The
B-Hive
By
Ed Garea
Stagecoach
Outlaws (PRC, 1945) – Director: Sam Newfield.
Writer: Fred Myton (story & s/p/). Stars: Buster Crabbe, Al St.
John, Frances Gladwin, Ed Cassidy, I. Stanford Jolley, Kermit
Maynard, John L. Cason, Bob Kortman, & Steve Clark. B&W,
58 minutes.
I
have a confession to make: I’m a big fan of the B-Western. They’re
fun to watch, move fast, and the action is continuous. The plots are
somewhat simple, almost as if from a cookie cutter, but I know what
I’m getting, so I’m never disappointed. Over the years these
lowly regarded B-Westerns have served as a spawning ground for young
actors such as John Wayne, and a last refuge for those whose time and
star have faded.
One
of the outfits churning out B-Westerns in the ‘40s was Producers
Releasing Corporation (PRC) and one of their most successful
franchises starred Buster Crabbe and Al (Fuzzy) St. John. Crabbe
first starred as Billy the Kid in 1941, taking over the role from
fellow B-veteran Bob Steele, and played the role in 13 films. The
character’s name was changed to “Billy Carson” in 1943, and
Crabbe starred in another 23 films.
Like
Johnny Weissmuller, Buster Crabbe was a championship swimmer, having
won a bronze medal in the 1500-meter men’s freestyle at the 1928
Amsterdam Summer Olympics and a gold medal in the 400-meter men’s
freestyle at the 1932 Los Angeles Summer Olympics. But it was
Weissmuller who beat out Crabbe for the role of Tarzan in an MGM
screen test. Paramount, though, was impressed enough to star him in
the 1933 feature, King of the Jungle, where Crabbe played
Kaspa, a white youth raised in the jungle by animals, is captured,
and brought back to civilization as an attraction in the circus. It
was one of many Tarzan imitations and was not to be Crabbe’s last.
Later that year, he starred for producer Sol Lesser in the
serial, Tarzan the Fearless, a movie so wretched it was
pulled from many theaters after only one episode and placed a
permanent damper on Crabbe’s career, consigning him to the B’s
and below. He made a few films for Poverty Row studio Mayfair before
Paramount signed him for a series of B-Westerns based on Zane Grey’s
writings.
While
at Paramount, he also freelanced in a couple of serials for
Universal, three as Flash Gordon and one as Buck Rogers. The serials
quickly passed into limbo, but were revived by audiences in the 60s
and 70s when they played on television and at colleges, and made
Crabbe something of a cult figure.
His
Paramount contract having run its course, and with no new prospects
at Universal, Crabbe became a free agent, i.e., unemployed.
It was in 1941 that he accepted a role as an African explorer in a
low-budget thriller from Poverty Row Producers Releasing Corporation.
Titled Jungle Man, it made back its cost and more, and
PRC pressed Crabbe into action in their “Billy the Kid” series,
replacing Bob Steele, who had enough of low-budget oaters and left
for greener pastures. And except for a few adventure films, such as
the notorious Jungle Siren (1942), where he and
“jungle girl” stripper Ann Corio fought the Nazis, Westerns would
be his specialty at PRC. His first film in the new series was
1941’s Billy the Kid Wanted, where he was paired with a
man who would appear with him in the subsequent Billy the Kid/Billy
Carson films: Al. “Fuzzy” St. John.
Al
St. John has quite a pedigree in Hollywood. He was one of the
original Keystone Cops for Mack Sennett and made many shorts with his
uncle, Fatty Arbuckle. After Fatty was banished from Hollywood due to
scandal, St. John formed his own production company and made comic
shorts for many studios, including Fox, Educational, Rayart, and
First National. (One of his shorts for Fox, 1923s Spring
Fever, co-starred a young Jean Arthur.) When sound arrived and
slapstick comedy became screwball comedy, St. John drifted into
Westerns, where he grew a beard and assumed that most popular role of
The Sidekick.
Legend
says he acquired the name “Fuzzy” while appearing in a Fred Scott
oater for low-budget Spectrum Pictures. The story was that the
producers were unsuccessfully trying to hire Fuzzy Knight, but
balking at his asking price, hired St. John instead, billing him as
“Fuzzy” in the picture. Given his beard, he began using the
nickname in future appearances. He also worked for director Sam
Newfield and his Westerns writer, Fred Myton, in the late '30s. When
Sam co-founded PRC, St. John went with him, playing Fuzzy Jones
(later Fuzzy Q. Jones) in a number of Westerns before landing in the
Billy the Kid series as a sidekick to Bob Steele. After Steele quit,
St. John became the sidekick of Buster Crabbe, and when Crabbe left
the series, the studio simply plugged in Lash La Rue without missing
a beat. When PRC folded in the late '40s, Lash and Fuzzy took their
act over to producers Ron Ormond and Joy Houck. Their last film was
in 1952, after which both La Rue and St. John bid goodbye to
Hollywood and hit the dusty trail, plying their trade at Wild West
shows and rodeos.
Stagecoach
Outlaws makes ample use of Fuzzy’s pratfall skills and
revolves around a case of mistaken identity. It begins with a bang,
as Billy Carson happens upon three masked outlaws holding up a Red
River Lines stagecoach. They shot the driver and the guard and are
trying to kidnap the only passenger, Linda Bowen (Gladwin). Billy
shoots and kills one outlaw while chasing the other two off. He
accompanies the stage and Linda back to Red River.
