Showing posts with label The Rebel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Rebel. Show all posts

Friday, November 1, 2019

The Rebel (1961)


Bob Anderson's interview with writer, producer, and co-creator Andrew J. Fenady in the Shout! Factory Season 2 DVD set for The Rebel fails to shed any light on why Fenady and star Nick Adams chose to base their western on a former Confederate soldier. Like his interview with Boyd Magers' Western Clippings web site, which we mentioned in the post on the 1960 episodes, Fenady maintains that he wanted to create a Jack London-type wandering writer who based his works on his own experiences, and since westerns were the dominant genre in terms of popularity on television in the late 1950s, he obviously chose to set the drama in the old west. But that still doesn't explain why he and Adams chose to make Johnny Yuma a former Confederate, or the series completely skirting the issue of slavery and portraying most of the surviving southerners as pitiable victims who have lost an enviable way of life. Anderson completely whiffs on digging into why the series' creators chose to show that there were very fine people on both sides.

However, the interview does shed some light on why The Rebel was canceled. Anderson notes that the series was ABC's highest-rated show airing on Sunday night, even though it never cracked the top 30 of the overall ratings, and Fenady and partner Irvin Kershner decided to develop a companion piece called The Yank, which would tell the story of a young man named Matthew Dorn who on the day he graduates from medical school learns that his father, an officer in the Union Army, is killed in the Battle of Fredericksburg. So rather than pursuing a medical career and taking the Hippocratic Oath, he enrolls at West Point, becomes a Union officer himself under William Tecumseh Sherman, and takes part in the destruction of the South. But once the war is over, Dorn takes to heart the words from Lincoln's second inaugural address about binding the nation's wounds and decides to retrace his path as a soldier and eventually use his medical training to help bring healing to the South. It's worth noting that of the two companion series, the former Union soldier is the one who feels compelled to embark on a tour of atonement, while the former Confederate sees no need to make amends.


Fenady and Kershner filmed a pilot episode that starred James Drury as Dorn, shortly before he landed the title role in The Virginian, with a supporting cast including John McIntire, Harry Townes, L.Q. Jones, and John Sutton. ABC was thrilled with the pilot and wanted to pick it up immediately, but since the 1960-61 season was already half over, they offered production company president Bill Todman 16 episodes to start right away. However, Todman wanted a full-season commitment of 36 episodes and decided instead to shop the show to NBC, where he had a friend in vice president of programming David Levy, offering both it and The Rebel as a package deal. Levy agreed to take both The Yank and The Rebel at 36 episodes each beginning the next season, so Todman went back to ABC and, according to Fenady's account, told them to "go to hell." Understandably ABC dropped The Rebel at the end of its second season. However, before NBC could pick it up for the 1961-62 season, Levy had left NBC in the wake of allegations by producer Ivan Tors during Congressional hearings on sex and violence in TV that Levy had insisted that sex and violence be added to Tors' series The Man and the Challenge before he would agree to add it to NBC's lineup. In other words, Todman's decision to burn his bridges with ABC spelled the demise of The Rebel.

But in the remaining episodes that aired in 1961, Fenady and company try to walk a fine line between exonerating the South while also saying that slavery is wrong, at least when it involves white people. In "The Promise" (January 15, 1961), Yuma rides into the town of Three Points to deliver a watch and a locket from a fallen war buddy to the man's daughter Laurie Buford only to discover that she is in effect enslaved by Hobie Kincaid, leader of a local vigilante outfit. At first Kincaid tries to make it appear that Laurie is merely his housekeeper, but he also plans to force her to marry his nephew Billy Joe as a final repayment for his having paid for her mother's doctor bills when she gave birth to Laurie. Yuma, of course, has to speak up against the marriage at the ceremony, prompting the minster to refuse to complete it, and then eventually Yuma guns down Billy Joe when he and Hobie try to find another minister in the next town and he tries to stop them. Then Hobie attempts to frame Yuma for Billy Joe's murder. Since there are no African-Americans ever depicted in the 1961 episodes of The Rebel, this is as close as the show ever gets to freeing the slaves.

In "Mission--Varina" (May 14, 1961) we see a sympathetic Jefferson Davis, one-time president of the Confederacy, being released from prison but in need of an armed escort to ensure that he can make the journey to a marina where he will be joined by his wife to sail back home. Yuma is recruited as one of Davis' escorts by Mrs. Davis because he served in a fictional secret mission that tried to end the war in 1863 but was sabotaged. Mrs. Davis fears that her husband has enemies on both sides of the war who may try to assassinate him if they learn of his travel plans, and his escort by the U.S. government will end 1 mile short of the marina to avoid drawing attention to his identity aboard the ship. However, another escort is Charles Ashbaugh, another member of the secret mission who was the one who sabotaged the peace deal (though it appears Yuma is the only one who knows this) by firing at a Union officer when the representatives from both sides met to sign the agreement. Unbeknownst to anyone until almost too late, Ashbaugh secretly harbors hate for Davis because he thinks he surrendered too easily, and Yuma has to gun down Ashbaugh when he tries to kill Davis. But before they reach the final confrontation, one of the U.S. government soldiers making up the escort asks Davis how, as a graduate of West Point and a member of the U.S. Army for 9 years, he could choose to secede from the country he had sworn to defend. Davis' answer is the sort of emotionally laden non-answer one expects from a career politician--that when forced to choose between family and country, of course one would choose family. The fact that everyone listening accepts his diversion without blinking an eye is yet another example of the way The Rebel sought to smooth over what really caused the Civil War.

However, the most ironic episode of 1961 is undoubtedly "Paperback Hero" (January 29, 1961) in which Yuma is sought out by Missouri-based newspaper writer Emily Stevens because she is looking for a western hero she can write about to please her editor and father back home. The plot is hardly original--many westerns of the era take potshots at eastern journalists and novelists who are thrilled by the tall tales of the west and decide to head there to witness the sensationalized action firsthand, only to realize that the deadly stakes involved are far more serious than they first realized. So the way the plot evolves is hardly novel, but what is interesting is the way Stevens builds up Yuma's character in her first articles--describing him as adorned with a chestful of medals, swaggering about like a cavalier, and claiming that he fought in the Civil War to "defend the dignity of gracious living." Though his only medal is an eagle's claw given to him by a Kiowa chief who considered him a blood brother because of his bravery, Yuma's depiction on The Rebel is not far off from Stevens' account. He portrays himself as a tough guy, who in the words of Fenady's theme song "figured that he'd been pushed enough," and never has to own up that he fought to defend a way of living that included enslaving other humans. Unwittingly, this episode undercuts Yuma's heroic status by exposing the facade of the South's "noble cause" and provides a perfect example that his character is not all he's cracked up to be. Furthermore, Yuma is engaged in the exact same occupation as Stevens, since he periodically sends sections of his journal to be published in his hometown newspaper in Mason City. Since we never see his completed newspaper columns, how do we know that his accounts of his exploits are any less sensationalized than those of Stevens? As one of Fenady's Shakespeare-quoting characters would have said, "Ay, there's the rub."

