Sagebrush News issue 12
Transcription
Sagebrush News issue 12
The Sagebrush News Inside this issue: This n That 2 Fan to Fan 3 The Great American Cowboy 4 Movie Review 5 Nellybelle 6 Roy’s Sidekicks 7 Mom’s Scrapbook 8-9 Roy’s Faith 10-11 Dale’s Faith 12 Memphis Film Festival 13 Pioneer Record Rack 14-15 Dale Evans Film Project 16 Henager Centennial 17 Happy Trails 18 Issue No. 12 Celebrate Roy’s birthday 19 August, 2011 Bobby Copeland 20-21 Roy Rogers’ Festival 22-23 FirstPlace 24 August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 2 This n That NOW ON THE WEB HTTP://WWW.SAGEBRUSHNEWS.ORG A lot of fan contributions throughout this issue Be sure to check out the new website for access to all of the archived issues of The Sagebrush News. ************************************************ Krys reviews “Days of Jesse James” from 1939 *************************************************** Krystina and Leah continue their series describing Roy and Dale’s Faith *************************************************** Meet the new owners of Nellybelle *************************************************** Are you a Facebook member? If so, be sure to become a fan of The Sagebrush News group on Facebook. http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_91175802565 Western Music on the Internet Our favorite sites: Listen to O. J. Sikes at bostonpete.com. Our friend, O. J., has an all new show each week at: http://www.bostonpete.com/wma/show0004.asx “Big Boy” Williams is featured in issue as Roy’s sidekick *************************************************** John Fullerton returns with another episode of The Pioneer Record Rack *************************************************** We review the Memphis Film Festival, Henager’s Roy Rogers Cenntennial Celebration and the Roy Rogers Festival in Portsmouth, OH *************************************************** Learn about a Dale Evans Film Project *************************************************** Ranch and Reata Radio for a good mix of continuous old and new western music More locations where you can celebrate Roy’s 100th birthday hp://www.customchannels.net/player_pages/player_launch.php?page=ranch The Cowtrails show hosted by Western Belle can be heard each Sunday from 1-3 p.m. CDT on pbs station KSJD in Colorado. It can be heard online at: hp://www.customchannels.net/player_pages/player_launch.php?page=ranch The Sagebrush News is a free, quarterly, online only publication dedicated to the memory of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. Co-Editors: Jim Friesz and Charles Galloway Contributing Writers: Leah, Krystina, John, Jim Proofreaders: Sharon Friesz and JeanBeth Hill EDITOR note—this newsletter is a work of love for Roy and Dale, thus it is free. The fans of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans present: THE SAGEBRUSH NEWS 108 HAMPSHIRE DRIVE BRANSON, MO 65616 Phone: 417-334-0890 Fax: 417-334-0890 Email: [email protected] Web: sagebrushnews.org We would like to hear from you regarding your special connection to Roy and Dale. Your letter may very well be included in the next issue of The Sagebrush News. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 3 Many of our readers are very talented folks. Since the last issue of The Sagebrush News we have received many writings we want to share with you. Judy Garcia writes :“A few years ago I wrote a book of poems printed by Ghost River Images in Tucson, AZ. and one of my poems was about Roy. The poetry book was titled TO ALL THE MEN I LOVED BEFORE and the poem is titled HAPPY TRAILS. I’d like to share it with you.” Happy Trails I fell in love with you those Saturday matinees I was mesmerized and stayed in the theater all day W_ n__^ mor_ h_ro_s lik_ Roy [n^ D[l_, how_v_r, my n_ph_ws [n^ ni_]_s ^on’t _v_n know who th_y [r_. I s__ th[t [nt_nn[ TV h[s som_ of th_ r_[l ol^ s_ri_s —I w[t]h_^ Rin-Tin-Tin this morning. I wish su]h shows [s Roy Rog_rs , G_n_ @utry, R_^ Ry^_r, Hop[long C[ss[^y, Th_ Lon_ R[ng_r, Br[v_ E[gl_, Whistling @rrow, [n^ of ]ours_, Rin-Tin-Tin, Fury [n^ m[ny oth_rs th[t pr_s_nt_^ [^ult [n^ ]hil^ rol_ mo^_ls to th_ vi_w_r w_r_ still [v[il[\l_. I think if th_s_ \_][m_ [ r_gul[r on S[tur^[y morning TV [g[in th_y ]oul^ on]_ [g[in \_]om_ h_ro_s to th_ ]hil^r_n of to^[y. Th[nk you for Th_ S[g_\rush N_ws. D[rl_n_ M. St[pp You’d ride on Trigger across the silver screen Enforcing the law and keeping the prairie clean I was a charter member of the Roy Rogers Riders Club and You taught us values at a very young age While dodging cactus tumbleweed and purple sage You’d sing under the western skies In your cowboy shirt and bolo tie In each picture, you’d ride the range Champion of justice promoting change Trigger was your gallant steed Helping you complete each good deed still have the rules in a frame on my wall, along with several autographed pictures I received over the years from their fan club. I had a Dale Evans cowgirl outfit and I had Roy Rogers saddlebags but no horse, so I put them on the back of my bicycle and made “reins” out of a rope to attach to the handlebars of my JC Higgins bike. I also had a Roy Rogers lunchbox, which long ago rusted and was thrown away, but I found a duplicate a few years ago so enjoy carrying it when we travel or just having it on display in my kitchen. When I was in 4th grade, my mother gave me a copy of Angel Unaware and I read it so many times I almost had it memorized. Your sidekicks were Gabby and Dale With them you could not fail I grew to love your movies of the old west And my memories of you are the very best I never got to meet Roy in person but I stood in line for nearly 4 hours to meet Dale at a book-signing once in Dallas. The other thing is that Dusty and I think, Linda and Cheryl, were in my cousin’s Sunday School class in California when they were kids and Barb got to go on a picnic at their ranch. I was so envious!!! Thanks and Happy Trails! Jean Brock August, 2011 The Sagebrush News The Great American Cowboy Made famous by writers Gene Autry, Matt and Chester, like Louis L’amour and Zane Grey, as we rode our stick horses the cowboy rode into our lives and shot our cap guns via the pages of dime novels, and dressed like cowboys. radio dramas, movie serials, Sometimes our heroes and later made weekly would come to town, appearances on Saturday appear at our rodeos, morning television, and seeing Roy and Dale Our heroes clad in chaps, and Matt and Chester spurs and cowboy boots, and the good guy always ride into the arena wore a white hat. was almost more than These were our champions, we could bear, as we the men who rounded up, rushed from our seats herded, roped, branded, who smelled of cattle and horse and often The first one is “Roy Rogers, King of the Cowboys, The Collected Dailies and Sundays” published by Hermes Press in cooperation with The Roy Rogers Family Entertainment Corporation. The foreword, written by Dusty, explains how he and his brother, Sandy, were like all other kids that waited impatiently for that next Roy Rogers comic book or newspaper comic strip. This is a wonderful look into the history of this part of the Roy Rogers legacy. The book is available at Amazon.com or directly from the publisher at hermespress.com. railing to get a better look at these men and women of stars with only a saddle who brought out the best in each to pillow their head. of us. We lived vicariously Long live the Great American through the adventures cowboy. We need their of Tom Mix, Shane, Roy and Dale, brand of heroism today. © 2011 Carol J. Grace Carol Grace is a native of Little Rock, Arkansas. This past March she attended a concert by Roy Rogers, Jr. and the HighRiders as part of the Songs Across America Festival held at the University of Central Arkansas in Conway. We suspect writers such as Ms. Grace are always preparing for the next poem and so it was no surprise when she put her thoughts about The Great American Cowboy into poetry. For more information on her writwww.reflectionspoetry.com There are two recent publications that you may be interested in obtaining. I would call them coffee table books — the kind you set out for people to look through. and pressed against the slept under a blanket ings go to her website at Page 4 American Cowboy magazine’s editors recently published this next book: “The 100 Greatest Western Movies of all time: Including five you’ve never heard of.” Whether you agree with the list or not, it is a fascinating read. Two of our Sagebrush News readers, authors Douglas Brode and Raymond E. White are involved with this particular book. Brode has written the foreword, while White wrote a piece on John Wayne, “The Making of an Icon.” Usually shunned in these books, Roy and Dale’s film, “Don’t Fence Me In” was included at number 41. