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Western, 30 min, b/w
David Friedkin
Morton S. Fine (writer)
David Friedkin (writer)
Original Air Date: 8 October 1958
Bat responds to cry for help when a friend's small gambling house is
threatened by rival casino owned by Big Keel Roberts. Roberts suggest that
he and Bat play one hand of poker, with the winner gaining ownership of
both casinos.
Original Air Date: 15 October 1958
A vicious night rider reacts with murderous intent when he thinks Bat is
flirting with his girl, pretty saloon girl Molly Doyle.
Original Air Date: 22 October 1958
Bat wins a herd of cattle in a card game in Laramie and discovers that in
order to convert them into cash, he'll have to fight his way past a
rancher determined to only allow his cattle to be sold in Cheyenne.
Original Air Date: 29 October 1958
A old flame of Bat's asks him to rescue her current beau, accused of
murder and shackled to a tree by a lynch mob led by the slain man's
brother.
Original Air Date: 5 November 1958
Bat wins the contract of a talented young fighter from his unscrupulous
manager, then trains the boxer for one honest fight, betting all his poker
winnings on the result. The boxer's former manager isn't interested in a
fair fight and plans to ensure the young man loses.
Original Air Date: 12 November 1958
Bat is hired to guide a hunting party to Canada, not knowing that the
three are wanted for robbery and murder. When Bat discovers the truth, he
is roped to a tree as bait for the bears.
Original Air Date: 19 November 1958
While on his way to break his brother out of jail for a crime he did not
commit, Ben Thompson saves Bat Masterson's life, but is wounded in the
process. Bat agrees to undertake the hazardous mission of saving Ben's
brother from the hangman.
Original Air Date: 26 November 1958
When a bully threatens to run two youngsters out of town if they won't
sell him the hardware store they have inherited, Bat steps in to help. He
teaches the young man how to defend himself with a gun, but the student
shoots his antagonist in the back and then goes gunning for his teacher.
Original Air Date: 3 December 1958
Three cousins inherit pieces of map describing the location of their
uncle's buried treasure. Not trusting each other, they hire Bat to guide
them to the place where the money has been hidden - a place known as "Worry
Hill".
Original Air Date: 17 December 1958
Bat is hired by John Conant to discover if his daughter's fiancée cheats
at cards. Bat discovers the crooked card sharp is really a powerful cattle
baron who plans to kill Bat before he can tell anyone else.
Original Air Date: 24 December 1958
General William T. Sherman, he of "Sherman's March to the Sea", appears in
Dodge City to promote President Hayes's bid for re-election. The town's
full of Texas cowboys just up from a trail drive and, while they're happy
to rub elbows with the President, they'd be even more pleased to
assassinate General Sherman. The town marshal, expecting trouble,
deputizes Bat to be General Sherman's personal bodyguard.
Original Air Date: 31 December 1958
When a veteran trail boss is found murdered and no evidence can be found
to point to the killers, Bat decides to join the next wagon train in order
to locate the bandits who have been preying on wagon trains. Unfortunately
for Bat, the leader of the wagon train refuses to accept Bat's aid. The
woman believes that Bat's skill as a gambler and gunslinger aren't
qualifications to guide her train across the desert.
Original Air Date: 7 January 1959
When Bat learns that a man sporting a derby and a cane and claiming to be
"Bat Masterson" has set himself up as sheriff of Trinidad, Colorado, he
immediately rides to investigate.
Original Air Date: 14 January 1959
While leading a trail drive, Bat stops off at a town and is confronted by
a gang who tries to extort money from him before they allow his cattle
through town. Bat refuses to pay and discovers the gang is backed by the
mayor. He organizes the townspeople to try to throw the mayor and his
henchmen out at the next election.
Original Air Date: 21 January 1959
Bat is asked to rescue two sisters captured by a renegade Indian and his
braves.
Original Air Date: 28 January 1959
When outlaw Bailey Harper steals Bat's horse, gun and money. Bailey laughs
when Bat tells him he'll get all of his property back, telling the gambler
that he'll never be found. Bat's plan is to court Bailey's girl and force
the outlaw to find him.
Original Air Date: 4 February 1959
Bat buys a dealers' license in a town where the other poker games are run
by crooks in cahoots with the sheriff. Bat is accused of cheating himself
and thrown in jail. While incarcerated he teaches a novice how to beat the
dealers at their own game and is so successful that the sheriff hires a
man to replace Bat's real cane with one filled with blasting powder.
Original Air Date: 11 February 1959
A casino owner hires a marksman with money problems to kill Bat because he
is deeply in debt to Masterson. When the sharpshooter's pregnant wife
convinces him to renege on the agreement, the casino owner hires two hard
cases to force the confrontation between the two men.
Original Air Date: 18 February 1959
A gang of river pirates take over a paddle-wheeler and relieve the
passengers of jewels and furs and Bat of $10,000. Bat uses a barrel of
rare cheeses to trap the gang's gluttonous leader.
Original Air Date: 25 February 1959
A hard-driving railroad builder engaged in a race with a rival company
asks Bat to ramrod his building operations through a tricky canyon before
a process server can deliver a "cease and desist" order favoring his
opponent's rights. When Bat asks the construction boss to pay a three year
old debt before he starts work the man refuses and Bat opts to work for
his rival.
Original Air Date: 11 March 1959
Bat is cheated at cards by a town boss with the cooperation of the local
sheriff. When he meets a brother and sister who were cheated in a land
swindle, they three plot to get their money back and bring the crook to
justice.