The Actors

For the biography of Nick Adams, see the 1960 post for The Rebel.

Notable Guest Stars

Season 2, Episode 16, "The Liberators": Joan Vohs (shown on the near left, played Jan Dearing on My Three Sons and Miss Cummings on Family Affair) plays abandoned physician Dr. Bless Stelling. Jody Warner (shown on the far left, played Penny Cooper on One Happy Family) plays her sister Hope. Nick Dennis (starred in A Streetcar Named Desire, East of Eden, and Kiss Me Deadly and played Nick Kanavaras on Ben Casey and Constantine on Kojak) plays Mexican revolutionary Greco. 
Season 2, Episode 17, "The Guard": Ed Nelson (shown on the right, played Michael Rossi on Peyton Place and Ward Fuller on The Silent Force) plays former Union prison guard Clint Mowbree. William Phipps (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays his brother Ben. Dee Pollock (Billy Urchin on Gunslinger) plays his brother Charlie.
Season 2, Episode 18, "The Promise": Gigi Perreau (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Betty Hutton Show) plays daughter of Yuma war buddy Laurie Buford. Peter Whitney (Sergeant Buck Sinclair on The Rough Riders and Lafe Crick on The Beverly Hillbillies) plays her employer Hobie Kincaid. Victor Izay (starred in Dr. Sex, The Astro-Zombies, and Blood Orgy of the She-Devils and played Judge Simmons on The D.A., Bull on Gunsmoke, and Dr. Matthew Vance on The Waltons) plays general store owner Abel Hawkins.
Season 2, Episode 19, "Jerkwater": John Dehner (shown on the right, played Duke Williams on The Roaring '20's, Commodore Cecil Wyntoon on The Baileys of Balboa, Morgan Starr on The Virginian, Cyril Bennett on The Doris Day Show, Dr. Charles Cleveland Claver on The New Temperatures Rising Show, Barrett Fears on Big Hawaii, Marshal Edge Troy on Young Maverick, Lt. Joseph Broggi on Enos, Hadden Marshall on Bare Essence, and Billy Joe Erskine on The Colbys) plays Yuma's fishing partner John Sims. John Marley (starred in Cat Ballou, Love Story, and The Godfather) plays Campbelltown patriarch George Campbell. James Chandler (Lt. Gerard on Bourbon Street Beat) plays Campbelltown physician Dr. Raydon. 
Season 2, Episode 20, "Paperback Hero": Virginia Gregg (shown on the left, starred in Dragnet, Crime in the Streets, Operation Petticoat and was the voice of Norma Bates in Psycho and was the voice of Maggie Belle Klaxon on Calvin and the Colonel) plays eastern newspaper writer Emily Stevens. Bobby Diamond (Joey Newton on Fury and Duncan Gillis on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis) plays shoeshine boy Jody Webster. Marie Selland (wife of director Sam Peckinpah) plays a saloon girl.

Season 2, Episode 21, "The Actress": Virginia Field (appeared in Little Lord Fauntleroy, Thank You, Jeeves!, Stage Door Canteen, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court) plays renowned actress Lotta Langley. Sandra Knight (shown on the right, ex-wife of Jack Nicholson, appeared in Thunder Road, Frankenstein's Daughter, and Blood Bath) plays her daughter Ruth Revere. Vic Perrin (the narrator on Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, the control voice on The Outer Limits, and did voicework on Jonny Quest, Star Trek, Scooby Doo, Where Are You?, and Mission: Impossible!) plays widower farmer Will Arvid. Robert Hickman (makeup artist who worked on Creature From the Black Lagoon and Around the World in Eighty Days as well as TV series Burke's Law, Honey West, and H.R. Pufnstuf) plays a deputy.
Season 2, Episode 22, "The Threat": Trevor Bardette (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays Big Rescue Sheriff Ike Howard. Richard Bakalyan (starred in The Delicate Delinquent, The Cool and the Crazy, Juvenile Jungle, Hot Car Girl, Paratroop Command, and The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes) plays extortionist Bart Vogan. Aladdin (Cesare on My Three Sons) plays banker Ambrose Pack.
Season 2, Episode 23, "The Road to Jericho": Robert Middleton (Barney Wales on The Monroes) plays scam artist Arthur Sutro. Warren Stevens (shown on the right, starred in The Frogmen, The Barefoot Contessa, Deadline U.S.A., and Forbidden Planet, played Lt. William Storm on Tales of the 77th Bengal Lancers, and was the voice of John Bracken on Bracken's World) plays pacifist Christopher Portal.
Season 2, Episode 24, "The Last Drink": Tom Drake (starred in Meet Me in St. Louis, Words and Music, Mr. Belvedere Goes to College, and The Sandpiper) plays notorious gunslinger Trace Dawes. Steve Marlo (Jack Casey on Ben Casey) plays his pursuer Ben Culver.
Season 2, Episode 25, "The Burying of Sammy Hart": George Wallace (see the biography section for the 1961 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays rancher Aaron Wallace. Eugene Mazzola (Joey Drum on Jefferson Drum) plays his son Billy. Charles Maxwell (shown on the left, played Special Agent Joe Carey on I Led 3 Lives and was the voice of the radio announcer on Gilligan's Island) plays his foreman Deeb Ericksen. Peggy Stewart (starred in Oregon Trail, Son of Zorro, and Desert Vigilante and played Cherien's mother on The Riches) plays his wife Sarah. Iron Eyes Cody (played the Indian who sheds a single tear in the "Keep America Beautiful" commercial that began running in 1971) plays dying Indian Sammy Hart.
Season 2, Episode 26, "The Pit": Olive Sturgess (Carol Henning on The Bob Cummings Show) plays wife of missing prospector Charity Bruner. Myron Healey (Doc Holliday on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays postal clerk Mac MacGowan. Ralph Reed (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays his son Slip. Steve Franken (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis) plays Slip's friend Ruck. Ned Glass (shown on the right, played MSgt. Andy Pendleton on The Phil Silvers Show, Sol Cooper on Julia, and Uncle Moe Plotnick on Bridget Loves Bernie) plays assayer Sam. Sheldon Allman (Norm Miller on Harris Against the World) plays enforcer Hunk.
Season 2, Episode 27, "Shriek of Silence": Tom Nolan (Jody O'Connell on Buckskin, Officer Hubbell on Jessie, and Mick on Out of This World) plays deaf/mute boy Paul Fellows. Yvette Vickers (starred in Reform School Girl, Attack of the 50 Foot Woman, and Attack of the Giant Leeches) plays saloon girl Nancy. Frank DeKova (shown on the left, played Chief Wild Eagle on F Troop and Louis Campagna on The Untouchables) plays outlaw Dick Sturgis. Anna Karen (Anna Chernak on Peyton Place) plays farm wife Bess Warren.
Season 2, Episode 28, "Two Weeks": Frank Overton (starred in Desire Under the Elms, To Kill a Mockingbird, and Fail-Safe and played Major Harvey Stovall on 12 O'Clock High) plays former Union Army prisoner John Galt. Jamie Farr (shown on the right, appeared in The Blackboard Jungle, With Six You Get Eggroll, The Cannonball Run, and Scrooged and played Maxwell Klinger on M*A*S*H and AfterMASH and Dudley on The Cool Kids) plays his ranch-hand Pooch. Shirley Ballard (Miss California of 1944, wife of Jason Evers, continuity supervisor on Water Under the Bridge and The Sullivans) plays Galt's wife Ann. 
Season 2, Episode 29, "Miz Purdy": Patricia Breslin (shown on the left, plated Amanda Peoples Miller on The People's Choice, Laura Brooks on Peyton Place, and Meg Bentley on General Hospital) plays ranch wife Elizabeth Purdy. Jason Evers (starred in The Brain That Wouldn't Die, House of Women, The Green Berets, and Escape From the Planet of the Apes and played Pitcairn on Wrangler, Prof. Joseph Howe on Channing, and Jim Sonnett on The Guns of Will Sonnett) plays ex-Confederate marauder George Tess. Ken Mayer (Maj. Robbie Robertson on Space Patrol) plays his cohort Deacon.
Season 2, Episode 30, "The Ballad of Danny Brown": William Bryant (McCall on Combat!, President Ulysses S. Grant on Branded, Col. Crook on Hondo, Lt. Shilton on Switch, and the Director on The Fall Guy) plays just-released ex-con Danny Brown. Gail Kobe (Penny Adams on Trackdown, Doris Schuster on Peyton Place, and Dean Ann Boyd Jones on Bright Promise and produced over 200 episodes of The Bold and the Beautiful) plays his fiance Emily Hardy. Tex Ritter (shown on the right, singing cowboy star of 1930s and 40s B westerns, who sang the Oscar-winning theme for High Noon and is a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame) plays the Shady Grove marshal. Stephen Joyce (Bubba Wadsworth on Texas, Admiral Walter Strichen on Wiseguy, and George Connor on All My Children) plays Emily's nephew Isham.
Season 2, Episode 31, "The Proxy": Vaughn Taylor (starred in Jailhouse Rock, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Psycho, and In Cold Blood and played Ernest P. Duckweather on Johnny Jupiter) plays fugitive banker Houghton. Vic Damone (shown on the left, popular singer once married to Diahann Carroll, starred in Rich, Young and Pretty, Hit the Deck, and Hell to Eternity) plays posse member Jess Wilkerson. Royal Dano (appeared in The Far Country, Moby Dick, and The Outlaw Josey Wales) play posse member Ben Crowe. William Bryant (see "The Ballad of Danny Brown" above) plays U.S. Army Maj. Lipscott.