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 5 Days of Jesse James Producer and Director: Joseph Kane Filmed at Iverson’s Ranch Filmed in 1939, Days of Jesse James stars Roy Rogers, Gabby Hayes, Pauline Moore, and Donald "Red" Barry as Jesse James, the ostensible bad guy of the story. It contains, according to IMDB.com, three songs, “I’m a Son of a Cowboy”, “Saddle Your Dreams” and “Echo Mountain”. Unfortunately my version only had the latter one, with it being sung as a reprise again at the end. The storyline goes something like this: Gabby and his granddaughter, played by Pauline Moore, return from their gold mine in California, and aim to settle down in Missouri and live on their returns from the gold mine. On their way, however, the train on which they are traveling is held up, by Jesse James and his brother Frank. However, they do not steal Gabby's money, and a local banker, who also happens to be on the train, persuades them to put their money and gold in his bank. This they do, and settle down to start a new life in the town. However, it isn't long before the bank is robbed. Enter Roy Rogers, who is a peace officer assigned to finding out who stole the money from the bank. The blame for that and other robberies is laid on the James brothers, but the evidence may not be as conclusive as it seems... I enjoyed this particular one, although I was disappointed that it only had the one song in it. As my version ran 53 minutes, I suppose these other songs were cut out from it. No matter, though, it's a relatively minor quibble. I enjoyed Don "Red" Barry's performance, it is interesting to note that in at least two RR films in which he played notable characters- Saga of Death Valley and this one, he plays characters that may be bad, or may be misunderstood, or may be both. Pauline Moore did a fair performance in this one, she isn't my favorite of the early RR heroines, but I think I will come to like her more. This is, from what I understand, the first Roy Rogers film she was in. She would go on to be in four other films with Roy. So, all in all, an entertaining Roy Rogers' western. Perhaps not one of my absolute favorites, but still enjoyable, as they all are, are they not? The shortened version of the film is available for your viewing pleasure on You Tube. Just click on this link. http://youtu.be/6RvLmXNZ-UE Sagebrush News reader, Bill Black, is offering a special Roy Rogers 100th anniversary MOVIE POSTER SPECIAL for sale on eBay. The MOVIE POSTER PACK contains 11 items authorized and licensed by AC Comics from 1991-99. This pack includes several title cards, posters, comics and Roy Rogers’ portraits all from the AC Comics warehouse. There are two versions, the special, described above, sells for $19.95 and the deluxe version that includes a DVD of the Trigger, Jr. movie sells for $24.95. $8.00 expedited postage is additional. This sounds like a great deal for the Roy Rogers collector. Check them out at Roy Rogers 100th Anniversary Poster Special. 200642875133 and Roy Rogers 100th Anniversary Poster Special Deluxe ED 200642877489. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Nellybelle Page 6 By Jim Friesz New Jersey native Pam Weidel has long been a lover of horses, having owned over 200 horses since 1978, and has trained or sold 100’s more. When Pam heard about the Christies/High Noon Auction of the Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Museum collection in July, 2010, she and her sister, Angela, headed to the auction with eyes for the fancy parade saddles used by Trigger and Trigger, Jr. “The first thing I saw parked in front of Christies was “Nellybelle.” She exclaimed to Angela, “I love Nellybelle. I called all of my cars Nellybelle.” Then I quickly stepped under the roped off area and had my picture taken.” Pam Weidel, right, and her sister, Angela, pose in Nellybelle in front of Christies Auction House in New York City. Her friend, John B. Haynes IV, owns a private museum facility in Pennsylvania and she felt it would be the perfect location to keep any purchases safe and secure. With John unable to attend the auction, they made an agreement to partner up on any purchases. When Pam was the winning bidder of Nellybelle at $116,500 (including buyer’s premium), John called wanting to know what was going on. When Pam told him she had just bought Nellybelle he was somewhat taken back since they hadn’t discussed that possible purchase. John wondered why she hadn’t called during the auction and she said she had already lost out on a winning bid because she glanced down to look at her program and the hammer fell and she wasn’t about to make that mistake again by trying to talk on the phone during the bidding. Before the sale was said and done, Pam had won Trigger, Jr.’s Bohlin saddle for $242,500 along with many other items including spurs, and an oil painting of Roy and Trigger. Their venture with Nellybelle and the Bohlin parade saddle to the Memphis Film Festival was really their first road experience other than a car show. They had a great time at the festival meeting both Roy Rogers, Jr.(Dusty) and Dustin Roy Rogers, and gathering some information about Pat Brady’s trusty sidekick that they hadn’t previously known. Dustin Roy Rogers, Roy Rogers, Jr, Pam Weidel and John Haynes, IV in Nellybelle during Memphis Film Festival, June, 2011 August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 7 By Charles Robert Galloway G uinn “Big Boy” Williams played Roy’s sidekick in two movies in 1944, “Hands Across the Border” and “The Cowboy and the Senorita.” As a sidekick, “Big Boy” specialized in the often confused, big loveable “teddy bear” type of buddy. In fact, his character’s name in both Roy movies was “Teddy Bear.” And he was very good in this role. However, this role did not define his long and varied career in the movies. He played the varying role of supporting actor, character roles, and leading man in a career that spanned over 40 years and included over 250 movies. It included westerns, crime dramas, love stories, and comedies. Guinn Williams was a very versatile actor. Roy and “Big Boy” in a scene from “The Cowboy and the Senorita”, 1944. He was born in Decatur, Texas, in April, 1899, and grew up there as the son of a prosperous rancher, banker, and politician, Guinn Terrell Williams Sr. His father was elected to the US Congress from Texas 13th Congressional District. Young Guinn was an athletic star on the baseball field in high school and played in college as well. He was rumored to have played on some semiprofessional baseball teams during that time (using an assumed name to protect his amateur status, a common thing to do at that time). His sports abilities were responsible for some of his early movie roles such as the silent pictures, “Slide, Kelly, Slide” and “The Babe Comes Home”, both in 1927. As a young man in Texas, he had learned to ride horses, developed other cowboy skills which proved very useful to him in those early Hollywood days. His father had hoped he would go to law school after college but Guinn drifted to Hollywood where Will Rogers, the humorist, cowboy, and actor, put him in some of his features in 1919. Guinn was a tall actor at 6’ 2” in height with red hair and a burly athletic body which fit naturally into the western and sports featured movies of the time. Hence the nickname, “Big Boy”, given to him by none other than Will Rogers. He later utilized his cowboy riding skills and athleticism in another popular Hollywood elite sport, polo, with his good