartridges, favored by many Westerners to simplify ammunition supply problems by using the same cartridge in both a handgun and a rifle. The Model 1892 was replaced by the Browning-designed Model 1894, which also had an impressive manufacturing history, with over 7,000,000 produced; it is still being produced to this day by a successor to Winchester. The Model 94's popularity and long production history may be related to its being the first Winchester to be designed for the then-new "smokeless" powder.
Directing and writing
The pilot episode, "The Sharpshooter", was originally telecast on CBS as part of Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre on March 7, 1958; it was repeated (in edited form) as the first episode of the series on ABC. The episode was written by Sam Peckinpah, and guest starred Dennis Hopper.
Regulars on the program included Marshal Micah Torrance (R. G. Armstrong was the original marshal for two episodes, the first and the fourth), Sweeney the bartender (Bill Quinn), and a half-dozen other residents of North Fork (played by Hope Summers, Joan Taylor, Patricia Blair, John Harmon, and Harlan Warde).
Fifty-one episodes of the series were directed by Joseph H. Lewis (director of 1950's Gun Crazy and known for his film noir style). Ida Lupino directed one episode, "The Assault".
Connors wrote several episodes. Robert Culp (star of CBS's Trackdown, another Four Star production), wrote one two-part episode, and Frank D. Gilroy (creator of ABC's Burke's Law, another Four Star production), wrote "End of a Young Gun".[citation needed]
Release
Home media
MPI Home Video has released The Rifleman on DVD in Region 1 in a number of versions. It has released single-disc DVDs with five episodes; from 2002 to 2006 it released six sets, each with 20 episodes. The releases are random collections of episodes, rather than the original broadcast order. These releases are out of print, since MPI Home Video no longer owns the rights to the series. Levy-Gardner-Laven Productions, the original producer, is again the sole copyright owner of The Rifleman series.[16]
In late 2013, Levy-Gardner-Laven Productions, Inc. announced it would be the only authorized outlet to offer for the first time all 168 episodes of The Rifleman, the original series, newly restored and assembled in DVD box sets. The episodes were to be released in sequential order, by season, in high-quality boxed sets with exclusive special features. The first boxed set of all Season 1 episodes was made available on December 4, 2013, for $69.95.[17] The second season was released on November 28, 2014.[18] Season 3 was released on December 2, 2015.[19] Season 4 was released on December 4, 2016.[20][21] Season 5 was released on November 27, 2017.[22]
1 | 1 | "The Sharpshooter" | Arnold Laven | Sam Peckinpah | September 30, 1958 |
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Lucas (Chuck Connors) and Mark McCain (Johnny Crawford) finally find the ranch they have been looking for, but the ranch comes with a price, and Lucas may have to decide between the ranch and his son's life. |
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2 | 2 | "Home Ranch" | Arnold Laven | Sam Peckinpah | October 7, 1958 |
After two of Oat Jackford’s cowhands burn the McCain house, drag Lucas, and steal his rifle, Lucas goes to hunt Jackford (Harold J. Stone) and his men to inform them that he and his boy are there to stay. Guest stars: Lee Farr, Steve Rowland, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Don Kennedy, Jack N. Young, and Bobby Somers |
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3 | 3 | "End of a Young Gun" | Jerry Hopper | Frank D. Gilroy | October 14, 1958 |
When Mark gets caught on a mountain ledge, a young outlaw (Michael Landon) risks his life to rescue him and breaks his leg doing so. Guest stars: Charles Cooper, Joe Haworth, Carolyn Craig, Mel Carter, and Jesse Wayne |
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4 | 4 | "The Marshal" | Sam Peckinpah | Sam Peckinpah | October 21, 1958 |
The notorious Sheltons ride into North Fork to take revenge on Marshal Micah Torrance (Paul Fix) who is now crippled. Guest stars: James Drury, Warren Oates, Robert J. Wilke, Abby Dalton, Bill Quinn, Bert Stevens, and Jesse Wayne |
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5 | 5 | "The Brother-in-Law" | Arnold Laven | David Victor & Herbert Little, Jr. | October 28, 1958 |
Johnny Gibbs (Jerome Courtland), Lucas McCain's fugitive brother-in-law, visits the McCain ranch. Guest stars: Charles Watts, Karl Lukas, Dan White, Fay Roope, Archie Butler, Bobby Somers, and Jesse Wayne |
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6 | 6 | "Eight Hours to Die" | Arnold Laven | Palmer Thompson | November 4, 1958 |
A bitter judge (George Macready) kidnaps Mark and plans to kill him to avenge his own son's hanging while Lucas watches. Guest stars: Russell Collins, Hope Summers, Marilee Phillips, Irving Mitchell, Bobby Crawford Jr., Bud Osborne, Jack N. Young, and Bobby Somers |
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7 | 7 | "Duel of Honor" | Joseph H. Lewis | Ken Kolb | November 11, 1958 |
A stagecoach breaks down and Italian nobleman Count Di Montova (Cesare Danova) is stranded overnight in North Fork. He accepts a challenge for a gun duel after being insulted by Sim Groder (Jack Elam). Guest stars: Glenn Strange, John Dierkes, Joe Bassett, John Harmon, Bill Quinn, Archie Butler, Robert H. Robinson, and Jesse Wayne |
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8 | 8 | "The Safe Guard" | Joseph H. Lewis | David Swift | November 18, 1958 |
The first bank in North Fork is opening, and a Texas gunfighter (Claude Akins) is hired to guard the safe, but a gang of bank robbers that used to include him arrives in town. Guest stars: Marc Lawrence, Sidney Blackmer, Harlan Warde, Hope Summers, Dennis Cross, Mel Carter, Fritz Ford, Robert H. Robinson, and Jesse Wayne |
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9 | 9 | "The Sister" | Montgomery Pittman | Montgomery Pittman | November 25, 1958 |
Mark tries to set Lucas up with a woman (Sherry Jackson) he thinks would make a perfect wife. Lucas soon finds himself contending with the woman's two brothers as well as some outlaws intent on killing him. Guest stars: Dan Blocker, David Tyrell, John Dierkes, Lance Fuller, Mike Morgan, Mort Mills, Hope Summers, Michael Harris, Archie Butler, and Fritz Ford |
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10 | 10 | "New Orleans Menace" | Arnold Laven | Cyril Hume | December 2, 1958 |
A New Orleans gambling czar (Akim Tamiroff) and his men stop at the McCain ranch and decide to take it from Lucas. Guest stars: Harlan Warde, Michael Pate, Hope Summers, Jerry Oddo, Galvan DeLeon, Jack Tornek, Bobby Somers, Archie Butler, Robert H. Robinson, and Jesse Wayne |
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11 | 11 | "The Apprentice Sheriff" | Arthur Hiller | Barney Slater | December 9, 1958 |
