Search the Western Clippings Site

An Interview With…
        - Archives

Will "Sugarfoot" Hutchins
    - Archives

Do You Remember?
    - The Alaskans
    - Northwest Passage
    - Father Murphy
    - Little House on the Prairie
    - Here Come the Brides
    - Circus Boy
    - Gabby Hayes Show
    - Davy Crockett
    - Young Maverick
    - Bret Maverick
    - Wagon Train
    - Death Valley Days
    - The Travels of Jaimie  McPheeters
    - Cade’s County
    - Guns of Will Sonnett
    - Cowboy in Africa
    - Sheriff of Cochise
    - Rin Tin Tin
    - Two Faces West
    - The Monroes
    - The Westerner
    - Daniel Boone
    - Whiplash
    - Riverboat
    - Zorro
    - Wild Wild West
    - Spin and Marty
    - Grizzly Adams
    - Buckskin
    - Stagecoach West
    - Dundee and the Culhane
    - Daniel Boone (Disney)
    - Andy Burnett
    - Swamp Fox
    - Texas John Slaughter
    - Black Saddle
    - Hondo
    - Man Called Shenandoah
    - Elfego Baca
    - Man Without a Gun
    - The Big Valley
    - Have Gun Will Travel
    - Laredo
    - Custer
    - Buffalo Bill Jr.
    - Iron Horse
    - The Outcasts
    - Sugarfoot
    - The Cisco Kid
    - Lawman
    - Lancer
    - Zane Grey Theatre
    - Laramie
    - Overland Trail
    - Range Rider
    - Pony Express
    - Union Pacific
    - The Rebel
    - The Dakotas
    - Tales of the Texas Rangers
    - Casey Jones
    - Colt .45
    - Wanted Dead or Alive
    - Alias Smith and Jones
    - Cimarron Strip
    - State Trooper
    - Bat Masterson
    - Bronco
    - Cheyenne
    - Destry
    - Sgt. Preston of the Yukon
    - The Tall Man
    - Hotel de Paree
    - Tate
    - Tales of Wells Fargo
    - The Deputy
    - Trackdown
    - Stories of the Century
    - Jefferson Drum
    - 26 Men
    - The Rifleman
    - Shane
    - Broken Arrow
    - Wichita Town
    - Rawhide
    - Adventures of Kit Carson
    - Shotgun Slade
    - Yancy Derringer
    - Law of the Plainsman
    - Adventures of Jim Bowie
    - Adventures of Champion
    - Tombstone Territory
    - Wild Bill Hickok
    - Gunslinger
    - Maverick
    - Brave Eagle
    - Hopalong Cassidy
    - The Outlaws
    - Judge Roy Bean
    - Fury
    - Man From Blackhawk
    - Mackenzie’s Raiders
    - Legend of Jesse James
    - Branded
    - The Lone Ranger
    - Frontier Doctor
    - The Loner
    - Whispering Smith
    - The Texan
    - Cowboy G-Men
    - Tim McCoy Show
    - Gene Autry Show
    - Boots and Saddles
    - Roy Rogers Show
    - Rough Riders
    - My Friend Flicka
    - Sky King
    - Steve Donovan
    - Californians
    - Restless Gun
    - Gray Ghost
    - Temple Houston
    - Annie Oakley
    - Johnny Ringo
    - Cimarron City

Comic Book Cowboys
    - Archives

Rangeland Elegance
    - Archives

Westerns of...
    - Archives

Heavies and Characters
      - Archives

The Stuntmen - Neil Summers
    - Archives

Western Treasures
    - Archives

Circus Cowboys
    - Archives

Radio Range Riders
    - Archives

Western Artifacts
    - Archives

Film Festival Fotos
    - Archives

Silent Western Reviews
    - Archives

Serial Report
    - Archives

Subscribe to Western Clippings

THINGS TO PURCHASE:

Western Clippings Back Issues

Daily Comic Strips
    - Page 1 (1910-1949)
    - Page 2 (1950-1979)

Sunday Comic Strips
    - 1907-1990

Books

Miscellaneous Collectibles

Autographs

Lobby Cards

Movie Posters

Home

TV GUIDE ad for "Suns of Will Sonnett".“Guns of Will Sonnett”

“The Guns of Will Sonnett” followed the exploits of retired Army Scout Will Sonnett (Walter Brennan) and his grandson Jeff (Dack Rambo) as they journey through the West in search of Jeff’s father, James Sonnett (Jason Evers), who abandoned his family 20 years earlier and became a renowned gunfighter and who is now on the run.

Walter Brennan, Dack Rambo.Over the theme music of Hugo Friedhofer, the spoken opening by Brennan explained, “We search for a man named Jim Sonnett; and the legend folks tell may be true. Most call him gunman and killer. He’s my son, who I hardly knew. I raised Jim’s boy from the cradle til the day he said to me, ‘I have to go find my father.’ And I reckon that’s how it should be. So we ride, Jim’s boy and me.”

The 50 episode show was producer Aaron Spelling’s only attempt at a Western series. Created by Spelling and Richard Carr and produced by Danny Thomas (and associate producer Andy Brennan, Walter’s son), the half hour episodes were in color. The ABC series aired first on Friday nights from 9:30-10 from September 8, 1967 until March 21, 1969. Summer reruns ran on Monday nights from 8:30-9 from June to September ‘69.

Although Will and Jeff come close, it is difficult to find James who is always on the move, until the 50th episode, “Three Stand Together”, which did not air until the end of those summer reruns on September 16, 1969 and is often overlooked. It was intended as a series finale or… possibly…the pilot for a revamped series which never materialized. In the episode Will and Jeff finally meet up with Jim and convince him to start a new life and join them as lawmen in a small trail town.

Jason Evers as Jim Sonnett.Evers noted, “Walter Brennan was wonderful; we got along just great. Every kid grows up with fantasy dreams of wanting to be a Western hero, and that part of Jim Sonnett was really a Western hero. So it was like a dream coming true.”

Brennan was a bonafided TV star after 224 episodes of “The Real McCoys” (‘57-‘63) and “The Tycoon” (32 eps. ‘64-‘65), so along with his established Western film credits “The Guns of Will Sonnett” was a ratings winner for ABC, solidly beating the forgettable “Accidental Family” on NBC (replaced by “Hollywood Squares”) and rerun movies on CBS.

Filmed at Desilu Studios with exteriors often at Vasquez Rocks and Bronson Canyon, series directors included Jean Yarbrough (33 eps.), Richard Sarafian, Jack Arnold, Bernie Kowalski, Irving J. Moore, Christian Nyby and a few others including B-Western vet Tommy Carr who recalled, “My last before retirement was ‘Guns of Will Sonnett’. Walter Brennan was a nice guy but he’d never rehearse a line. You had to work with signs on a blackboard off stage. It was awful rough on other actors to have this guy looking right past them and talking. But, that was the way he worked by that time.”

Due to Spelling, Desilu and Danny Thomas, the series attracted top name Western guest stars.

Stuntwork was handled by the best—Bob Herron, Bobby Hoy, George Orrison, Bill Catching, Rocky Shahan, Boyd Stockman, Boyd “Red” Morgan, Allen Pinson and Troy Melton.

Full of old west philosophy with past paced, well written stories, high production values and an unusual premise “The Guns of Will Sonnett” is an ever enduring TV Western. No brag, just fact!

 

top of page