Western-Stars singen

 
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 26.01.2010 - 13:02 Uhr  ·  #109
Ihre Tochter schrieb der ROCKABILLY HALL OF FAME eine
Biografie der Mutter auf:

Known by such nicknames as the Yodeling Blonde Bombshell, Westerns First Lady and the All-American Girl, Carolina Cotton came from humble beginnings and became a prolific entertainer in the Golden Era of Western Swing music and B movies, soundies, radio shows and early television. Her fun, lively "pretty little girl next door" personality made her a favorite with Western fans worldwide. She made numerous live appearances, including parades and rodeos. Her countless contributions at charity benefits had earned her the title of "Miss Good Samaritan". Most of all, she was known for her unique style of yodeling, and was considered a World Champion by many in the field.

Carolina Cotton was born Helen Hagstrom on October 20th, 1925 and raised on the family farm in her native town of Cash Arkansas. The family relocated to San Francisco by 1937. As a youngster she joined the O'Neille Sisters Kiddie Revue, and started performing at the Golden Gate Theater. She went on to sing, yodel and play a few instruments in Dude Martin's Roundup Gang, performing on Bay Area stations KPO and KYA. Martin encouraged her to change her name to "Carolina".

A chance meeting with Johnny Marvin in Los Angeles led to Carolina relocating to Hollywood in 1944, and joining the Spade Cooley Orchestra, where she was the featured female vocalist/yodeler. She was only known as "Carolina" at the time, and still needed a last name. Cooley's manager, Bobbie Bennett (who also later became Cotton's manager) held a contest to pick a last name for the Yodeling Blonde Bombshell, and Cotton was the winner. The band played regularly at LA's Riverside Rancho club, and appeared on the popular radio show "Hollywood Barn Dance", on local station KNX. That same year she appeared in the B Western films "Sing Neighbor Sing" for Republic Pictures (Roy Acuff), Universal's "The Singing Sheriff" (Bob Crosby) and PRC's "I'm From Arkansas" (Slim Summerville). In 1945 she signed with Columbia Pictures, filming "Outlaws of the Rockies", (one of 3 Durango Kid/Charles Starrett pictures), and "Texas Panhandle" At that time Carolina also made several film shorts and soundies with Cooley and Merle Travis.

After filming "Outlaws", Carolina realized she should learn to ride horses. Like anything else she did, she gave it her all, and soon became an Outstanding Horsewoman, and appeared in several equestrian events ... rodeos, horse shows and parades. She often rode as Grand Marshalette.

In 1945 Carolina secretly married Cooley bassist Deuce Spriggins. The two left the band, and formed Deuce Spriggins Orchestra (several of Cooley's band members also migrated to this group). The new band also featured Andy Parker and the Plainsmen Trio. They performed nightly at Santa Monica Pier's Western Palisades Ballroom, one of the largest dance halls on the West Coast. Like the Spade Cooley Orchestra, they made soundies, shorts and appeared in 4 films: "Song of the Prairie", "That Texas Jamboree", "Cowboy Blues" and "Singing on the Trail" ... all with Ken Curtis, and the Hoosier Hot Shots. They recorded 1 release for Mercury Records, "What's the Matter With You" / "I Been Down in Texas". But by 1946, Cotton and Spriggins had divorced, and the Spriggins Orchestra dissolved.

Carolina briefly performed with Hank Penny in '46 back at the Riverside Rancho, and soon signed with King Records. The session produced 2 of her self-penned signature songs, "Three Miles South of Cash in Arkansas", and "I Love to Yodel". She appeared on the Armed Forces Radio Service show "Ranch House Party" along with Ken Curtis, Cottonseed Clark and others. Carolina eventually guest starred on several radio and early television programs (some were her own shows).

In 1947, she toured with Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys, and made another film, "Smoky River Serenade" (Hoosier Hot Shots). Among her radio appearances was on the long-running series "KMPC Westerners" (featuring Red Rowe, Pappy Cheshire, and the Plainsmen). 2 songs for Crystal Records were released, "You've Got Me Wrapped Around Your Finger" / "Chime Bells".

By 1948, Carolina went on the road with the Sons of the Pioneers. She became the only "daughter" of the group. "Smoky Mountain Melody" (Roy Acuff) was her next movie. She also became one of the first (possibly THE first) female disc jockeys in the country, spinning records on Long Beach station KGER. Carolina also guest starred on the KTLA-TV show "Sunset Ranch".

