Call me a Lancer fanatic....but I watched all 52 episodes from beginning to end. Have to say that I really wished it lasted longer then 2 seasons. It had great actors and marvelous storylines. R.I.P. Andrew...Wayne...James...Elizabeth...and Paul. You're altogether now on the Lancer ranch in heaven.
Marie Miller: News Note: Barbara Luna Still alive as of this Date 26 - 11 - 2024. At the Age of 87. Ironside Police Woman Elizabeth Baur along with Don Galloway, Raymond Burr and Don Mitchell have all passed on, Barbara Anderson still Alive as of This date at the Age of 80.
debrarick96 I wrote a long comment what I read about Johnnys history.and left it at "Legacy" ...if you are interested.. Bye, Lancer family.I won't forget you. Thanks for 51 wonderful episodes. Thanks to Johnny/James for everlasting love. You enriched my life.
Paul Alden Brinegar Jr. (December 19, 1917 - March 27, 1995) was an American character actor best known for his roles in three western series: The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Rawhide, and Lancer. Brinegar was born in 1917 in Tucumcari in eastern New Mexico, the first child of Paul A. Brinegar Sr., a farmer, and Louise Brinegar[2][3] His family relocated several times during his childhood, first moving to Alamagordo, then to Las Cruces, and finally to Santa Fe.[4] It was in Santa Fe where Brinegar became interested in acting, performing in stage productions at his local high school.[4] After his graduation in 1935, he left Santa Fe to attend Pasadena Junior College in California. There he studied drama, literature, and art.[4] According to the United States Census of 1940, Brinegar was back in Santa Fe by May of that year living with his parents and his two younger brothers, Warren and Robert.[5] The 1940 census also identifies him at that time as an independent "Writer" and his father then as a freelancing "general short hand Reporter".[5] Soon thereafter young Brinegar joined the United States Navy to serve four years during World War II as a chief radio operator in the South Pacific.[4] After the war he returned to California, where he applied his military training and experience to earn a living in the Los Angeles area as a radio repairman. He also resumed his pursuit of an acting career in his spare time, playing bit parts in movies. The veteran actor died of emphysema at the age of 77 in Los Angeles on March 27, 1995. He was buried at Los Angeles National Cemetery and was survived by his wife Shirley and their two sons, Paul III and Mark.[3][8] His family directed memorial contributions for Brinegar to go to the Motion Picture and Television Fund in Woodland Hills, California.
Elizabeth Baur (December 1, 1947 - September 30, 2017) was an American actress. She is perhaps best known for her roles as Teresa O'Brien on the CBS western series, Lancer, with Andrew Duggan, James Stacy, Wayne Maunder, and Paul Brinegar, and as Officer Fran Belding on NBC's crime drama series Ironside. Elizabeth Baur was born in Los Angeles, California. Juanita Gless, her great-grandmother, was an early settler of California who came from the Basque region of France.[1] Actress Sharon Gless is Baur's first cousin.[2] Her father, Jack Baur, was a veteran casting director at 20th Century Fox,[3] and did not want his daughter in the industry.[4] She attended Immaculate Heart High School in Los Angeles and was a student at Los Angeles Valley College "for a year and three-quarters."[3] She left college to join a 20th Century Fox program for training actors. Baur died on September 30, 2017, after a lengthy illness at age 69. She was survived by her husband and her daughter.
Its too bad the last episode dealt with this kind of stuff. Such a quality show could have done without this episode. Gosh I love the Lancer family! Including Teresa of course!
What a good episode sad to see the last one ever made. What a shame it didn't last a few more seasons. Starting on the over the air channel, Decades is suppose to start showing them this Tuesday at 5 AM first one Highriders, hope they show them in order.