Lucas tries to help a young West Point reject, who is filling in as marshal, just as the town erupts into a gunfight. | |||||
12 | 12 | "Young Englishman" | Arnold Laven | Arthur Weiss | December 16, 1958 |
Lucas accuses the young foreman of a neighboring ranch of rustling one of his calves. | |||||
13 | 13 | "The Angry Gun" | David Swift | Samuel A. Peeples | December 23, 1958 |
Lucas and Mark return from a cattle sale when their stagecoach is robbed by three outlaws led by sharpshooter Johnny Cotton (Vic Morrow). Lucas sends Mark on in the stagecoach while he goes after the outlaws on foot without his rifle. | |||||
14 | 14 | "The Gaucho" | Jerry Hopper | Bruce Geller | December 30, 1958 |
Lucas helps an Argentinian family who are new to North Fork when they are ridiculed by others. | |||||
15 | 15 | "The Pet" | Joseph H. Lewis | Ken Kolb | January 6, 1959 |
Lucas allows Mark to take in a homeless horse after its owner is killed in a gunfight. Lucas soon discovers the truth about the horse and has to fight a gunman who does not want his secret to be exposed. | |||||
16 | 16 | "The Sheridan Story" | Arnold Laven | Cyril Hume | January 13, 1959 |
Wanting to teach Mark about tolerance and acceptance, Lucas hires an injured and bitter confederate soldier (Royal Dano) to work on his ranch, only the Union army also arrives at the farm. Guest stars: Lawrence Dobkin, William Meigs, Fritz Ford, Frank Wilcox, and Stephen Chase |
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17 | 17 | "The Retired Gun" | Arnold Laven | Barney Slater | January 20, 1959 |
A famous gunman (Robert Webber) promises his new bride that he will retire from gunfighting and settle in North Fork, but five outlaws try to make him break his promise. | |||||
18 | 18 | "The Photographer" | Arnold Laven | Ken Kolb | January 27, 1959 |
When a photographer friend of the McCains is accused of murder, father and son take opposing views on the matter. | |||||
19 | 19 | "Shivaree" | Joseph H. Lewis | David Victor & Herbert Little | February 3, 1959 |
A young couple is forced to marry after they hide the fact that one of them is a girl, and Lucas helps them hide; but a rowdy crowd calls for a Shivaree. | |||||
20 | 20 | "The Deadeye Kid" | Jerry Hopper | Palmer Thompson | February 10, 1959 |
Lucas and Mark protect a witness wrongfully accused of murder. | |||||
21 | 21 | "The Indian" | Arnold Laven | Cyril Hume | February 17, 1959 |
U.S. Marshal Sam Buckhart arrives in North Fork to look for Indians who are suspected in the brutal murder of a Ranger and his family. (This is the pilot for the series Law of the Plainsman.) | |||||
22 | 22 | "The Boarding House" | Sam Peckinpah | Sam Peckinpah | February 24, 1959 |
Julia Massini (Katy Jurado), a reformed gambler, runs a respectable boarding house in North Fork, but her old boss shows up and tries to force her to turn her place into a gambling house. | |||||
23 | 23 | "The Second Witness" | Lewis Allen | Judy & George W. George | March 3, 1959 |
After the witness in a murder case is killed, Lucas agrees to testify in order to convict a murderer, but someone wants the prosecution stopped. Mark and the townsfolk try to talk Lucas out of testifying. | |||||
24 | 24 | "The Trade" | Joseph H. Lewis | David Lang | March 10, 1959 |
After falling in love with a sick young woman, fugitive Sam Morley asks his friend Lucas to turn him in and use the reward money to pay for the woman's medical needs. | |||||
25 | 25 | "One Went to Denver" | Lewis Allen | Pat Fielder | March 17, 1959 |
Lucas' friend and renowned bank robber Tom Birch (Richard Anderson) comes for a surprise visit, upsetting Mark. Neither know the man has plans to rob the North Fork bank. | |||||
26 | 26 | "The Deadly Wait" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | March 24, 1959 |
Released from Yuma prison, Dan Maury arrives in North Fork intent on getting even with Marshal Torrance, who helped send him to jail. | |||||
27 | 27 | "The Wrong Man" | Arnold Laven | N. B. Stone, Jr. | March 31, 1959 |
A crooked marshal from another territory intentionally kills an innocent man to collect the bounty money. | |||||
28 | 28 | "The Challenge" | Lewis Allen | David Victor & Herbert Little | April 7, 1959 |
An escaped killer holds Hattie and Micah hostage at the General Store to prove that he is still good with a gun. | |||||
29 | 29 | "The Hawk" | Lamont Johnson | Arthur Browne, Jr. | April 14, 1959 |
The McCains befriend a stranger after he saves Mark from a rattlesnake, but they soon discover that he is not who he says he is. | |||||
30 | 30 | "Three-Legged Terror" | William Conrad | Palmer Thompson | April 21, 1959 |
Lucas takes in an orphaned teen (Dennis Hopper) being raised by his abusive uncle after trouble is caused at the school. | |||||
31 | 31 | "The Angry Man" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Browne, Jr. | April 28, 1959 |
A neighboring rancher refuses medical assistance when his son is seriously hurt in an accident because he blames doctors for the death of his wife. | |||||
32 | 32 | "The Woman" | Arnold Laven | Pat Fielder & Bernard Girard | May 5, 1959 |
After a boy (Paul Carr) admits to his father that he and the school teacher (Patricia Barry) are in love, the rancher chases the advocator for women's rights out of town. Lucas wants to learn the truth. | |||||
33 | 33 | "The Money Gun" | Sam Peckinpah | Bruce Geller | May 12, 1959 |
Bookkeeper Asa Manning (William Phipps) hires a professional gunman (John Dehner) to provoke Oat Jackford (Bert Freed), a bully rancher who suspects him of embezzlement, into a gunfight. Lucas is forced to assist Jackford, the man he once hated. | |||||
34 | 34 | "A Matter of Faith" | Don Taylor | Harry Kronman | May 19, 1959 |
A drought has forced local cowhands to seek work on a railroad construction project and railroad executives are afraid that their workers will desert them when an old man (Royal Dano) claims to have found a way to make rain. Guest stars: Parley Baer, Bing Russell and Michael Hinn |
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35 | 35 | "Blood Brothers" | Arnold Laven | Story by: Chuck Connors Teleplay by: Pat Fielder |
May 26, 1959 |
Lucas is surprised when Micah wishes death on a dying man (Max Wagner) he brings into North Fork, then Lucas discovers that Micah holds a big secret. | |||||
36 | 36 | "Stranger at Night" | Lewis Allen | David Lang | June 2, 1959 |
Mark stumbles across a dead man and the only clue to his identity is a belt with the initials RM. | |||||
37 | 37 | "The Raid" | Paul Landres | Harry Julian Fink | June 9, 1959 |
A renegade band of Indians captures Mark and disappears into the hills of New Mexico. (This is the sequel to the episode The Indian.) | |||||
38 | 38 | "Outlaw's Inheritance" | Don Taylor | Judy & George W. George | June 16, 1959 |
The townspeople question the reputation of Lucas when he is named in a will of a notorious outlaw. | |||||
