Billy Dennis Weaver (June 4, 1924 – February 24, 2006) was an American actor and president of the Screen Actors Guild, best known for his work in television and films from the early 1950s until just before his death in 2006. Weaver's two most famous roles were as Marshal Matt Dillon's deputy Chester Goode on the western Gunsmoke and as Deputy Marshal Sam McCloud on the police drama McCloud. He starred in the 1971 television film Duel, the first film of director Steven Spielberg. He is also remembered for his role as the twitchy motel attendant in Orson Welles's film Touch of Evil (1958).

Early life

Weaver was born on June 4, 1924, in Joplin, Missouri, the son of Walter Leon "Doc" Weaver and his wife, Lenna Leora (née Prather). Weaver wanted to be an actor from childhood. He lived in Shreveport, Louisiana, for several years, and for a short time in Manteca, California. He studied at Joplin Junior College and then transferred to the University of Oklahoma at Norman, where he studied drama and was a track star, setting records in several events. During World War II, he served as a pilot in the United States Navy, flying Grumman F4F Wildcat fighter aircraft. After the war, he married Gerry Stowell, his childhood sweetheart, with whom he had three children. Under the name Billy D. Weaver, he tried out for the 1948 U.S. Olympic team in the decathlon, finishing sixth behind 17-year-old high school track star Bob Mathias. However, only the top three finishers were selected. Weaver later commented, "I did so poorly [in the Olympic Trials], I decided to ... stay in New York and try acting."

Career

Weaver's first role on Broadway came as an understudy to Lonny Chapman as Turk Fisher in Come Back, Little Sheba. He eventually took over the role from Chapman in the national touring company. Solidifying his choice to become an actor, Weaver enrolled in the Actors Studio, where he met Shelley Winters. In the beginning of his acting career, he supported his family by doing odd jobs, including selling vacuum cleaners, tricycles, and women's hosiery.

Weaver as Chester, Milburn Stone as Doc, and Amanda Blake as Kitty in Gunsmoke, 1960
Weaver and Mariette Hartley on the set of Gunsmoke, 1962

In 1952, Shelley Winters helped him get a contract from Universal Studios. He made his film debut that same year in the movie The Redhead from Wyoming. Over the next three years, he played in a series of movies, but still had to work odd jobs to support his family. In 1955 he appeared in an episode of The Lone Ranger "The Tell-Tale Bullet", which is viewable on YouTube. While delivering flowers, he heard he had landed the role of Chester Goode, the limping, loyal assistant of Marshal Matt Dillon (James Arness) on the new television series Gunsmoke. It was his big break; the show went on to become the highest-rated and longest-running live action series in United States television history (1955 to 1975), an honor now held by Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. He received an Emmy Award in 1959 for Best Supporting Actor (Continuing Character) in a Dramatic Series.

According to the Archive of American Television interview with Weaver, the producer had him in mind for Chester, but could not locate him, and was delighted when he showed up to audition. Never having heard the radio show, Weaver gave Chester's "inane" dialog his best "method" delivery. Disappointed in his delivery, however, the producer asked for something humorous, and resurrecting "a dialect from some lost county in Oklahoma," Weaver nailed it. His character's limp came about when the producer pointed out that sidekicks usually exhibit some diminishing trait that makes them less heroic than the star. To keep from losing the part, college decathlon champion Weaver settled on using a stiff leg, something "simple and consistent," allowing him still to perform all the actions needed in a Western.

In 1957, Weaver appeared as Commander B.D. Clagett in a single episode of the television series The Silent Service titled "Two Davids and Goliath". Having become famous as Chester, he was next cast in an offbeat supporting role in the 1958 Orson Welles film Touch of Evil, in which he played a face-twisting, body-contorting eccentric employee of a remote motel who nervously repeated, "I'm the night man." In 1960, he appeared in an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents titled "Insomnia", in which his character suffers from sleeplessness owing to the tragic death of his wife. He also co-starred in a 1961 episode of The Twilight Zone titled "Shadow Play". In that episode, Weaver's character is trapped inside his own revolving nightmare, repeatedly being tried, sentenced, and then executed in the electric chair. In 1964, Weaver left Gunsmoke to star as a friendly veterinary physician raising an adopted Chinese boy as a single father in NBC's one season comedy drama Kentucky Jones. He had a significant role in the 1966 western Duel at Diablo, with James Garner and Sidney Poitier. His next substantial role was as Tom Wedloe on the CBS family series Gentle Ben, with co-star Clint Howard, from 1967 to 1969. Decades earlier, as a student at Oklahoma University in the mid-1940s, it was Weaver who had introduced Clint's parents, Rance Howard and Jean Speegle Howard, to one another when the three of them were theater students at OU.