Andrew Duggan (December 28, 1923 - May 15, 1988) was an American character actor of both film and television. Duggan was born in Franklin in Johnson County in south central Indiana. During World War II, he served in the United States Army 40th Special Services Company, led by actor Melvyn Douglas[1] in the China Burma India Theater of World War II. His contact with Douglas later led to his performing with Lucille Ball in the play Dreamgirl. Duggan developed a friendship with Broadway director Daniel Mann[2] on a troopship when returning from the war. Duggan appeared on Broadway[3] in The Rose Tattoo, Gently Does It, Anniversary Waltz, Fragile Fox, The Third Best Sport. Duggan appeared in some 70 films, including The Incredible Mr. Limpet with Don Knotts, and in more than 140 television programs between 1949 and 1987. He was the main character in the Disney theme parks' Carousel of Progress and the singer of the accompanying song, The Best Time of Your Life, subsequently updated with new voices and songs in 1993.[citation needed] Duggan also did voice-over work including voice-over for Ziebart's 1985 Clio Award-winning "Friend of the Family (Rust in Peace)" television commercial.[4] In 1957, Duggan played a villain in the first episode of NBC's Wagon Train, starring Ward Bond. That same year, Duggan was cast with Peter Brown and Bob Steele in the guest cast of the first episode of the ABC/Warner Brothers series, Colt .45, starring Wayde Preston as Christopher Colt, an undercover agent and pistol salesman in the Old West. In the opening episode, "The Peacemaker" or "Judgment Day", Duggan plays Jim Rexford; Brown is cast as Dave, and Steele as Sergeant Granger.[5] Duggan had a recurring role as General Ed Britt in the second and third seasons of the ABC war series, Twelve O'Clock High. He appeared on the NBC westerns Jefferson Drum, Bonanza, The Big Valley and was also in the pilot episodes of both NBC's The Restless Gun and CBS's Hawaii Five-O, as a former prisoner and an intelligence agent, respectively. Duggan portrayed the patriarch in a 1968-1970 series called Lancer,[7] in which he played cattle baron Murdoch Lancer, while James Stacy portrayed Lancer's gunfighter son, Johnny Madrid, son of Maria, Murdoch's second wife. Some six years earlier, Stacy and Duggan had appeared together, along with Joan Caulfield, in the series finale, "Showdown at Oxbend", a classic drama of the fight between cattlemen and sheepherders, on the ABC/WB western series, Cheyenne, with Clint Walker in the title role.[8] Wayne Maunder portrayed the older son, Scott Lancer, who had been educated in Boston. In real life Maunder had been reared in nearby Bangor, Maine. Lancer lasted for only fifty-one episodes, but critics cited the scripts and performances as excellent. Paul Brinegar co-starred as Jelly Hoskins, having played a similar role of "Wishbone" on CBS's earlier western series Rawhide, with Eric Fleming and Clint Eastwood. In 1954, he married Broadway dancer and actress Elizabeth Logue,[10] whom he called Betty.[11] The couple had three children, Richard, Nancy, and Melissa. Duggan died[12] of throat cancer on May 15, 1988. He was 64.
Sad. Not to see Johnny's boots jingling, his fingers running the desk, his manicured fingers. Me always wanting to see his tight pants fall off when he takes of his belt.. wish they would have made Lancer movies..
Wayne E. Maunder (born December 19, 1937) is a Canadian-born American retired actor who starred in three American television series between 1967 and 1974. From September 6 to December 27, 1967, Maunder starred as 28-year-old Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer (1839-1876), during the time that Custer was stationed in the American West. The program, Custer, aired on ABC at 7:30 Eastern on Wednesday, opposite NBC's established western, The Virginian starring James Drury and Doug McClure. The program ended after seventeen episodes.[1] Maunder's next series was a second western, CBS's Lancer, with co-stars Andrew Duggan, James Stacy, and Paul Brinegar. Lancer ran from 1968 to 1970, with an additional rebroadcast cycle in the summer of 1971.[2] Maunder's last regular series, Chase, is a 21-episode drama about an undercover police unit which aired on NBC during the 1973-1974 television season, co-starring Mitchell Ryan as Chase Reddick and Reid Smith as officer Norm Hamilton.[3] Maunder played the role of police Sergeant Sam MacCray, one of whose duties was to handle the police dog named "Fuzz". A Jack Webb production, Chase was created by Stephen J. Cannell. The fictitious Scott Lancer was born in California, but reared in Boston, Massachusetts, by his maternal grandfather, Harlan Garrett. A Civil War veteran, Scott was a lieutenant in the cavalry under General Philip Sheridan. He spent time in a Confederate States of America prisoner of war camp. He attended Harvard University near Boston and was once engaged to a girl named Julie Dennison.[7] By contrast to Scott, Johnny Lancer, played by James Stacy, Scott's half-brother, was born to a Mexican woman and had been a gunslinger under the name "Johnny Madrid" for several years before he attempted to settle down on the family's Lancer ranch.[7] As the educated older son of Andrew Duggan's patriarchial figure of Murdoch Lancer, Maunder wore short hair and removed the moustache from his Custer role. Like Custer, Lancer was a 20th Century Fox production and also required action scenes and horseback-riding. Maunder resides in the Greater Los Angeles Area. In 1967, Maunder married the former Lucia Maisto.[4] The couple's son, Dylan T. Maunder, was born the next year in 1968.