39 | 39 | "Boomerang" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | June 23, 1959 |
Lucas takes in an orphaned boy (Lee Kinsolving) and teaches him how to use a gun, not knowing that the boy plans on killing the banker (Harlan Warde) he believes is responsible for his father's death. | |||||
40 | 40 | "The Mind Reader" | Don Medford | Robert C. Dennis | June 30, 1959 |
Accused of a murder he did not commit, a young man (Michael Landon) is finally cleared by the accidental discovery of a "mind reader" (John Carradine). | |||||
41 | 1 | "The Patsy" | Joseph H. Lewis | Harry Kronman | September 29, 1959 |
Two gunfighters (Steven Marlo, Dennis Cross) use a cowardly barber (Whit Bissell) and his son to talk Lucas into a gunfight so they can kill Lucas and take over the town. |
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42 | 2 | "Bloodlines" | Arthur Browne, Jr. | Arthur Hiller | October 6, 1959 |
After Lucas is blamed for killing a young man, an outlaw father and his two sons attempt to kill Lucas. |
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43 | 3 | "The Blowout" | James Neilson | Arthur Hiller | October 13, 1959 |
An ailing gunfighter (John Dehner) comes to North Fork to die under a doctor's care in order to spare his family. But the gunfighter is being pursued by bank robbers (John Milford, Howard Ledig) from whom he stole robbery money. Guest stars: Hugh Sanders, Bill Quinn, Glenn Strange, George Brenlin, James Parnell, and Archie Butler |
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44 | 4 | "Obituary" | Don Medford | Teddi Sherman & Ward Wood | October 20, 1959 |
After Lucas accuses a newspaper writer's (Alexander Scourby) misleading articles of causing an innocent man's death, the writer begins writing articles about Lucas. Guest stars: Joanna Moore, Brian D. Hutton, Chris Alcaide, Steve Darnell, Ian Murray, Whitey Hughes, and Archie Butler |
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45 | 5 | "Tension" | Ted Post | David Lang | October 27, 1959 |
After a wanna-be bounty hunter (Harry Dean Stanton) kills a man (Gregory Walcott) wanted for a crime committed long ago, Lucas and Mark try to protect the widow (Sydna Scott) from learning about her husband's criminal past. Guest stars: Robert H. Harris, Jack Elam, Jeff Connors, and Ted Stanhope |
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46 | 6 | "Eddie's Daughter" | Joseph H. Lewis | William F. Leicester | November 3, 1959 |
Eddie's daughter (Gloria DeHaven), who is withholding criminal information and stolen money, comes to meet her father (John Harmon) and causes trouble for Lucas. Guest stars: Bill Quinn, Peter Whitney, Ray Teal, Jeff Daley, and Kathleen Mulqueen |
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47 | 7 | "Panic" | Joseph H. Lewis | Albert Aley | November 10, 1959 |
Lucas discovers a young married couple (William Joyce and Enid Janes) with yellow fever and cares for them at his house, but Mark lets out the secret which causes panic in town. Guest stars: Dabbs Greer, Fay Roope, Bill Quinn, Hope Summers, Charles Watts, Lynn Cartier, and Bert Stevens |
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48 | 8 | "Ordeal" | Paul Landres | Palmer Thompson | November 17, 1959 |
A series of events leads to Lucas and Mark being stranded in the middle of a desert with very little food or water, and after Lucas is injured, Mark becomes the only hope for their survival. Guest stars: Hank Stohl and Fritz Ford |
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49 | 9 | "The Spiked Rifle" | John English | Palmer Thompson | November 24, 1959 |
An unarmed outlaw (Richard Devon) robs the stage of a lot of money after the outlaw informs Lucas that his son, Mark, is being held hostage at the McCain ranch and will be killed within the hour unless Lucas cooperates. Guest stars: Harlan Warde, Jack Lambert, Baynes Barron, Virginia Christine, Glenn Strange, Charles E. Conrad, Fay Roope, John Harmon, Robert H. Robinson, Carl Sepulveda, Archie Butler, and Rod McGaughy |
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50 | 10 | "Letter of the Law" | Joseph H. Lewis | Judy & George W. George | December 1, 1959 |
Lucas makes a life-and-death decision when Micah is held hostage and the kidnappers demand the release of a notorious outlaw (Vic Morrow). Guest stars: Rhys Williams, Milton Parsons, Ken Lynch, Michael Fox, Paul Carr, John Goddard, and Harlan Warde |
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51 | 11 | "Legacy" | Bernard L. Kowalski | Edmund Morris | December 8, 1959 |
Lucas respects a dying man's (James Barton) wishes by telling the son (James Franciscus) that his father is a partner in the McCain ranch in order to get him to North Fork, but Lucas finds trouble when the man dies before telling his son the truth. Guest stars: Jack Grinnage, Paul Jasmin, Denver Pyle, Fay Roope, Bill Quinn, Robert Bice, Donald Elson, Lillian Bronson, John Harmon, Harry Harvey, Jack Tornek, Don Kennedy, and Robert H. Robinson |
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52 | 12 | "The Baby Sitter" | Sam Peckinpah | Sam Peckinpah & Jack Curtis | December 15, 1959 |
A singer (Phyllis Avery) asks Lucas to care for her daughter in an effort to hide the child from its bigoted father (John Dehner). Guest stars: Lillian Bronson, Henry Rowland, Bill Quinn, Whitey Hughes, Robert H. Robinson, Bert Stevens, and Rod McGaughy |
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53 | 13 | "The Coward" | James Neilson | Philip Saltzman & Clair Huffaker | December 22, 1959 |
Lucas becomes involved in a battle between a recently fired cook (Carleton Carpenter) and a cocky trail hand (Steve Rowland) who finds it fun to attack those weaker than himself. Guest stars: John Milford, Robert Bice, Don Elson, Bill Quinn, Sailor Vincent, and Archie Butler |
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54 | 14 | "Surveyors" | Joseph H. Lewis | Dale & Katherine Albert Eunson | December 29, 1959 |
Mark overhears two surveyors (Mike Kellin, Lin McCarthy) arguing and his surveying friend (Ted Otis) suddenly disappears, but Lucas will not believe him and he runs away from home. Guest stars: Harlan Warde |
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55 | 15 | "Day of the Hunter" | Joseph H. Lewis | John Dunkel | January 5, 1960 |
Lucas refuses a shooting competition with a wandering buffalo hunter (John Anderson) and then becomes his new target. Guest stars: Dick Elliott |
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56 | 16 | "Mail Order Groom" | Arthur Hiller | Gene Olson | January 12, 1960 |
Shortly after his arrival to marry Isabelle (Alice Backes), John Jupiter (Peter Whitney) is taunted and beaten. Guest stars: John Anderson, Sandy Kenyon, and Montie Montana |
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57 | 17 | "A Case of Identity" | John Peyser | Philip Saltzman | January 19, 1960 |