Original Air Date: 18 March 1959
Bat rides to Leadville, Colorado to confront a newspaper editor that wrote
an article describing him as one of the West's most ruthless gunfighters.
The editor learns of Masterson's true nature when he defends the paper
against a crooked civic leader who plots its destruction.
Original Air Date: 25 March 1959
Bat agrees to escort a murder suspect to trial, but the man escapes with
the help of his girl friend. Bat decides to take the woman to Fort Smith
to stand trial for jail-breaking with the hope that he might capture the
suspect along the way.
Original Air Date: 1 April 1959
Bat buys a boxing club in Denver. When he arrives he sees that the police
have posted "Property Condemned" signs on his building. He soon discovers
that the town councilors have plans to raze his gym and erect a casino on
the spot.
Original Air Date: 8 April 1959
Two gunman holdup a stagecoach in which Bat Masterson and Lorna Adams are
riding and steal only the horses, even though Bat is carrying more than
$2000. Bat trades his cane for a horse so Lorna can get to Austin in time
to present evidence that will save a man from the gallows, but the two
thieves who have no intention of letting her see the governor in time.
Original Air Date: 22 April 1959
Bat follows his favorite tailor to his new shop in a small New Mexico town
to order specially made suits. Bat's order is put on hold when the crooked
casino owner orders the tailor, a town-leader, kidnapped before he can
organize a town counsel to fight him and his gang.
Original Air Date: 29 April 1959
On his way to build a gambling casino in a boomtown, Bat is confronted by
an inept robber - an Austrian nobleman who has been cheated at a crooked
saloonkeeper's roulette table.
Original Air Date: 13 May 1959
Bat agrees to accept one-half of a lottery ticket as payment for a
gambling IOU. His trouble starts when his ticket is declared the winner.
Original Air Date: 20 May 1959
Bat returns to a small mining town to withdraw his earnings from a cattle
drive and discovers his "widow" has probated his will and withdrawn the
entire $20,000 from his account.
Original Air Date: 27 May 1959
Bat agrees to work undercover for the Wyoming territorial administrator to
try to infiltrate a gang of ruthless businessmen who mastermind a crime
wave behind their veneer of respectability. Bat works his way into the
crook's gang, but discovers that federal agents suspect him of complicity
in the crimes and his alibi, the territorial representative, dies of a
massive heart attack, leaving him trapped between two fires.
Original Air Date: 10 June 1959
Bat is asked to become the bank president in a town consisting entirely of
former outlaws, because the former crooks don't trust each other.
Original Air Date: 17 June 1959
Bat is asked to prevent a false story supposedly John Surratt, one of John
Wilkes Booth's confederates for the Lincoln assassination.
Original Air Date: 24 June 1959
Bat discovers that a bartender serves as John Surratt in order to sell a
scandalous story to the local newspaper. After Bat learns the truth, the
bartender is found dead and the gambler is blamed for the murder.
Original Air Date: 1 July 1959
Bat is arrested for cheating at cards and thrown into a jail cell with
notorious train robber Polk Otis. Bat helps Polk free himself from his
shackles and kills the sheriff in order to escape - but it's all part of a
plan he's worked out with the lawman to recover a priceless necklace of
black pearls Polk and his gang have stolen from a train's express box.
Original Air Date: 15 July 1959
Two Dutch treasure hunters search for a legendary Spanish galleon that
sank in the Colorado River. Bat attempts to rescue the unwary pair from a
desert sandstorm and two crooks who are out to steal the jewels if the
ship is found.
Original Air Date: 22 July 1959
After Bat rescues an old gypsy from a brutal rancher, the old man offers
him many valuable gifts, including a beautiful girl.
Original Air Date: 29 July 1959
Bat agrees to substitute for a bully as the leader of a party of buffalo
hunters into Indian territory, but the man he supplanted stirs up trouble
by killing an Indian brave and framing Bat for the murder.
Original Air Date: 1 October 1959
An old friend asks Bat to look into the background of her daughter's
fiancée.
Original Air Date: 15 October 1959
Bat seeks to collect a loan given to a reformed gunman. In order to get
his money he must save the man from a trigger-happy sheriff who believes
the man is guilty of murder.
Original Air Date: 22 October 1959
Bat races to the bedside of a dying friend, only to discover the man is
quite well and needs Bat's help in his quest to relocate his county's seat.
Original Air Date: 29 October 1959
While visiting St. Joseph, Missouri to see his former girlfriend, an up-and-coming
soprano, Bat comes to the aid of a businessman who refuses to pay
protection money but finds himself accused of being an enforcer for the
racket.
Original Air Date: 5 November 1959
Bat comes to the aid of two beautiful women who are being blackmailed by
the owner of Sacramento's largest casino, "The Lady Luck".
Original Air Date: 12 November 1959
When Bat buys a derby hat in a small Missouri town he is aghast at the
price. Learning that a riverboat owner forces shopkeepers to use only his
line to ship their supplies, Bat decides to break his monopoly.
Original Air Date: 19 November 1959
When Bat learns that the two thousand dollars the Bassett brothers owe him
is in jeopardy because of the shooting feud between the Bassetts and the
Clements, Bat decides to intervene to protect his investment.
Original Air Date: 26 November 1959
When a man is elected to be the town sheriff campaigning for fair taxes,
the wealthy business owners ship their cash out of town to avoid paying
their fair share. The new sheriff asks Bat help him collect.
Original Air Date: 3 December 1959
A unsophisticated miner runs afoul of a town boss and is framed for murder.
When the town's lawyers refuse to represent him because they fear for
their lives, Bat agrees to represent the defendant in court.