This is an incredibly well-done episode, one of the best of the series. The dark, foreboding atmosphere is pulled off very well, and BarBara Luna's performance is both haunting and darkly intoxicating. Does anyone know if production (especially the actors) knew that the series had been cancelled when they were making this episode? Clearly it wasn't written into the storyline, but knowledge of the fact that Lancer was indeed "doomed" from a TV standpoint makes evertyhing they do even more poignant to us - and a positive outcome for the Lancer ranch far less certain. Did the audience know this was the final episode at the time it aired, for that matter?
Doubt it no Internet then and studios kept things quieter then. Barbara Luna was so sexy in the 60's through the 80s. She should have been a bigger star than she was.
seerstone I pray that Quentin Tarantino never EVER make a movie or a reboot of the series. I watched Johnny/James dubbed in other languages ( German, French and Spanish). I had to switch off after 10 min. because I couldn't get used to the voice actors. That was no longer my Johnny with his softspoken, quiet voice. The voice is so special, you can't change it. Johnny's little ideas and jokes brought life into the figure and the story. James Stacy made Johnny unmistakeable, special, wonderful and unique. And I didn't even write about his unbelievable attractiviness. There is just no other actor who would be able to be a second Johnny Madrid Lancer!
Hannah could have been the spirit of Johnny's mom. She was Mexican and BEAUTIFUL like Johnny. I know Scott's mom died. Whatever really happened to Johnny's mama. She must have abandoned him since he was on his own as a gunfighter about 15 or 16 years of age !!!
Quinton Tarantino bought the creative rights from the widow of Samuel A. Pebbles. He owns the characters, and could make a movie, or reboot the series.
@@seerstone8982 I really hopes he does something with the show but it would be very hard to find an actor to give life to Johnny "Madrid" Lancer JS made it his own. Actor Tim Olyphant did a poor job in "Once upon a time in Hollywood it didn't flow naturally he was trying too hard. I have always loved Westerns as a kid they stressed family and honor loved Bonanza and Big Valley
Yeah like a couple of other fans. so sad that this was the last episode there was so much potential for future episodes. I. could see a bit of a change in Stacy his acting in this episode was a little more intense All these guys from the 60's Tom Laughlin (Billy Jack) Michael Parks (Then came Bronson) Lee Majors (Big Valley) were so influenced by Dean and Brando. The brooding quiet speaking voice. What I liked about Johnny and Scott they wanted to belong to a family Johnny in a couple of the episodes playfully hits or grabs at Scott He loves his brother the chemistry btwn the 2 actors totally comes across. I hope if Quentin does this as a movie or TV show he looks high and wide for the right actors. Brad Pitt would have made a good Johnny
What happened to Anne (Barbara Luna) at the episode's end. She should have stayed at the ranch. I am sure old Murdock could have told them meet my new "maid" ha ha. The Series should have had another year.
Call me a Lancer fanatic....but I watched all 52 episodes from beginning to end. Have to say that I really wished it lasted longer then 2 seasons. It had great actors and marvelous storylines. R.I.P. Andrew...Wayne...James...Elizabeth...and Paul. You're altogether now on the Lancer ranch in heaven.
Marie Miller:
News Note: Barbara Luna Still alive as of this Date 26 - 11 - 2024.
At the Age of 87.
Ironside Police Woman Elizabeth Baur along with Don Galloway, Raymond Burr and Don Mitchell have all passed on, Barbara Anderson still Alive as of This date at the Age of 80.
great show recommend watching all episodes too bad only seasons thanks for posting them all
Thanks for posting these episodes!!!
Truly a series that ended before its time.
Last episode pink shirt again for Johnny again & last of hearing his spurs jingle .. Cried lake a baby for weeks after Lancer went off !!!
I did too. I'm 70 now and still have a crush on him.
Happy to read your comments. I am 65 now, and Johnny/James is forever in my heart.❤
debrarick96
I wrote a long comment what I read about Johnnys history.and left it at "Legacy" ...if you are interested..
Bye, Lancer family.I won't forget you. Thanks for 51 wonderful episodes. Thanks to Johnny/James for everlasting love. You enriched my life.
Interesting episode, spooky music. And a beautiful woman that Johnny DOESN'T fall in love with!
That’s what I say. Who yanked this Siri from TV after only two seasons? Poor choice. Thanks for the uploads really enjoying them.