Carolina made another film in 1949 (briefly leaving Columbia for Astor Pictures), "Stallion Canyon" (Ken Curtis), and released 2 more records for Mastertone, including "Put Your Shoes On Lucy", "Hoosegow Serenade" and "The Old Square Dance is Back Again". She also made a picture back at Columbia with Eddy Arnold, "Feudin' Rhythm". She was a radio guest on the AFRS show "Redd Harper's Hollywood Roundup", and featured on KLAC-TV's Ranch Time.

By 1950, the Yodeling Blonde Bombshell a second film with Arnold, "Hoedown" (Jock Mahoney). A new recording contract with MGM Records produced several memorable songs, including "I Betcha I Getcha", "You're Gettin' a Good Girl" and the spectacular yodeling tune, "Nola". Plans were made for Carolina's own TV Western adventure series, "Queen of the Range". Unfortunately, it never materialized. By December, she was on her way overseas, to entertain at military bases in Europe. This was the first of many such tours, mostly with the USO, to Korea and the Far East. In Germany, Carolina received the title "Deputy Provost Marshal"...the only citizen to receive such an award.

Carolina made a wide variety of personal appearances over the years, including the Out Of This World Series (celebrity baseball game), St Mary's All Western Days fiestas in San Diego, the All-Palomino Horse Show in Ohio, the Helldorado celebrations in Nevada, and the Sheriff's Annual Rodeos at the LA Coliseum. One of her most unusual feats was in December 1951, when she helped place a real "pole" at the North Pole. As a publicity stunt for Alaskan Airlines, the candy striped pole was filled with letters to Santa Claus, and was to be flown over the North Pole, and dropped by Carolina and Alaskan DJ North Pole Nellie. A huge celebration was held in Fairbanks, but at the last minute, Carolina and Nellie were barred from the flight, as the crew had to refuel at a restricted all-male military base. As a tribute to the 2 girls who couldn't attend the historic event, the crew on the plane yodeled, as they dropped the Pole into position.

The Yodeling Blonde Bombshell recorded 4 more MGM songs in '51, with Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys: "You Always Keep Me in Hot Water", "Cause I'm In Love", "I'm All Alone" and a remake of her song "Three Miles South of Cash". She also guested on Hedda Hopper's radio program, among others.

Carolina co-starred in 3 films in 1952, coming into her own as a leading lady. In "Apache Country", she worked with Gene Autry and Pat Buttram, playing an adventurous cowgirl, much like the role she would have played in "Queen of the Range". She made another movie with Jock Mahoney, "Rough Tough West" (also featuring her long-time friend Smiley Burnette). Her final film was the Autry picture "Blue Canadian Rockies", playing opposite Gail Davis. This was also the year she made her last recordings for MGM, which included Yodel Yodel Yodel, from "Rockies".

Carolina continued her many personal appearances. She took over Doye O'Dell's kiddie amusement park in Compton, and renamed it "Carolina Cotton's Tiny Town". While on a USO return visit to Korea, Carolina was honored to have a tank named after her: Miss Carolina--The Cotton Special.

Between 1953-55, Carolina was still doing guest spots on radio and television. The AFRS aired "Carolina Cotton Calls", heard by Armed Forces personnel worldwide. She continued making guest appearances at rodeos and special events. And she made one last tour overseas in June 1956, to Johannesburg South Africa, to visit hospitals of children with cerebral palsy. It was then that Carolina told herself that if she ever left Show Biz, she would become involved in helping those with disabilities.

By the mid '50s, Western Swing and B Movies started becoming more and more of a thing of the past. In August 1956, Carolina had married Bill Ates, nephew of the character actor Roscoe Ates, with whom she did many shows over the years. She began concentrating on her home life and family, and had 2 children: son William, and daughter Sharon. But the marriage didn't endure into the 1960s, as Carolina and Bill divorced. Carolina remembered her promise to help disabled children ... she became a teacher, and earned her Masters degree in Special Education, as well as traditional education.\

Over the years, Miss Cotton taught at different schools. She moved to Bakersfield CA in the early 1970s, where she taught for many years at Mt Vernon Elementary School. Always the type to be "on the go", she took on another job at a local department store (Brocks, later renamed Gottschalks). After her kids were grown, Carolina began showing up at jam sessions at Bakersfield's local Grange Hall, making music with some of the pioneers of the Bakersfield Sound of country music, including Bill Woods.

Beginning in 1984, Carolina Cotton was a favorite Guest Speaker at several Western Film Festivals, most notably in Charlotte NC, Memphis TN and Little Rock AR. She enjoyed reminiscing with her friends from the good ol' days of Show Biz, and loved connecting with fans old and new.