Linda
and her father, Jed (Cassidy), are grateful and impressed with
Billy’s skill. Ned tells Billy there have been quite a few stage
robberies as of late and offers Billy the job of protecting the
coaches, but Billy declines, telling Ned that he doesn’t like being
tied down.
The
two surviving outlaws, Joe Slade (Cason) and Vic Dawson (Maynard),
slink back to town to report their failed mission to their boss,
saloon owner Steve Kirby (Jolley). Kirby had earlier tried to
convince Jed to sell the stage line to him, so we knew right away he
was a heel. That’s the way it works in a B-Western.
Kirby
berates them for their failure and then gets an idea. Notorious bank
robber Matt Brawley (Kortman) is cooling his heels in a jail in
nearby Cherokee. If Joe and Vic can break Brawley out, not only will
he join their gang, but he might also be persuaded to share in the
loot he has stashed from the robbery.
However,
before Joe and Vic can get to Cherokee, Brawley, left in the care of
Fuzzy while the sheriff (Clark) stepped out for refreshment,
overpowers Fuzzy, cold-conks him, and places him in the cell as he
makes his getaway. When the sheriff returns and finds Brawley has
escaped, he’s so angry that he decides to leave Fuzzy in the jail
cell as punishment.
The
two baddies arrive, overpower the sheriff, and thinking Fuzzy is
Brawley, spring him and take him with them. Fuzzy, for once sizing up
the situation, decides to play along until he can make his escape,
and travels with the two back to Red River.
Fuzzy’s
cover is almost blown when Billy sees him, but Fuzzy pretends not to
know who he is. After Billy brawls with Vic in the saloon, he
overhears Fuzzy introducing himself to Kirby as Brawley and picks up
on the ruse, concerned for his friend.
Billy
follows Joe, Vic and Fuzzy to a ghost town hotel, where the two
outlaws grill Fuzzy about the hidden loot. Searching the hotel, Billy
accidentally rings the front desk bell, and Joe, Vic and Fuzzy rush
downstairs looking for an intruder. Fuzzy manages to ditch his
partners long enough to tell Billy about his plight. Later, Joe and
Vic tell Fuzzy that they’ll let him in on a lucrative proposition
if he agrees to share his loot. Vic catches Billy trying to eavesdrop
on their conversation but Billy escapes after a brawl.
Back
in Red River, Kirby tells Linda that he advised her father to sell
the stage line to him, but Linda says her father will never sell.
When Billy shows up and questions Kirby about his intense interest in
the stage line, the two get into a fight, which is broken up by Jed.
Afterward, Billy offers to protect Jed’s next shipment: the nearby
miner’s payroll.
The
next day we see Billy, dressed in a serape and sporting a fake
mustache, pulling a cart while Joe and Vic force Fuzzy to go with
them to rob the stage. They secure the lockbox, but when they force
it open, they find it’s full of iron washers.
After
Kirby learns of Billy’s ruse, the real Brawley shows up in town,
looking for his impersonator. Overhearing Brawley’s threats, Billy
hightails it to the ghost town to warn Fuzzy and runs into his friend
as he’s sneaking out of the hotel. The two join together against
Joe and Vic, who have kidnapped Linda. While Joe and Brawley chase
Fuzzy, Billy has it out with Vic in the hotel. Fuzzy returns, and he
and Billy overwhelm and hogtie the baddies while freeing Linda.
Back
in Red River, Vic is about to spill the beans of Kirby when Kirby
shoots him through an open window. Billy returns the fire, killing
Kirby. As the film ends, Billy says goodbye to Jed and Linda while
Fuzzy takes the recaptured Brawley back to the Cherokee jail.
Stagecoach
Outlaws is a pretty entertaining outing from PRC in spite of
the low production values, one of which includes substituting a
curtain for a wall at the ghost town hotel. (Watch for the scene
where Billy bumps into it.) It’s more St. John’s picture than
Crabbe’s, as the plot really revolves around Fuzzy. He usually is
given time in the other films of the series to do his shtick, but not
as the center of attention and he is fun to watch as both the comic
foil of Billy as well as the baddies, with more than a couple of
Sennett-type pratfalls to his credit.
The
film also has a good supporting cast, with veteran B-movie heel I.
Stanford Jolley in fine form as the conniving Kirby. Kermit Maynard,
brother of Ken, gets a meaty role as Vic, and Kortman, whose credits
harken back to the silent days, manages well as the tough guy
Brawley. The only fly in the ointment is Frances Gladwin, as Jed’s
daughter Linda. She can’t act and it shows as she sits there in the
hotel room seemingly baffled by all the action going on around her.
This
is one of the better entries in the series and both Crabbe and St.
John acquit themselves well in their roles, billed at the beginning
as “Our Pals,” just in case the kids at the matinee didn’t
know. It’s also well thought out and written, which is a rarity
with PRC. One last point: although this Western series made more than
enough money to keep PRC afloat, Crabbe made only $3,000 per picture
and St. John, $1,000. Considering what they returned, it was skimpy
wages indeed.
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