Let's face it: those enduring cowboys and
riders of the purple sage who've kept moviegoers
enthralled since the time of The Great Train
Robbery back in 1903 -- the John Waynes, Randy
Scotts, Gary Coopers and Jimmy Stewarts -- for
the most part have received wagonloads of
attention for their work in Westerns, never more
than in recent times when books and essays have
been penned extolling the virtues of high-grade
oaters and such actor-director Western combos as
the two Johns (Ford and Wayne), Stewart with
Anthony Mann and Scott with Budd Boetticher.
But forgotten in the mix has been the "singing
cowboy," the Gene Autry-Roy Rogers type of
cowpoke who was not only a whiz at ridin,'
shootin,' rescuin' and fistfightin' but also able to
stop between the gallops long enough to grab a
guitar, lean against a tree and sing about
"Tumblin' Tumbleweeds" (an Autry reliable) or
warn "Don't Fence Me In" (a Rogers favorite).
Some of the small fries in the audience may have
preferred less music and more roughhousing; some
cowboys also rebelled. John Wayne once said the
most personally embarrassing thing to him in his
career happened in 1933 when Monogram Studios
insisted he sit by a tree, move his lips and pretend
to sing while a real warbler named Bill Bradbury
hid behind the tree and did the actual crooning.
(The film was the long-forgotten Riders of Destiny.)
Many audiences, however, found the whole idea
refreshingly pleasant, and once cowboy crooners
arrived in movieland full-tilt, they dug in their
boots and didn't leave for 20 years, eventually
vamoosing to television. Flash ahead to 2011: that
entire genre has not only disappeared but has
basically been forgotten. But not here on TCM.
In
honor of Roy Rogers in the 100th anniversary year
of his birth, and also to salute all those dozens of
other movie heroes of the Old West who were
comfortable with a six-shooter in one hand and a
guitar in the other, every Friday this month we'll
be honoring the entire fraternity. Throughout July,
instead of putting our TCM spotlight on a single
star, we'll be shining it on nine "singing cowboys,"
beginning July 1 with five movies starring Rogers
(first up: 1944's Cowboy and the Senorita, Roy's
first film with future wife Dale Evans), later
focusing on Autry, Tex Ritter, Jimmy Wakely,
Dick Foran, Monte Hale and Herb Jeffries, who in
the 1950s became a top-selling recording star after
having been the first African American "singing
cowboy" in a series of so-called "race movies"
specifically made in the 1930s and 1940s for black
audiences in black neighborhoods in that
segregated time.
We'll also have films with Ken
Maynard, who in 1930 became the first Western
actor to actually sing in a Western movie. Also
Rex Allen, the man considered the last of the
genre; he signed off on his big screen career in the
mid 1950s. So every Friday this month, we invite
you to take off them boots, sit back and enjoy a
look to the past and a vanishing breed of movie
and movie hero -- fellows with honor, integrity,
saddle-sores, spurs and songs, and who, true to the
code of the West, rarely ever kissed the leading
lady. See you at the corral.
by Robert Osborne
Singing Cowboys Introduction - Singing Cowboys 26 Films, Fridays in July
by Robert Osborne | May 19, 2011
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