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Local Legends
Presents |
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Tim McCoy's Wild
West debuted February 11, 1950, at 7:00-8:30 pm Saturdays on |
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Tim McCoy was the
authority for kids (and adults) who watched his show. The show was a
forerunner to other shows like "The Gabby Hayes Show" and local
KECA series "Cowboys n' Injuns", hosted by cowboy actor Rex Bell in
the fall of 1960. Tim McCoy was
probably the most authoritative cowboy-hero to ever host his own television
series, being a virtual living link with the old west. On his show Tim
McCoy would lean casually against a corral fence or some other western style
set in a small studio and told fifteen-minute stories about Western history,
heroes and folklore. Described by some as an illustrated lecture series, the
talks would precede a vintage western movie. Some of the topics that he
covered were "The Bozeman Trail", Cattle Brands", Outlaw
Paradise", "Davy Crockett", "Kit Carson", and
"The Immaculately dressed
in cavalry blue and wearing his white Montana-peak hat, he might not have
looked like a working cowboy, but kids knew he was no phoney.
The most distinctive aspect of his outfit was the hand-tooled gun belt with
buckles of intricately designed Mexican silver. He wore one gun, a
silver-plated, pearl-handled .45 and was an expert in it's
use. He enjoyed debunking famous lawmen like Wyatt Earp,
as well as outlaws. In a talk on "Trigger fingers," he explained a
face-off was a rarity. "They bushwhacked you, they drygulched
you, they shot you in the back," he said. A crack shot, McCoy was famed
for his fast draw. A film editor once timed it on 35mm film with twenty-four
frames per second. It took exactly six frames from the blur of his hand to
the smoke issuing from the end of his gun. McCoy also
related Indian legends and stories, sometimes featuring his Indian friends.
In his 1950 premiere show on KTLA, eleven Indians wearing authentic tribal
dress performed dances and reenacted traditional ceremonies with
interpretative commentary by McCoy and his actor pal, Iron Eyes Cody, who was
a regular during the first year.
(Side note:
According to a 1999 article in the It's debatable
whether he did more harm than good posing as a Native American. He pushed a
false illusion of himself onto the public and yet he never did anything that
would reflect negatively on American Indians, rather he promoted and helped
expand concepts outside of stereotyped views, supported Native causes, etc...
He may not have been Native by blood but he certainly was by spirit.) McCoy was first
introduced to the Plains Tribes on the Wild River Reservation when he was
eighteen, and he also became familiar with the Shoshones and the Arapahoes, who adopted him as a brother named High Eagle.
He had a natural facility for mimicry and easily learned the tribal gestures,
one of the few white men still alive who could converse in sign language.
Sometimes he would begin his show by demonstrating something about the art.
Pointing to a path down his cheeks, explaining "The Indian had cause to
shed many tears in his dealing with the white man". During his career,
Colonel Tim McCoy (1891-1977) was an Indian Commissioner, a veteran of both
World Wars, and a silent and sound film star. Between the years of 1923 to
1965, he was in over ninety movies and for a time was MGM's resident cowboy,
noted for his "steely stare". At first he wore all-black outfits,
contrary to the cowboy-hero standard that was much imitated by William Boyd
in Hopalong Cassidy. As a youth he
lived the life of a real cowboy, as a His film image
of a restrained, self-possessed westerner came naturally. With Buck Jones and
Raymond Hatton, for Monogram Pictures in 1941-1942, McCoy made "The
Rough Riders" series, for which he became best known. As Tim McCall, he
rode a black stallion, Baron, and later, Ace, but in his earlier films he was
mounted on a snow white horse named Pal. As for his TV
show, McCoy wrote that, "It gave me a forum to educate people about a
portion of American history which is clouded by a great many tall
tales." Readers interested in the remarkable life of "The Dean of
American Cowboys" should try to find a copy of "Tim McCoy Remembers
the West" (Doubleday, 1977), an autobiography written with his son,
Ronald McCoy. The films of
the show were syndicated to about sixty-five stations through the late
fifties, beginning in April 1956 at 5:45-6:00 pm weekdays on WABD, New York,
as lead-in's for Captain Video's Cartoons, and that fall were shown at
10:45-11:00 am Saturday, followed by a western feature. His show
received a local Ron McCoy
recently told an amusing story to Local Legends about the year when his
Father was up for the Emmy and found he was up against Webster Webfoot.
Although he won the Emmy, he wasn't present to pick it up because he'd stayed
at home: "I'll be damned if I'm going to sit there and get beaten by a
talking duck". Tim McCoy was more than a host, performer, sharp-shooter, he was a legend and the Real McCoy. |
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