Paul Alden Brinegar Jr. (December 19, 1917 - March 27, 1995) was an American character actor best known for his roles in three western series: The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Rawhide, and Lancer.
Brinegar was born in 1917 in Tucumcari in eastern New Mexico, the first child of Paul A. Brinegar Sr., a farmer, and Louise Brinegar[2][3]
His family relocated several times during his childhood, first moving to Alamagordo, then to Las Cruces, and finally to Santa Fe.[4] It was in Santa Fe where Brinegar became interested in acting, performing in stage productions at his local high school.[4]
After his graduation in 1935, he left Santa Fe to attend Pasadena Junior College in California. There he studied drama, literature, and art.[4] According to the United States Census of 1940, Brinegar was back in Santa Fe by May of that year living with his parents and his two younger brothers, Warren and Robert.[5]
The 1940 census also identifies him at that time as an independent "Writer" and his father then as a freelancing "general short hand Reporter".[5] Soon thereafter young Brinegar joined the United States Navy to serve four years during World War II as a chief radio operator in the South Pacific.[4] After the war he returned to California, where he applied his military training and experience to earn a living in the Los Angeles area as a radio repairman. He also resumed his pursuit of an acting career in his spare time, playing bit parts in movies.
The veteran actor died of emphysema at the age of 77 in Los Angeles on March 27, 1995. He was buried at Los Angeles National Cemetery and was survived by his wife Shirley and their two sons, Paul III and Mark.[3][8]
His family directed memorial contributions for Brinegar to go to the Motion Picture and Television Fund in Woodland Hills, California.
Thanks for uploading this episode
67,783 View's So Far:
Lancer: Episode 51.
Season 2. Episode 25. "Lifeline".
Tuesday, November 26 - 2024.
Peter Palmer who played Charlie, was Sgt. Bustard in "Custer" starring Wayne Maunder.
Oh my, Johnny's eyes are truly beautiful.
Yes they are truly beautiful eyes
Elizabeth Baur (December 1, 1947 - September 30, 2017) was an American actress. She is perhaps best known for her roles as Teresa O'Brien on the CBS western series, Lancer, with Andrew Duggan, James Stacy, Wayne Maunder, and Paul Brinegar, and as Officer Fran Belding on NBC's crime drama series Ironside.
Elizabeth Baur was born in Los Angeles, California. Juanita Gless, her great-grandmother, was an early settler of California who came from the Basque region of France.[1] Actress Sharon Gless is Baur's first cousin.[2]
Her father, Jack Baur, was a veteran casting director at 20th Century Fox,[3] and did not want his daughter in the industry.[4]
She attended Immaculate Heart High School in Los Angeles and was a student at Los Angeles Valley College "for a year and three-quarters."[3] She left college to join a 20th Century Fox program for training actors.
Baur died on September 30, 2017, after a lengthy illness at age 69. She was survived by her husband and her daughter.
Sad she's passed away to !!! Wish she would have written a book about Lancer !!!
News Note:
This is The End of the Entire Series. 👍👍
Its too bad the last episode dealt with this kind of stuff. Such a quality show could have done without this episode. Gosh I love the Lancer family! Including Teresa of course!
What a good episode sad to see the last one ever made. What a shame it didn't last a few more seasons.
Starting on the over the air channel, Decades is suppose to start showing them this Tuesday at 5 AM first one Highriders, hope they show them in order.
Andrew Duggan (December 28, 1923 - May 15, 1988) was an American character actor of both film and television.
Duggan was born in Franklin in Johnson County in south central Indiana. During World War II, he served in the United States Army 40th Special Services Company, led by actor Melvyn Douglas[1] in the China Burma India Theater of World War II. His contact with Douglas later led to his performing with Lucille Ball in the play Dreamgirl. Duggan developed a friendship with Broadway director Daniel Mann[2] on a troopship when returning from the war. Duggan appeared on Broadway[3] in The Rose Tattoo, Gently Does It, Anniversary Waltz, Fragile Fox, The Third Best Sport.
