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Category Archives: B-Western trivia

Roy Rogers and Trigger: The Perfect Match!

22 Friday Nov 2013

Posted by jerrysprague in B-Western trivia, Cowboy Talk

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Happy Trails: Our Life Story, Roy, Roy Rogers, Smiley Burnette, Trigger

Roy and Trigger: the perfect match

When Roy Rogers began his career with Republic Studios, he needed a good horse. The first horse that Hudkins stables sent him was Golden Cloud who had played in Errol Flynn’s Robin Hood. Roy fell in love with Golden Cloud immediately; the horse was beautiful, fast, and intelligent and could stop on a dime.  The horse was so fast and quick that Smiley Burnette suggested Roy name him Trigger. The name stuck. Roy and Trigger became famous as a pair.

Early in Roy’s career, Herbert Yates, president of Republic Studios, was pushing Roy to play in some non-western bad guy roles. Roy did not like it so Herbert threatened Roy saying he would replace him and put some other cowboy on Trigger. Yates told Roy that Trigger made him famous, not the other way around. Unbeknown to Yates, Roy had purchased Trigger and when Roy told him that, Yates became very angry but he gave in to Roy’s wishes.

Yes, Roy had gone to the stables’ owner and asked to buy Trigger. The price was $2500 and Roy was making $75 per week so in today’s dollars that would be a very expensive horse. Roy had to buy Trigger on time but he considered it the best investment ever.

Roy and Trigger made 88 movies and 104 TV shows together. Roy said he was the only silver screen cowboy to use the same horse throughout his whole career. Trigger never let him down. He was very smart and knew over 100 tricks that could be cued by touching a certain part of his body. He was a natural ham. Most male TV horses were geldings but Trigger was a stallion and yet gentle enough that Roy could put children on him.

Trigger had several doubles to use in the more dangerous scenes or just to give him a break. But Trigger was quite capable of doing about anything. One day the film crew had taken several shots of Trigger’s doubles running up beside a moving locomotive. None of the doubles would get very close to the train without spooking. Finally, Roy said let Trigger do it. So, he and Trigger pulled off the stunt perfectly.

Director Bill Whitney once said that Roy was so athletic that he could have been a stunt man himself. He was pretty tough and could hang with the best of the stuntmen. And Trigger was also very athletic so the pair made a real team. In Roy’s autobiography Happy Trails: Our Life Story, he recalls one of his fondest memories was when he was doing a personal appearance at a movie set in Palm Desert. There were some cowboys hanging out and ragging on Roy about how Trigger really wasn’t much of a horse. Trigger was in his 20’s at the time. Roy recounts the story: “Finally I decided I had to call their bluff. I said, ‘Okay, boys, let’s race’. I put a wad of bills on the table. They matched my bet and four of them mounted their ponies. We lined up, someone dropped a flag and the horses took off. Fifty yards after the start, Trigger was nosing out in front, and a few hundred yards after that, the other horses were eating his dust. I’ll tell you, the money I picked up from the table that day wasn’t anywhere as satisfying as seeing the look of respect for the palomino on those men’s faces after the race”. Of course, those guys probably did not realize Trigger’s father was a thoroughbred.

All of us know that actors are just that: they are pretending to be something or someone they really aren’t. But, as near as I can tell, both Roy and Trigger were pretty tough dudes; about as close to the real thing that a silver screen cowboy and his steed could get.

The Wannabe Cowboy, November 20, 2013

THAT SILVER HAIRED DADDY OF MINE: THE GREAT GENE AUTRY IRONY

10 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by jerrysprague in B-Western trivia, Cowboy Talk

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Gene Autry, Hollywood Walk of Fame

Irony is the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning. Whenever I hear the song “That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine” written by Gene Autry and Jimmy Long, I feel somewhat puzzled. In the song, Gene apologizes to his dad for all the heartache he may have caused him. But isn’t that ironic? I wonder how this could be because in reality it was the other way around. Gene’s father was the one who caused heartache to the whole family.

Gene’s father, Delbert Autry, was characterized by several books as a horse trader, cattleman, a rover, a drunk and a womanizer. He often uprooted the family to move somewhere else; the situation was feast or famine. Sometimes they lived pretty well and then other times they had to scrape by. And then, Delbert would up and leave the family high and dry for long periods of time. Gene, being the oldest of the siblings, must have felt a lot of responsibility for the family. The instability in Gene’s life must have been the motivating factor which drove him to succeed in whatever he tried. Gene could have played pro baseball but he knew that would not be a stable situation so he taught himself Morse Code so he could work for the railroad, which he eventually did. While working for the railroad, he continued working on his musical talents and performing wherever he could. He traveled to NY to explore a music and recording career. An interviewer told him he had potential but he should go back home and work in front of a microphone for a while, which he did while he still worked for the railroad. He met Jimmy Long who also worked for the railroad and the two practiced and played songs together. Gene eventually married Jimmy’s niece. He and Jimmy wrote “That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine” which was considered their first big hit and sold 500,000 copies. With the help of agent Art Satherly, Gene went on to a successful music career and performed on National Barn Dance in Chicago. Gene eventually went to Hollywood and the rest is history. His success in the entertainment world is evidenced by his 5 stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Gene was the only person ever to accomplish that distinction. But Gene’s real success was due to his business acumen; he invested what he made in the entertainment world in many businesses and became very wealthy. He finally attained the stability that escaped him as a child. While Gene’s dad was very irresponsible and did not look out for his family, Gene made sure he looked after his own.

In her book, “Public Cowboy # 1”, Holly George Warren points out how generous and loyal Gene was to his family and friends. He continued to send money to his old agent, Art Satherley, up until Art’s death at 96.  Gene’s dad and his brother, Dudley, continuously asked for financial assistance in addition to what Gene sent them on a regular basis. Gene paid for his niece’s dental work when her immediate family couldn’t. Gene helped many of his early mentors in financial ways. Gene’s first movie role was with actor Ken Maynard. One day in 1956, Ken wanted to sell his Stetson to Gene for $100. Gene told him to keep the hat and gave him $500; plus he began sending him a monthly check. People saw Gene as a very compassionate person, always wanting to lend a helping hand. He became the provider that Delbert Autry never was.

So, I often wonder what Gene must have been feeling on the inside as he sang “That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine”. I doubt that he felt anything warm and fuzzy about his own dad but maybe he sang it as if he were wishing his dad had been like the one depicted in the song. And I often wondered if maybe Jimmy Long actually wrote the words about his father. My suspicion was just confirmed as I consulted Douglas Green’s book, “Singing in the Saddle”, (page 123) where he attributes the words of the song to Jimmy Long.

So, there is irony in the tribute to Gene’s dad; a tribute that did not really reflect Gene’s relationship to his dad. Delbert Autry did not did not fit the bill of the man honored in the song. Evidently, Jimmy Long’s daddy did!

Footnote: By the way, a quick Google search shows that the following singers have recorded “That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine”: Johnny Cash, Marty Robbins, Simon and Garfunkel, Jim Reeves and the Everly Brothers. So, Gene lives on!

Jerry Sprague

The Wannabe Cowboy

October 8, 2013

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