A man (Royal Dano) hires two private detectives to find his long-lost son. They presume him to be dead and try to take Mark to pass him off as the son in order to collect the money. Guest stars: Herbert Rudley, Chris Alcaide, Jim Breneman and Rhys Williams |
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58 | 18 | "The Visitor" | Joseph H. Lewis | William F. Leicester, Chuck Connors, and Wally Bennett | January 26, 1960 |
Anne Dodd (Christine White), a pretty young widow of a man who was once Lucas' good friend, visits. Guest stars: Michael Pate, June Vincent, John Harmon, and Ralph Moody |
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59 | 19 | "Hero" | Joseph H. Lewis | Albert Aley | February 2, 1960 |
The body of a notorious outlaw, the Domino Kid, is brought in by Colly Vane (Robert Culp), who doesn't get the reward for he shot the man in the back. Guest stars: Frank Ferguson, Lynn Cartier, Dick Keene, Dennis Cross, Steve Marlo, Whitey Hughes, and Archie Butler |
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60 | 20 | "The Horse Traders" | William Claxton | Jack Curtis | February 9, 1960 |
Lucas and Mark try to help out a friend (Chubby Johnson) who has been cheated in a horse trading deal. Guest stars: Jack Kirkwood, John Milford, Clegg Hoyt, Fern Barry, and Whitey Hughes |
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61 | 21 | "The Spoiler" | Joseph H. Lewis | Harry Kronman | February 16, 1960 |
The Averys (Chubby Johnson, Ellen Corby), Lucas' new elderly neighbors live under an assumed name to keep the town from knowing they are the parents of a vicious wanted killer (Skip Homeier). Guest stars: Malcolm Cassell, Ralph Moody, and Max Wagner |
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62 | 22 | "Heller" | Joseph H. Lewis | Christopher Knopf | February 23, 1960 |
Teenaged Heller (Gigi Perreau) and her brother (Don Grady) are badly mistreated by their drunken stepfather (Peter Whitney). Guest stars: K. T. Stevens, Sid Gilman, and Hope Summers |
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63 | 23 | "The Grasshopper" | Lewis Allen | Pat Fielder | March 1, 1960 |
Lucas and Mark find themselves held at gunpoint by a prisoner (Richard Devon) being transported on a train, which becomes stranded from a plague of grasshoppers. Guest stars: Arthur Hunnicutt, Stuart Randall, James K Anderson, Arthur Space, Joe Bassett, Renny McEvoy, Joe Haworth, Ethan Laidlaw, Sid Gilman, and Hope Summers |
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64 | 24 | "A Time for Singing" | John Rich | Harry Kronman | March 8, 1960 |
Mark learns a new preacher (Robert Knapp) is an impostor. Guest stars: Chris Alcaide, Patricia Barry, John Milford, Bob Osterloh and Hope Summers |
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65 | 25 | "The Deserter" | Joseph H. Lewis | Albert Aley | March 15, 1960 |
Lucas learns why a young soldier (Ron Hagerthy) deserted. Guest stars: Robert O. Cornthwaite, Harry Carey, Jr., Baynes Barron, Bill Quinn, Richard Alexander, Archie Butler, and Daniel Borzage |
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66 | 26 | "The Vision" | Don Medford | Cyril Hume | March 22, 1960 |
While ill with typhoid fever, Mark has a vision of his mother (Marian Seldes). Guest stars: Milton Parsons, Karl Swenson, Hope Summers, Natividad Vacío, Jeanne Wood, Dennis Cross, John Abbott, and Chuck Hicks |
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67 | 27 | "Lariat" | Don Medford | Pat Fielder | March 29, 1960 |
An old friend (Richard Anderson) of Lucas' arrives in North Fork to open a gambling casino. Guest stars: Steve Conte, Dayton Lummis, George Macready, James Flavin, Bill Quinn, Harlan Warde, Whitey Hughes, Jack Tornek, Archie Butler, Rod McGaughy, and Snub Pollard |
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68 | 28 | "Smoke Screen" | Murray Golden | Palmer Thompson | April 5, 1960 |
The daughter (Jennifer Lea) of a prosperous rancher (Douglas Kennedy) is found murdered. Guest stars: Paul Carr, Warner Jones, George N. Neise, William Benedict, Richard Alexander, Johnny Collier, and Archie Butler |
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69 | 29 | "Shotgun Man" | Joseph H. Lewis | Jack Curtis & Paul Mazursky | April 12, 1960 |
Lucas receives a series of mysterious threatening notes from an ex-convict (John Anderson) with a grudge. Guest stars: John Harmon, Bill Quinn, Jack Elam, Archie Butler. and Robert Robinson |
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70 | 30 | "Sins of the Father" | Ted Post | Philip Saltzman & Lewis Meltzer | April 19, 1960 |
Andy Moon (George D. Wallace) and his young son (Eugene Mazzola) take shelter at the McCain ranch. Guest stars: Richard Evans, Kay E. Kuter, Kelton Garwood, Dick Wilson, Rhys Williams, Charles Tannen, Archie Butler, and Snub Pollard |
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71 | 31 | "The Prodigal" | Donald McDougall | Robert Sherman | April 26, 1960 |
A bank-robbing gunman (Kevin Hagen) decides to hide out at the McCain ranch. Guest stars: Josephine Hutchinson, Warren Oates, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Rhys Williams, Lee Van Cleef, and Hope Summers |
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72 | 32 | "The Fourflusher" | Joseph H. Lewis | Thomas Thompson | May 3, 1960 |
A neighbor (Whit Bissell) has bet his whole year's farm crop on a horse race. Guest stars: James Westerfield, K. T. Stevens, Hope Summers, Archie Butler, Joe Benson, and Ralph Moratz |
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73 | 33 | "The Jailbird" | Don Taylor | Frederic Conrad | May 10, 1960 |
A convict (Dabbs Greer) is released from prison and returns home to North Fork. Guest stars: Karl Swenson, Bill Quinn, Molly Dodd, Charles Briggs, Charles Tannen, and Archie Butler |
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74 | 34 | "Meeting at Midnight" | Don Medford | Pat Fielder & Arthur Browne Jr. | May 17, 1960 |
Lucas helps an old friend (Claude Akins), a federal agent, infiltrate a gang of robbers. Guest stars: Chris Alcaide, John Milford, Frank de Kova, Bill Quinn, Ian Murray, Richard Alexander, and Archie Butler |
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75 | 35 | "Nora" | Ted Post | David Victor & Herbert Little | May 24, 1960 |
Lucas helps a woman (Julie Adams) who is being harassed by a rough gambler. Guest stars: Murvyn Vye, Michael Fox, Michael Stefani, Johnny Carpenter, Whitey Hughes, Archie Butler, Joe E. Benson, and Bert Stevens |
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76 | 36 | "The Hangman" | Joseph H. Lewis | Teddi Sherman & Ward Wood | May 31, 1960 |
An ex-convict (Denver Pyle) is accused of robbing and killing his employer. Guest stars: Whit Bissell, Richard Deacon, Michael Fox, Ralph Moody, Betty Lou Gerson, Ian Murray, Amanda Ames, Joe E. Benson, and Archie Butler |
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77 | 1 | "Trail of Hate" | Arnold Laven | Calvin Clements | September 27, 1960 |