Duggan appeared in some 70 films, including The Incredible Mr. Limpet with Don Knotts, and in more than 140 television programs between 1949 and 1987. He was the main character in the Disney theme parks' Carousel of Progress and the singer of the accompanying song, The Best Time of Your Life, subsequently updated with new voices and songs in 1993.[citation needed] Duggan also did voice-over work including voice-over for Ziebart's 1985 Clio Award-winning "Friend of the Family (Rust in Peace)" television commercial.[4]
In 1957, Duggan played a villain in the first episode of NBC's Wagon Train, starring Ward Bond. That same year, Duggan was cast with Peter Brown and Bob Steele in the guest cast of the first episode of the ABC/Warner Brothers series, Colt .45, starring Wayde Preston as Christopher Colt, an undercover agent and pistol salesman in the Old West. In the opening episode, "The Peacemaker" or "Judgment Day", Duggan plays Jim Rexford; Brown is cast as Dave, and Steele as Sergeant Granger.[5]
Duggan had a recurring role as General Ed Britt in the second and third seasons of the ABC war series, Twelve O'Clock High. He appeared on the NBC westerns Jefferson Drum, Bonanza, The Big Valley and was also in the pilot episodes of both NBC's The Restless Gun and CBS's Hawaii Five-O, as a former prisoner and an intelligence agent, respectively.
Duggan portrayed the patriarch in a 1968-1970 series called Lancer,[7] in which he played cattle baron Murdoch Lancer, while James Stacy portrayed Lancer's gunfighter son, Johnny Madrid, son of Maria, Murdoch's second wife. Some six years earlier, Stacy and Duggan had appeared together, along with Joan Caulfield, in the series finale, "Showdown at Oxbend", a classic drama of the fight between cattlemen and sheepherders, on the ABC/WB western series, Cheyenne, with Clint Walker in the title role.[8]
Wayne Maunder portrayed the older son, Scott Lancer, who had been educated in Boston. In real life Maunder had been reared in nearby Bangor, Maine.
Lancer lasted for only fifty-one episodes, but critics cited the scripts and performances as excellent. Paul Brinegar co-starred as Jelly Hoskins, having played a similar role of "Wishbone" on CBS's earlier western series Rawhide, with Eric Fleming and Clint Eastwood.
In 1954, he married Broadway dancer and actress Elizabeth Logue,[10] whom he called Betty.[11] The couple had three children, Richard, Nancy, and Melissa.
Duggan died[12] of throat cancer on May 15, 1988. He was 64.
Now Slawson It's hard to grasp how young he was, when he appeared in Lancer.
I could not find one on this thread that you did on James Stacy. Did you do one?
GREAT SERIES!!! To Bad it was ONLY two seasons!!!!!
"THE MOD SQUAD" [on ABC] knocked it off the air after the second season.
Sad. Not to see Johnny's boots jingling, his fingers running the desk, his manicured fingers. Me always wanting to see his tight pants fall off when he takes of his belt.. wish they would have made Lancer movies..
Wayne E. Maunder (born December 19, 1937) is a Canadian-born American retired actor who starred in three American television series between 1967 and 1974.
From September 6 to December 27, 1967, Maunder starred as 28-year-old Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer (1839-1876), during the time that Custer was stationed in the American West. The program, Custer, aired on ABC at 7:30 Eastern on Wednesday, opposite NBC's established western, The Virginian starring James Drury and Doug McClure. The program ended after seventeen episodes.[1]
Maunder's next series was a second western, CBS's Lancer, with co-stars Andrew Duggan, James Stacy, and Paul Brinegar. Lancer ran from 1968 to 1970, with an additional rebroadcast cycle in the summer of 1971.[2]
Maunder's last regular series, Chase, is a 21-episode drama about an undercover police unit which aired on NBC during the 1973-1974 television season, co-starring Mitchell Ryan as Chase Reddick and Reid Smith as officer Norm Hamilton.[3] Maunder played the role of police Sergeant Sam MacCray, one of whose duties was to handle the police dog named "Fuzz". A Jack Webb production, Chase was created by Stephen J. Cannell.
The fictitious Scott Lancer was born in California, but reared in Boston, Massachusetts, by his maternal grandfather, Harlan Garrett. A Civil War veteran, Scott was a lieutenant in the cavalry under General Philip Sheridan. He spent time in a Confederate States of America prisoner of war camp. He attended Harvard University near Boston and was once engaged to a girl named Julie Dennison.[7]
By contrast to Scott, Johnny Lancer, played by James Stacy, Scott's half-brother, was born to a Mexican woman and had been a gunslinger under the name "Johnny Madrid" for several years before he attempted to settle down on the family's Lancer ranch.[7]
As the educated older son of Andrew Duggan's patriarchial figure of Murdoch Lancer, Maunder wore short hair and removed the moustache from his Custer role. Like Custer, Lancer was a 20th Century Fox production and also required action scenes and horseback-riding.
