Tuesday, August 20

Clint Walker

He was a mountain of a man and a western legend thanks mainly to playing TV's favorite wandering adventurer, Cheyenne.  He parlayed that role into movie westerns playing heroes as taciturn and emotionless as western folk are thought to have been.  But those same traits kept him rather pigeon-holed as an actor and his overall opportunities in Hollywood were rather limited.

Thinking of his acting made me think of the piece we just did on Fred MacMurray whose acting style is similar to Walker's.  Why did I usually find MacMurray uninteresting while I paint Walker as a more fascinating creature?  Well now, I wonder.

Could it be that this handsome, ultra-manly creature with his 6'6" frame, 48" chest and 32" waist with a propred being an actor.  He and his twin sister were born in Hartford, Illinois, in 1927.  His family had little money and life became even worse as the depression hit.  He was tall and good-looking from early childhood and he quickly got used to folks commenting on physical appearance.  After he began working out some, he became the dreamboat to many a lass.  Things turned more serious, however, when at age 16 he decided to quit school to go to work to help support the family.

He began with such jobs as a factory worker, a riverboat lackey, a carnival roustabout and a caddy.  He was willing to do anything and was seemingly good at everything he undertook.  His physical presence was most imposing and as he became less shy and more outgoing, employment came easier for him.  He always had a need to keep moving.  No wonder he understood Cheyenne.  





He joined the Merchant Marines toward the end of the war and later found himself working his way west with jobs in Texas oil fields and stints in California as a sheet metal worker, nightclub bouncer, deputy sheriff and an undercover agent for a detective agency.

His wanderlust next took him to Las Vegas where he hired on as a security officer at the Sands Hotel when he ran into actor and Cecil B. DeMille bff, Henry Wilcoxon.  He got hired to play a small role in the director's The Ten Commandments (1956) but not before he had an uncredited part in a silly Bowery Boys comedy, Jungle Gents (1954). 

I've never heard any serious rumors about Walker's sexuality but at this point he did hire on for representation with noted gay agent, Henry Willson (Rock, Tab, Troy, Guy, Rory) whose male clientele were whispered about in Hollywood as casting couch actors.

In 1955 Warner Bros signed him on to play Cheyenne Bodie for 108 episodes and a seven-year run.  Walker was set in life.  For most people no matter what big-screen western he played in, he was always Cheyenne.  Walker and his mega-popular show set the stage for many westerns to come at WB and elsewhere.  

The western Fort Dobbs (1958) was so-so although I loved him in it.  Of course, being one of those long trek things, he got dusty and had to take off his shirt and bathe.  Then it went from so-so to oh-oh.  Costar Virginia Mayo said in her autobiography that he was a nice guy but a terrible actor.





















My favorite Clint Walker performance is in Yellowstone Kelly (1959), a highly-fictionalized story of a real-life trapper.  The wide-open spaces and color of Sedona, Arizona, the skirmishes with a local Sioux tribe and the homoerotic relationship between Walker and Edd Byrnes, hired, more or less, as a houseboy for Walker, certainly captured my imagination.  

He was a trapper again in Gold of the Seven Saints (1961) with Roger Moore (so unbelievable in westerns) as his partner as they try to keep their stash of gold from the bad guys.  It came and went with barely a mention.

By 1962, Cheyenne, still doing well in the ratings, was no more.  Most press releases said he and the notoriously cheap WB couldn't come to any agreement over him doing more and better film work.  But the truth appears to be the age-old gripe... money.  He felt he wasn't paid enough and they thought he was.  So Walker said adios and by the time the brouhaha reached the news outlets, his reputation was suffering.  Who does the big cowboy think he is?

He made an attempt to get off a horse and make an honest-to-goodness contemporary romantic comedy, Send Me No Flowers (1964).  Walker actually gets rather lost in the third and final Rock Hudson-Doris Day comedy in which he plays her former boyfriend who comes back into her life when her husband (Hudson) mistakenly thinks he's dying.  Walker's part was too small for anyone to get excited about it and the film was not nearly as praised as Hudson & Day's first two.

For None but the Brave (1965), Walker's first war picture, he heads a platoon of Marines who, along with a Japanese group, are stranded on a small Pacific island and must learn to get along with one another.  Frank Sinatra, in his only directorial effort, is one of Walker's men.  It was not an especially noteworthy film but I, because of Walker, enjoyed it.

Night of the Grizzly (1966) was the first of three family-oriented films he made.  They all have that Disney feel and yet they were made elsewhere.  Walker, wife Martha Hyer and their son move to Wyoming to start a new life living on and working the land.  In addition to two familiar and expert villains, Jack Elam and Leo Gordon, the family is terrorized by a giant grizzly.  There are some genuinely scary scenes but who better to fend off the beast than Clint Walker.  I mean, come on!