In 1970, Weaver landed the title role in the NBC series McCloud, for which he received two Emmy Award nominations. In 1974, he was nominated for Best Lead Actor in a Limited Series (McCloud) and in 1975, for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series. The show, about a modern Western lawman who ends up in New York City, was loosely based on the Clint Eastwood film Coogan's Bluff. His frequent use of the affirming Southernism, "There you go," became a catchphrase for the show. During the series, in 1971, Weaver also appeared in Duel, a television movie directed by Steven Spielberg. Spielberg selected Weaver based on the intensity of his earlier performance in Touch of Evil.

Weaver was also a recording artist, with most of his tracks being spoken-word recordings with musical accompaniment. He released several singles and albums between 1959 and 1984, most notable of which was his eponymous Im'press Records LP in 1972, the cover of which featured a portrait of Weaver in character as McCloud; it was the first of seven albums he recorded.[citation needed]

From 1973 to 1975, Weaver was president of the Screen Actors Guild.

His later series during the 1980s (both of which lasted only one season) were Stone in which Weaver played a Joseph Wambaugh-esque police sergeant turned crime novelist and Buck James in which he played a Texas-based surgeon and rancher. (Buck James was loosely based on real-life Texas doctor James "Red" Duke.) He portrayed a Navy rear admiral for 22 episodes of a 1983–1984 series, Emerald Point N.A.S.

In 1977, he portrayed a husband who physically abuses his wife (portrayed by Sally Struthers) in the made-for-TV movie Intimate Strangers, one of the first network features to depict domestic violence. In 1978, Weaver played the trail boss R. J. Poteet in the television miniseries Centennial, in the installment titled "The Longhorns". Weaver also appeared in many acclaimed television films, including Amber Waves (1980) with Kurt Russell. Also in 1980, he portrayed Dr. Samuel Mudd, who was imprisoned for involvement in the Lincoln assassination, in The Ordeal of Dr. Mudd and starred with his real-life son Robby Weaver in the short-lived NBC police series Stone. In 1983, he played a real estate agent addicted to cocaine in Cocaine: One Man's Seduction. Weaver received probably the best reviews of his career when he starred in the 1987 film Bluffing It, in which he played a man who is illiterate. In February 2002, he appeared on the animated series The Simpsons (episode DABF07, "The Lastest Gun in the West") as the voice of aging Hollywood cowboy legend Buck McCoy.

For his contribution to the television industry, Dennis Weaver was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6822 Hollywood Blvd, and on the Dodge City (KS) Trail of Fame. In 1981, he was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers with the Bronze Wrangler Award at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Weaver as McCloud was used to promote a rock show in New York City. He also hosted segments for the Encore Westerns premium cable network in the late 1990s and early to mid-2000s.

Weaver's last work was done on an ABC Family cable television show called Wildfire, where he played Henry Ritter, the father of Jean Ritter and the co-owner of Raintree Ranch. His role on the show was cut short by his death.

Weaver had an interest in the UFO topic and in 1986 narrated a daily toll-charge phone message service called the UFO Contact Newsline, produced in his basement and operated by his son Rusty Weaver and partner Paul Shepherd. Each three-minute report featured "late-breaking news of human contact with extraterrestrials, inside stories of UFO sightings and scientific verification of alien visits to planet Earth" according to an article in the Los Angeles Times.

Music career

It was reported in the November 1982 issue of Music Row that Weaver was seriously pursuing a career in country music. He and singer Noel were the first artists signed to the Deep South Records label, which also had Coni Causey, C.C. Conley, Ron Blair and Billy Jack on their roster. Working with producer Allen Cash, Weaver recorded a single "If I Had a Love Song" that was released that year.

Personal life

Weaver in 2000

Weaver was reported to have been a vegetarian from 1958 for ethical reasons; however, he did occasionally eat fish.

Weaver married Gerry Stowell after World War II, and they had three sons: Richard, Robert, and Rustin Weaver. Gerry died April 26, 2016, at 90.[citation needed]

Weaver's home in Ridgway, Colorado, exemplified his commitment to preserving the environment. In the late 1980s, he commissioned architect Michael Reynolds to design and build his new residence, which incorporated into its construction various recycled materials, such as old automobile tires and discarded cans, and featured passive solar power and other ecotechnologies. Weaver called his home Earthship, the same name given to the design concept pioneered by Reynolds and advanced by him as part of what was then a growing interest in "sustainable architecture" by environmentalists. Weaver and his family lived at Earthship for over 14 years, until 2004.