Maunder resides in the Greater Los Angeles Area. In 1967, Maunder married the former Lucia Maisto.[4] The couple's son, Dylan T. Maunder, was born the next year in 1968.
He died on November 11, 2018.
Yep the only woman who didn't fall in love with Johnny or Scott. That woman maybe was a reincarnation of John's Mexican mother!!!
This is an incredibly well-done episode, one of the best of the series. The dark, foreboding atmosphere is pulled off very well, and BarBara Luna's performance is both haunting and darkly intoxicating.
Does anyone know if production (especially the actors) knew that the series had been cancelled when they were making this episode? Clearly it wasn't written into the storyline, but knowledge of the fact that Lancer was indeed "doomed" from a TV standpoint makes evertyhing they do even more poignant to us - and a positive outcome for the Lancer ranch far less certain. Did the audience know this was the final episode at the time it aired, for that matter?
Doubt it no Internet then and studios kept things quieter then. Barbara Luna was so sexy in the 60's through the 80s. She should have been a bigger star than she was.
Happy Birthday BarBara Luna. Wow, what a woman.
seerstone
I pray that Quentin Tarantino never EVER make a movie or a reboot of the series.
I watched Johnny/James dubbed in other languages ( German, French and Spanish). I had to switch off after 10 min. because I couldn't get used to the voice actors. That was no longer my
Johnny with his softspoken, quiet voice. The voice is so special, you can't change it. Johnny's little ideas and jokes brought life into the figure and the story. James Stacy made Johnny unmistakeable, special, wonderful and unique. And I didn't even write about his unbelievable attractiviness.
There is just no other actor who would be able to be a second Johnny Madrid Lancer!
So true!!
I absolutely agree with you!!!
Hannah could have been the spirit of Johnny's mom. She was Mexican and BEAUTIFUL like Johnny. I know Scott's mom died. Whatever really happened to Johnny's mama. She must have abandoned him since he was on his own as a gunfighter about 15 or 16 years of age !!!
I was sad watching this. Last episode ever. Such a shame. Very short sighted
Just no closure and unfair
The fact we crave to watch it today & enjoy the Lancer family is a testament to how much we loved it 50 years ago!!!
The times, they were a’ changing.
Quinton Tarantino bought the creative rights from the widow of Samuel A. Pebbles. He owns the characters, and could make a movie, or reboot the series.
@@seerstone8982 I really hopes he does something with the show but it would be very hard to find an actor to give life to Johnny "Madrid" Lancer JS made it his own. Actor Tim Olyphant did a poor job in "Once upon a time in Hollywood it didn't flow naturally he was trying too hard. I have always loved Westerns as a kid they stressed family and honor loved Bonanza and Big Valley
I can't believe Scott had only 2 scenes in the series finale, doesn't make sense 🤬
The last line in the final episode was delivered by Jelly.
Yeah like a couple of other fans. so sad that this was the last episode there was so much potential for future episodes. I. could see a bit of a change in Stacy his acting in this episode was a little more intense
All these guys from the 60's Tom Laughlin (Billy Jack) Michael Parks (Then came Bronson) Lee Majors (Big Valley) were so influenced by Dean and Brando. The brooding quiet speaking voice. What I liked about Johnny and Scott they wanted to belong to a family Johnny in a couple of the episodes playfully hits or grabs at Scott He loves his brother the chemistry btwn the 2 actors totally comes across. I hope if Quentin does this as a movie or TV show he looks high and wide for the right actors. Brad Pitt would have made a good Johnny
No sound on this one am afraid
Love this western when did James pass away
2016
BarBara Luna's eyebrow is incredible and she knows it!
🙂🙂🙂
Did the show get cancelled because of Stacey's accident? Or because of ratings and if ratings do you think the cast knew.?
Mr. Stacy's accident occurred on September 27, 1973. The show was cancelled in 1971.
@@cynthiawilson1903 It most likely would have been axed because of the CBS rural purge in 1971.
No sound and to bad this was a great episode
Weird, just a month ago someone commented on the music. Can you give it another try and let me know? Thanks.
What happened to Anne (Barbara Luna) at the episode's end. She should have stayed at the ranch. I am sure old Murdock could have told them meet my new "maid" ha ha. The Series should have had another year.
Missed Scott though. Boo hoo
No sound
I hear it.
Lancer Fan I can hear it now too thanks
@@lancerfan4231 The sound only comes in when a speaker is not plugged into it. All the others one can hear it with speaker plugged in.