friend Will Rogers. It has been reported that Guinn owned approximately 125 polo ponies at one time. By 1922 Guinn had actually written and starred in a western, “The Jack Rider”, for an independent production company. He bounced around a number of independent companies making silent movies in which he both starred and/or played supporting roles. By 1930, Guinn had appeared in some 54 silent movies, with approximately half of them westerns. His first talking movie was “The Big Fight” in 1930. One pivotal picture that starred Guinn was “Law of the Colt .45’s” in 1935. His leading action character was Tucson “Two Gun Smith” and the sidekick was Stoney Martin, played by Al St. John in his “pre-Fuzzy days”. This was the first adaption of a William Colt MacDonald story and stayed very close to the book. Of course, this series of novels would become the basis for “The Three Mesquiteers” group of 53 westerns with Ray “Crash” Corrigan, John Wayne, Robert Livingston, Max Terhune, Bob Steele, among others to play these roles. Similar series included the “Rangebusters” and others. Some of his most famous roles were in “Dodge City” with Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland, in 1939, and his career ended with his final film appearance as Ed McBain in the John Wayne western, “The Commancheros” in 1961. In 1962, Guinn Williams began suffering from kidney failure and died in June of that year. Randolph Scott, Glenn Ford While his sidekick performances with Roy were few, we all know how important “The Cowboy and “Big Boy” in a publicity and the Senorita” was to the lives of our heroes, Roy and Dale. Their first picture together still from 1943’s, “The Despebrought the kind of movie magic that Republic Pictures was looking for in regard to their star singing cowboy. And Guinn Williams was certainly a contributor to that magic. I can recall Roy radoes.” speaking fondly of “Big Boy” in introducing that picture on the Happy Trails Theater. I certainly have found new admiration for the “Big Boy” from Decatur, Texas, a veteran of over 250 films spanning the silent era to Technicolor. He was beloved and respected by the people he worked with and by his family as well. No better standard is required. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Mom’s Scrapbook Page 8 by Cheryl Nelson I am a fan, an admirer of all things western. The power and majesty of the horse thrill me. The pride, honor, and sheer courage of the cowboy haunt me in today’s world. This fascination, this love, was passed down to me by my mother, Maxine or “Mack”, as she preferred to be called. As a child she spent every available moment in a movie theater, and what money was available to her through her teen years, buying magazines and pictures of movie stars. While she had her favorites among other types of movies, her love of the western has been beautifully preserved for me in the form of scrapbooks, meticulously created by her loving hands. Mack was born in 1935, while the country was still reeling from the Great Depression, and entertainment came where and how you could find it in small, rural communities in the Midwest. By the time she reached her teens, however, in 1948, we’d survived a World War, and in the process learned the value of escapism and the ease with which public opinions could be shaped by one single force—the motion picture. And mother “Mack” embraced it with both arms. Virtually every extra dime she had was spent on movies, magazines, and photographs of her heroes. Many of the pictures were culled out of those magazines, carefully trimmed and pasted into the pages of a scrapbook. Many others were given out as publicity by the theaters, and still others, sometime beautiful color photographs, were taken off the front of tablets and coloring books. One such example is a picture of Roy Rogers, a particular stunning color picture printed on quality paper, and removed from the front of a primary school tablet. If you love the genre, it seems you knew where to look! The very first page is covered by four small publicity photos given out by theaters; two, a kind of sepia brown; and two, by now you would have to describe as purple. The pictures are Gene Autry on Champ, Bob Allen, Charles Starrett, and Allan “Rocky” Lane, respectively. Further over you’ll find Johnny Mack Brown, Jack Butell, Jimmy Wakely, and John Wayne. There are stars like Howard Duff, Randolph Scott, Smiley Burnette, Gabby Hayes, Tim Holt, Ray Corrigan, and nearly 60 pictures of Roy Rogers, from a rare photo of him at age five, one of he and his cousin Stan Sly, and photos of he and Dale at their wedding. There are several of a very small Roy Rogers, Jr. (Dusty), as well. This is where my love of the western began to take shape. Many afternoons were spent side by side with Mom on the couch, as she slowly turned the pages of a scrapbook from the 40’s, telling my brother and me who everyone was, what kind of westerns they made, and whatever else she knew about each one. Roy Rogers, Sunset Carson, Johnny Mack Brown, Charles Starrett, Bill Elliott, Bobby Blake, Tim Holt and many others, whose names are as familiar to me as those of the TV stars of the late 60’s an early 70’s, when I was growing up, because my mother told us about them, showed us pictures of them, and described their movies to us. Sometimes it was in surprising detail. One such example was her chronicle of the career of Riley Hill from a fan’s perspective. She said she first began to see him in bit parts, as villains, sometimes quickly killed off, and then gradually, his parts got bigger, until he was no longer quickly dispensed with, and then co-starring in some film, until one day she saw a movie advertised, “Starring Riley Hill.” A new generation sees the advancement of a one time bit player. As those years passed, and the “B-Western” faded into the sunset, so to speak, my Mom’s love of the western did not. Television westerns were rising high, and the movie westerns she loved were joined by Rawhide, the Rifleman, Gunsmoke and Wagon Train, to name a few. Her brother, my uncle Walter, shared August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Mom’s Scrapbook Page 9 by Cheryl Nelson her love of the western, if not exceeded it. If he was at our house when one of those shows came on, he was right there with us. And right there between them was me. At the time of his death, my uncle had the largest paperback western book collection I have ever seen. I was 5 years old in 1963 when JFK was killed, and like the rest of the country, I remember where I was and what I was doing when we heard the news. I was with my cousin, also 5, watching reruns of Wagon Train, where we were every day at that time. Other times, we would be outside playing cowboy and Indians. More often than not, my cousin was the Cisco Kid, my brother, Roy Rogers, and if no plum part was readily available, I was perfectly happy to pretend to be a wild horse no one could catch, complete with two sturdy branches for front legs! Visiting another uncle when I was about 8, I was playing outside with another cousin, when my uncle called my Mom to the window to look out across the field where we were playing, our stick horses silhouetted against the last rays of the setting sun. “Just like you and Walt,” he said. When I look at my mother’s scrapbook today, I see a world in which I never lived, but was very much a part of, through my Mom’s love and preservation of it. Her memories became my memories, and something so simple shared between her and me played a large role in creating the person I am today, and I believe I am better for it. Those simple heroes, with their faithful horses, their larger than life ambitions, and honor and dignity above and beyond that of regular people, set a goal worthy of striving for. I never really thought of it that way, until I was asked to write this article describing the 60-some year old scrapbook, I carried in my hands. I never analyzed it. I only knew that those pictures, those pages, were very special to someone who meant the world to me, and now are special to me in a different way. Mack and Walt are gone now, just like Roy and Dale, and Sunset, and so many others, but they all live on between the brittle pages of my Mom’s scrapbook, and deep in the heart of this 52-year-old, who will always remember. