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  3. In movies, I must admit I'm not a big Western fan; but strangely enough, in my teens when all the old sixties Western se

In movies, I must admit I'm not a big Western fan; but strangely enough, in my teens when all the old sixties Western se

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  • F Offline
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    fgadmin
    wrote last edited by
    #7

    misspaddylee — 12 years ago(August 22, 2013 10:02 AM)

    Of the series which premiered in the 1960s my favourites would be
    The Virginian
    and
    The Big Valley
    . I still enjoy them to this day. I wish
    The Big Valley
    dvds hadn't stopped at season 2, volume 1. I wish
    The Virginian
    dvds were less expensive.
    I remember liking
    High Chaparral
    ,
    The Road West
    and
    The Guns of Will Sonnett
    as well.
    "Walk? Not bloody likely. I'm going in a taxi."

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      joehrobertsjr — 12 years ago(August 23, 2013 09:07 PM)

      Maverick is my favorite Western of all-time but I mostly think of it as a 50's series even though part of it aired in the 60's. Of the shows that aired mostly in the 60's I would have to say Wagon Train followed by Wild, Wild West. I like Daniel Boone too but that show isn't really a true Western.

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        #9

        Patricia91 — 12 years ago(August 24, 2013 07:09 AM)

        Another vote for Wagon Train

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          mactach — 12 years ago(August 24, 2013 01:09 PM)

          Rawhide.
          Still enjoy watching that.

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            DontBogartMe — 12 years ago(August 27, 2013 07:32 AM)

            I looked forward to Encore Westerns adding Rawhide to its daily slate. Didn't fare well,I guess, because it soon disappeared from the schedule.

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              mamacassfan — 12 years ago(August 27, 2013 02:13 PM)

              They lasted but one season but I loved the ABC Monday night double-shot of
              The Legend of Jesse James
              with future movie star Christopher Jones and
              A Man Called Shenandoah
              , with Robert Horton (fresh off the Wagon Train).

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                #13

                ZevII — 12 years ago(August 25, 2013 06:58 PM)

                I think of Maverick as more of a '50s series (especially the James Garner episodes), so I'll go with Bonanza.

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                  cvalance — 12 years ago(August 28, 2013 04:04 AM)

                  Bonanza was as much a family drama boarding on soap than a true Western. On any given episode, you were as likely to see a gypsy band crossing the Ponderosa than a steer (let alone a cattle herd).

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                    FillCorey — 12 years ago(August 29, 2013 12:22 PM)

                    Bat Masterson (Gene Barry), Wyatt Earp (Hugh O'Brien), and especially Laredo.
                    Everybody wants money; that's why they call it MONEY!

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                      wackydac — 12 years ago(September 12, 2013 03:37 PM)

                      Gun Smoke

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                        MsLexy — 12 years ago(September 14, 2013 06:19 PM)

                        Began in the 50s, ran into the 60s:
                        Gunsmoke
                        Cheyenne
                        The Rifleman
                        Bonanza
                        Maverick
                        Lawman
                        Bronco
                        Sugarfoot
                        Began in the 60s:
                        The Dakotas
                        Gunslinger
                        Big Valley
                        Wild Wild West
                        Jesse James
                        The Tall Man
                        The Deputy
                        The Loner
                        Guns of Will Sonnett

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                          #18

                          Sylvie17 — 12 years ago(September 15, 2013 03:11 PM)

                          I loved Laredo. There was a lot of humor and I had a serious crush on the character Joe Riley, played by William Smith.