Season 2, Episode 32, "Decision at Sweetwater": William Phipps (see "The Guard" above) plays mining engineer Morton Bishop. Carla Belanda (Patricia Hardy on The Mickey Rooney Show, Betty Leonard on The Adventures of Dr. Fu Manchu, and Miss Hazllit on Lassie) plays his wife Mary. Yvette Vickers (shown on the right, see "Shriek of Silence" above) plays saloon dancer Catherine Jewel. 
Season 2, Episode 33, "Helping Hand": Ray Stricklyn (Dr. James Parris on The Colbys and Senator Pickering on Wiseguy) plays family feuder Carl Blaine. Lee Erickson (Woody on Lassie) plays his brother Dave. Jack Elam (shown on the left, played Deputy J.D. Smith on The Dakotas, George Taggart on Temple Houston, Zack Wheeler on The Texas Wheelers, and Uncle Alvin Stevenson on Easy Street) plays his Uncle Luce. Eddie Ryder (see the biography section for the 1961 post on Dr. Kildare) plays Luce's son Web.
Season 2, Episode 34, "The Uncourageous": George Dolenz (shown on the right, father of Micky Dolenz, appeared in The Strange Death of Adolf Hitler, Vendetta, Scared Stiff, and The Last Time I Saw Paris and played Edmond Dantes/The Count of Monte Cristo on The Count of Monte Cristo) plays matador Juan Amontillo. Renata Vanni (appeared in Pay or Die!, A Patch of Blue, and Fatso and played Rose Brentano on That Girl) plays his wife Rosa.  

Season 2, Episode 35, "Mission--Varina": Richard Gaines (shown on the left, appeared in The Howard of Virginia, Double Indemnity, Unconquered, and Ace in the Hole and played the judge 14 times on Perry Mason) plays former Confederate president Jefferson Davis. Frieda Inescourt (appeared in Pride and Prejudice, The Return of the Vampire, A Place in the Sun, The She-Creature, and The Alligator People) plays his wife Varina. William Schallert (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis) plays former Confederate soldier Charles Ashbaugh. Dan Sheridan (see the biography section for the 1960 post on Lawman) plays retiring U.S. Army Sgt. Mundale. Ralph Reed (see "The Pit" above) plays his subordinate Pvt. Gaines.
Season 2, Episode 36, "The Calley Kid": Richard Bakalyan (see "The Threat" above) plays wounded outlaw Calley Dawson. 
Season 2, Episode 37, "Ben White": Charles Aidman (narrator on the 1985-87 version of The Twilight Zone) plays wanted bank robber Ben White. Mary Murphy (shown on the right, appeared in The Wild One, Beachhead, The Mad Magician, The Desperate Hours, and Junior Bonner) plays his wife T. Bruno VeSota (see "Decision at Sweetwater" above) plays cantina owner Basto.
Season 2, Episode 38, "The Found": Karl Held (see the biography section for the 1961 post on Perry Mason) plays wanted bank robber Danny Heathers. 
Season 2, Episode 39, "The Hostage": Lon McAllister (shown on the left, starred in Winged Victory, Thunder in the Valley, Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay!, and The Story of Seabiscuit) plays Yuma's war buddy Coley Wilks. Ed Kemmer (Commander Buzz Corry on Space Patrol, Paul Britton on The Secret Storm, Dick Martin on As the World Turns, and Ben Grant on Somerset) plays his brother Sheriff Jesse Wilks. Stephen Joyce (see "The Ballad of Danny Brown" above) plays convicted murderer Frank Daggett. Corey Allen (went on to direct multiple episodes of Dr. Kildare, Police Woman, Dallas, Hunter, and Star Trek: The Next Generation) plays his brother Yancey. Barry Russo (Roy Gilroy on The Young Marrieds) plays Yancey's cohort Charles Kane. Aladdin (see "The Threat" above) plays local Judge Baylon. Jean Inness (see the biography section for the 1961 post on Dr. Kildare) plays murder victim's widow Martha Randall. William Bryant (see "The Ballad of Danny Brown" above) plays poker player Bill.
Season 2, Episode 40, "The Executioner": Barry Atwater (Dr. John Prentice on General Hospital) plays Shoshone chief LeBlanc. Arthur Peterson (shown on the right, played The Major on Soap) plays the Carson City sheriff. Charles Aidman (see "Ben White" above) plays hostage Ferguson. Ken Mayer (see "Miz Purdy" above) plays hostage Andrews. Terry Moore (claimed to be secretly married to Howard Hughes though over the same period married and divorced several other men, including football star Glenn Davis, starred in Mighty Joe Young, Come Back, Little Sheba, Daddy Long Legs, and Peyton Place, and played Connie Garrett on Empire and Venus on Batman) plays hostage Janice Dutton.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