Original Air Date: 10 December 1959
When Colonel Moran bets a spur of his railroad against a Texas horse ranch
that a Kentucky thoroughbred can beat a Texas quarter-horse in a 440 yard
spring, he hires Bat to train his horse to win the wager.
Original Air Date: 17 December 1959
Bat is convinced that a painting purchased by a beautiful friend is a
forgery and attempts to put the crooked art dealer out of business.
Original Air Date: 31 December 1959
Bat agrees to help a group of women campaigning for women's suffrage in
Wyoming fight a cabal of wealthy ranchers who wish to prevent women from
getting the vote.
Original Air Date: 7 January 1960
Bat's old friend Luke Short offers him 50% of the Long Branch Saloon if
he'll help make the place profitable. Bat hires a pretty piano player and
business picks up, much to the chagrin of owners of rival establishments.
The mayor, one of these saloon proprietors, helps enact a new city
ordinance forbidding the playing of musical instruments in saloons. After
he hires Bat's piano player, the mayor has the ordinance repealed. Bat
counters the crooked politician with the "Dodge City Peace Commission," a
group of gunslingers led by Wyatt Earp, to force the mayor to come to
terms.
Original Air Date: 14 January 1960
When Hugh Blaine bets $50,000 that all four hooves of a harness racehorse
are off the ground at the same time he agrees to pay Bat ten percent of
the bet to supply the proof. Bat hires a man to take photographs of the
trotter in action, but the pictures are stolen from the developing room
before Bat can retrieve them.
Original Air Date: 21 January 1960
When two speculators try to corner the stock market by sending former Pony
Express riders racing from the mining towns to Denver with the latest
information, Bat helps his friend, Hugh Blaine, counter the move with by
sending his news by carrier pigeon. Facing ruin, the speculators hire a
beautiful woman and her falcons to kill the birds en route.
Original Air Date: 28 January 1960
Bat and his partners fleece an unscrupulous businessman out of half the
profits in a rich gold mine. The millionaire exacts revenge by buying up
the timber Bat and his friends need to build a log flume and shore up the
mine walls, then tries to kill the men themselves by triggering a
explosion in the mine.
Original Air Date: 4 February 1960
A stagecoach carrying Bat and Claire, the local sheriff's fiancée, is
robbed and Claire is kidnapped. With the sheriff wounded and out of action,
Bat tries to rescue Claire and capture the entire gang of kidnappers by
himself.
Original Air Date: 11 February 1960
Bat's friend, Ellie Winters, is hired by promoters who are selling shares
in their diamond mine. Although Ellie is convinced that the mine is
legitimate, Bat investigates and discovers the owners are salting the mine
with high-grade quartz as bait to swindle investors.
Original Air Date: 18 February 1960
On his way to investigate irregularities in a bank's bookkeeping, Bat
becomes involved with embezzlers, murderers and a thieving dog.
Original Air Date: 25 February 1960
Bat meets a Lisa Truex, a former employee who stole $2000 from him before
skipping town. In order to stay out of jail, the woman sells Bat a
worthless piece of land that Bat converts into an exclusive graveyard.
When Bat's plan turns a profits and then gold is discovered in the first
grave, the woman and her crooked partner frame Bat for running a land-swindle.
Original Air Date: 3 March 1960
Bat receives half of the cane he gave to Jane Taylor long ago and rides to
her ranch to investigate. He is forced to choose sides between her family
and other small ranchers and his old friend , a cattle baron intent on
returning to the old days of open range.
Original Air Date: 10 March 1960
Three cowboys trick a magician helping them rob a bank by taking Bat
Masterson's gun "as a joke". Bat and the magician team up to recover the
loot through the aid of another conjurer's stunt.
Original Air Date: 17 March 1960
Bat travels to Yuma to give away the bride at a wedding but discovers the
girl's fiancée has been murdered. He joins the posse sent to bring the
suspected killer, the Yaqui Kid, to justice.
Original Air Date: 24 March 1960
While awaiting a murder trail in which he will be the star witness, Bat
visits a Mexican ranch where, he is told, a fortune in jewels awaits. It's
a trap, though, set by the defendant's uncle and Bat will face a firing
squad at dawn.
Original Air Date: 31 March 1960
When Ellie Winters is framed for murder, she desperately telegraphs Bat
for help. While Bat searches for a missing witness, he gets Wyatt Earp to
play the role of Ellie's lawyer.
Original Air Date: 7 April 1960
Original Air Date: 14 April 1960
Bat's plan to catch a gang of stagecoach robbers backfires, when not only
the silver bullion the coach was carrying is stolen, but the stagecoach
itself disappears.
Original Air Date: 21 April 1960
The U.S. Cavalry at Fort Bowie contracts with Bat for a herd of 55 horses.
When his herd is stolen and his men all killed or wounded, Bat determines
to recapture his herd and bring the killers to justice.
Original Air Date: 28 April 1960
Bat discovers that a gambler has appropriated his name and set up a casino
called "Masterson's Arcadia Club" where all the ranch hands passing
through town lose all their money playing crooked games.
Original Air Date: 5 May 1960
While waiting for his stagecoach's horses to get a drink of water, Bat is
arrested, charged with possession of firearms and assessed a staggering
fine. When Bat learns that the local judge runs the town as a personal
fiefdom, he decides to incite the townsmen to run the jurist and his hired
guns out of town.
Original Air Date: 12 May 1960
When Hugh Blaine is conned in a complex land swindle, he hires Bat to get
his money back and bring the crooks to justice.