I guess that beast wasn't big enough because next came an Indian elephant, the title star of Maya, also 1966.  Its slight story concerns a boy (Jay North, recently grown up from TV's Dennis the Menace) who gets mad at his father (Walker) and runs off into the jungle with a local boy and the mighty Maya.  It had a few fun moments but this was no way to re-ignite Walker's career.

The best movie the big guy ever made is The Dirty Dozen (1967).  Directed by gutsy Robert Aldrich, it concerns a rebellious army major (Lee Marvin) during WWII who is assigned a dozen miscreants to train and lead into a mass assassination of Germans. 




















It is a good film, immensely popular with male filmgoers, that had far more comedy than accuracy.  Walker got lost in the shuffle with costars like Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, John Cassavetes, Donald Sutherland and Charles Bronson, far better actors all. 

A funny scene had Marvin out to engage gentle giant Walker, who as Samson Posey can be goaded to fight, into taking a swing at him.  Towering over Marvin, Walker says I don't want to hurt you, Major.  The major responds you're not gonna hurt me.  I'm gonna hurt you.  That dialogue and its aftermath was a highlight.

On the other side, there was a scene where Posey pretends to be a general inspecting Ryan's troops and Walker told Aldrich he was uncomfortable playing it.  It seems odd, at best, and may shine a light on the actor's inability to truly hit his marks.  The scene was given to Sutherland.

In 1969 came two supporting roles in western comedies with robbery at the center.  Sam Whiskey was just plain knee-slappin' funny from start to finish and if you don't think so, meet me out in the street at sundown.  Widow Angie Dickinson, always so watchable and willing to poke fun at her real-life image, hires a trio (Burt Reynolds, Ossie Davis and Walker) to retrieve gold bars from the bottom of a river and return them to the bank from where her husband stole them, without the bank knowing.  Preposterous, yes, but Reynolds and Dickinson sparkle and Davis and Walker are right there, too, in their co-starring roles.

We wonder how Walker felt being back at WB after their touchy departure to make the flamboyant comedy, The Great Train Robbery.  At its center is a couple (wild and crazy Zero Mostel and beautiful Kim Novak, once again trying her hand at comedy) pretending to be church people in a Texas town while, in fact, they are getting set up to rob a bank.  Walker plays a ranger out to nab the devious pair.  It's a corny thing but its outlandishness worked well.  A very funny scene has Novak giving peyote to lawman Walker while he reactions are priceless.

Walker at this point had returned to television but in a number of TV movies and not especially memorable ones.  He also began something that he would do for the rest of his life... use his cowboy image to brighten various venues around the country that saluted the western.  The public found him kind, unassuming and seemingly as happy to meet them as they were to meet him.  

I saw him at one of those events in Southern California and also once on a Santa Monica street and lastly at the Phoenix airport.  He was hard to miss.  I wish we had spoken (I was too shy) but he noticed me as well because I was taller than he was.  

In 1971 he was involved in a serious skiing accident.  He fell out of a lift and his ski pole pierced his heart.  He was originally pronounced dead but then rushed into surgery when signs of life were detected.

He made a return to the family film with Baker's Hawk (1976).  Beautifully filmed in Utah, it's another outdoor yarn about a boy who finds an injured hawk and nurses it back to health while his parents (Walker and Diane Baker) are treated like pariahs by the townsfolk.  Burl Ives adds his usual flavor as a wise, old hermit.

After making the film, Walker did no more work that warrants even a modicum of attention (with the exception of a one-episode appearance in 1978's mega TV blockbuster Centennial).  His last work, a voiceover, came in a forgotten 1998 flick.




















I wonder how many recall that Walker had a pretty decent singing voice.  He sang occasionally in Cheyenne and also a few of his films.  He even made an album called Inspiration.  When that beautiful speaking voice erupted into song, I half wanted to scream like a teenage girl but I resisted.  I thought you should know.

He was married three times, approximately for 20 years to each woman.  During his last marriage he kept a pretty low profile.  Other than with stunt men and some of the crew, he never really felt a part of the Hollywood community, never felt that they totally accepted him or respected him.  So it wasn't a problem turning his back on them.  Perhaps, too, after two failed marriages, he wanted to give more to his last.

The big guy, a life-long health addict, died last year of congestive heart failure in Grass Valley, California.  He was 90 years old.