The Rebel (1960)



A sizable portion of White America has long been tone deaf in owning up to its history of enslaving and later disenfranchising African-Americans, a fact as true today as it was 55 years ago when ABC debuted its post-Civil War western "The Rebel." The series came to life only because of the tenacity of actor Nick Adams, who persuaded producer Andrew J. Fenady at a cocktail party, according to a cover story in the August 13, 1960 edition of TV Guide, to develop a series that he could star in since all of his film roles to that point had been supporting ones and Adams desperately wanted to be a star. Adams had settled on an acting career after growing up poor In Jersey City, the son of a former Pennsylvania coal miner, because he wanted to "be somebody," rejecting his father's advice to learn a trade because he wanted to make "a lot of money." According to the TV Guide account, it was Adams who pitched the general concept of the series to Fenady, but it isn't clear why he settled on portraying a former Confederate soldier who wanders the southwest ostensibly searching for a place to settle down without any clear idea of where or what that would be. Where Adams got his affinity for the Old South is equally puzzling since he grew up in the north, but he appears to have relished or at least embraced the underdog, outsider role, perhaps because of his poor upbringing and the fact that he didn't have the height or the good looks to be a Hollywood leading man. It's also extremely ironic that Adams appeared with James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause and became best friends with the actor until his untimely death in1955, after which he befriended Elvis Presley during the filming of Love Me Tender, a Civil War period piece. Adams also named his only son Jeb Stuart Adams after the famous general who was considered the knight errant of the Confederacy. Adams' apparent fondness for the Confederacy as some sort of noble lost cause seems as clueless as his idea early on that he could simply show up at a theatre and audition without any prior theatrical training, another true anecdote mentioned in the TV Guide article.

Fenady, in an interview for Boyd Magers' Western Clippings web site, says that he saw Adams' character Johnny Yuma as a kind of Jack London out west, an aspiring writer who had to live the adventures he would later write about. And the Yuma character does keep a journal in which we see him writing during perhaps half the episodes. Fenady saw this angle as unique amongst the current crop of westerns, but it isn't far removed from the newspaper stories being written by narrator and newspaper publisher Harris Claibourne of Tombstone Territory crossed with any of a number of wandering knights errant in series such as Cheyenne, Bronco, The Texan, and Sugarfoot. The series is also like Bronco in chronicling a hero who served in the Confederate Army, and like Bronco it never even so much as mentions the primary cause of the Civil War--slavery. 

Johnny Yuma's backstory is perhaps intentionally murky. The titular pilot episode "Johnny Yuma" (October 4, 1959) begins two years after the War's end with Yuma returning to his hometown of Mason City. Why he took two years to return home isn't explained and neither is his decision to join the Confederate Army, though there is a vague reference to his wanting to get away from home during a troublesome time, a suggestion that perhaps he did not get along with his father. But it is his father's honor that he has to restore in this episode. His father was the lawman of the town but was shot down by a gang who have since taken over the town. His aunt and her timid husband offer no resistance to the gang, so it is up to Yuma to confront and kill them. Afterward he has no sense of peace and feeling of home for a town that wouldn't come to his father's aid, so he sets out on his adventures not sure where he is going or what he is seeking but is encouraged to keep a journal of his affairs by the local newspaper publisher Elmer Dodson. He returns to Mason City and we find him working as a press operator for Dodson in the episode "The Bequest" (September 25, 1960), though why he came back and how long he has been there are not explained. He stays just long enough to try to help a simple-minded friend Jeremy Hake, who goes berserk when he learns his daughter needs an operation he can't afford and ends up shooting and killing a stagecoach driver in a failed attempt to rob the stage to pay for her operation. When Hake disappears but then returns late one night to seek Yuma's help, Yuma does his best but has to fend off two greedy bounty hunters eager to claim the reward on Hake's head. Hake urges Yuma to turn him in and then forward the reward money to his wife for his daughter's operation but winds up getting shot by the bounty hunters, who are then gunned down by Yuma. The citizens of Mason City assume that when Yuma collects the reward money that he has betrayed his friend Hake to enrich himself, though Dodson eventually learns the truth. But rather than allowing the newspaper publisher to print what really happened, he turns his fellow citizens' ignorance into an excuse to leave town again as the misunderstood hero.

This sense of misplaced southern martyrdom is shown elsewhere in the series as well. In "Noblesse Oblige" (February 14, 1960) southern belle Cassandra Bannister complains to Yuma that she is also a casualty of the war because the number of young Confederate soldiers killed has reduced the pool of potential suitors. She isn't helped by her overly proud father who shoots her lover because he considers the suitor beneath their exalted station. In "The Death of Gray" (January 3, 1960) former Confederate officer Col. Charles Morris tells Yuma he can't even bear to return to the South to see its destruction after the War, so instead he teams up with a band of cut-throat marauders who steal from and kill innocent ranchers, though by episode's end a banker's daughter's kidnapping gone awry convinces him of the error of his ways and he agrees to turn himself in.