Sadly, in 1994, Carolina was diagnosed with Ovarian Cancer. In spite of enduring treatments, she carried on with a smile, and the same enthusiasm she was known for. She continued teaching and working at the department store, attended a Film Festival or two, and managed to enjoy summer visits to Europe. She retired from teaching in March 1997, and entered the hospital in April, where she passed away the morning of June 10th, 1997.

Carolina Cotton lives on in the legacy she left behind, and in the hearts of her fans. She is fondly remembered in her Western Swing recordings, B Western movies, radio and television shows which, luckily, still survive in one form or another. Like other Western stars of the era, Carolina's films and recordings are in the midst of restoration, much to the benefit of generations to come. Carolina Cotton's story is assured a future, as a pioneer in the Golden Age of Western Entertainment.


Posted April, 2005 - Thanks to Carolina's daughter Sharon Marie
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 26.01.2010 - 13:15 Uhr  ·  #110
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 28.01.2010 - 13:47 Uhr  ·  #111
BEN JOHNSON
Birth: Jun. 13, 1918
Death: Apr. 8, 1996

Actor. He is best remembered for his role of Sam the Lion in "The Last Picture Show" (1971), for which he won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar. Born in Foraker, Oklahoma, his father, Ben Johnson, Senior, was a cattleman and rancher in Osage County, Oklahoma, as well as a champion rodeo steer roper. Naturally, young Ben would follow in the footsteps of his father, learning how to work a ranch and going on the rodeo circuit. Young Ben was soon a rodeo star in his own right. Both he and his father would earn Belt-Buckles together for rodeo team roping. In 1939, he made his first appearance in front of the camera, doing stunt work in the film, "The Fighting Gringo" (1939). In 1940, Producer Howard Hughes hired him to take a herd of horses to California, and to manage the horses upon arrival, for one of the films. As he considered the pay better in California, Ben decided to stick around (in Oklahoma he was paid $30 a month; Hughes paid him $300 a month). In 1941, he married Carol Elaine Jones, daughter of Western film star Buck Jones; although they would have no children, they remained together all their lives. He worked for several years as a stunt man, horse wrangler and film double for such notable stars as John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart and Gary Cooper. He played Cavalryman Travis Tyree in both of John Wayne's Cavalry movies, "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949) and "Rio Grande" (1950). His big break in acting occurred when director John Ford gave him the starring role in Wagon Master (1950). Johnson would go on to play supporting roles in such films as "Shane" (1953), "Major Dundee" (1965), "The Wild Bunch" (1969), and "Chisum" (1970). When offered the role of Sam in "The Last Picture Show" (1971) for which he would win an Oscar, he first turned it down because he didn't believe in swearing or in nudity in films. His friend, Director John Ford, got him to change his mind, but only after Ben got permission to rewrite all of his scenes with the offensive words removed. In 1982, Ben was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, as well as earning a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1994. Ben continued to find steady work in films, between continuing his ranching back in Mesa, Arizona. He died at his home in Mesa, Arizona, of an apparent heart attack, at the age of 77. (bio by: Kit and Morgan Benson)
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 28.01.2010 - 13:49 Uhr  ·  #112
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 28.01.2010 - 14:03 Uhr  ·  #113
Jack Elam (* 13. November 1920[1] in Miami, Arizona; † 20. Oktober 2003 in Ashland, Oregon, USA) war ein US-amerikanischer Schauspieler, der meist als Bösewicht oder Außenseiter auftrat.

Zu seinen grossen Filmen gehörten RIO LOBO (mit JOHN WAYNE) und
zahlreiche Mitwirkungen in TV-Serien wie BONANZA..
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 28.01.2010 - 14:05 Uhr  ·  #114
Das schreibt WIKIPEDIA:

In Erinnerung geblieben ist Elam durch seine Auftritte als Bösewicht oder Faktotum in Western wie Spiel mir das Lied vom Tod oder Auch ein Sheriff braucht mal Hilfe, wobei sofort sein ungewöhnliches Äußeres (das unbeweglich schielende Auge und seine großen Augenbrauen) auffällt.

Die Augenverletzung, verursacht durch einen Streit im Alter von 12 Jahren – bei den Pfadfindern hatte ein anderer Junge ihn mit einem Bleistift verletzt – war von Anfang an sein Markenzeichen.