Three robbers hold Mark hostage, forcing Lucas to help them rob the North Fork bank. |
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78 | 2 | "Woman from Hog Ridge" | William F. Claxton | Calvin Clements | October 4, 1960 |
A matriarch seeks revenge for her sons' deaths. |
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79 | 3 | "Seven" | Ted Post | Arthur Browne, Jr. | October 11, 1960 |
A prison wagon carrying seven criminals stops over in North Fork for supplies. |
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80 | 4 | "The Pitchman" | John Rich | Jay Simms | October 18, 1960 |
A con man and his son want Lucas' mineral rights. Guest stars: Danny Richards, Jr., John Milford, Paul Wexler, and Bob Sweeney |
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81 | 5 | "Strange Town" | Joseph H. Lewis | Jack Curtis | October 25, 1960 |
Lucas trails an escaped prisoner (Claude Akins) to a mining town in the mountains. Guest stars: William Shallert, Milton Parsons, Claude Akins, and Peter Whitney |
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82 | 6 | "Baranca" | Joseph H. Lewis | Mike Mamakos & Peter Mamakos | November 1, 1960 |
A Mexican bandit and his gang ride into North Fork. Guest stars: John Milford, Jack Krushen, Linda Dangcil, Henry Amargo, and Cesare Danova |
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83 | 7 | "The Martinet" | Joseph H. Lewis | Phillip Saltzman | November 8, 1960 |
Lucas helps a young minister who had problems with his father. Guest stars: John Hoyt, Don Dubbins, and Richard Alexander |
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84 | 8 | "Miss Milly" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | November 15, 1960 |
A store owner hires con men as collection agents. Guest stars: Joan Taylor, Warren Oates, Michael Fox, Charles Tannen, and Richard Devon |
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85 | 9 | "Dead Cold Cash" | Dick Moder | Irving Elman & Arthur Browne, Jr. | November 22, 1960 |
Before she dies, the widow of a bandit Lucas shot arranges for his death. Guest stars: Joan Taylor, Steve Darrell, Chris Alcaide, Harlan Warde, and Ed Nelson |
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86 | 10 | "The Schoolmaster" | Arthur Hiller | Margaret Armen | November 29, 1960 |
Mark is trapped in an old mine. Guest stars: Jimmy Fields, Pamela Cole, and Arnold Moss |
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87 | 11 | "The Promoter" | Dick Moder | Phillip Saltzman | December 6, 1960 |
A con man makes his living by provoking and then betting on gunfights. Guest stars: Dabbs Greer, Ollie O' Toole, Robert F. Hoy, Jack Lester, and Denny Miller |
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88 | 12 | "The Illustrator" | Don Medford | Ken Kolb & Robert Mark | December 13, 1960 |
A hard-drinking painter is accused of murder. Guest stars: Midge Ware, Dayton Lummis, Ed Nelson, Joseph V. Perry, and Richard Whorf |
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89 | 13 | "The Silent Knife" | Don Medford | John Wilder & Douglas Stevens | December 20, 1960 |
A desperate, mute man steals from the stagecoach. Guest stars: Brad Weston, Robert Williams, James Chandler, Wallace Earl, and Richard Devon |
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90 | 14 | "Miss Bertie" | James Clavell | Margaret Armen | December 27, 1960 |
A sprightly elderly lady arrives in North Fork and announces that she plans to capute a bandit. Guest stars: Joan Taylor, Agnes Moorehead, and Richard Anderson |
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91 | 15 | "Six Years And A Day" | Paul Wendkos | Peter Arends | January 3, 1961 |
Lucas helps an alcoholic former doctor regain his self-respect. Guest stars: John Larch, James Gavin, Ron Hayes, Regina Gleason, Ralph Moody, and Hal K. Dawson |
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92 | 16 | "Flowers By The Door" | Joseph H. Lewis | Harry Kronman | January 10, 1961 |
Lucas unmasks a book salesman as a killer. Guest stars: Richard Anderson, Jean Allison, and Patricia Breslin |
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93 | 17 | "Long Trek" | Lamont Johnson | Calvin Clements | January 17, 1961 |
Lucas and Micah are beset with troubles while bringing a killer to trial. Guest star: Lonny Chapman |
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94 | 18 | "The Actress" | Joseph H. Lewis | Chuck Connors & Lawrence Dobkin | January 24, 1961 |
A dying friend asks Lucas to fetch his wife. Guest stars: Morris Ankrum, Diana Millay, Ralph Moody, Charles Tannen, and Joe Benson |
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95 | 19 | "Face Of Yesterday" | Joseph H. Lewis | Palmer Thompson | January 31, 1961 |
Lucas begins to believe in ghosts when he sees someone he thinks he killed. Guest stars: Joan Taylor, K.T. Stevens, Ralph Moody, Ben Cooper, and John Anderson |
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96 | 20 | "The Wyoming Story: Part 1" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | February 7, 1961 |
Lucas goes undercover as a federal agent. Guest stars: Joan Taylor, Kent Taylor, Dabbs Greer, Russell Thorson, Enid Janes and Chris Alcaide |
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97 | 21 | "The Wyoming Story, Part 2" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | February 14, 1961 |
Lucas is sent to Wyoming to investigate the sale of guns to Indians. Guest Stars: Joan Taylor, Kent Taylor, Dabbs Greer, Russell Thorson, Enid Janes and Chris Alcaide |
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98 | 22 | "Closer Than A Brother" | Joseph H. Lewis | Cyril Hume | February 21, 1961 |
Micah is terrorized by an old enemy and resigns from his job. Guest Stars: Rex Ingram, Berry Kroeger, Kelly Thorsden, and Jack Wells |
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99 | 23 | "The Lost Treasure Of Canyon Town" | Don Taylor | Calvin Clements | February 28, 1961 |
Lucas, Mark and Micah learn the secret of a town's 20-year-old mystery of a lost gold mine. Guest Stars: Willam Fawcett, Robert Foulk, and Mickey Finn |
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100 | 24 | "Dark Day At North Fork" | Paul Landres | Arthur Browne, Jr. | March 7, 1961 |
Lucas, temporarily blind, faces a gunfight. Guest Stars: Joan Taylor, John Milford, Ralph Moody, and Joe Higgins |
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101 | 25 | "The Prisoner" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | March 14, 1961 |
A former POW imprisons Lucas for his role in the Civil War. Guest Stars: Joan Taylor, Adam Williams, and John Dehner |
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102 | 26 | "Assault" | Ida Lupino | Jay Simms | March 21, 1961 |
A traveling salesman is accused of forcing his attentions on a local woman. Guest Stars: Linda Lawson, Danny Richards, Jr., King Calder, Meb Florey, Paul Mantee and Bob Sweeney |