But besides portraying the defeated South as somehow deserving of pity, the series whitewashes their role in fighting for slavery. Like other westerns of the era, racial prejudice can never be depicted as being whites discriminating against blacks. Instead, the Chinese are inserted in their place, as in the episode "Blind Marriage" (April 17, 1960) in which white stagecoach passengers refuse to ride in the same coach with Chinese immigrants. When slavery is shown, it is of the white-on-white variety shown in "The Captive of Tremblor" (April 10, 1960) in which town patriarch Jethro Gain imprisons the town physician Dr. Sam Bates against his will after paying for his medical training in a vain attempt to save his ailing wife. After his wife dies, Gain keeps Bates locked up in jail so that he can't leave town until he has paid back his debt. Even Confederate-related shame is smoothed over in "The Unwanted" (January 31, 1960) when the father of a Confederate soldier from a Union town digs up unmarked graves in the search for his dead son's remains so that he can rebury the boy in the Union cemetery and hide the fact that his son fought for the South. At first citizens like Jake Rollins, whose Union soldier son rests in the cemetery, think the old man is a despicable grave robber, but after they learn his true motivations, Yuma asks Rollins if it is so wrong to die for something you so firmly believe in. The sensible answer is that if you believe in slavery, then of course it is wrong to die defending it, but in the sentimental world of The Rebel Rollins instead replies that after seeing Yuma go to great lengths to help an old man he doesn't even know and from whom he can expect no reward, then he would have no problem being buried next to him. And then there's the inexplicable line from "The Hope Chest" (December 25, 1960) when Yuma is offered $200 if he will marry an old man's daughter, which Yuma declines and remarks, "I just don't think anybody has the right to sell a human life." Spoken like a page from the Confederate apologist's playbook: the Civil War was not fought over the issue of slavery. Denial couldn't be painted in any starker terms.

The theme song for The Rebel  was composed by Richard Markowitz with lyrics by Fenady and was sung by country music icon Johnny Cash. Richard Allen Markowitz was born in Santa Monica, California and in high school led a big band called Dick Allen and the Teenagers. He served in the military during World War II and then studied music in Paris under Arnold Schoenberg and Arthur Honegger. His career in film and TV composing didn't get started until 1958 when he scored the feature Stakeout on Dope Street, which was produced by Fenady and directed by Rebel director  Irvin Kershner. His other late 50s work continued in the teen exploitation genre: The Hot Angel, The Young Captives, Roadracers, and Operation Dames, all from 1958-59. While his work on The Rebel opened up other TV opportunities, such as Philip Marlowe, Dr. Kildare, and Ben Casey, he also continued working on feature films such as Hoodlum Priest, The Magic Sword, and Bus Riley's Back in Town, as well as TV movies like The Scalplock, which was later adapted into the TV series The Iron Horse. Perhaps his breakout work was the theme and scores for the first two seasons of The Wild, Wild West. From there he found steady work on many TV series into the early 1990s, most notably on The F.B.I. (16 episodes), Police Story (34 episodes), and Murder, She Wrote (71 episodes). His daughter Kate had a platinum-selling single in Germany in the 1990s under the name of Kate Yanai (her mother's maiden name). He died December 6, 1994 at age 68.

The complete series has been released on DVD by Timeless Media Group.

The Actors

Nick Adams

Nicholas Aloysius Adamshock was born in Nanticoke, Pennsylvania, the son of a Ukranian immigrant coal miner. When Adams was 5 years old, his uncle was killed in a mining accident, so his father moved the family as far away as his money would take them, which turned out to be Jersey City, New Jersey. His father found work as a janitor, and his mother worked for Western Electric. At the age of 17 Adams decided he wanted to be an actor but was so naive that, with no prior training, he showed up at a New York theater where The Silver Tassie was holding auditions. By chance he there met actor Jack Palance, and when Palance discovered that they both came from Ukranian-immigrant Pennsylvania coal-mining backgrounds, he steered Adams to a junior theater production of Tom Sawyer in which Adams was cast as Muff Potter. After a year of acting for no pay in New York, Adams hitch-hiked to Los Angeles and worked a number of odd jobs, from which he typically got fired, but also acted in a Las Palmas Theater production and filled in for Pearl Bailey once at the Mocambo nightclub. He finally landed an uncredited part in 1952's Somebody Loves Me, but his bigger break came after joining the Coast Guard and docking in Long Beach where John Ford was casting for the film version of Mister Roberts. Adams showed up at an audition in uniform and did impressions of James Cagney and other celebrities, ending with an impression of Morse code that spelled out "Give the kid a break." Ford was impressed enough to give Adams a small supporting part. The next year he landed supporting roles in box office smashes Picnic and Rebel Without a Cause, where he met and befriended James Dean. After Dean's tragic death, Adams attempted to exploit his connection with the star in order to further his own career, claiming he was being stalked by a female Dean fan and posing for photos at Dean's grave. It wasn't long before he met and became close friends with Elvis Presley. Presley biographer Elaine Dundy spoke ill of Adams as an actor "whose main scheme to further his career was to hitch his wagon to a star." Adams continued getting decent supporting roles, the best being alongside Andy Griffith in No Time for Sergeants, but he appeared to be frustrated by the lack of leading roles, which was his main impetus in persuading Fenady to develop The Rebel.

After The Rebel was canceled at the end of its second season, he appeared in the Steve McQueen war feature Hell Is for Heroes and then landed another TV lead as reporter Nick Alexander on Saints and Sinners, which ran only 18 episodes in 1962-63. He received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his work in Twilight of Honor in 1963, though one account says that the nomination was the result of a hefty dose of self-promotion. He thereafter found occasional guest spots on several TV shows, including 5 appearances on Burke's Law between 1963 and 1965, but in the latter half of the decade he was reduced to B movie fare such as Frankenstein Conquers the World and Invasion of Astro-Monster. A friend of Robert Conrad, he appeared in two episodes of The Wild, Wild West as well as Combat! and Hondo. But after suffering a career downturn and while going through a pending divorce from his wife Carol Nugent, Adams died of a prescription drug overdose on February 7, 1968 at the age of 36. Fenady believes his death was accidental, that he was too invested in his children to have committed suicide. But Adams' daughter Allyson has floated the possibility of foul play when she claimed that some of his personal belongings, such as a bronzed replica of his cap from The Rebel, were missing after his death. However, amongst his surviving effects was a manuscript of his days with Presley, which she published under the title The Rebel and the King in 2014.

Notable Guest Stars

Season 1, Episode 13, "The Death of Gray": Harry Townes (starred in The Brothers Karamazov, Screaming Mimi, and Sanctuary) plays former Confederate officer Col. Charles Morris. Johnny Cash (shown on the left, iconic country singer known as The Man in Black) plays marauder Pratt. Sandra Knight (ex-wife of Jack Nicholson, appeared in Frankenstein's Daughter, Thunder Road, and Blood Bath) plays a banker's daughter.
Season 1, Episode 14, "Angry Town": Jack Elam (Deputy J.D. Smith on The Dakotas, George Taggart on Temple Houston, Zack Wheeler on The Texas Wheelers, and Uncle Alvin Stevenson on Easy Street) plays a small-town lawyer. Perry Cook (Barney Udall on Hunter) plays town deputy Leach. Ron Soble (Dirty Jim on The Monroes) plays dead sheriff's brother Flint.
Season 1, Episode 15, "Gold Seeker": John Sutton (appeared in Jane Eyre, The Three Musketeers(1948), and The Return of the Fly) plays the unnamed gold seeker.
Season 1, Episode 16, "Glory": Marie Windsor (shown on the right, starred in Outpost in Morocco, Dakota Lil, Cat-Women of the Moon, Swamp Women, and The Day Mars Invaded Earth) plays jealous sister Emma Longdon. William Bryant (McCall on Combat!, President Ulysses S. Grant on Branded, Col. Crook on Hondo, Lt. Shilton on Switch, and the Director on The Fall Guy) plays her brother Don. Nick Dennis (starred in A Streetcar Named Desire, East of Eden, and Kiss Me Deadly and played Nick Kanavaras on Ben Casey and Constantine on Kojak) plays stable owner Al Johnson. John Mitchum (see the biography section for the 1960 post on Riverboat) plays brawler Sam.