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 10 Roy’s Faith By Krystina, age 17, from Ontario, Canada A fter Roy signed his contract with Republic, he was quickly catapulted into stardom and fame. Soon a beautiful golden Palomino horse was added along to Roy’s name, who, as we all know, was Trigger. It was also during this time that Roy and Arline were given the chance to do something wonderful. They adopted a little girl named Cheryl Darlene, who added so much joy to the Rogers family, and through whom God would bless the family in many ways. In 1943, they found they would be having another child, a girl they called Linda Lou. It wasn’t long after Roy and Arline adopted Cheryl that a sudden, fateful event happened. Pearl Harbor was a day that will be etched in American history forever. The ensuing war touched many aspects of life, and Hollywood was not excluded. Gene Autry left pictures to fly airplanes for the Army Air Force, ferrying fuel and supplies in the China-India-Burma theater. Jimmy Stewart went on to distinguish himself in the service. James Arness was at the battle of Anzio, where he was wounded. British actor, Richard Attenborough served in the Royal Air Force. Cowboy star Bob Baker also fought in the war. Pat Brady was a tank crewman in the 4th Armored Division. One source said that Hollywood stars won over 300 medals for their bravery and service during the war. For those that didn’t enlist directly, they toured, giving shows to support the troops. Some of these included singers such as the Andrews sisters, Bob Hope, Doris Day, Marlene Dietrich, and of course, Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. The Sons of the Pioneers, for those of the members who did not enlist, toured military bases and gave shows and performances, often working through demanding schedules. All of these Hollywood entertainers either put their careers on hold or made sacrifices in order that they could help the cause of freedom. They realized there was something higher than simply making films and money, and that was defense of freedom and good in this world. Their patriotism was truly amazing and inspiring. We know that Roy wasn’t in the armed services; he was thirty when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and had a family and therefore did not have a high draft status. Later as he was about to be drafted, the maximum age limit was lowered, thereby excluding him. He did actively participate in the war effort on the home front, and this should not by any means go unappreciated. He toured extensively and gave hundreds of performances to support the effort. He sold war bonds, and was given a citation for having sold over $1 million dollars worth of bonds, reportedly more than any other Hollywood star. In today’s currency this would have been close to $13 million, for anyone who happens to be curious. Obviously this shows his hard work, his dedication, and his true patriotism. I think that, more and more, the things I appreciate the most about the life of Roy is his faith in the Lord and his love of not only his country, but also the freedom, the good solid values, and the beliefs which underpin the very structure of countries such as Great Britain and the United States of America. He, and so many other Hollywood stars from that era in history, as we have seen, were willing to stand up and be counted among those who were ready and able to defend what they loved. You would not see that too often among todays stars, although to their credit, there still are singers and artists from the county music genre that do give shows and tours for and Photo courtesy of Henager’s Memories & Nostalgia August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 11 Roy’s Faith By Krystina, age 17, from Ontario, Canada in support of servicemen and women. An event that followed shortly after the end of the war, tested Roy’s faith along with his friends, Dale, Art Rush and his wife Mary Jo, and The Sons of the Pioneers, to name a few. After giving birth to their third child, Roy, Jr. (Dusty), in 1946, Roy’s beloved wife Arline suddenly died as a result of an embolism in her blood stream. They had celebrated their tenth wedding anniversary 5 months prior to this. This would be the first in a series of tragedies that would test Roy’s faith severely. One of the first to arrive at Roy’s side at the hospital was Art Rush. Once again, God had placed exactly the right person with Roy and his family. Art and Mary Jo Rush, and Jim Osborne—who handled Roy’s financial affairs, were there for Roy. God did not only work through these people, he worked through connections with people that Roy knew from the set. For instance, as Dusty Rogers shares in his book, “Growing Up with Roy and Dale,” Roy learned from his film standin, Whitey Christiansen, that his mother was a recent widow, and suggested that she come and help take care of Roy’s three little children while Roy was away occupied with filming, tours, rodeos and more. Even here, despite what truly was a hard time, God was working…. Grace Arline holding Linda Lou with Cheryl Darlene, age three, while Roy admires his family, 1943 November 4, 1946 Ed Note: The spelling of Arline’s name is quite often seen in print as Arlene, the much more common spelling. Even comparing Linda Lou and Dusty’s birth certificates, one is spelled Arline and the other, Arlene. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 12 Dale’s Faith By Leah, age 17, from Ohio It was not that Dale did not like Roy Rogers... of course she liked him! EVERYONE liked him. He was a good friend. His two daughters adored Dale. The crew was nice to her. The pay was reasonable. Dale was simply unhappy with the roles she was playing, and also her personal life. Dale had been married to Robert Dale Butts for several years, but it ended in divorce in 1946. Lying about her son Tommy, was hard, even when it felt necessary for her career and Dale needed the job. After she had her career well underway, then she would tell about Tommy, then she would spend more time in church. Dale was proud of her son, and she wished everyone could know that he was hers. The lie about her age continued to rankle, and with all things combined, Dale was a very unhappy person. She worked as hard as she could on her movie roles, hoping someone would see the promise in her. Hoping someone would give her a different role. Dale gradually got her feet under her. She took riding lessons, and she became friends with cast and crew. Roy Rogers was a quiet, unassuming man. He was happily married, and had two daughters, Cheryl and Linda Lou. Dale was also playing an important part in changing her roles. Usually the heroine of western movies tended to be damsels in distress. Dale, however, was a damsel who was not in distress. She could take care of herself... and often told the hero so. Dale was diligent on memorizing lines, and was always well prepared when she came onto set. Dale might have been unhappy, but the studio was not. Fans loved the pairing of mild Roy Rogers, and fiesty Dale Evans. Dale made nine pictures with Roy before finally heading to Herbert Yates and telling him clearly she was not happy, and either wanted oth- UP article from February 2, 1946 er roles, or she would quit. He told her quite clearly that she was under contract and could not do so. Dale acted in ten more Roy Rogers films. In early 1947 Dale's contract was almost over, and she was through with Republic. When the public got wind of Dale leaving she was sent letters by the hundreds ... thousands, asking her not to leave. While Dale was surprised and flattered, she wanted something different. She did not attempt to renew her contract. For a while, Dale tried to find a part in a musical comedy movie. It never happened, and Dale returned to singing. Before long Republic contacted her and offered her a better contract... including the fact that she would not have to act in Westerns. Dale's options had been exhausted, and she accepted. Again, the movies did not do well, and Dale went on a singing tour. After that she attempted another comedy movie. It did not do well. Dale returned to Herbert Yates and told him she wanted to be back in westerns. Almost without missing a beat, Dale stepped back into her well known and much loved roles. She was growing closer with Roy Rogers, and she was beginning to fall in love. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 13 By Jim Friesz K udos to Ray Nielson, Boyd Magers, and all of their capable help in running a very smooth three day western film festival in Memphis, Tennessee. Of course, after 33 years you should have the bugs out, I guess. Anyway, this was my first trip to this festival, as it honors TV westerns, for the most part, — Laramie, Lancer, The Virginian, Wagon Train, Lawman, Fury, Brave Eagle, My Friend Flicka, and F-Troop. What did I learn?? There are some pretty devoted fans that still follow their heroes, aka the Lancer Ladies and the Virginian Posse. There are other western festivals scattered around the country but I doubt any are more respected than this one and the celebrities always want to come back, it seems. Since it was our guy, Roy Rogers, 100th birthday year, Roy (Dusty) Rogers, Jr., and the HighRiders, along with Dusty’s son, Dustin Roy Rogers, provided the entertainment for Saturday night by performing their complete Branson show for those in attendance. It was definitely a highlight of the event and the band was swarmed by fans after the show to get autographs and purchase CD’s, photos and other memorabilia. The festival included several Celebrity Panel discussions with folks like Peter Brown, James Drury, Roberta Shore, Robert Fuller and James Hampton, and a full schedule of western videos being shown in three separate film rooms. Probably my favorite part of the festival, however, was a Roy Rogers Radio Show re-creation staring Dustin Rogers as Roy, Roberta Shore (Betsy Garth, The Virginian) as Dale and James Hampton (F-Troop) as Pat Brady. Now, we’ve come to expect perfection from professional actors but with limited rehearsal time and lets face it, its been a while since most were on the screen, mistakes and hilarity ensued. The star of the show in that respect was James Hampton who I think could have played the part of Pat Brady driving Nellybelle on the TV show very well. Dustin’s grandpa would have been proud of his work. Dusty, Dustin, John Fullerton and Tommie Nallie in the dealer memorabilia room Dustin Roy Rogers and Roberta Shore read their dialogue during a re-creation of the Roy Rogers Radio Show Dusty and Dustin performing the Zac Brown Band hit “As She’s Walking Away” August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 14 THE PIONEER RECORD RACK by John Fullerton The year 1960 was busy for the Sons of the Pioneers. Their touring schedule was full of state fairs and rodeos with Roy and Dale that took them all over the country coast to coast. The folks at RCA in Hollywood released the "Cool Water" album earlier in the year and the sales were very good! The fans were thrilled to hear the guys sing their Western and Cowboy standards. RCA producer, Neely Plumb called for more sessions with the Western theme, so the Pioneer trio of Lloyd Perryman, Tommy Doss, and Dale Warren got to work and by October 1960, Lloyd had close to 20 selections ready for the studio. The crew at RCA was very flexible in working with the Pioneers to make sure the sound was close to the way Lloyd arranged it. The trio usually spent around a month rehearsing for an upcoming recording session. Lloyd would record their arrangements and send it to RCA's arranger and the staff musicians would begin working on their parts. If everyone had done their homework, the sessions would roll along like a well oiled machine. Very seldom did anyone make mistakes or false starts. It was very common for the Pioneers and the RCA musicians to go thru and record 12 tunes without a goof-up. John Fullerton is a Branson, Missouri native celebrating his 17th year as a Singing Cowboy. John is a member of the High Riders with Roy Rogers, Jr, as well as doing his solo Western Roundup show since 2001. His website is On November 11, 1960 the Pioneers consisting of Lloyd Perryman, Tommy Doss, Dale Warren, and Karl Farr entered RCA's Hollyhttp://johnfullertoncowboy.com wood studio to do a test session. Four songs were laid down; "Cimarron," "Saddle Up," "Pecos Bill," and "Take Me Back To My Boots and Saddle." Usually these test tracks were unreleased and would collect dust on the shelf. But the cut of "Pecos Bill" was perfect, so it was released. The common practice was to record three or four songs a day. This allowed the vocalists to perform with fresh voices, and no one got tired. This photo from 1960, courtesy of the Ken Griffis collection, shows l-r Tommy Doss, Dale Warren, Karl Farr, Pat Brady and Lloyd Perryman. The Pioneers returned on November 17, 23, and 25 and again on December 2, 7, and 30, 1960. At the end of these sessions, a total of 18 songs had been recorded with only one of them being a remake. Here is the track listing from the above dates... Take Me Back To My Boots and Saddle Carry Me Back to the Lone Prairie Along the Navajo Trail A Cowboy Has to Sing Wanderers of the Wasteland Silver On the Sage Ragtime Cowboy Joe Chant of the Plains The Cowboy's Lament Yippi-Yi, Yippi-Yo There's A Gold Mine In the Sky (unreleased cut) When the Bloom Is On the Sage My Adobe Hacienda Cimarron (Roll On) The Cattle Call Hills of Old Wyoming There's A Gold Mine in the Sky (remake) Saddle Up August, 2011 The Sagebrush News THE PIONEER RECORD RACK Page 15 by John Fullerton The purpose of these sessions was so RCA could crank out one or two LPs a year. Two more sessions took place on April 19 & 20, 1961. Six tunes were recorded. They were... El Paso There's A Home In Wyomin' Tumbleweed Trail The Lillies Grow High Song of the Pioneers Song of the Trail The folks at RCA felt the trio was stronger with a fourth voice, so once again well known bass vocalist Thurl Ravenscroft (Tony the Tiger) was present for these recordings. Thurl is featured with brief solos on "Saddle Up" and "Pecos Bill." Karl Farr did the lead guitar on these sessions while the instrumentation from the RCA gang consisted of rhythm guitar, accordion (by George Bamby who toured with the group in 1960), drums, bass, trumpet, and french horn. If you listen carefully you can hear Karl's familiar lead fills and runs here and there and his solo on "Cimarron" was full of energy. Unfortunately, the April 1961 session was Karl's last. Karl died onstage on September 20, 1961, when the group was appearing at the Massachusetts State Fair with Charlie Weaver (Cliff Arquette). Tommy Doss recalled the tragic event. "Karl was doing a solo, "Up A Lazy River" on his old acoustic Martin guitar when a string broke. This noticeably upset him, and as he worked with the string he suddenly slumped over, suffering a heart attack. Dale Warren and I carried him backstage. It was a terrible shock to all of us." Around the time of Karl's death RCA released twelve tunes from the sessions for the "Lure of the West" album. It has been said that Lloyd Perryman was not present in the studio when the twelve numbers were mixed for the master. After hearing the final mix, Lloyd felt that on a few of the numbers, Thurl Ravenscroft's booming bass voice was too much and it sounded like "Thurl Ravenscroft backed by the Sons of the Pioneers!" The remaining 12 tunes were released later in 1962 for the group's "Tumbleweed Trail" album. This project featured some great classics, two from the pen of Stan Jones, "Song of the Trail" and "The Lillies Grow High." Also featured is "El Paso" with the solo portion featuring Dale Warren. Listening to "El Paso" it's quite obvious the trio was not prepared for this one, perhaps RCA wanted them to throw it in since it was so hot on the charts. Dale Warren himself expressed in an interview in 1994, that he was not satisfied with his efforts on the solo. "I should have contributed more to the song than I did," Dale remembers. "Tommy was