Have Gun–Will Travel (1958-60) aired “The Gunsmith” on April 26, 1959 as the show’s 23rd episode out of what would be a total of 106 over its two year run. This is only the fourth episode we have shared of this much loved western, the first being in September of 2019 with the second and third coming, respectively, in March and October of 2020. So a bit of backstory about the program is in order for newcomers.
The very existence of the radio show is an odd duck, in that while not unique it was one of the very rare radio shows to be a spinoff of a successful tv show, which is backwards from the usual sequence of events, with the radio show coming first, then the tv show (for examples of the usual order, see Gunsmoke, Dragnet, and The Lone Ranger). In this case, Have Gun–Will Travel on television first aired in 1957 and its radio counterpart aired its first episode just over a year later in 1958. The original CBS tv series would run from September 1957 through April of 1963 and proved quite popular. Richard Boone (1917-1981) starred as Paladin, a cultured, educated, gun-for-hire living in San Francisco’s swanky Carlton Hotel during the period following the Civil War to approximately 1875 as a well-appointed man of wealth and sophistication, who earned his living by putting ads in local newspapers as a high-priced gunslinger with the simple calling card of “Have Gun–Will Travel.” While expensive to hire ($1,000 per day plus expenses) and ready, willing, and able to use his trademark gun when necessary, he often was a master at settling disputes or resolving issues in a diplomatic and bloodless manner.
The term “paladin” itself has several meanings, among them “champion of the realm” or “trusted military leader” or even “a knight without armor in a savage land.” You get the idea. Paladin’s trademark is the iconic chess character of the knight, which he showcases on his signature black holster and on his business card. As backup to his handgun, Paladin also carried a double-barreled derringer behind his belt.
Famed radio director of such shows as Suspense, Escape, and later the popular tv westerns such as The Virginian and Gunsmoke, Norman Macdonnell championed the idea of spinning off a successful tv show to radio, and Have Gun–Will Travel on radio was born. One of my favorite radio and tv actors, John Dehner (1915-1992), was cast as radio’s Paladin, his resonating baritone voice perfect for the role. Dehner himself was in many ways like the character he played, for his father traveled a lot and Dehner went to school and was educated mostly in Europe (though he was born in New York). Along the way, he learned to speak four languages fluently and others to a lesser degree (including Norwegian, French, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, and even some Hopi Indian). In the early 1940s Dehner worked for Walt Disney Studios as an animator and did work for such iconic animated features as Fantasia (1940), Bambi (1942) and some Pluto, Donald Duck, and Mickey Mouse cartoons. After a stint in the Army during World War II he held jobs as a radio news editor and disc jockey, then graduated to numerous acting roles of various sizes, including, but not limited to shows such as The Hermit’s Cave (as host), and supporting roles in The Whistler, Gunsmoke, Suspense, Escape, Philip Marlowe, Frontier Gentleman (star), and the week following the demise of Frontier Gentleman, the star of Have Gun–Will Travel.
John Dehner’s television and film roles are far too many to list here, but he appeared in 125 feature films and shorts, and in well over another 100 tv roles from mystery to western to science fiction and is easily recognizable for his blue eyes, moustache, and again his iconc baritone that Radio Life Magazine said was the industry’s “best radio voice.” Of interest to SF fans, Dehner appeared three times on the original The Twilight Zone: in the first season as Captain Allenby in “The Lonely,” as engineer Alan Richards in “The Jungle” in its third season, and in its fifth and final season as Jared Garrity in “Mr. Garrity and the Graves.”
Of interest is that Norm Macdonnell was not only the champion of spinning off a radio program from its parent television show, but his idea to rewrite as closely as possible for radio the original tv scripts, thus, the initial 30 episodes of Have Gun were lifted from the already aired tv shows. [After that, Macdonnell would leave the show and go on to direct and write for television’s Gunsmoke, tv’s longest running (to that time, 1955-75) continuous prime time show in history.]
Last but not least, from an article in AVClub from 2014 by Brandon Nowalk titled “The Adult Western Peaked with Have Gun–Will Travel”: “…the adult Western, nominal or otherwise, is what TV audiences were looking for in the late ’50s. Have Gun – Will Travel wasn’t the first, it wasn’t the most popular, and it didn’t last the longest. But it was the best. Have Gun picked up the pieces of the adult Western and assembled them into something greater. There was Gunsmoke’s dramatic power, Earp’s pretension, and Cheyenne’s rootless energy. And where those others lost cast members, dipped in quality, or completely transformed, Have Gun stayed steady, a strong half-hour black-and-white adventure leading into Gunsmoke every Saturday night for six years.” Though it is true that Have Gun wasn’t the most popular show of its time, Nielsen ratings confirm that it ranked near the very top of the heap with a #3 or #4 rating for its first four years. (Gunsmoke would take top honors as the #1 show for four years, from 1958-61.)
What can one say about “The Gunsmith”? Perhaps only that ignoring violence only encourages it until it is recognized for what it is, faced with a steadfast resolve, and eliminated.
[For those interested in further episodes of this program, note that the Blind Courage collection featured at the top of the page is one of several from Radio Spirits and includes “The Gunsmith.” Clicking on the cover will take you to the Radio Spirits website. All episodes are digitally remastered and restored, while those showcased here have not been.]
Play Time: 24:20
[Below: Paladin on radio, John Dehner, left — Paladin on tv, Richard Boone, right]
[Below: Paladin’s iconic business card]
{“The Gunsmith” aired on a Sunday evening in late April of 1959, and the following afternoon after school found the neighborhood gang at the nearby newsstand in search of a few of the SF magazines they may not have had the chance to catch up with yet. Astounding SF (1930-present, now Analog) was always a must-buy favorite and with the wild, almost comic cover on the issue below was even harder to resist. Note that the story featured on the cover by one Winston P. Sanders is actually by Poul Anderson using one of his pen names. Astounding was a monthly in 1959. The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (1949-present) was in the middle of its 10th year of publication and what a stellar array of talent it showcased on the cover below! It too was a monthly in 1959. Fantastic Universe (1953-1960), while not terribly long-lived, lasted for more issues than many of the new contemporary SF magazines struggling for a foothold in the market along with it. It was helmed by two editors, the second of which seemed to have an affinity for UFO stories which, in retrospect, did little to endear it to as many readers as was hoped. While a monthly throughout most of its run, by 1959 it managed but 8 issues.]
[Left: Astounding, April 1959 – Center: F&SF, April 1959 – Right: Fantastic Universe, May 1959]
To view the entire list of weekly Old Time Radio episodes at Tangent Online, click here.