The Guns of Will Sonnett | |
---|---|
Walter Brennan and Edward Andrews, 1968.
|
|
Genre | Western |
Created by |
Aaron Spelling Richard Carr |
Written by | Ed Adamson Harry Basch Tony Barrett Jameson Brewer Richard Carr Peter B. Germano Cliff Gould Kathleen Hite James Komack Edward J. Lakso Robert Pirosh Aaron Spelling Cliff Todd |
Directed by |
Jack Arnold Thomas Carr Irving J. Moore Michael O'Herlihy Richard C. Sarafian Jud Taylor Jean Yarbrough |
Starring |
Walter Brennan Dack Rambo |
Composer(s) |
Hugo Friedhofer Earle H. Hagen Fred Steiner |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 50 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Danny Thomas |
Producer(s) | Aaron Spelling Dick Clark |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) | Thomas-Spelling Productions |
Distributor |
King World Productions CBS Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Picture format | Color |
Original release | September 8, 1967 – September 16, 1969 |
The Guns of Will Sonnett is a Western television series set in the 1870s which was broadcast on the ABC television network from 1967 to 1969. The series was the first production collaboration between Aaron Spelling and Danny Thomas, who would later go on to produce one of ABC's most-memorable hits, The Mod Squad. Today, the series is distributed by King World (now CBS Television Distribution), and, when telecast, is usually seen in tandem with another 1960s short-lived Western series, the Mark Goodson-Bill Todman production Branded; King World was originally responsible for distributing both shows.
The series starred veteran character actor Walter Brennan as Will Sonnett, and Dack Rambo as his grandson, Jeff, who were searching for Will's son, James. Disgusted with his father's absence due to army business, James had disappeared at the age of seventeen. A few years later, a baby boy was delivered to Will, with a letter identifying him as James' son and explaining that the mother had died in childbirth. The letter also said that James was giving his father a second chance at being a parent. Will was grateful for the opportunity, and did his best to steer his grandson in the right direction.
The elder Sonnett was capable with firearms and often spoke to strangers about this in an intimidating way. In the first episode, he mentions that his son is an expert with guns, and his grandson is better, "and I'm better than both of 'em–no brag, just fact." This last phrase was uttered frequently on the show, and became a catch phrase among the show's fans.
Will was not completely absent from James' childhood, and he had taught James how to handle a six-shooter; the younger man became renowned as a peerless gunfighter. Hearing so much of his father's repute, Jeff decided to find him. Will agreed, and they rode across the West looking for James. They often arrived at places that James had recently left. The people they met had mixed opinions of James, some seeing him as a ruthless killer, and others as the only man brave enough to take the side of justice against men far more ruthless. James appeared in several episodes, played by Jason Evers. One episode, entitled "The Man Who Killed Jim Sonnett", guest starred Robert F. Simon.