originally set to sing it, but at the last minute, for some reason it fell to me to do it, and I just wasn't ready. For me to do my best I almost have to memorize the words. If I am not familiar with the words it's difficult for me. To me it's like singing and reading at the same time. It's just hard for me to do." Both of these albums did well in sales and could be found in stores for a number of years. If I had to pick my favorite, it would be "Tumbleweed Trail" for the fact that the trio mix is better than "Lure of the West." Also the song selection is a big part of it. The harmony structure that Lloyd created for these is unmatched. "Silver On the Sage" is a masterpiece along with "Tumbleweed Trail" and "There's a Home in Wyomin'." Both of these LPs are rather easy to find. Many Ebay sellers have them at an excellent price, and they show up in used record stores too. Several of the cuts have been re-released on CD in recent years. Next time we will discuss the August 1962 session for the "Our Men Out West" album and introduce you to Karl Farr's replacement, the talented Roy Lanham. Happy Trails, John August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 16 Dale Evans Rides Again This Fall Call for volunteers nationwide http://www.RoyandDale.com By Steve Morales I n honor of what would have been Roy’s 100th Birthday November 5th, the Dale Evans Film Project will be hosting prerelease screenings of a new documentary on the extraordinary lasting influence of Dale Evans’ life on the fabric of America. Screenings will included the documentary, two feature films, and two television shows and will take place at thousands of retirement homes, churches and community centers around the county during the first week of November 2011. Most all of us know that Roy and Dale were married 52 years, but did not know that Roy was Dale’s fourth husband and Dale was Roy’s third wife? Many of the details of Dale’s life have slipped from the minds of most Americans. Working with Dale’s oldest son, Tom Fox, the Dale Evans Film Project is capturing hours of interviews with family members, friends, celebrities and fans, to memorialize the impact of Dale on so many people around the world. Dale was married at 14 and was 15-yearsold when Tom was born. Tom brings a unique perspective as he watched Dale transform from an ambitious, divorced, singlemother of one, to a God-fearing mother of nine committed to the Lord and loving everyone with whom she came into contact. The lasting impression of Dale’s first book Angel Unaware continues to this day. At a time when children born with Down Syndrome and other intellectual or physical disabilities were usually whisked away from their parents to an institution, Roy and Dale firmly insisted that their baby girl, Robin, would come home with them. Robin died at age two, but her short life became an inspiration to millions through the publication of Dale’s first of 28 books, Angel Unaware. During the 1940’s and 1950’s, multiple advocacy groups of parents who had children with disabilities were formed around the county. The ARC was the first national organization which sought to join these groups together to raise awareness of children with special needs and to lobby for assistance for parents to be able to care for their children. Proceeds from Angel Unaware funded the first national office and executive director salary for The ARC. Dale’s 27 other books, the 400+ songs she wrote, the dozens of movies and the hundreds of television appearances have left a lasting impression on two generations of Americans. With this new documentary, we seek to re-introduce Roy and Dale to the next two generations. One of the most moving interviews from the 13 hours of film already shot comes from cowboy-singer Michael Martin Murphey as he recounts Dale’s struggle to perform at Madison Square Garden after the death of Robin. Dozens of other interviews with family and friends have provided us with an inspiring look at one of America’s most-beloved heroines. We are still tracking down family members, friends and fans to complete the interviews, so if you have any stories you would like to tell, please let us know. In addition to the interviews for the documentary, we anticipate receiving hundreds of other video interviews and recollections from fans around the world which we will post on the website. Stay tuned for 18 months of celebrations and reminiscing of a time when the country was full of hope and opportunity and believed in what was true, right and great about America. On a whim, I recently asked a friend in his sixties from Turkey if he had ever heard of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. He smiled, threw his hands in the air and exclaimed, “Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Tom Mix, Gene Autry, of course!!” He went on to relate that in 1960, his family received their first-ever television set in Turkey. It only had one channel, which only played one type of show, Cowboy Westerns! Beginning in November 2011 and continuing through October 31, 2012 (what would have been Dale’s 100th Birthday), the Dale Evans Film Project will be screening the documentary and hosting Roy Rogers/Dale Evans birthday celebrations across the country with the assistance of volunteers in every state. Please join us if you would like to help with a local screening, or host one of your own. Visit www.RoyandDale.com/volunteer and email [email protected] for more information. Phone: 434-286-2275. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News The temperatures were just plain brutal the three days of this celebration of Roy’s 100th birthday but, in the spirit of the Great American Cowboy, celebrities, musicians, vendors and fans persevered. While attendance was low due to the heat at the Gibson County Fairgrounds in Princeton, Indiana, those who did attend had a great time. Organizer and promoter James Henager, owner of Henager’s Memorials and Nostaglia museum in nearby Buckskin, did an amazing job with minimal help. It seemed he was everywhere at once during the three day event and the fans that did attend were treated to quality time with the special guests on hand. Page 17 (Cade’s County, Barnaby Jones) Heather Lowe (Battle for the Planet of the Apes, The Young and the Restless, The Spiral Staircase). Prolific western writer(22 books), Bobby Copeland was on hand as was the author of Roy Rogers, the King of the Cowboys, and Dale Evans, Queen of the West, Raymond White. Dodie Rogers Patterson represented the Rogers’ family with her husband, Jon Patterson. There were a stream of look-a-likes, Alan (Gabby) Bye, The Cagle Brothers (Rooster Cogburn and Matt Dillon), John (Tonto) Phipps, Robert (Fuzzy St. John) Brooks, and Bob (Lash LaRue) Wallace, The Lone Ranger, and probably some we missed. Julie Ann Ream, whose family included Cactus Mack, Glenn Strange and Rex Allen, did a lot to coordinate schedules and activities during the event. Jamie Nudie, granddaughter to the famous Nudie the Rodeo Tailor, was also on hand to talk about her famous family. Julie Ann Ream leads heated (temps) discussion among celebrity panel The guest lineup included stars such as Mr. Hugh O’Brien, TV’s Wyatt Earp, the ever amazing, James Hampton who in addition to blowing that F-Troop bugle to begin the show (he brings one with him to wake folks up occasionally) was in Roy’s final movie “McIntosh and TJ.” Other actors in attendance were Donna Martell, who was in Roy’s first color movie, Apache Rose, Beverly Washburn (Fury, Wagon Train Zane, Grey Theater, the Texan) Bo Hopkins (The Wild Bunch, Monte Walsh, The Culpepper Cattle Co., Cat Ballou, the Man Who loved Cat Dancing, American Graffiti, White Lightning, Dynasty) Peter Ford, The musical entertainment was seemingly endless and the Saturday night musical entertainment lasted late into the evening with KG & The Ranger, The Texas Trailhands, Steve Mitchell, Jon Patterson, Prairie Moon, Kristyn Harris, and Cindy Smith. All in all, it was the kind of event that should have drawn thousands but those days may be gone forever. We all have to Dodie Rogers Patterson chats keep doing what