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103 | 27 | "Short Rope For A Tall Man" | Paul Landres | Tom Gries | March 28, 1961 |
Lucas faces lynching for unwittingly buying stolen horses. Guest Stars: Hal Baylor, Norman Leavitt, Charlie Briggs, William Shallert, and Bert Freed |
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104 | 28 | "The Clarence Bibs Story" | David Friedkin | Calvin Clements | April 4, 1961 |
A slow-witted handyman gets into trouble when he accidentally kills a skilled gunfighter. Guest Stars: Joan Taylor, Buddy Hackett, Denver Pyle, Lee Van Cleef, John Milford and X. Brands |
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105 | 29 | "The Score Is Even" | William F. Claxton | Fanya Foss | April 11, 1961 |
Lucas and Mark stumble across a robbery in progress. Guest Stars: Adam Williams, Kelly Thordsen, and Joe Benson |
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106 | 30 | "The Mescalaro Curse" | Jesse Hibbs | Margaret Armen | April 18, 1961 |
After Lucas receives a curse while attending then hanging of a murdering Indian, he goes on a hunt to find out who or what is behind the so-called curse. Guest Stars: Ralph Moody, Charles Watts, Larry Chance, Jackie Searl, Joe Brown, Jr., and Michael Pate |
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107 | 31 | "Stopover" | Budd Boetticher | Arthur Browne, Jr. | April 25, 1961 |
Lucas allows troublesome snowed-in stagecoach passengers to stay with him until the roads are passable. Guest Stars: Adam West, Gordon Jones, Joe Higgins, and Bethel Leslie |
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108 | 32 | "The Lonesome Bride" | Otto Lang | Arthur Browne, Jr. | May 2, 1961 |
Lucas almost finds himself at the altar when two drunken cowboys play a joke on him. Guest Stars: Joan Taylor, Kay E. Kuter, Lincoln Demyan, Bill Quinn and Joan Shawlee |
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109 | 33 | "Death Trap" | Arnold Laven | Arthur Browne, Jr. | May 9, 1961 |
An ex-gunfighter from Lucas' past, now a doctor, comes to his aid when a dying man is brought in, but Lucas and the new doctor have unresolved anger toward each other. Guest Stars: Philip Carey, Gigi Perreau, Hank Stohl, John Pickard, Larry Perron, William Kendis, Steve Pendleton, and James Drury |
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110 | 34 | "The Queue" | James Clavell | Beverly Fix, Frank Eby and Arthur Browne, Jr. | May 16, 1961 |
Lucas helps a Chinese man settle into town after townspeople try to force him out because of his race. Guest Stars: Joan Taylor, Victor Sen Yung, Dick Kay Hong, Pat Close and Paul Wexler, and Peter Whitney |
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111 | 1 | "The Vaqueros" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne Jr. | October 2, 1961 |
Lucas subdues a gang of bandits singlehandedly. |
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112 | 2 | "First Wages" | Gene Nelson | Ed Adamson | October 9, 1961 |
Mark takes a job against his father's wishes. |
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113 | 3 | "Sheer Terror" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne Jr. | October 16, 1961 |
Stagecoach robbers take Mark and Millie hostage. |
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114 | 4 | "The Stand-In" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne Jr. | October 23, 1961 |
A prison wagon carrying a condemned killer passes through North Fork. |
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115 | 5 | "The Journey Back" | Joseph H. Lewis | Herman Groves | October 30, 1961 |
A new neighbor of the McCains' gives Mark a job on his ranch. |
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116 | 6 | "The Decision" | Gene Nelson | Ed Adamson | November 6, 1961 |
A killer's rich father tires to bribe witness Lucas. |
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117 | 7 | "Knight Errant" | Gene Nelson | Jay Simms | November 13, 1961 |
An eccentric old friend of Lucas' arrives in North Fork. |
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118 | 8 | "Honest Abe" | Joseph H. Lewis | Michael Morris | November 20, 1961 |
A kindly neighbor (Royal Dano) of Lucas' believes he is President Lincoln. |
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119 | 9 | "The Long Goodbye" | Gene Nelson | Marian Carpenter, Jack Lewis | November 27, 1961 |
The North Fork Town Council feels that an old man is incapable of raising his grandson. |
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120 | 10 | "The Shattered Idol" | Joseph H. Lewis | Margaret Armen | December 4, 1961 |
Mark Twain visits North Fork. |
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121 | 11 | "Long Gun from Tucson" | Joseph H. Lewis | Calvin Clements | December 11, 1961 |
The townspeople leave Lucas to face killers alone. |
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122 | 12 | "High Country" | Gene Nelson | Calvin Clements | December 18, 1961 |
Lucas is accidentally responsible for the death of a young mountain boy. |
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123 | 13 | "A Friend In Need" | Gene Nelson | Arthur Browne Jr. | December 25, 1961 |
Lucas is stunned when Mark is kidnapped and a $5,000 ransom is asked. |
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124 | 14 | "Skull" | William F. Claxton | Arthur Browne Jr. | January 1, 1962 |
Outlaws force Lucas to help with a prison break. |
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125 | 15 | "The Princess" | Robert Butler | Pat Fielder | January 8, 1962 |
A young girl seeks refuge at the McCain ranch for herself and her ill brother. |
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126 | 16 | "Gunfire" | Richard Donner | Arthur Browne Jr. | January 15, 1962 |
A gang comes to town to free a jailed member. |
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127 | 17 | "Quiet Fear" | Gene Nelson | Arthur Browne Jr. | January 22, 1962 |
A drifer forces his attentions on a deaf girl. |
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128 | 18 | "Sporting Chance" | Gene Nelson | Arthur Browne Jr. | January 29, 1962 |
A dapper man arrives on the stage and announces that he has come to kill Lucas. |
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129 | 19 | "Young Man's Fancy" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne Jr. | February 5, 1962 |
Mark falls head-over-heels in to his first puppy love. |
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130 | 20 | "Man From Salinas" | Lawrence Dobkin | Arthur Browne Jr. | February 12, 1962 |
A yound man arrives in north Fork to claim the body of his dead brother. |
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131 | 21 | "Two Ounces Of Tin" | Arnold Laven | Calvin Clements | February 19, 1962 |
A young gunman with a killer's reputation comes to town and threatens to kill Micah. |
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132 | 22 | "Deadly Image" | Richard Donner | Philip Saltzman | February 26, 1962 |