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                            #19

                            MikeF-6 — 12 years ago(September 18, 2013 03:20 PM)

                            Westerns were the most popular series on TV in the late 50s - early 1960s. Some came and went pretty quickly and some were syndicated for the younger set and played on Saturday mornings. Here are a few, perhaps ephemeral shows, but which I have fond memories of enjoying and watching frequently, even if I couldnt describe a single weekly plot today.
                            Memory can play tricks on you. When I started doing research for this post, I was surprised. I remembered many of these shows coming later and lasting longer than they did. That is why several are late-1950s.
                            The Adventures of Jim Bowie
                            . 1956-1958. The theme song began Jim Bowie Jim Bowie. He was a bold adventuring man. Scott Forbes played Bowie in the same dashing way that Fess Parker was playing Davy Crockett.
                            The Range Rider
                            . 1951-1953 Jock Mahoney played the title character. His sidekick was played by Dick Jones, a former child actor billed as Dickie Jones. This was a kids show.
                            Yancy Derringer
                            . 1958-1959. After The Range Rider ended, Mahoney grew a mustache and went all over New Orleans riverboat gambler who was really a secret agent for the New Orleans police. His right-hand man was a Pawnee Indian played by X Brands.
                            Whispering Smith
                            . 1961. Audie Murphy starred in the one-season oater about a Denver detective who solved crimes using the latest developing scientific forensic methods. This was more than a decade before Hec Ramsey.
                            Tate
                            . 1960. A Civil War soldier with a injured arm wrapped in black tape traveled the west as a gunslinger. Pretty violent for its time. Tate left a lot of dead bodies in his wake.
                            mf
                            There's anarchists over there, sir. And Atheists. And vegetarians, sir. Vegetarians!

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                              binapiraeus — 12 years ago(September 18, 2013 10:09 PM)

                              Now that you mention it, I also remember one: "Wanted: Dead or Alive" (1958-61) with Steve McQueen; that was a pretty good one too!
                              Let's be realists, let's demand the impossible.

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                                wrote last edited by
                                #21

                                jrparz — 12 years ago(September 30, 2013 11:36 AM)

                                I'd go with

                                1. The Rifleman (Nobody more deadlier than Lucas McCain)
                                2. The Big Valley (Always remember Jarod for his brains, Nick for his brawling, Heath for his fast gun; Audra for her beauty, and Victoria for her class.)
                                3. The Wild Wild West (James Bonder I mean, West)
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                                  amyghost — 12 years ago(October 03, 2013 04:24 AM)

                                  Wild Wild West
                                  (for
                                  all
                                  the obvious reasons, lol)
                                  High Chaparral
                                  , for the enormous crush I had on Manolito (BTW, Henry Darrow still looks bloody good for his age)
                                  Early
                                  Gunsmoke
                                  (before it tried to become softer and more 'humourous')

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                                    binapiraeus — 12 years ago(October 03, 2013 06:21 AM)

                                    Yeah, Manolito was cute (and so funny!); but for some reason I don't even know myself I liked that grumpy Buck even better 'High Chaparral' was my second favorite after 'Bonanza'.
                                    Let's be realists, let's demand the impossible.

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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #24

                                      binapiraeus — 12 years ago(December 18, 2013 10:13 PM)

                                      Oh, I see, you were a "Bonanza" fan by force With us it was just the other way round: I went to my grandparents' every day (because we didn't have cable TV at home), and made them turn their TV to "Bonanza"
                                      Let's be realists, let's demand the impossible.

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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #25

                                        Queenbee60 — 12 years ago(December 19, 2013 08:33 PM)

                                        The Virginian, Big Valley, Bonanza, Gun Smoke. I think there was one called Seven Brides for Seven Brothers? I miss those shows. They didn't need a lot of violence to keep your attention.

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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #26

                                          rj-27 — 11 years ago(June 26, 2014 11:53 AM)

                                          Never missed "
                                          Have Gun, Will Travel
                                          " if I could help it.
                                          I also liked "
                                          Stoney Burke
                                          " with Jack Lord.
                                          "
                                          Rin Tin Tin
                                          " was another good one. That dog could get anyone out of trouble.
                                          Honorable mention also goes to "
                                          Johnny Yuma
                                          " and "
                                          Cheyenne
                                          ".
                                          Democracy is the pathetic belief in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance. H.L. Mencken

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