we’re doing to with fans support your favorite western heroes. Thanks for the memories. August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 18 Thanks to Stephen Bond for submitting this article and these comments: Thanks for The Sagebrush News, keeping the memory of Roy and Dale and what they stood for, alive and well. I am, of course, a baby boomer, and Roy was my hero, growing up. Years ago, I read in the paper of Roy’s eighty-fifth birthday, and got to thinking about what he meant to me. My sister and I played Roy and Dale the whole time we were growing up. I wrote and submitted an article about Roy which was published in a little amateur section of the Baton Rouge Sunday Advocate Magazine section. I got good comments from folks for months afterward. This was in about 1997. Their artist did a good sketch to go with it. Stephen Bond Denham Springs, LA Thanks to our friend, Janey Miller, for submitting several items that we at The Sagebrush News have used from time to time and we really haven’t given her credit for some of it. One story in particular that she worked hours on was in issue number 11 and titled An Artist Looks at Roy Rogers. Janey, thanks for sharing. ED August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 19 There will be opportunities this year for you to remember Roy on what would have been his 100th birthday year. At locations across the country special events will honor the King of the Cowboys. Some are: Branson, Missouri - The Roy Rogers, Jr. show that performs in Branson throughout the year will have a special 100th anniversary tribute as a regular part of each show. Kanab, Utah - August 18-20—Annual Western Roundup features Roy Rogers, Jr., Dustin Roy Rogers and the HighRiders performing Saturday evening August 20th at 7 P.M. Victorville, California-August 27, 2011 –Roy Rogers Ranch “Round-Up of Stars” at the Sterling Inn in Victorville, CA.. This starstudded affair includes Roy Rogers’ daughter Mimi Swift, and granddaughter Julie Fox Pomilia along with Roy Rogers’ Ranch owners, Eric and Anne Enriquez Apple Valley, California—On Roy’s birthday, November 5th, a special tribute show will be performed by Roy Rogers, Jr. and the HighRiders. The local newspaper, the Apple Valley Review, is collecting fan comments at http://www.applevalleyreview.com/roys100. Greg Bell, host of RadioClassics on Sirius XM Radio will be having a major Roy Rogers’ centennial special in November. Rose Parade— Monday, January 2, 2012-Roy Rogers, Jr., Dustin Roy Rogers and the HighRiders will be featured on RFD-TV’s special float dedicated to the memory of Roy Rogers. Gene Autry OK Museum www.geneautryokmuseum.com PO Box 44, 47 Prairie St, Gene Autry, OK 73436 You won’t want to miss this. The Lone Pine (CA) Film Festival will be celebrating Roy’s 100th with special guest Cheryl Rogers-Barnett sharing stories about her famous father during the member’s banquet, October 6th. Also featured is the Roy Rogers’ Round-Up and Rodeo. For more information: http://www.lonepinefilmfestival.org/ August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 20 Roy Rogers was more than a cowboy movie star Noted western author, Bobby Copeland, shared this article he wrote for the Oak Ridger newspaper in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, shortly after Roy’s death in 1998. Roy Rogers was more than a cowboy movie star. “To me, he was father figure, pastor, Sunday school teach, hero—all rolled into one,” Copeland said after learning of Rogers’ death this week at the age of 86.” Copeland, who moved to Oak Ridge as a 10-year-old boy in 1945, developed a life-long interest in and love for Rogers, whose movies he saw in local theaters. That interest and love never left him, as Copeland, over the next 50 years, read and clipped everything he could find, not only about Rogers, but about all the cowboys who rode across the silver screen, in movie theaters across America, in the 1940’s and 1950’s. Copeland, whose father brought the family to Oak Ridge when a job as a construction engineer brought him here in 1945, spent his Saturday afternoons as a boy at a succession of Oak Ridge movie theaters, armed with 10 cents, his childish imagination and his keen devotion to the film cowboys. First, there was the Playtime Theater, Copeland recalled this week in an interview with the Oak Ridger. Erected in the west end of Oak Ridge, near K-25, the Playtime was where it all began for Copeland. The movies, with stars like Rogers, Bill Elliott (“Red Ryder”), Gene Autry, Hopalong Cassidy and others, drew the kids in droves to the theater, starting at 11 a.m. on a Saturday morning, Copeland recalled. “The kids would start to line up at 10 a.m. for the show; there’d be long lines,” Copeland reminisced. The movies cost 9 cents, which left a penny for treats. “In those days, youngsters couldn’t make any money, Copeland said. “Family men cut their own grass and did their own chores, so, you had to beg for that dime to go to the movies. There were penny vending machines, and for that penny, you could get candy, gum or peanuts.” Copeland recalled that the kids would crowd to get in and get the best seats. “There was a real scramble for the front seats,” Copeland recalled with a chuckle. “The kids had to be close to their cowboy heroes, and the front row, that’s as close as you could get!” After the Playtime closed in 1945, the kids moved to the Midtown Theater, and when that one went, around 1950, with the shrinking of the town after the war,” Copeland said, “the trail of kids, peanuts and candy followed the cowboys and horses farther east, to what is now the Oak Ridge Community Playhouse, then simply the Center Theater. There was also the Jefferson Theater, in the present-day Jefferson Plaza area, now also long gone. “ “When TV came in 1952, it knocked the little westerns out,” Copeland said. It might have been the end of the small westerns on the big screen, but for Copeland, it was just the beginning of a life-long passion for the screen cowboys. Today, more than fifty years later, he’s BOOKS BY BOBBY COPELAND 104 Claremont Rd. Oak Ridge, TN 37830 (865) 482-1185 ([email protected]) NEW - May 2011-- Don "Red” Barry - The Cyclone Cowboy -- Now a book on the most underrated B -western cowboy. It is unlike any book you've read on a cowboy star - chocked full of info and photos. $23.95 ****$10 DISCOUNT ON THREE OR MORE BOOKS (EXCLUDING CHARLIE KING and DON BARRY BOOK) ---- SEND THIS COUPON -- ------------------------------------New Feb. 2011: Randolph Scott - Dignity in the Saddle; Finally, a good book on this great western star; His bio. movies, comments by Randy and his peers, historical time line of his life, filmography, lots of photos and much, much more. $23.95. NEW Oct. 2010: Fuzzy St. John - Our Fuzzy Q. 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This book has been called "a literacy milestone and one of the topten cowboy books of all time." $17.95 August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 21 Roy Rogers was more than a cowboy movie star the author of more than 150 published articles on cowboys and their movies and is recognized world-wide as an authority on the subject. “From all over the world,” he said, he gets letters from people who want to know such details as when someone died, what they starred in and when. He’s written three books and is working on a fourth. His Oak Ridge home houses what he believes is the most comprehensive archive of information in the world about the cowboys of the American movies. There are filing cabinets and crates filled with clippings, Xeroxes, folds of information on every film cowboy, recording the details of his life and his films, magazines, books and pictures, reference works and autographed photographs. One of the autographed photos shows Roy and his wife, Dale Evans, with Copeland, who had gone to see him to show him an article he’d written about the legendary cowboy. Of all the cowboys, Copeland loved Rogers best. Of them all, Roy was truly the king, Copeland says. “Roy never passed up an opportunity to do good work. He visited children’s hospitals whenever he could, he gave money