THE RIFLEMAN


Chuck Connors as ''The Rifleman''

'''The Rifleman''' was a Western television program that ran from 1958 to 1963 on the ABC and was produced by Four Star Television. The black-and-white western starred Chuck Connors as Lucas McCain, a widower and Union veteran of the Civil War. McCain and his son Mark (Johnny Crawford) lived on a ranch just outside the fictitious town of North Fork, New Mexico Territory. Regulars on the program included Marshal Micah Torrance (Paul Fix), Sweeney the bartender, and a half-dozen other denizens of North Fork. Fifty-one episodes of the series were directed by Joseph H. Lewis, the director of the classic film noir ''Gun Crazy'' (1950), which accounts for some of the show's virtuoso noir lighting and dark, brooding quality.
According to network publicists, the series was set in the late 1880s. Unfortunately for historical accuracy, McCain seemed too young to have served in the Army 25 years earlier, as did guest stars who also portrayed veterans of the Civil War. It seems that the time period was pretty much whatever a writer wanted to make it. The 39th episode "Boomerang" (1st Season, aired May 23rd, 1959) has a scene where a newly created grave stone has the year 1871 marked as the year of death. The 45th episode "Tension" (Second season, aired October 27th, 1959) makes reference to a robbery that occurred in 1871 which, according to one of the characters, was seven years earlier. McCain carrying an anachronistic Winchester Model 1892 rifle probably didn't matter much considering such a lack of effort on the part of the creators to keep the timeline consistent.
Westerns were extremely popular when ''The Rifleman'' premiered, forcing television producers to find gimmicks to distinguish one show from another. ''The Rifleman's gimmick was a modified Winchester rifle with a trigger mechanism allowing for rapid-fire shots. Connors demonstrated its rapid-fire action during the opening credits as McCain dispatched an unseen bad guy on North Fork's main drag. Although the rifle may have appeared in every episode, it was not always fired, as some plots did not lend themselves to violent solutions, e.g., a cruel teacher at Mark's one-room school.
The various episodes of ''The Rifleman'' promote fair play toward one's opponents, neighborliness, equal rights, and the need to use violence in a highly controlled manner ("A man doesn't run from a fight, Mark," McCain tells his son, "But that doesn't mean you go looking to run TO one!"). In other words, the program's villains tend to be those who cheat, who refuse to help people down on their luck, who hold bigoted attitudes, and who see violence as a first resort rather than the final option. Indeed, a curious aspect of the program is that when they meet African-Americans, the people of North Fork are truly color-blind. In "The Most Amazing Man", a black man (played by Sammy Davis, Jr.) checks into the only hotel in town; for the entire show, no one notices his race. Not only is this noteworthy for the 1880s setting, it was radical for Hollywood of the early 1960s. While the message was clear, it was neither heavy-handed nor universal. A certain amount of xenophobia drifts around North Fork, however, forcing McCain to defend the right of a Chinese immigrant to open a laundry ("The Queue") and the right of an Argentine family to buy a ranch ("The Gaucho"). This racial liberalism does not extend to villains, however. The Mexicans in "The Vaqueros" are indolent, dangerous, and speak in the way of most Mexican outlaws in Westerns of the time.
Another fundamental value of the series is that people deserve a second chance. Marshal Micah Torrance is a recovering alcoholic and McCain once gave an ex-con a job on his ranch ("The Jailbird"). Royal Dano appeared as a former Confederate soldier, given a job on the McCain ranch, who encounters the Union soldier who had cost him his arm in battle. The soldier, now a general, arranges for medical care for the wounded former foe, quoting Abraham Lincoln's orders to "Bind up the nation's wounds."
In retrospect, ''The Rifleman'' holds up better than most Westerns of its era, partly because Connors fit so well into the role (his gravestone reads "The Rifleman") and partly because the father-son interactions between Connors and Crawford seem genuine. And the Lucas McCain character has an angry, vindictive streak that makes him more human. The lighting and camera angles give the program a mildly artistic look. The excellent musical score, one of the most remembered aspects of the program, was composed by Herschel Burke Gilbert.
Most importantly, however, the show was created and initially developed by a young Sam Peckinpah, who would go on to become the last legendary director of classic Western movies (''The Wild Bunch'', ''Ride the High Country'', etc.). Peckinpah, who wrote and directed many of the best episodes from the first season, based many of the characters and situations on real-life scenarios from his childhood growing up on a ranch. He also used many character actors such as Warren Oates and R.G. Armstrong who would later feature prominently in his films. His insistence on violent realism and complex characterizations, as well as his refusal to sugarcoat the lessons he felt that the Rifleman's son needed to learn about life, soon put him at odds with the show's producers at Four Star Television. He left the show and created another classic TV series, "The Westerner," starring Brian Keith, which unfortunately was short-lived.

Contents
Trivia
Further Reading
External links

Trivia



Michael Landon guest-starred on the show in two episodes, "End of a Young Gun" and "The Mind Reader"

★ The rifle was a Winchester Model 1892 chambered in .44-40 caliber. There were three rifles used in the series. A primary and backup Winchester Model 1892, and a Model 1892 Spanish copy called, "El Tigre." El Tigre was used for scabbard or shots where a close-up was not required. (Guns & Ammo, Feb 2007, The Rifleman's Rifle).

★ Lucas's rifle has a small screw in the lever, causing the trigger to be pressed each time the lever is cocked. The screw could be backed out so that the rifle did not have to fire each time the rifle was cocked. This explains how Lucas could cock the rifle in some episodes without the rifle firing. (Guns & Ammo, Feb 2007, The Rifleman's Rifle).

★ Chuck Connors fires 12 shots from this 11 round rifle during the opening credits. Seven shots in the first closeup as the credits open and then five more shots are shown as the camera switches to another view. Then he swings the rifle to cock it and reaches for a round from his shirt pocket. The rifle was capable of using six-gun cartridges or rifle rounds.

★ The Rifleman has a villainous twin/lookalike relative, a plot staple of practically every television series of the era; sooner or later on almost every series, the evil exact duplicate with precisely the same voice (eerily enough) inevitably turns up for a single episode.

★ Many guest stars appeared more than once during the series playing different roles. Prominent actors included Sammy Davis, Jr., Dennis Hopper, Lee Van Cleef, John Anderson, John Carradine, James Coburn, Claude Akins, Richard Anderson, Royal Dano, Warren Oates, Jack Elam, R. G. Armstrong, Peter Whitney, Dabbs Greer, Denver Pyle, and Robert Culp.

★ Former NBA player Chuck Person, a prolific long-range shooter, was known as "The Rifleman", since he has the same names (first and middle) as Chuck Connors.

Further Reading


Christopher Sharrett, ''The Rifleman'' (TV Milestones Series), Wayne State University Press, 2005

External links



TV.com Rifleman page

Rifleman's Rifle

a clip on YouTube

The Films of Joseph H. Lewis

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