Original Air Date: 19 May 1960
When depositing his winnings from a night of poker playing, Bat and the
bank are robbed by a gang of Mexican bandits. Bat tracks the bandits and
their double-crossing female accomplice through Spanish-American
communities to retrieve his money and the bank's gold.
Original Air Date: 26 May 1960
Bat is asked to find how stolen Mexican cattle, many of them diseased, are
entering Texas and mingling with local animals. With the help of the local
sheriff he prints a wanted poster which he hopes serve as his introduction
to the local rustlers.
Original Air Date: 2 June 1960
Bat is hired as the bodyguard of a beautiful woman who insists on wearing
a fabulously expensive diamond.
Original Air Date: 16 June 1960
When a man Bat has staked to search for the Lost Dutchman's Mine
disappears without a trace, the former lawman buys a map of the territory
from a too agreeable bartender and sets off in pursuit. Bat soon learns
that his friend is but one of many miners who have recently vanished in
the Superstition Mountains looking for the legendary mine.
Original Air Date: 23 June 1960
Before Bat's partner in a casino venture is dies, he asks Masterson to
deliver his share of the money to his brother on the Mexican border. Bat
learns that the man is rumored to lead a gang of rustlers.
Original Air Date: 1 July 1960
An old sea captain has dismantled his clan's Scottish castle and is
rebuilding it in San Francisco. The company stockholder's serve him with a
restraining order, claiming he's wasting the business' assets constructing
such an extravagant building.
Original Air Date: 29 September 1960
Bat grubstakes Cactus Charlie, an elderly prospector searching for a gold
strike. Charlie finds gold, all right, the proceeds from a recent
stagecoach robbery and the crooks who buried the loot will stop at nothing
to recover their ill-gotten gains.
Original Air Date: 6 October 1960
Bat is hired to investigate the theft of barbed-wire fencing that prevents
cattle from climbing onto a railroad's right-of-way.
Original Air Date: 13 October 1960
The town council of Midas Creek hire Bat to run their annual shooting
contest. The council believe that the local bully will cheat, threaten and
generally do anything in his power to win the contest. When the local
gunsmith wins the hefty prize, the enraged troublemaker abducts a
beautiful girl to force Bat to meet him in a deadly contest of arms - the
thug's rifle vs. Bat's pistol.
Original Air Date: 20 October 1960
Bat invests in a mine in Colorado and discovers its conditions are unsafe,
but the general manager is forcing the miners to work in it anyway.
Original Air Date: 27 October 1960
An Englishman has a theory that accuracy is more important in a gunfight
than speed or size of the ammunition. When he kills a bully with his
specially designed rifled pistol, the Englishman decides he's ready to
take on the West's greatest gunfighter - Bat Masterson.
Original Air Date: 3 November 1960
When Bat catches his partner in a gambling casino embezzling money, he
kicks the man out, telling him never return unless he brings $25,000 to
buy Bat's interest in the business. The partner plans to get control of
Bat's half by killing him.
Original Air Date: 10 November 1960
When his friend is murdered, Bat agrees to undertake his unfinished
business - delivering three mail-order brides to their new husbands.
Original Air Date: 17 November 1960
Bat rides to the assistance of his friend, a sheriff, but arrives after
the Dakota boys gun him down. The president of the town council asks Bat
to step into the office, but Bat decides the job should go to another
person.
Original Air Date: 24 November 1960
Bat helps a woman and her young son escape the deadly Doolin gang.
Original Air Date: 1 December 1960
Bat thinks a young gunfighter might be the son of a man with whom he
fought at the Battle of Adobe Wells. He plans to appeal to the governor
for a pardon for his crimes because of the unrewarded service of his
father.
Original Air Date: 15 December 1960
Bat returns to Casper, Wyoming to testify at a murder trial. He learns
that all the other witnesses are either dead or are afraid to testify and
the father of the man under arrest intends to eliminate the last witness
Original Air Date: 22 December 1960
Bat inherits a casino from an old enemy and soon discovers the reasons for
the man's largess. Upon arriving in town, he learns that the casino was
$3000 behind in its mortgage payments and the previous owner was killed by
the town marshal who owned the mortgage.
Original Air Date: 19 December 1960
An eastern gambler playing a "system" breaks the bank at Bat's casino,
putting the dapper Masterson out of business. Bat wonders if the "system"
didn't have more than a little help from his pretty dealer.
Original Air Date: 5 January 1961
When a old miner refuses to allow a road to be built through a high
mountain pass he owns, the governor of California asks Bat to intervene.
Original Air Date: 11 January 1961
The stagecoach in which Bat Masterson, Major Mars and pretty Lottie
Tremaine are traveling is waylaid by a vengeful gang led by an Indian
whose family was slain when the Major's men wiped out a village full of
non-combatants. Bat is forced to defend the Major during a kangaroo court.
Original Air Date: 19 January 1961
Pat arrives in Paradise, Colorado to collect a gambling debt from a
crooked casino owner who doesn't like to pay his debts. He also doesn't
like to pay his taxes, going so far as to change the course of a river so
his town would lie beyond the authority of the county tax assessor - until
Bat accepts the appointment.
Original Air Date: 26 January 1961
Bat's lucrative contract to build a train through the mountains is in
jeopardy. His crew is attacked by Indian, menaced by natural disasters and
then wagon loads of equipment fall over a cliff. Just when things it seems
things can't get worse, Bat is arrested for the murder of an Army supply
sergeant.
Original Air Date: 2 February 1961
Bat's old friend, Marshal Ben Holt, asks him to help fight a scheme
plotted by the power-grabbing land baron. When he arrives Bat isn't sure
that the Marshal is on the side of law and order.