Lucas is accused of cold-blooded murder by a man who claims to have been an eyewitness. |
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133 | 23 | "The Debt" | Richard Donner | Calvin Clements | March 5, 1962 |
Mark deliberately disobeys his father for the first time when he allows a convicted prisoner to escape. |
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134 | 24 | "Tinhorn" | Lawrence Dobkin | Paul Mazursky, Skippy Adelman | March 12, 1962 |
Lucas suddenly develops the habit is playing all-night poker in the local saloon. |
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135 | 25 | "None So Blind" | Paul Wendkos | Cyril Hume | March 19, 1962 |
A banjo-playing wanderer, hunting the man who caused his blindness, befriends Mark. |
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136 | 26 | "Jealous Man" | Lawrence Dobkin | Peter Germano, Calvin Clements | March 26, 1962 |
Jake Owens and his beautiful young wife buy the ranch adjoining the McCains'. |
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137 | 27 | "Guilty Conscience" | Richard Donner | Cyril Hume | April 2, 1962 |
An aging Southern belle and her teenage son arrive in North Fork and immediately identify Micah as her long-lost husband and father of the boy. |
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138 | 28 | "Day Of Reckoning" | Lawrence Dobkin | Calvin Clements | April 9, 1962 |
North Fork welcomes a new minister (Royal Dano), but Lucas knows he is a former outlaw and an ex-convict. |
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139 | 29 | "The Day A Town Slept" | Richard Donner | Calvin Clements | April 16, 1962 |
The McCains return from a trip to learn Micah has been voted out as marshal and a stranger now has the job. |
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140 | 30 | "Milly's Brother" | Richard Donner | Arthur Browne Jr. | April 23, 1962 |
A handsome gambler moves into town and begins wooing Milly Scott, claiming to have known her deceased brother. |
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141 | 31 | "Outlaw's Shoes" | Richard Donner | Calvin Clements | April 30, 1962 |
Lucas develops temporary amnesia from a head injury while visiting a strange town and mistakenly assumes the identity of a wanted criminal. |
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142 | 32 | "The Executioner" | Lawrence Dobkin | Adam Williams | May 7, 1962 |
A former friend of Lucas', out to recover some stolen money he had hidden on the McCain ranch, is released from prison and asks Lucas for a job. |
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143 | 1 | "Waste: Part 1" | Joseph H. Lewis | Robert Culp | October 1, 1962 |
The McCains and Micah enter a "ghost town" and are taken prisoners by a group of bandits. |
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144 | 2 | "Waste: Part 2" | Joseph H. Lewis | Robert Culp | October 8, 1962 |
One of the bandit's wives (Enid Jaynes) is about to give birth and Lucas must deliver it rather than escape. |
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145 | 3 | "Lou Mallory" | Arnold Laven | Arthur Browne, Jr. | October 15, 1962 |
Red-headed Lou Mallory (Patricia Blair) arrives in North Fork and buys a hotel. |
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146 | 4 | "Quiet Night, Deadly Night" | Arnold Laven | Arthur Browne, Jr. | October 22, 1962 |
Lucas, Lou Mallory, Doctor Burrage and two innocent bystanders are trapped in the hotel with a dangerous outlaw (Ed Ames) after a smallpox epidemic. |
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147 | 5 | "Death Never Rides Alone" | Joseph H. Lewis | David P. Harmon | October 29, 1962 |
A former gunfighter friend of Lucas (Lee Van Cleef) arrives in town intent on settling down and living quietly. |
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148 | 6 | "I Take This Woman" | Joseph H. Lewis | David P. Harmon | November 5, 1962 |
A charming Irishman (Sean McClory) comes to town announcing that he is there to claim Lou Mallory as his bride. |
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149 | 7 | "The Assailants" | Arthur H. Nadel | Herman Groves | November 12, 1962 |
A group of assassins disguised as cavalry soldiers try to murder an influential visiting senator (Edward Platt). |
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150 | 8 | "Mark's Rifle" | Arnold Laven | Oliver Crawford | November 19, 1962 |
Mark befriends a young man (Mark Goddard) who arrives in town and then quickly becomes a robbery suspect. |
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151 | 9 | "The Most Amazing Man" | Arthur H. Nadal | Robert Lewin | November 26, 1962 |
Wade Randall (Sammy Davis, Jr.) appears in town, bragging of his gun battles with notorious bad men, until one of them (Richard Devon) shows up to challenge him. |
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152 | 10 | "Squeeze Play" | Joseph H. Lewis | Ed Adamson | December 3, 1962 |
An unscrupulous land buyer (Chris Alcaide) tries to purchase the McCain ranch for a railroad imminent domain. |
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153 | 11 | "Gun Shy" | Arthur H. Nadel | Lois Meyers, Cyril Hume | December 10, 1962 |
Mark develops an intense aversion of his father's rifle after a shooting accident takes the life of his friend (Jimmy Carter). |
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154 | 12 | "The Anvil Chorus" | Arnold Laven | Arthur Browne, Jr. | December 17, 1962 |
Blacksmith Nils Swenson (Joe Higgins) volunteers as acting deputy when Micah is called out of town. He is soon challenged by some arriving outlaws. |
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155 | 13 | "Conflict" | Arthur H. Nadel | Ed Adamson | December 24, 1962 |
While out on a cougar hunt, a frightening incident causes Lucas to lose faith in his ability as a rifleman. |
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156 | 14 | "Incident at Line Shack Six" | Arnold Laven | Calvin Clements | January 7, 1963 |
A murder occurs at a railroad camp near town, and a young Indian friend of Lucas' is accused of the killing. |
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157 | 15 | "Suspicion" | Joseph H. Lewis | Jay Simms | January 14, 1963 |
Lucas and Mark find Winslow Quince (Kevin McCarthy) stranded in the desert with a broken wheel on his wagon and help him to get to town. Quince is later blamed for a series of murders and robberies. |
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158 | 16 | "The Sidewinder" | Joseph H. Lewis | Robert Lewin | January 21, 1963 |
Grid Maul, a boy not much older than Mark, confronts Lucas with the announcement that he intends to kill him to avenge his father's death. |
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159 | 17 | "The Sixteenth Cousin" | Arthur H. Nadel | Arthur Browne, Jr. | January 28, 1963 |