Season 1, Episode 17, "The Unwanted": Trevor Bardette (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays dead soldier's father Sam Amister. Gregory Irvin (Johnny Brady on Dennis the Menace) plays his grandson. Carleton Young (starred in Dick Tracy (1937), The Brigand, Thunderhead - Son of Flicka, and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance and played Harry Steeger on The Court of Last Resort) plays Perdition Sheriff John Peeples. Buck Young (Deputy Buck Johnson on U.S. Marshal and Sergeant Whipple on Gomer Pyle: USMC) plays Amister antagonist Salvo. Joseph V. Perry (Nemo  on Everybody Loves Raymond) plays blacksmith customer Brad Evans. Vinton Hayworth (see the biography section for the 1961 post on Lawman) plays physician Dr. Elliott.
Season 1, Episode 18, "The Crime": Walter Sande (appeared in To Have and Have Not, A Place in the Sun, and Bad Day at Black Rock and played Capt. Horatio Bullwinkle on The Adventures of Tugboat Annie and Papa Holstrum on The Farmer's Daughter) plays Mexican Hat Sheriff Amos Cannon. Richard Devon (Jody Barker on Yancy Derringer) plays his deputy Clyde Vollmer.
Season 1, Episode 19, "Noblesse Oblige": Kenneth Tobey (starred in Angel Face, The Thing From Another World, and It Came From Beneath the Sea and played Chuck Martin on Whirleybirds and Russ Conway on I Spy) plays Yuma's former commanding officer Quincy Bannister. Robert Vaughn (shown on the right, starred in Teenage Cave Man, The Magnificent Seven, The Towering Inferno, and Bullitt and played Capt. Ray Rambridge on The Lieutenant, Napoleon Solo on The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Harry Rule on The Protectors, Harlan Adams on Emerald Point N.A.S., Gen. Hunt Stockwell on The A-Team, and Albert Stroller on Hustle) plays his brother Asa. Gail Russell (starred in The Uninvited, Calcutta, and Angel and the Badman) plays his sister Cassandra.
Season 1, Episode 20, "Land": Ralph Moody (see the biography section for the 1961 post on The Rifleman) plays Nebraska Judge Parks. Ross Elliott (Freddie the director on The Jack Benny Program and Sheriff Abbott on The Virginian) plays physician Dr. Mac. Charles Maxwell (Special Agent Joe Carey on I Led 3 Lives and the voice of the radio announcer on Gilligan's Island) plays gunman Joe Falton.
Season 1, Episode 21, "He's Only a Boy": Robert Blake (shown on the left, played Mickey in over 30 Our Gang shorts and Little Beaver in 23 westerns, starred in Black Rose, Pork Chop Hill, The Purple Gang, In Cold Blood, Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here, and Electra Glide in Blue, and played Det. Tony Baretta on Baretta and Father Noah Rivers on Hell Town) plays young gun Virgil Moss. Donald Woods (John Brent on Tammy and Craig Kennedy on Kennedy, Criminologist) plays his father Sam. Paul Picerni (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Untouchables) plays hotel clerk Clee.
Season 1, Episode 22, "Take Dead Aim": Edgar Barrier (appeared in Phantom of the Opera (1943), Adventures in Silverado, Macbeth (1948), and Snow White and the Three Stooges and played Don Cornelio Esperon on Zorro) plays trick-shooter The Great Bianco. Mala Powers (starred in Cyrano de Bergerac, Rose of Cimarron, and Tammy and the Bachelor and played Rebecca Boone on Walt Disney's Daniel Boone and Mona on Hazel) plays his wife Cassie.
Season 1, Episode 23, "The Rattler": Martha Vickers (starred in The Big Sleep, Ruthless, and Alimony and was Mickey Rooney's third wife and mother of Teddy Rooney) plays marshal's wife Bess Weed. Richard Jaeckel (shown on the right, see the biography section for the 1961 post on Frontier Circus) plays hired hand Roader.
Season 1, Episode 24, "You Steal My Eyes": Cathy O'Donnell (starred in The Best Years of Our Lives, They Live by Night, Detective Story, The Man From Laramie, The Deerslayer, and Ben-Hur) plays blind trapper's daughter Prudence Gant. William Bryant (see "Glory" above) plays gang leader Hump.
Season 1, Episode 25, "Fair Game": Patricia Medina (Margarita Cortazar on Zorro) plays accused murderess Cynthia Kenyon. James Drury (The Virginian on The Virginian and Captain Spike Ryerson on Firehouse) plays her accomplice Bert Pace. Stacy Harris (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays drummer Cramer. James Chandler (Lt. Girard on Bourbon Street Beat) plays bounty hunter Farnum.
Season 1, Episode 26, "Unsurrendered Sword": Lorna Thayer (starred in The Beast With a Million Eyes and played the waitress in Five Easy Pieces) plays Confederate widow Amanda Harrington. Jay Novello (Juan Greco on Zorro and Mayor Mario Lugatto on McHale's Navy) plays Gomera constable Guido Morales. Paul Picerni (shown on the left, see "He's Only a Boy" above) plays bitter drunkard Manuel Flynn. Joseph V. Perry (see "The Unwanted" above) plays hotel owner Sam Hackett. Mary Gregory (appeared in Sleeper and Coming Home and played Dr. Stanwhich on Knots Landing and Judge Pendleton on L.A. Law) plays his wife Elvira.
Season 1, Episode 27, "The Captive of Tremblor": Robert Brubaker (Deputy Ed Blake on U.S. Marshal and Floyd on Gunsmoke) plays captive physician Dr. Sam Bates. James Seay (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays town patriarch Jethro Gain. John Pickard (Capt. Shank Adams on Boots and Saddles and Sgt. Maj. Murdock on Gunslinger) plays Tremblor Marshal Drown. Guy Wilkerson (played Panhandle Perkins in 22 westerns, and Theodore Lehmann, the narrator on Around the World With Willy Fogg and Grimm Masterpiece Theatre and voiced High Dingy Doo on Noozles, the Commander and Zero on Captain Harlock and the Queen of a Thousand Years, and Mayor Lion on Maple Town) plays a saddle tramp.
Season 1, Episode 28, "Blind Marriage": Philip Ahn (Master Kan on Kung Fu) plays wealthy Chinese father Quong Lee. Lisa Lu (see the biography section for the 1960 post on Have Gun --Will Travel) plays his daughter Quong Lia. Victor Buono (shown on the right, appeared in Robin and the 7 Hoods, Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte, The Greatest Story Ever Told, and The Silencers and played King Tut on Batman and Dr. Schubert on Man From Atlantis) plays stage passenger Young. Joseph V. Perry (see "The Unwanted" above) plays miner Bert.