Original Air Date: 16 February 1961
Bat's plan to journey to Cheyenne for a big poker game are disrupted when
the cavalry escort for a vital load of gunpowder is wiped out and the only
men available to drive the wagons to Fort Stewart appear unreliable. At
his old friend Billy Willow's request, Bat agrees to lead the wagon train
through hostile Indian territory.
Original Air Date: 23 February 1961
In response to an urgent telegram, Bat rides to a remote Texas ranch and
finds that the Grant family believes he's a hired killer.
Original Air Date: 2 March 1961
A villainous saloonkeeper plots to take over Bat's bank by preventing the
gold bars the bank needs to back its gold certificates from getting
through and then provoking a run on the bank by its frightened depositors.
Original Air Date: 9 March 1961
Bat wins a mining claim in a lottery, but a huge bearded man attacks Bat
when he tries to look for gold on it.
Original Air Date: 16 March 1961
When gunslingers employed by Sam Shanks terrorize a small New Mexico town,
Bat agrees to serve as a special prosecutor when one of Shank's men is to
be tried for murder.
Original Air Date: 23 March 1961
During a holdup, a gang of outlaws tries to take a Medal of Honor from a
woman whose husband gave his life earning it. Bat offers a hundred dollars
he has stashed in his cane in exchange for the medal, but the gunman
escapes with Bat's money, cane and the medal of honor with Bat in hot
pursuit.
Original Air Date: 30 March 1961
Bat's hard riding rescues three men from the gallows - he bears an amnesty
signed by the Governor of New Mexico and the President of the United
States for all combatants in the Lincoln County War. The three gunmen soon
return to their criminal ways and Bat must help the local marshal hunt
down the recently freed men.
Original Air Date: 6 April 1961
Bat rescues a woman from three men trying to grab her and her carpet bag.
The woman tells Bat she was the prisoner of a gang of outlaws who rode
with Jesse James and has the evidence to prove it.
Original Air Date: 13 April 1961
Several Indian tribes claim that white men are kidnapping their women and
children to be sold for slaves or held for ransom. In order to prevent an
all-out war with the local tribes, the U.S. Army sends Bat Masterson to
investigate.
Original Air Date: 20 April 1961
Bat is wounded by Indians while trying to deliver a message to Fort
Logan's commanding officer. The fort's ambitious second-in-command
intercepts and destroys the message, resulting in the death of the Colonel
and his entire patrol. Bat believes that the second-in-command
intentionally allowed his commanding officer to walk into a trap in order
to further his own political career and attempts to prove it by bringing
back the Colonel from the dead.
Original Air Date: 27 April 1961
Bat rides into town to meet a young friend. He arrives too late - the
young man was killed when he accused a three wealthy ranchers of cheating
at cards and the sheriff refused to arrest the men responsible for murder.
Original Air Date: 4 May 1961
When a new silver strike is made in Monument City, Nevada, Bat returns to
the former ghost town to check on his old claim and find two claim jumpers
are prepared to shoot first and ask questions later.
Original Air Date: 11 May 1961
The Pinkerton Detective Agency hires Bat to get evidence against a outlaw
gang that is terrorizing the Southwest. Bat goes undercover as a marble
salesman and convinces the gang's leader that so prominent a citizen
should have a statue in his honor erected in the town square.
Original Air Date: 18 May 1961
Bat is ambushed in the desert, his horse stolen and his canteen empty.
Rescued by the town marshal, Bat determines to help the young lawman gain
confidence in his ability to keep the peace.
Original Air Date: 25 May 1961
Bat is hired to serve as a bodyguard at a El Paso casino, but can't
prevent a robbery which costs Wyatt Earp $13,000.
Original Air Date: 1 June 1961
Bat investigates the murder of a friend in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
Western more
Dressed-up dandy (derby and cane), gambler and lawman roams the West charming women and defending the unjustly accused. His primary weapon was his wit (and cane) rather than his gun
Nominated for Emmy.