Next posting:
The four films of two actor-friends

27 comments:

  1. I know you won't believe me, but when you mentioned a "brawny" stranger, I actually thought of Clint Walker...I really didn't know he did many movies before Cheyenne (being a 50's - 60's TVaholic). And only knew of a few movies after Cheyenne. Do I get a gold star??? :)

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  2. You mean a gold star for honesty in admitting you actually know very little about him? LOL. LOL. LOL. Keep buzzin', Cuzzin'.

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    1. Read this part of your blog because I'm a Clint Walker fan. I think his first agent (who represented notably gay actors) was the first agent card he was given by Van Johnson while working in Vegas. I think he and his 1st wife had grown apart and he was dissatisfied with is career by the late 60s at the time they divorced. I really think he was wasted in movies like Send me No Flowers. He could be very funny. He had conviction but Midwesterners are notoriously good natured, and I think he was somewhat naive about the business.
      No matter how well he rebounded from the ski pole accident, that is a life altering event. Changing outlook and left feeling vulnerable, he married Gisselle Gennesy in '74. I think it was a troubled marriage and read somewhere divorce was filed then she got cancer.
      He always seemed to have one really bad actor in the movies in which he starred. Tommy Sands is rediculous in Non but the Brave. The other sharp shooter in More Dead than Alive really chewed the scenery! Kim Novak in their film, really over did it too. I also notice that Mr. Walker never appeared shirtless after his ski accident. I don't think he was ever as bulky and I think he probably had visable scars. If you'd made you start on your looks I can see why he was protective of his image.
      I have no idea about his sexuality. I see him as a conservative WW2 vet whose job it was to get married, have a family and take care of them. He seemed conservative and aside from all the kisses in Cheyenne he rarely had a screen kiss let alone a passionate one. Watch the Great Bank Robbery he looks like he's trying to get away from his heroine. He was pretty vocal about values in film. He was as good an actor as others of he day who were discovered because of their looks. I think Warner Brothers screwed him big time. They really wasted an opportunity. When filming the Dirty Dozen few of the other actors were well known but EVERYONE in Europe knew Cheyenne. The Movies of the Week kept him working but they were pretty bad.
      Did anyone ever notice the "Snowbeast" got killed by being impaled on a ski pole?Obviously, he was pretty private and I feel he got a really good partnership with Susan Cavellari for the last 20 years of his life. Yes, he is a joy to watch physically and I have his album with that beautiful, untrained barratone. I binge on old westerns (baby boomer here) and Cheyenne and Walker movies have been my latest. This is kind of like geneology. You find out bits and pieces along the way and then fill in the blanks to your own likeing. He gave us, and continues to, give us all a lot of pleasure. (Except for the ending in More Dead than Alive! ARRRG!) I doubt if we will ever hear any more about Mr. Walker than we already have. RIP

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    2. What an utterly lovely, thoughtful, informative and intelligent piece you wrote. I thank you so much.

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    3. You seem kindhearted but I wish you had left out V. Mayo's opinion, not true at all @ him. He was a wonderful, genuine, full-range actor. How do we know it wasn't sour grapes, like, he turned her down! A HUGE FAN XO RIP CW

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  3. Walker can be seen as guard behind Yul Brynner in courtroom scene from Ten Commandmenta

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  4. MovieMan, just curious. How much taller were you compared to Clint Walker?

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  5. At 6'8" I was two inches taller than Walker.

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  6. Thank you so much for your blog.
    Since Clint Walker never became a major star, there isn't a whole lot of information on him personal life. I think Walker proves that God has a sense of humor - such a genetically blessed man yet very conservative.

    I've been trying to find out why his first marriage collapsed since it seems to be out of character. Walker was reported as saying he had one of the happiest marriages in Hollywood as late as 1965. They appeared together at 'the Night of the Grizzly' premiere in 1966 - yet they divorced in 1968.

    Also, you mentioned that Walker's first two marriages failed. I understand that his second wife, Giselle Hennesy died from cancer in 1994 while still married to Clint but she is buried with her first husband.
    Do you have any insight to why Clint divorced Verna and to his marriage with Giselle?

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  7. You are so right about how little information there is on Walker. I know we both wonder why that is. Even if he wasn't an Olivier, he was famous and that usually generates a lot of copy. But noooo. I looked so many places on why his marriage to Verna ended and found nothing. I knew his second marriage to Giselle ended in her death but a gremlin must have gotten to my keyboard and changed that. Thanks for letting me know and thanks for writing. Hope you will again sometime.

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  8. Thanks for the response! If I'm able to come up with any additional information, I'll pass it along.