to lots of charities; he Trail Talk - Best selling cowboy book for two years. Cowboy quotes, creeds, names of horses, real names of cowboy and cowgirl before changed by Hollywood, Top-ten moneymakers, plus much more. $14.95 Best of the Badmen - Over 300 pages with 300+ badmen from A and Bwesterns and TV. $42.95 The Tom Tyler Story - All about this great serial and Western star. Was $23.95 -- reduced $13.95. Whip Wilson Story-Complete coverage on Monogram's whip-cracking cowboy. $12.95 Bob Baker Story - All the info on the 1930s Universal star. $12.95 Five Heroes - Featuring Russell Hayden, Eddie Dean, Tom Keene, John "Dusty" King and George Houston. $13.95 VIDEO - DVD or VHS. An informative and nostalgic look back at the six-gun heroes of yesterday. Includes an exclusive interview with Johnny Mack Brown's daughter Cynthia, and historian Bobby Copeland. A MUST FOR COWBOY FANS. $19 didn’t like to talk about it though, he just did these things.” “He was very concerned about being a good model for kids,” he said. He liked to drink a beer now and then, but he stopped doing it, because he didn’t want to set a bad example to children.” “Cowboy movies were great because they were bearers of moral tone and the cowboys always did what was right. “the good guys didn’t drink, they didn’t smoke, they wore white hats. A kid could get a good lesson in morality every time he went to the movies. I don’t mean it was a substitute for church, but it certainly complimented church.” Copeland said it was impossible to explain to a later generation, what those movies meant to kids in his generation. “Someone once said to me, “If you were there, no explanation will do.’” Copeland’s two sons, Michael 40, a Methodist minister, and Lance 28, who, with his father, is a deacon at a Baptist Church, “tolerate cowboys, because Dad likes them,” Copeland chuckled. “I like things from the past; they like things from the future, I guess.” Interested in cowboy trivia? Check out Bobby’s western trivia site at: http://www.cowboypal.com/bobbycopelands_trivia.html August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 22 The Roy Rogers Festival celebrating the 100th Anniversary of Roy’s birth was recently held in Portsmouth, Ohio, the town where Roy grew up. While there were a number of guest stars at the events, the highlight was having three of Roy’s and Dale’s children present; Roy Rogers, Jr. (Dusty), Mimi Rogers Swift, and Dodie Rogers Patterson. Appearing with his father Dusty, was Dustin Roy Rogers, Roy’s grandson. Other children and grandchildren of Dodie Rogers Patterson and her husband, Jon, were present at the Grand Banquet, held Saturday night, August 6th. The entertainment highlight of the event was a concert by Dusty and his band, The HighRiders, held Friday night, August 5th, at the Vern Riffe Center for the Arts at Shawnee State University in Portsmouth. Other special guests appearing at the Festival were Donna Martell, Ed Faulkner, Steve Mitchell, Raymond White, Colonel Bill Sanders, and other local entertainers. Jon Patterson also performed a number of songs and entertained us with his hand puppets, Trigger and Gabby. Each evening was capped by informal entertaining and refreshments in the Hospitality Room. Various panel discussions were also held with the guest stars and Rogers’ family members. Each discussion was informative and enjoyable. Donna Martell made her film debut at 17 with Roy and Dale in their first color movie, Apache Rose. Donna went on to appear in over 200 movies and many television productions in a career that had productive many years. She was very gracious in her comments concerning Roy and Dale and their influence on her and all the young people they came in contact with. Donna expressed great concern over the direction that many of the youth in this country are encouraged or influenced to take due to today’s supposed role models. Ed Faulkner is a most recognizable face for anyone who has watched western movies and television shows since the late 1950’s. He made six major motion pictures with John Wayne and had Richard Boone (Paladin to many of us) as one of his early and most influential mentors. Ed is a very gracious, Actors Ed Faulkner and Donna Martell charming, and entertaining Kentuckian who graduated from the University of Kentucky. His festival appearances are always delightful, informative, and inspiring as he reveals his character and how he and his family have lived their lives. Steve Mitchell, the Singing Cowboy from Texas,( and more recently, Branson, MO), is one of the most versatile cowboy singers one is ever likely to hear. He plays a right-handed guitar left-handed, and is also accomplished as a fiddle player and a jazz violinist. Raymond White, a retired professor and author, served as moderator for several panel discussions and as master of ceremonies at the Saturday night Banquet. He was informative and entertaining as always. This is 85% of your Sagebrush News staff and the first time we had all been together as a group. Left to right is Jim Friesz, Sharon Friesz, A special occurrence at this year’s festival was John Fullerton, Leah Bashaw, Charles Galloway and JeanBeth Hill. Our the opportunity for Leah Bashaw and her famiCanadian teen, Krystina wasn’t able to get to Portsmouth but maybe ly to attend the events on Friday at the Festinext year. val. Leah writes a regular column in this fan newsletter about various subjects related to August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 23 Roy and Dale from a teenager’s perspective. It was quite a treat for Jim and Sharon Friesz, Charles Galloway, JeanBeth Hill, and John Fullerton to be able to meet Leah and her family in person for the first time at the 2011 RR Festival. Attending with Leah were her parents, Betty and Stephen and her brother Nathan. Jim and Charles enjoyed accompanying Leah et al on a trip to Roy’s boyhood home in Duck Run and to the other events at the festival. Krystina, our movie reviewer for this publication, was unable to attend due to conflicts in her schedule. She was missed. The Dealers room was a lively place during the festival with the guest stars meeting the attendees and various dealers selling Roy and Dale collectibles as well as other Western items. A special thank you from all of us should acknowledge the hard work and dedication of the members of the Portsmouth Area Community Exhibits, The Roy Rogers Festival Committee, and The Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Collectors Association and the many other helpers who make The Roy Rogers Festival a success each year. Revenues that exceed expenses and proceeds from the annual live auction go to The Roy Rogers Scholarship Fund which provides a scholarship for a local student to attend Shawnee State University in Portsmouth. Rogers family photo in front of Roy’s boyhood home in Duck Run, near Portsmouth, Ohio. Photo taken by John Fullerton with Dustin’s phone camera. L-R Mimi, Roy, Jr. (Dusty), Dustin Roy and Dodie Rogers Patterson. Megan and Taylor, granddaughters of author, Raymond White, with Dodie Rogers Patterson. They had just presented Dodie with a bouquet of red roses. Later they were great assistants and even modeled some of the items present for auction August, 2011 The Sagebrush News Page 24 The Sagebrush News and Roy Rogers, Jr. and the HighRiders are proud partners in FirstPLACE!, an exciting community-wide initiative in Stone and Taney County, Missouri. This program, a partnership of the Keeter Center for Character Education at the College of the Ozarks, Characterplus, and the Public Schools was created to foster a community where character is highly defined and intentional taught. The Goals for the Stone and Taney County initiative are as follows: 1. Improve school climate to positively impact achievement, attendance, discipline and drop-out rate; 2. Cultivate visible community support; 3. Increase parent participation and awareness in character development. Read the FirstPLACE! Magazine and the Keeter Center reports at the links below: http://www.keetercenter.edu/images/FirstPlaceMagazine.pdf http://www.keetercenter.edu/reports/Rpt_2011.pdf