| Emmy Awards | |||
| Year | Result | Award | Category/Recipient(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1959 | Nominated | Emmy | Best Editing of a Film for Television Richard L. Van Enger (editor) For episode "Two Graves for Swan Valley |
(Series
Cast Summary - 1 of 176)
| Gene Barry | ... | William Barclay 'Bat' Masterson (108 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Allison Hayes | ... | Ellie Winters (7 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Ken Drake | ... | Burdette / ... (6 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Allen Jaffe | ... | Bolo / ... (5 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Frank J. Scannell | ... | Sandy (5 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| George Eldredge | ... | Doctor / ... (5 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Lasse Hellman | ... | Brad Pierce / ... (5 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Dennis Moore | ... | Barker / ... (5 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Bill Catching | ... | Kansas / ... (5 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Robert Swan | ... | Ben Thompson / ... (5 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Quintin Sondergaard | ... | Henchman / ... (5 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Ron Hayes | ... | Wyatt Earp / ... (4 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Howard Petrie | ... | Hugh Blaine (4 episodes, 1960) |
| William Tannen | ... | Amherst / ... (4 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Paul Lambert | ... | Augustus Ulbrecht / ... (4 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Kasey Rogers | ... | Dixie Mayhew / ... (4 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Charles Maxwell | ... | Ed Caulder / ... (4 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Dehl Berti | ... | Gant Barth / ... (4 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Brett King | ... | Hub Elliott / ... (4 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Charles Reade | ... | Clerk / ... (4 episodes, 1960) |
| Ken Christy | ... | Morgan / ... (4 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Frank Warren | ... | Henchman / ... (4 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Tom London | ... | Bartender / ... (4 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Troy Melton | ... | Government Agent / ... (4 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Paula Raymond | ... | Angie Pierce / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Will Wright | ... | Billy Willow (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Joan O'Brien | ... | Dolores Clark / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Paul Richards | ... | Ned Ruggles / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Don Kelly | ... | Green River Tom Smith / ... (3 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Audrey Dalton | ... | Abby Chancellor / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Lance Fuller | ... | Chad Hornsby / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Lisa Gaye | ... | Elena / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Willard Waterman | ... | Bank Manager / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Patrick Waltz | ... | Buck Peters / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Tyler McVey | ... | Colonel Sloan / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Susan Cummings | ... | Lili Napoleon / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Jack Hogan | ... | Marshal Johnny Dillon / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Jerome Cowan | ... | Jasper Salt / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Emile Meyer | ... | General Moran / ... (3 episodes, 1959) |
| Gene Roth | ... | Barkeep / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Hank Patterson | ... | Soda Smith / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Charles E. Fredericks | ... | Marshal / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Gerald Milton | ... | John Whelan, Blacksmith / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Mickey Simpson | ... | Donovan / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Jack Reitzen | ... | Motto / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Peggy Knudsen | ... | Katie / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Ted de Corsia | ... | John Watson, Bartender / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Craig Duncan | ... | Casey / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| John Hart | ... | Wilson / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| William Boyett | ... | Dank, Henchman / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Byron Morrow | ... | Amos Judd / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| K.L. Smith | ... | Chuck / ... (3 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Robert Lynn | ... | Inn Clerk / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Wayne Burson | ... | U.S. Marshal (3 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Chuck Webster | ... | Judd Elkins (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Larry Darr | ... | Bank Robber #1 / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Jean Paul King | ... | Alistaire Drago / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Jack Lester | ... | Bartender / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Leon Alton | (3 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| Bill Hickman | ... | Ranch Hand (3 episodes, 1960) |
| Terry Frost | ... | Henchman / ... (3 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| William Conrad | ... | Clark Benson / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Richard Arlen | ... | John Minor / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| John Dehner | ... | Marshal Ben Holt / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Gerald Mohr | ... | Courtney Shepherd / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| James Coburn | ... | Leo Talley / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Kathleen Crowley | ... | Jo Hart / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| John Doucette | ... | Lemuel Carstairs / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| H.M. Wynant | ... | Benton Foster / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Diane Brewster | ... | Lynn Harrison (2 episodes, 1959) |
| John Sutton | ... | Andrew Stafford / ... (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Robert Ivers | ... | Charley Boy / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| James Best | ... | Danny / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Leo Gordon | ... | Joe Quince / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Gloria Talbott | ... | Ellen Parish / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Marcia Henderson | ... | Molly Doyle / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Robert J. Wilke | ... | Bull Kirby / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Jan Harrison | ... | Belle Sims / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Constance Ford | ... | Gwen Parsons / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| John Vivyan | ... | Chip Grimes / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Ken Mayer | ... | Largo Morgan / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Patricia Donahue | ... | Billie Tuesday / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Elisha Cook Jr. | ... | Pete Sheeley / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Jean Willes | ... | Grace Williams / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Cathy Downs | ... | Amelia Roberts / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Don Haggerty | ... | Gordon Hall / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Carol Ohmart | ... | Linda Beaudine / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Myron Healey | ... | Colonel Marc James / ... (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Jacqueline Scott | ... | Carol Otis / ... (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Gregory Walcott | ... | Lou / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| William Henry | ... | Griff Hanley / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Robert Stevenson | ... | Ben Roper / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Joe Turkel | ... | Fargo / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| John Gallaudet | ... | Colonel Pierce / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Dean Harens | ... | Steven Haley (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Dyan Cannon | ... | Diane Jansen / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Paul Dubov | ... | Danny Dowling / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Jack Lambert | ... | King Fisher / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| June Blair | ... | Constance Whitney / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Ron Foster | ... | Sheriff Buck Simpson / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Paul Fierro | ... | Hidalgo / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| Robert Karnes | ... | Landry / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| James Seay | ... | Harry Cassidy / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| Robert Bice | ... | Bledsoe / ... (2 episodes, 1961) |