North Fork welcomes the arrival of the first train on the new railroad and with it, visitors that include a royal cousin of the Emperor of Japan (John Fujioka). |
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160 | 18 | "Hostages To Fortune" | Arthur H. Nadel | Cyril Hume | February 4, 1963 |
Lucas' faith in his son's honesty is shaken when he hears rumors that Mark may be mixed up with some thieves. |
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161 | 19 | "And the Devil Makes Five" | Joseph H. Lewis | Arthur Browne, Jr. | February 11, 1963 |
Lucas and Mark, returning from a hunting trip, encounter Micah escorting a prisoner (Lonny Chapman) to Santa Fe. | |||||
162 | 20 | "End Of The Hunt" | Arthur H. Nadel | Jay Simms | February 18, 1963 |
Lucas, ordinarily a patient and reasonable man, turns vengeful after learning an old enemy (Jeff Morrow) is in town. |
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163 | 21 | "The Bullet" | Joseph H. Lewis | Lowell Barrington | February 25, 1963 |
Away on a trip for the Cattleman's Association, Lucas rescues a man and is drawn into a fight with the crooked owner of a gambling establishment (Richard Anderson). |
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164 | 22 | "Requiem At Mission Springs" | Arthur H. Nadel | Margaret Armen | March 4, 1963 |
Mark is injured in an accident, which leaves his legs paralyzed. The doctor suggests mineral baths at Mission Springs to help. There, a gang of Yuma Prison escapees are hiding. |
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165 | 23 | "The Guest" | Joseph H. Lewis | Ed Adamson | March 11, 1963 |
A charming stranger (Cesare Danova) arrives at the McCain ranch and identifies himself as an acquaintance of an old friend of Lucas. |
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166 | 24 | "Old Man, Running" | Arthur H. Nadel | A. Martin Zweiback | March 18, 1963 |
An old man (John Anderson) appears in North Fork asking for Micah's protection from a gang of criminals who are after him. |
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167 | 25 | "Which Way'd They Go?" | Arthur H. Nadel | Arthur Browne, Jr. | March 25, 1963 |
The hillbilly Jackman family are installed as peace officers in a town near North Fork. |
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168 | 26 | "Old Tony" | Joseph H. Lewis | Thomas Thompson | April 8, 1963 |
The recluse Old Tony (Stefan Schnabel) helps Lucas rescue Mark and his friend from quicksand. |
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DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date | |||
The Complete First Season | 40 | December 4, 2013 | |||
The Complete Second Season | 36 | November 28, 2014 | |||
The Complete Third Season | 34 | December 2, 2015 | |||
The Complete Fourth Season | 32 | December 4, 2016 | |||
The Complete Fifth Season | 26 | November 27, 2017 |
Reception
U.S. Nielsen ratings
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | Rank | Rating |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season premiere | Season finale | |||||||
1 | 40 | September 30, 1958 | June 30, 1959 | 4 | 33.1[23] | |||
2 | 36 | September 29, 1959 | May 31, 1960 | 13 | 27.5[23] | |||
3 | 34 | September 27, 1960 | May 16, 1961 | 27 | 22.1[23] | |||
4 | 32 | October 2, 1961 | May 7, 1962 | 28 | 22.3[23] | |||
5 | 26 | October 1, 1962 | April 8, 1963 | Not in the Top 30[23] |
Spin-offs and remakes
Law of the Plainsman (1959)
The February 17, 1959 episode of The Rifleman was a pilot for an NBC series, Law of the Plainsman, starring Michael Ansara as Marshal Sam Buckhart. In the episode "The Indian", Buckhart comes to North Fork to look for Indians suspected of murdering a Texas Ranger and his family.[24] He subsequently reappeared in "The Raid". Three episodes of "The Rifleman" served as pilots for Westerns that never became a series. These were: "The Lariat" (March 29, 1960) starring Richard Anderson as a gambler and sharpshooter; "Death Trap" (May 9, 1961) featuring Phil Carey as Simon Battle, a gunslinger turned doctor; and "Which Way'd They Go?" (April 1, 1963), a comedy-western with Peter Whitney.[25]
The Gambler Returns (1991)
Chuck Connors briefly played the same character again in 1991's The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw, which featured a number of 1950s and 1960s television Western series leads reprising their roles in quick cameo appearances (Gene Barry as Bat Masterson, Hugh O'Brian as Wyatt Earp, Jack Kelly as Bart Maverick, Clint Walker as Cheyenne Bodie, David Carradine as Kung Fu's Caine).
2011 attempted remake
In late 2011, CBS announced plans to remake the original Rifleman series.[26] Chris Columbus was slated to be the executive producer and direct, with Robert Levy, Steven Gardner, and Arthur Gardner (related to original producers Levy-Gardner-Laven) as executive producers.[27] The remake project was canceled a few months later, without a pilot episode being made.[28]
Merchandising
The TV show was also adapted into a comic book by Dan Spiegle, distributed by Dell Comics.[29]
American toymaker Hubley produced a well made toy copy of McCain's Model 1892 known variously as The Rifleman Rifle, the Flip Special, and the Ring Rifle. Marx Toys also marketed a version called the Wild West that was simply the Lone Ranger/Roy Rogers Winchester with the loop lever used by McCain replacing the standard straight lever.[30]
See also
References
- ↑ In those episodes which Laven received director credit, the producers are credited as Levy and Gardner, only, as simultaneous producer and director credit was not then allowed.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Hume, Cyril. The Rifleman, Episode 1/16, first aired January 13, 1959
- ↑ The Rifleman, episode 3/25, The Prisoner. First aired March 14, 1961.
- ↑ The Wyoming Story part 1 & 2 (season 3)
- ↑ Sheridan is quoting Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address, specifically the final paragraph: "With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations."
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Stone, Robert (2011). Day Hikes Around Ventura County. Day Hike Books. Page 216. ISBN 9781573420624.
- ↑ McKinney, John (2013). HIKE Ventura County. The Trailmaster, Inc. Page 85. ISBN 9780934161534.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://www.riflemanconnors.com/Rifle/Ed/ed3.html[dead link]
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://riflemanconnorsforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=1751&p=12291.[dead link] Retrieved August 25, 2020.
Further reading
- Christopher Sharrett, The Rifleman (TV Milestones Series), Wayne State University Press, 2005
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- Official website
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Rifleman at IMDb
- The Rifleman at epguides.com
- The Rifleman's Rifle
- The Rifleman's Rifle demonstration on YouTube.com
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