Season 1, Episode 29, "Absolution": Gloria Talbott (shown on the left, starred in The Cyclops, Daughter of Dr. Jekyll,  and I Married a Monster From Outer Space and played Moneta on Zorro) plays Yuma's former fiance Genevieve Morgan. John Maxwell (Alex Gregory on The Court of Last Resort) plays her attending physician. Natalie Masters (Wilma Clemson on Date With the Angels, Mrs. Bergen on My Three Sons, and Edith Barson on Dragnet) plays his nurse.
Season 1, Episode 30, "A Grave for Johnny Yuma": Olan Soule (Aristotle "Tut" Jones on Captain Midnight, Ray Pinker on Dragnet (1952-59), and Fred Springer on Arnie) plays hotel clerk Mr. Dover.
Season 1, Episode 31, "In Memory of a Son": Jack Hogan (starred in The Bonnie Parker Story, Paratroop Command, and The Cat Burglar and played Kirby on Combat!, Sgt. Jerry Miller on Adam-12, Chief Ranger Jack Moore on Sierra, and Judge Smithwood on Jake and the Fatman) plays Yuma's former Army mate Vic Nielsen. Richard Evans (Paul Hanley on Peyton Place) plays former Army mate Tony Parlio.
Season 1, Episode 32, "Paint a House With Scarlet": John Anderson (see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays religious zealot Ezra Tabor. Clu Gulager (shown on the right, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Tall Man) plays his son Virgil. Margaret Field (mother of actress Sally Field) plays their neighbor Sara Bodine.
Season 1, Episode 33, "Grant of Land": Paul Richards (appeared in Playgirl and Beneath the Planet of the Apes and played Louy Kassoff on The Lawless Years) plays former Army chaplain Paul Travis. Ruta Lee (appeared in Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, Funny Face, and Witness for the Prosecution and played Rona on 1st and Ten: The Championship and Pauline Spencer on Coming of Age) plays land owner Ellen Barton. Ed Nelson (Michael Rossi on Peyton Place and Ward Fuller on The Silent Force) plays her hired hand Chad.
Season 1, Episode 34, "Night on a Rainbow": James Best (Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane on The Dukes of Hazzard) plays Yuma's old Army friend Ted Evans. Gail Kobe (shown on the left, played Penny Adams on Trackdown and Doris Schuster on Peyton Place and produced over 200 episodes of The Bold and the Beautiful) plays his wife Carrie. Perry Cook (see "Angry Town" above) plays druggist Roy Cale. Jon Lormer (Harry Tate on Lawman, various autopsy surgeons and medical examiners in 12 episodes of Perry Mason, and Judge Irwin A. Chester on Peyton Place) plays the town doctor.
Season 1, Episode 35, "Lady of Quality": Joanna Moore (mother of Tatum and Griffin O'Neal, appeared in Touch of Evil, Son of Flubber, and Never a Dull Moment and played Peggy McMillan on The Andy Griffith Show) plays deranged widow Barbara Dyer. Ed Kemmer (Commander Buzz Corry on Space Patrol, Paul Britton on The Secret Storm, and Dick Martin on As the World Turns) plays physician Dr. Curtis. Bart Burns (Capt. Pat Chambers on Mike Hammer) plays buffalo hunter Packer.
Season 1, Episode 36, "The Earl of Durango": John Sutton (see "Gold Seeker" above) plays novelist C. Spencer Scott. L.Q. Jones (Beldon on The Virginian, Sheriff Lew Wallace on The Yellow Rose, and Nathan Wayne on Renegade) plays his gunman Otis Rumph. Angelo Rossitto (appeared in Freaks, Spooks Run Wild, and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome and played Seymour Spider and Clang on H.R. Pufnstuf, Mr. Big and the lead singer of the Hat Band on Lidsville, and Little Moe on Baretta) plays his secretary Godfrey. Nick Dennis (see "Glory" above) plays Durango Sheriff Rocky Spiropolous. George Tobias (shown on the right, starred in Sergeant York, This Is the Army, and Yankee Doodle Dandy and played Pierre Falcon on Hudson's Bay, Trader Penrose on Adventures in Paradise, and Abner Kravitz on Bewitched) plays Dead Oak Sheriff Boyd. Jody Warner (Penny Cooper on One Happy Family) plays casino owner Belle. Victor Buono (see "Blind Marriage" above) plays casino dealer Ralph Babcock. Andrew J. Fenady (co-creator of The Rebel) plays district Marshal Hondo Payne. Patricia Medina (see "Fair Game" above) plays Spanish lady Lupe.
Season 2, Episode 1, "Johnny Yuma at Appomattox": William Bryant (see "Glory" above) plays Union Army Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. George Macready (Martin Peyton on Peyton Place) plays Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Andrew J. Fenady (see "The Earl of Durango" above) plays Union Gen. Philip Sheridan. Ed Nelson (see "Grant of Land" above) plays Confederate soldier Doug. Robert Hickman (makeup artist who worked on Creature From the Black Lagoon and Around the World in Eighty Days as well as TV series Burke's Law, Honey West, and H.R. Pufnstuf) plays a wounded Confederate soldier. J. Pat O'Malley (see the biography section for the 1961 post on Frontier Circus) plays Abilene newspaper publisher McCune. Teddy Rooney (son of actors Mickey Rooney and Martha Vickers) plays his grandson Jimmy.
Season 2, Episode 2, "The Bequest": Elisha Cook, Jr. (starred in The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, The Great Gatsby (1949), and The Killing and played Francis "Ice Pick" Hofstetler on Magnum P.I.) plays distressed father Jeremy Hake. John Carradine (shown on the left, starred in Stagecoach, The Grapes of Wrath, House of Frankenstein, House of Dracula, The Ten Commandments, and Sex Kittens Go to College and played Gen. Joshua McCord on Branded) plays Mason City newspaper publisher Elmer Dodson. John Pickard (see "The Captive of Tremblor" above) plays Mason City Sheriff Cahill. Natalie Masters (see "Absolution" above) plays shop owner Ma Silver.
Season 2, Episode 3, "The Champ": Michael Ansara (appeared in Julius Caesar, The Robe, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, and Harum Scarum, played Cochise on Broken Arrow and Deputy U.S. Marshal Sam Buckhart on The Rifleman and the Law of the Plainsman, and voiced General Warhawk on Rambo) plays washed-up boxer Docker Mason. Ed Kemmer (see "Lady of Quality" above) plays his manager Jake Wiley. Chuck Hicks (LaMarr Kane on The Untouchables) plays boxer The Frontier Kid. John Indrisano (real-life professional boxer and referee, played John the Chauffeur on O.K. Crackerby!) plays the fight referee.