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  9. As promised....looks like Bible-toting Walker has feet of clay. This is what I found regarding the collapse of marriage with Verna.
    - 04-20-66: Attended Night of the Grizzly premiere in Palm Springs with Verna (can be seen on You Tube).
    - 04-23-66 Colorado Springs Gazette publishes interview with Walker, where Walker states he likes to take his wife and daughter to the movies but doesn't much anymore because he's afraid they'll be embarrassed (in other words, the Night of the Grizzly is a family movie).
    - 04-25-66 to 10-13-66 IMBd Filming dates in UK of Dirty Dozen movie.
    - 06-08-66 Arizona Republic - announced that newly divorced Walker will next wed a ravishing red-head English beauty, Pauline Stevens.
    - By 08-01-66 Anderson Daily Bulletin - notes that Walker obtained a Mexican divorce several months ago (at that time a person could get a quick Mexican divorce and just have their lawyer represent them. Laws were changed in 1970). The Times Tribune 07-26-66 also noted that Walker was staying at a Belgravia penthouse while filming and Pauline Stevens made him a bikini to sunbathe in.
    - After filming and Walker came home, the relationship with Pauline was pretty much over.

    I wouldn't have gone to the trouble of posting this but all I was reading about Walker was how he maintained his high morals over his lifetime. Keep in mind that his daughter was only 16 yrs old at the time. It is reported that he was divorced in 1968. The 08-01-66 article also states that the divorce was going to be refiled in the US, so maybe that is what the 1968 date refers to.
    I have a soft spot for Verna - I suspect being married to Walker wasn't easy.

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    1. Clint was a long time friend and what you posted is pretty much inaccurate. Magazines and gossip columnists at that time made up a bunch of stuff because it made for a good story even if it wasn't true. Clint and Verna's reason for divorcing were actually pretty mundane. They married young and grew apart as they got older. But that sort of thing doesn't sell papers so that's why so much was embellished.

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  10. How incredibly investigative. I am very appreciative and impressed. Thanks so much.

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  11. I thought Clint was good in everything he did. He especially appealed to the ladies of all ages. He wasnt appreciated enough I thought. He could have had a lot more movies in my opinion. I also wondered what happened to his first marriage unless they just grew apart.

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  12. I liked Clint in everything he did and wanted to see more. I thought he wasn't appreciated like he should have been. Women of all ages loved him. So glad Cheyenne is back on tv although some of the stories could have been so much more interesting with more romantic interests. He was one of a kind! Where's the next Cheyenne..big, strong, moral, manly, but gentle giant?

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    1. I'll bet you wanted to see more. Oh, and so did a LOT of men. :)

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  13. Dear The Movie Man love your replies and forum. Want to also be a fb friend Paul Templeton of Morgantown,WV . Please fb fried request me. Was Clint Walker, Rory Calhoun, Jeff Chandler and Robert Taylor gay?Each were handsome, Sexy, attractive, athletic, talented appealing to many ladies, but also many men too. Where each of these four actors born& when, die & when cause of death/ circumstances? Where were these four buried. Do these four actors each gave children and what are their names abd are any if their children still living in 2021? Who were each if the spouse(s) and ex spouses of these four actors? Are any if their spouses still living in 2021? Thanks. Hugs! Love your forum and love all those who love movies and movie stars. What wonderful way to share mutual live if movies and the stars who made them. SCAMP aka Paul Templeton of Morgantown,WV.petempleton60@gmail.com
    or petempleton@retiree.wvu.edu

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  14. Calhoun was bisexual and gay rumors dogged Taylor for years. Chandler was likely no as well. Any speculation on Walker being anything but straight is likely little more that wishful thinking. Wish I had the time to answer the biographical info you want on the foursome but I don't. However, see "related sites" on home page and check out imdb.com and findagrave.com and you'll find all your answers. Thanks for writing, Paul.

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    1. Since Walker was married to three different women for about 20 years each, his chances of being gay I would liken to a nine months pregnant woman winning a gold medal in the pole vault at the Olympics.

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    2. LOL... that cracked me up. Thanks. On the other hand, whether he dabbled in gay or not, I have to assume you don't know a lot about how gay men or/and or closeted gay men operate. I'm jus' sayin'. Thanks for writing.

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    3. Exactly. Many, many gay or bisexual men were married many times, precisely to squelch rumors of their true orientation.

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  15. Should read: Chandler was likely bi as well.

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  16. Saying Clint Walker was gay is like saying Elizabeth Taylor hated men! Controversy and drama will always make a better read, but in this case, it’s laughable!!

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    1. Who said he was gay? But guys who signed on with Henry Willson were always suspect. Even the str8 ones would do most anything for an early role. Maybe Walker did, maybe he didn't. Neither of us really know.

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