War er in den 1950er Jahren noch auf die Rolle des Bösewichts abonniert, spielte er Ende der 1960er zunehmend Außenseiter oder komödiantische Rollen. Als er Mitte der 1970er „zu alt und zu fett wurde, um auf ein Pferd zu springen“ („[..] too old and too fat to jump on a horse“, Zitat Jack Elam), trat er vermehrt in Fernsehserien und Filmkomödien auf.

Elam hat eine einprägsame Beschreibung seiner eigenen und vielleicht auch der Karriere anderer erfolgreicher Schauspieler gegeben. [2] Nach seiner Vorstellung definieren sich die Phasen, die ein Schauspieler in seiner Karriere durchläuft, dadurch, wie Regisseure im Laufe der Jahre auf seine Rollenbesetzungen reagieren:

Phase 1: „Wer ist Jack Elam?“

Phase 2: „Holt mir Jack Elam.“

Phase 3: „Ich will einen Jack-Elam-Typ.“

Phase 4: „Ich will einen jungen Jack Elam.“

Phase 5: „Wer ist Jack Elam?“

Jack Elam starb im Alter von 82 Jahren an Herzversagen.

Filmographie
1950: Der Held von Mindanao (American Guerrilla in the Philippines)
1952: Zwölf Uhr mittags (High Noon)
1952: Die Schlacht am Apachenpaß
1953: Verwegene Gegner (Ride, Vaquero!)
1954: Vera Cruz
1954: Über den Todespaß (The Far Country) – Regie: Anthony Mann
1954: Königin der Berge (Cattle Queen of Montana)
1955: Wichita
1955: Der Agentenschreck
1955: Der Mann aus Laramie
1956: Zwei rechnen ab
1957: Die Uhr ist abgelaufen
1961: Die unteren Zehntausend
1961: Die Comancheros
1963: Vier gegen Texas (4 For Texas) – Regie: Robert Aldrich
1965: Rancho River (The Rare Breed)
1966: Duell der Gringos - Regie: Richard Thorpe
1968: Spiel mir das Lied vom Tod (C'era una volta il West)
1968: Die fünf Vogelfreien (Firecreek)
1969: Auch ein Sheriff braucht mal Hilfe (Support Your Local Sheriff!)
1970: Latigo (Support Your Local Gunfighter!)
1970: Rio Lobo
1971: In einem Sattel mit dem Tod (Hannie Caulder)
1973: Pat Garrett jagt Billy the Kid (Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid)
1978: Grauadler (Grayeagle) – Regie: Charles B. Pierce
1981: Auf dem Highway ist die Hölle los (The Cannonball Run)
1984: Auf dem Highway ist wieder die Hölle los (The Cannonball Run II)
1990–1992: Lucky Luke, 3. Serie: Ein schöner Zug von Geisterhand (Il treno fantasma)
1991: Der Ritter aus dem All (Suburman Commando)
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 28.01.2010 - 14:16 Uhr  ·  #115
Buck Jones (December 12, 1891 – November 30, 1942) was an American motion picture star of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, best known for his work starring in many popular western movies.
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 28.01.2010 - 14:20 Uhr  ·  #116
WIKIPEDIA:
Charles Frederick Gebhart was born on the outskirts of Vincennes, Indiana on December 12, 1891. (Some sources erroneously indicate December 4, 1889, but Jones's marriage license and his military records confirm the 1891 date.[2]) In 1907, Jones joined the US Army at age sixteen, after his mother signed a release form authorizing his enlistment. He was initially assigned to Troop G, 6th Cavalry Regiment. He served in combat and was wounded in the Philippine islands during the Moro Rebellion, deploying there in October 1907, returning to the U.S. in December 1909. He was discharged honorably that same year, at Fort McDowell, California.

Jones had an affection for racecars and the racing industry, and became close friends with early racecar driver Harry Stillman. Due to his association with Stillman, he began working for the Marmon Motor Company, where he test drove many of their vehicles. However, by 1910 he had re-enlisted in the US Army. In 1913 he requested a transfer to the Aeronautical Division, U.S. Signal Corps. He requested this due to his desire to become a pilot, however only officers were allowed pilot training. He received his second honorable discharge from the Army in October 1913.

Cowboy, stuntman, beginning of film career
Following his military service, he began working as a cowboy on the 101 Ranch near Bliss, Oklahoma. While attending equestrian shows he met Odille "Dell" Osborne, who rode horses professionally. The two became involved, and married in 1915. Both had very little money, so the producers of a Wild West Show they were working on at the time offered to allow them to marry in an actual show performance, in public, which they accepted. He and his wife formed their own riding expedition show, and toured the U.S.