| Harvey Stephens | ... | Isaac Parker / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Ray Teal | ... | H.G. Cogswell / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Don Kennedy | ... | Gunman / ... (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Arthur Shields | ... | Dana Ruggles (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Leslie Parrish | ... | Lisa Anders / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| Marshall Reed | ... | Alf Hayman / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| William Schallert | ... | Dr. Harold Dunsmore / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| Raymond Bailey | ... | Justice Bradshaw / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Stephen Bekassy | ... | Anton von Landi / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Frank Ferguson | ... | Dick Pierce / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Michael Forest | ... | Les Wilkins / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| King Calder | ... | Dinny Cave / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Dan White | ... | Ben Taylor / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Milton Frome | ... | Governor / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Harry Fleer | ... | Darby Cole / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Tom Greenway | ... | Ben Pick (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Warren Oates | ... | Cat Crail / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Jack Ging | ... | Billy Webb / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Carlos Romero | ... | Juan Torrino (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Sam Buffington | ... | Judge Hodie (2 episodes, 1959) |
| John Cliff | ... | Jess Santala (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Jack Kruschen | ... | Ben Tarko / ... (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Erin O'Brien | ... | Jeanie Landry / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Bobby Hall | ... | Miller / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Ray Kellogg | ... | Brock / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Jeff DeBenning | ... | Horton (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Tom McKee | ... | Derelict / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Kenneth MacDonald | ... | Mr. Jansen / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Ed Nelson | ... | Browder / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Liam Sullivan | ... | Blackie / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Page Slattery | ... | Dane Holloway / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| John Burns | ... | Hunch / ... (2 episodes, 1961) |
| Billy Wells | ... | Bob Bradbury / ... (2 episodes, 1961) |
| Paul Sorensen | ... | Macy (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Bill Walker | ... | Stagecoach Driver (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Ted Jacques | ... | Horse Renter / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Jack Harris | ... | Blaine's Secretary / ... (2 episodes, 1960) |
| Jack Mann | (2 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| Harry Woods | ... | Dr. Fleming / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| Harry Clexx | ... | Hotel Clerk / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Marx Hartman | (2 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Eve Cotton | ... | Emma / ... (2 episodes, 1959) |
| William Eben Stephens | (2 episodes, 1961) | |
| James Nusser | ... | Elmer / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| William Vaughan | ... | Eddie Griswell / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1960) |
| Kenneth Alton | ... | Hyde (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Tom Vize | ... | Husky Wrangler / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Joe Guardino | ... | Usher (2 episodes, 1959) |
| John Moloney | (2 episodes, 1959) | |
| Ralph Gary | ... | Riverboat Captain (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| Frank Watkins | ... | Man (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| John Baxter | ... | Curt / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Roydon Clark | (2 episodes, 1959) | |
| John Parrish | (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Richard Warren | (2 episodes, 1958) | |
| John Maloney | (2 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Tom Montgomery | ... | Frank McLean (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Terry Rangno | ... | Danny / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Wes Hudman | ... | Henchman in Dark hat / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Andy Albin | ... | Eddie (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Charlie Crafts | (2 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Guy Teague | (2 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Mel A. Bishop | ... | Charlie Bassett / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1960) |
| Leake Bevil | ... | Bartender (2 episodes, 1959) |
| Frank Harding | ... | Will (2 episodes, 1960-1961) |
| George Offerman Jr. | ... | Dealer (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| James Winslow | ... | Stan Larson (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Nick Nicholl | ... | Stagecoach Driver / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Denver Pyle | ... | Dan Morgan / ... (2 episodes, 1959-1961) |
| John Close | ... | Homesteader / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1961) |
| Leonard P. Geer | ... | Bank Robber #2 / ... (2 episodes, 1958-1959) |
| Tom Steele | ... | Slender Henchman / ... (2 episodes, 1960-1961 |
Series Directed by |
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| Alan Crosland Jr. | (22 episodes, 1959-1960) | ||
| Eddie Davis | (20 episodes, 1958-1961) | ||
| Walter Doniger | (17 episodes, 1958-1960) | ||
| John Rich | (6 episodes, 1958-1960) | ||
| Franklin Adreon | (5 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Elliott Lewis | (5 episodes, 1961) | ||
| Otto Lang | (4 episodes, 1958-1959) | ||
| William Conrad | (4 episodes, 1959-1961) | ||
| Lew Landers | (4 episodes, 1959-1961) | ||
| Allen H. Miner | (4 episodes, 1959-1961) | ||
| Bernard Girard | (3 episodes, 1958) | ||
| Hollingsworth Morse | (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Norman Foster | (2 episodes, 1960) | ||
| Herman Hoffman | (2 episodes, 1960) | ||
| David Friedkin | (1 episode, 1958) | ||
Series Writing credits |
||
| Richard O'Connor | (105 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Don Brinkley | (14 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Andy White | (9 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Gene Levitt | (8 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| Wells Root | (7 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| Maurice Tombragel | (6 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| Mikhail Rykoff | (6 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| George F. Slavin | (5 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| D.D. Beauchamp | (4 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| Paul Franklin | (4 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| John McGreevey | (4 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| Harry Essex | (4 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Guy de Vry | (4 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Ellis Kadison | (4 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Barney Slater | (3 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Frank Grenville | (3 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| John Elliotte | (2 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
