Recently I watched a 1941 Western called Six-Gun Gold which starred Tim Holt. I haven't seen many films starring Holt, but I really enjoyed his performance in the classic film The Treasure of the Sierra Madre which if you've never seen I would highly recommend. This all got me thinking back to a blog post that I did several years ago which in turn provides me for my September post for Flashback Friday...
IT'S FLASHBACK FRIDAY - A TIME OF THE MONTH WHERE YOU CAN REPUBLISH AN OLD POST OF YOURS THAT MAYBE DIDN'T GET ENOUGH ATTENTION, OR THAT YOU'RE REALLY PROUD OF, OR YOU THINK IS STILL RELEVANT ETC. THIS BLOG-GO-ROUND IS HOSTED BY MICHAEL G D'AGOSTINO FROM A LIFE EXAMINED--THAT'S WHERE YOU'LL FIND THE REST OF THE PARTICIPANTS OR TO JOIN UP YOURSELF.
THE POST I'VE CHOSEN FOR THIS MONTH FIRST APPEARED ON TOSSING IT OUT ON Wednesday, March 10, 2010. TO SEE THE ORIGINAL COMMENTS TO THAT POST YOU CAN CLICK ON THE TITLE BELOW TO BE TAKEN TO THE ORIGINAL POST...
No Country Music For Old Men
My father used to tell me stories about how when he was a kid he and his friends would go to the movie theatre on a Saturday and, for a nickel or a dime, spend the afternoon watching cowboy movies. He might have mentioned the stars of these movies, but if he did the names never really registered with me.
I had grown up with Hopalong Cassidy, Roy Rogers, and Gene Autry-- the cowboys that were on early television. Then later I might have watched Wagon Train, Gunsmoke, or Bat Masterson. The cowboy stars of my father's day had fallen out of favor in the early network television days and had been replaced with the new guys in town.
When my dad heard that Colonel Tim McCoy was coming to town with the Tommy Scott Caravan and Wild West Show, he was enthused about it. I was not able to share his enthusiasm because I wasn't familiar with Tim McCoy and even after my father told me who Tim McCoy was I was not very interested.
Tommy Scott's Wild West and Medicine Show, as it was also known, passed through Maryville, Tennessee every year and would play in the old armory building in Alcoa, which is a city which borders Maryville. Each year I would go with my parents to see the show. In one sense I feigned interest in these shows, though on the other hand my love of show business couldn't keep me away. Since our family was known in the entertainment business we would be always be welcomed to visit the show and spend time with the entertainers.
The show was mostly country music interspersed with cornball comedy skits and variety acts. Tommy Scott's show was very much like Hee-Haw, the country comedy TV variety show that was popular at the time, except Tommy Scott had been doing it long before the television show had ever aired. The highlight of Scott's show would be the headliner, who this year was Colonel Tim McCoy. He would come out and talk about being a cowboy and present his expertise at fast-draw and gun slinging and then give a demonstration of his skills using a bullwhip.
After the show, my parents and I visited with the performers and met Tim McCoy. Neatly dressed in a black cowboy outfit, he was a very polite man in his seventies. His demeanor was dignified and robust. He seemed like a real gentleman cowboy. He seemed more than willing to be engaged in conversation and I suppose my father spoke to him a bit, but I wasn't paying attention to what was said. My curiosity about the show and it's folk had been satisfied and I was ready to get on my way.
Now I look back wishing I had tried to establish some kind of relationship with this elegant, legendary cowboy star. This man is a genuine American legend. He had ties with the real West and actually was a real cowboy before he went to Hollywood. He had an actual working relationship with Indian tribal leaders and had gained their respect. He had actually been a Colonel in the U.S. Army. He was once a marquee idol and has a star on Hollywood Boulevard. His wife had been at one time associated with Adolf Hitler and John F. Kennedy. The man had an extraordinary history and hundreds of stories to tell and now toured the country with a country music circus and I didn't even ask for an autograph.
For that matter Ramblin' "Doc" Tommy Scott came to town every year and I passed him off as some country yokel who put a silly old time medicine show together. Actually he is a figure of country music history who wrote many songs and was an entertainer, recording artist, television personality, and author. His show was a springboard for future talents as well as a forum for nearly forgotten stars like Johnny Mack Brown, Clyde Moody, Gabby Hayes, and many others. He was a man who respected legendary talent because he was one of them. To see an early Tommy Scott performance check out his She'll Be Coming Round the Mountain video on YouTube. If you remember Hee-Haw I think you'll see the influence from this video that is probably from the late 40s or early 50s. Why didn't I get to know Tommy Scott? I was around him every year.
So perhaps I'll blame my indifference on my youth--I was in my early twenties at this time. But what excuse do I use when I was in my late thirties and early forties and was around Lash La Rue on many occasions. Lash La Rue was working with the company that owned the show I managed at that time and on several occasions I was right there working side by side with him. Somehow I guess I was thinking he was just some weird old guy that my boss was helping out. Now that I'll never have an opportunity to be around Lash La Rue again I realize that Lash was once a huge cowboy star famous for his skills with a bullwhip. He's the one who trained Harrison Ford for the Indiana Jones role. He was also a poet and a wonderfully witty raconteur. And yet at the events I attended where he was speaking I essentially ignored him, absorbed with my own thoughts. Couldn't I have just listened for a short while?
There have been so many lost opportunities. I think back once again to that Tommy Scott show passing through town --every one of the entertainers with stories to tell and with talents to exhibit. And like any one of the other faceless members of the audience I sat dutifully through the program and soon forgot what I saw. Except I had the opportunity that most of them did not have --I was able to meet with the performers and spend time with them. I could actually visit with a cowboy star like Sunset "Kit" Carson and shake his hand. But I squandered my opportunities. Sunset rode off into the sunset and I didn't even say so much as good-bye.