While in Los Angeles, and with his wife pregnant, Jones decided to leave the cowboy life behind and get a job in the film industry. He was hired by Universal Pictures for $5 per day as a bit player and stuntman. He later worked for Canyon Pictures, then Fox Film Corporation, eventually earning $40 per week as a stuntman. With Fox his salary increased to $150 per week, and company executive William Fox decided to use him as a backup to Tom Mix.

This led to his first starring role, The Last Straw, released in 1920. In 1925 Jones made three films with the then very young Carole Lombard. By 1928 he started his own company, "The Big Hop", which failed. By the 1930s he was on contract with Columbia Pictures, and his career steadily increased from there.

Stardom and death
Jones had more than 160 film credits to his name, in a career that began in 1918. By the 1920s, Jones joined Hoot Gibson, Tom Mix, and Ken Maynard as the top cowboy actors of the day. In the 1940s, Jones played Marshall Buck Roberts in a series of movies. During his career, he would develop a lifelong friendship with Scott R. Dunlap, a director and producer who would work with him on many of his films. Jones was also a consultant to the Daisy Outdoor Products company, which issued a Daisy "Buck Jones" model pump action air rifle. Incorporating a compass and a "sundial" into the stock, it was one of Daisy's top-end air rifles, and sold well for several years. This led to some confusion with the release of the well-known holiday film A Christmas Story, based on author Jean Shepherd's erroneous recollection that the Daisy "Red Ryder" model air gun had a compass and sundial in the stock (it never did at any time during it's production, save the two specially made examples for the film).

Buck Jones was one of the 492 victims of the 1942 Cocoanut Grove fire in Boston, Massachusetts, dying two days after the November 28 blaze. For years, legend held that Jones' fatal injuries were the result of his going back into the burning building to save victims, but it is now known that he was trapped in the fire.

Buck Jones' daughter, Maxine Jones (b. 1918) married Noah Beery, Jr. in 1940.

References
On his album When I Was a Kid, Bill Cosby has a routine called "Buck Jones," in which he talks about seeing Buck Jones movies as a kid. He says that Buck Jones had a horse named Silver, like the Lone Ranger, and that he would chew gum to signal that he was getting angry. Cosby mentions a specific movie in which a saloon tough picks a fight by pouring "Red Eye" liquor over Jones.
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Lorne Greene - Portugal (EP)

 · 
Gepostet: 05.02.2010 - 15:39 Uhr  ·  #117
Hallo Freunde der schnellen Pferde und rauchender Colts,

ich bin kein Anhänger übermässiger Sortierung und auch kein Ordnungsfanatiker - aber in dieser doch so umfangreichen Abteilung, finde ich mich schwer zurecht. Nun zu Papa Cartwright:

Lorne Greene - portugiesische RCA-EP ...
Mehr zu Lorne Greene (auch deutsche Coverversionen seiner Songs) steht hier:
viewtopic.php?t=2781&highlight…ght=greene

Gruß Ralf
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 12.02.2010 - 11:53 Uhr  ·  #118
Clint Walker (* 30. Mai 1927 in Hartford, Illinois) war ein US-amerikanischer Schauspieler. Er startete seine Karriere mit Westernfilmen im Jahr 1950.

Er war der Star der TV-Westernserie CHEYENNE und spielte in dutzenden Western,
sang aber auch:
Warner Brothers 5133 Silver Bells/Love At Home (1959)
Warner Brothers 5135 I Believe/The Kentuckian Song (1959)
Warner Brothers LP W 1343/WS 1343 INSPIRATION
Warner Brothers LP W 1337 (Compilation) WE WISH YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 12.02.2010 - 11:55 Uhr  ·  #119
xx
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Re: Western-Stars singen

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Gepostet: 31.05.2010 - 11:51 Uhr  ·  #120
Jack Palance (bürgerlich Wolodymyr Iwanowitsch Palagnjuk, ukrainisch, * 18. Februar 1919 in Lattimer Mines, Pennsylvania; † 10. November 2006 in Montecito, Kalifornien), war ein US-amerikanischer Filmschauspieler ukrainischer Abstammung.

JACK spielte in diversen Western der 50er Jahre bis zu seinem Tod mit.
1970 erschien sein Album "Palance" (Warner Brothers S 1865).
Daraus wurden folgende zwei Singles ausgekoppelt:
Warner Brothers 7406 Goodbye Lucy/Hannah
Warner Brothers 7433 Brother River/Blackjack County Chain
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