William Boyd(1895-1972)
- Actor
- Producer
- Director
The son of a day laborer, William Boyd moved with his family to Tulsa,
Oklahoma, when he was seven. His parents died while he was in his early
teens, forcing him to quit school and take such jobs as a grocery
clerk, surveyor and oil field worker. He went to Hollywood in 1919,
already gray-haired. His first role was as an extra in
Cecil B. DeMille's
Why Change Your Wife? (1920).
He bought some fancy clothes, caught DeMille's eye and got the romantic
lead in
The Volga Boatman (1926),
quickly becoming a matinée idol and earning upwards of $100,000 a year.
However, with the end of silent movies, Boyd was without a contract,
couldn't find work and was going broke. By mistake his picture was run
in a newspaper story about the arrest of another actor with a similar
name (William 'Stage' Boyd) on
gambling, liquor and morals charges, and that hurt his career even
more. In 1935 he was offered the lead role in
Hop-a-Long Cassidy (1935)
(named because of a limp caused by an earlier bullet wound). He changed
the original pulp-fiction character to its opposite, made sure that
"Hoppy" didn't smoke, drink, chew tobacco or swear, rarely kissed a girl
and let the bad guy draw first. By 1943 he had made 54 "Hoppies" for
his original producer,
Harry Sherman; after Sherman
dropped the series, Boyd produced and starred in 12 more on his own.
The series was wildly popular, and all recouped at least double their production costs. In
1948 Boyd, in a savvy and precedent-setting move, bought the rights to
all his pictures (he had to sell his ranch to raise the money) just as
TV was looking for Saturday morning Western fare. He marketed all sorts
of "Hoppy" products (lunch boxes, toy guns, cowboy hats, etc.) and
received royalties from comic books, radio and records. He retired to
Palm Desert, California, in 1953. In 1968 he had surgery to remove a
tumor from a lymph gland and from then on refused all interview and
photograph requests.