| Turnley Walker | (2 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
| Frank Pittman | (2 episodes, 1958) | |
| Fran Van Hartsveldt | (2 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| Ron Bishop | (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Paul King | (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Joseph Stone | (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| John Tucker Battle | (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Mary M. Beauchamp | (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Michael Fessier | (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Samuel A. Peeples | (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Morton S. Fine | (1 episode, 1958) | |
| David Friedkin | (1 episode, 1958) | |
| Gene Roddenberry | (unknown episodes) | |
Series Produced by |
|||
| Frank Pittman | .... | producer (105 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Andy White | .... | producer (105 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Frederick W. Ziv | .... | producer (unknown episodes) | |
Series Cinematography by |
|||
| Monroe P. Askins | (25 episodes, 1958-1961) | ||
| Robert Hoffman | (20 episodes, 1959-1960) | ||
| Richard L. Rawlings | (18 episodes, 1958-1961) | ||
| Curt Fetters | (14 episodes, 1959-1961) | ||
| Charles Van Enger | (9 episodes, 1958-1959) | ||
| Brick Marquard | (9 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Jacques R. Marquette | (7 episodes, 1959-1961) | ||
| Roger Shearman | (3 episodes, 1958) | ||
| Edward Cronjager | (3 episodes, 1960) | ||
| Robert Wyckoff | (2 episodes, 1961) | ||
Series Film Editing by |
|||
| Richard L. Van Enger | (72 episodes, 1958-1961) | ||
| Buddy Small | (15 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Joseph Silver | (4 episodes, 1959-1961) | ||
| Anthony Wollner | (4 episodes, 1960) | ||
| James Dyer | (3 episodes, 1959-1960) | ||
| John F. Schreyer | (3 episodes, 1961) | ||
| Charles Craft | (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Frank Baldridge | (2 episodes, 1961) | ||
Series Art Direction by |
|||
| Frank Hotaling | (36 episodes, 1959-1960) | ||
| Robert Kinoshita | (20 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Jack T. Collis | (14 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| Bruce Bushman | (8 episodes, 1961) | ||
| John M. Elliott | (2 episodes, 1960) | ||
Series Set Decoration by |
|||
| Lou Hafley | (34 episodes, 1958-1960) | ||
| Clarence Steensen | (24 episodes, 1960-1961) | ||
| George Sawley | (21 episodes, 1959-1960) | ||
| Charles S. Thompson | (19 episodes, 1958-1961) | ||
| Glen Daniels | (18 episodes, 1959) | ||
| Frank Wade | (12 episodes, 1958-1960) | ||
| Bruce MacDonald | (4 episodes, 1958) | ||
| Vin Taylor | (3 episodes, 1959-1960) | ||
| Ted Driscoll | (2 episodes, 1960) | ||
| Robert Kinoshita | (unknown episodes) | ||
Series Costume Design by |
|||
| Don Loper | (7 episodes, 1959) | ||
Series Makeup Department |
|||
| George Gray | .... | makeup artist / makeup supervisor (80 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| William Woods | .... | makeup artist (35 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Fred B. Phillips | .... | makeup artist (14 episodes, 1961) | |
| Frank Fitz-Gibbon | .... | makeup artist (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Bob Mark | .... | makeup artist (2 episodes, 1960) | |
Series Production Management |
|||
| Joe Wonder | .... | production manager / executive production supervisor / ... (96 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Bill Schwartz | .... | production manager (14 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
Series Second Unit Director or Assistant Director |
|||
| Eddie Stein | .... | assistant director (34 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Bert Glazer | .... | assistant director (15 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Donald Verk | .... | assistant director (9 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Robert Agnew | .... | assistant director (8 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| Hal Klein | .... | assistant director (8 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Wilbur McGaugh | .... | assistant director (7 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
| Harry R. Sherman | .... | assistant director (6 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
| Gilbert Mandelik | .... | assistant director (5 episodes, 1958-1960) | |
| James Engle | .... | assistant director (3 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
| Dale Hutchinson | .... | assistant director (3 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| Gordon Mandelik | .... | assistant director (2 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Mack V. Wright | .... | assistant director (2 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Edward Haldeman | .... | assistant director (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Leonard Katzman | .... | assistant director (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| William Owens | .... | assistant director (2 episodes, 1961) | |
Series Art Department |
|||
| Robert Kinoshita | .... | set designer (38 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
Series Sound Department |
|||
| Al Lincoln | .... | audio supervisor / sound supervisor (108 episodes, 1958-1961) | |
| Jerry Roberts | .... | music editor (51 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| Sidney Sutherland | .... | sound editor (22 episodes, 1959-1961) | |
| Gus Galvin | .... | sound editor (22 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Jay Ashworth | .... | sound mixer (8 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Garry A. Harris | .... | sound mixer / sound (8 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Milton Lustig | .... | music editor (8 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Chuck Overhulser | .... | sound editor (7 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| James Fritch | .... | sound editor (6 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Wayne Hughes | .... | music editor / sound (5 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Robert Post | .... | sound mixer (5 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Bert Schoenfeld | .... | sound editor (5 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Hayes Pagel | .... | music editor (3 episodes, 1959) | |
| William Bernds | .... | sound mixer (3 episodes, 1961) | |
| Thomas Downing | .... | music editor / sound (3 episodes, 1961) | |
| Jack Milner | .... | sound editor (2 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Alfred R. Bird | .... | sound editor (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Lawrence Kaufman | .... | sound editor (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Ray Alba | .... | sound editor (2 episodes, 1961) | |
| Al Overton | .... | sound mixer (2 episodes, 1961) | |
| Jim Bullock | .... | sound editor (unknown episodes) | |
Series Special Effects by |
|||
| Bob Overbeck | .... | special effects (unknown episodes) | |
Series Stunts |
|||
| Loren Janes | .... | stunts (unknown episodes) | |
| Troy Melton | .... | stunts (unknown episodes) | |
| Dean Smith | .... | stunts (unknown episodes) | |
Series Camera and Electrical Department |
|||
| Donald Tait | .... | video supervisor (5 episodes, 1958) | |
Series Casting Department |
|||
| Howard Montgomery | .... | casting supervisor (9 episodes, 1961) | |
Series Costume and Wardrobe Department |
|||
| Tommy Thompson | .... | costume supervisor (38 episodes, 1958-1959) | |
| Eddie Armand | .... | wardrobe (27 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Pat Kelly | .... | wardrobe (27 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Shirley Page | .... | wardrobe (18 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Forrest T. Butler | .... | wardrobe (6 episodes, 1959-1960) | |
| Walt Hoffman | .... | wardrobe (3 episodes, 1960-1961) | |
| Leonard Harris | .... | wardrobe (2 episodes, 1960) | |
| Allen Stone | .... | wardrobe (2 episodes, 1960) | |
Series Other crew |
|||
| Pat Kelly | .... | assistant to producer (1 episode, 1961) | |
Production Companies
Distributors
30 min (108 episodes)
USA
English
Black and White
1.33 : 1 more
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
ZIV Television Programs Inc. more