Season 2, Episode 4, "The Waiting": Claude Akins (shown on the right, played Sonny Pruett on Movin' On and Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo on B.J and the Bear and on Lobo) plays bounty hunter Tom Hall. Joan Evans (starred in Roseanna McCoy, Edge of Doom, and Skirts Ahoy! and played Leonar on Zorro) plays The Yellow Sky Kid's wife Cassie. William Bryant (see "Glory" above) plays Sheriff Ed Strode.
Season 2, Episode 5, "To See the Elephant": Ken Mayer (Maj. Robbie Robertson on Space Patrol) plays wealthy rancher Bull Hollingsworth. Mark Goddard (shown on the left, played Cully on Johnny Ringo, Det. Sgt. Chris Ballard on The Detectives, Bob Randall on Many Happy Returns, and Maj. Don West on Lost in Space) plays his naive son Seldon. Ron Soble (see "Angry Town" above) plays corrupt saloon owner Josiah Boyd. Ellen Corby (Henrietta Porter on Trackdown and Esther Walton on The Waltons) plays elderly saloon girl Carrie Blyden. Judith Rawlins (second wife of singer Vic Damone, died of a drug overdose) plays her supposed niece Mavis. Aladdin (frequent guest on The Lawrence Welk Show as a violinist, singer, and poet, played Cesare on My Three Sons) plays a hotel clerk.
Season 2, Episode 6, "Deathwatch": James Best (see "Night on a Rainbow" above) plays Confederate general's son Abel Waares. Frank Silvera (Don Sebastian Montoya on The High Chaparral) plays yaqui leader Cota.
Season 2, Episode 7, "Run, Killer, Run": Richard Jaeckel (see "The Rattler" above) plays fleeing killer Traskel. John Pickard (see "The Captive of Tremblor" above) plays patrolling Sheriff Pruett. Ed Nelson (see "Grant of Land" above) plays an unnamed deputy looking for Traskel.
Season 2, Episode 8, "The Hunted": Leonard Nimoy (shown on the right, played Mr. Spock on Star Trek, Paris on Mission: Impossible, and Dr. William Bell on Fringe) plays accused killer Jim Colburn. Dorothy Adams (appeared in Laura, The Best Years of Our Lives, The Winning Team, and The Killing) plays his mother. Nick Dennis (see "Glory" above) plays a French fur trapper. Lennie Weinrib (the voice of H.R. Pufinstuf, Seymour Spider, and Ludicrous Lion on H.R. Pufinstuf, voice of Sam Curvy on Doctor Doolittle, and voice of Moonrock on The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show) plays a sheriff building a boat in a bottle. Arlene Martel (Tiger on Hogan's Heroes and Spock's Vulcan bride on Star Trek) plays Colburn's best friend's wife Molly Keller.
Season 2, Episode 9, "The Legacy": Jon Lormer (see "Night on a Rainbow" above) plays Mecca City judge Adam Ricker. Robert Hutton (appeared in Destination Tokyo, Time Out of Mind, The Man on the Eiffel Tower, They Came From Beyond Space, and Trog) plays his son and prosecuting attorney Vance. James Chandler (see "Fair Game" above) plays his son and sheriff Bill. Paul Picerni (see "He's Only a Boy" above) plays his son and defense attorney Lee. Soupy Sales (host of The Soupy Sales Show) plays a blacksmith.
Season 2, Episode 10, "Don Gringo": Gigi Perreau (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1960 post on The Betty Hutton Show) plays a wealthy Mexican's betrothed daughter Demetria Angelica. Edgar Barrier (see "Take Dead Aim" above) plays her father Don Diego.
Season 2, Episode 11, "Explosion": L.Q. Jones (see "The Earl of Durango" above) plays bank-robbing killer Roy Shandell. Douglas Spencer (appeared in The Thing From Another World, Shane, This Island Earth, River of No Return, and The Diary of Anne Frank) plays her father Joe. Ross Elliott (see "Land" above) plays local Sheriff Barney Cagle. Gregory Irvin (see "The Unwanted" above) plays his son Davey.
Season 2, Episode 12, "Vindication": James Drury (shown on the right, see "Fair Game" above) plays blind retired Army Capt. Paul Travis. Dan Sheridan (see the biography section of the 1960 post on Lawman) plays stage shotgun man Jess Hosmer. Martha Vickers (see "The Rattler" above) plays stage waystation host Agnes Boley. William Bryant (see "Glory" above) plays her husband Sam. Michael Barrier (Lt. DeSalle on Star Trek) plays young newlywed Howard Gaynes. Jody Warner (see "The Earl of Durango" above) plays his wife Laurie.
Season 2, Episode 13, "The Scalp Hunter": John Dehner (shown on the left, played Duke Williams on The Roaring '20's, Commodore Cecil Wyntoon on The Baileys of Balboa, Morgan Starr on The Virginian, Cyril Bennett on The Doris Day Show, Dr. Charles Cleveland Claver on The New Temperatures Rising Show, Barrett Fears on Big Hawaii, Marshal Edge Troy on Young Maverick, Lt. Joseph Broggi on Enos, Hadden Marshall on Bare Essence, and Billy Joe Erskine on The Colbys) plays Apache scalp hunter John Sims. Dan Sheridan (see "Vindication" above) plays small-town Sheriff Armstedder.
Season 2, Episode 14, "Berserk": Tom Drake (starred in Meet Me in St. Louis, Mr. Belvedere Goes to College, and The Sandpiper) plays war-addled Kansas Sheriff Mat Dunsen. K.T. Stevens (Vanessa Prentiss on The Young and the Restless) plays his wife. Dan Barton (Det. Sgt. Burke on Dan Raven) plays his deputy Frank Maggio. Robert Brubaker (see "The Captive of Tremblor" above) plays trigger-happy citizen Picquete. Arthur Peterson (The Major on Soap) plays town physician Doc Jons.
Season 2, Episode 15, "The Hope Chest": William Demarest (shown on the right, appeared in Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, The Lady Eve, The Devil and Miss Jones, Stage Door Canteen, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, and That Darn Cat! and played William Harris on Love and Marriage, Mr. Daly on Make Room for Daddy, Jeb Gaine on Tales of Wells Fargo, and Uncle Charlie O'Casey on My Three Sons) plays old widower Ulysses Bowman. Cathy O'Donnell (see "You Steal My Eyes" above) plays his unmarried daughter Felicity. Soupy Sales (see "The Legacy" above) plays vagabond Meyers.