In July 2003, Weaver lost a daughter-in-law, Lynne Ann Weaver, wife of son Robby Weaver, in Santa Monica, California, when a car driven at high speed plowed through shoppers at the Santa Monica Farmers Market. She was one of 10 people killed in the incident.

Weaver was a lifelong active Democrat.

Activism

Weaver was an environmentalist, who promoted the use of alternative fuels, such as hydrogen and wind power, through the Institute of Ecolonomics, a nonprofit environmental organization he established in 1993 in Berthoud, Colorado. "Ecolonomics" is a term formed by combining the words ecology and economics. He was also involved with John Denver's WindStar Foundation, and he founded an organization called L.I.F.E. (Love is Feeding Everyone), which provided food for 150,000 needy people a week in Los Angeles.

Weaver was also active in liberal political causes. He used his celebrity status as a fundraiser and organizer for George McGovern's campaign for President in 1972.

In 2004, he led a fleet of alternative-fuel vehicles across the United States to raise awareness about America's dependence on oil.

Weaver was consistently involved with the annual Genesis Awards, which honor those in the news and entertainment media who bring attention to the plight and suffering of animals. Established by the Ark Trust, the award has been presented by the Humane Society of the United States since 2002.

There will come a time ... when civilized people will look back in horror on our generation and the ones that preceded it – the idea that we should eat other living things running around on four legs, that we should raise them just for the purpose of killing them! The people of the future will say "meat-eaters!" in disgust and regard us in the same way we regard cannibals and cannibalism — Dennis Weaver

Death

Weaver died from prostate cancer at his home in Ridgway, Colorado, on February 24, 2006, at age 81.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1952Horizons WestDandy Taylor
The RaidersDick Logan (uncredited)
1953The Redhead from WyomingMatt Jessup
The Lawless BreedJim Clements
The Mississippi GamblerJulian Conant (uncredited)
It Happens Every ThursdayAl, Chamber of Commerce President (uncredited)
Law and OrderFrank Durling
Column SouthMenguito
The Man from the AlamoReb (uncredited)
The Golden BladeRabble Rouser (uncredited)
The NebraskanCaptain De Witt (uncredited)
War ArrowPino
1954Pasties on a CatLeering Audience Member (uncredited)
Dangerous MissionRanger Clerk
DragnetPolice Captain R.A. Lohrman
The Bridges at Toko-RiAir Intelligence Officer (uncredited)
1955Ten Wanted MenSheriff Clyde Gibbons
Seven Angry MenJohn Brown Jr.
Chief Crazy HorseMajor Carlisle
Storm FearHank
1956Navy Wife
1958Touch of EvilMirador Motel Night Manager
1960The Gallant HoursLieutenant Commander Andy Lowe
1961Sing for Me, Canary BoyBlake Puddingstock
1963The Cost of Riding ShotgunSheriff Evan America
1966Duel at DiabloWillard Grange
Way...Way OutHoffman
1967Gentle GiantTom Wedloe
1968Mission BatangasChip Corbett
1970A Man Called SledgeErwin Ward
1971What's the Matter with Helen?Linc Palmer
DuelDavid Mann
1972Mothership TycoonCaptain Buck Finnster
Horsetrailer Tycoon
1973House ArrestSergeant Chester McFeeley
Terror on the BeachNeil Glynn
1977Cry for Justice
1979Surgery TrainDr. Lance Goiter
1982Splattercakes for MamaSmokey Joe Burgess
1995Two Bits & PepperSheriff Pratt
1997Telluride: Time Crosses OverCameo appearance
1998Escape from Wildcat CanyonGrandpa Flint
2000SubmergedBuck Stevens
The VirginianSam Balaam
2001Elephant RageElephantVoice
2004Home on the RangeAbnerVoice

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1954Cavalcade of AmericaPrisonerEpisode: "G for Goldberger"
1954–1955DragnetVarious roles6 episodes
1955–1964GunsmokeChester / Chester Goode290 episodes
1955The Lone RangerJeb SullivanEpisode: "The Tell-Tale Bullet"
1955Schlitz Playhouse of StarsBenEpisode: "Underground"
1956Big TownEpisode: "Crime in the City Room"
1957The Silent ServiceLt. Cmdr. Bladen D. ClaggettEpisode: "The Two Davids and Goliath"
1958Climax!Steve MaclynEpisode: "Burst of Fire"
Playhouse 90Karl OhringerEpisode: "The Dungeon"
1959Have Gun – Will TravelMonk
1960Alfred Hitchcock PresentsCharles 'Charlie' Morton CavenderEpisode: "Insomnia"
1961The Twilight ZoneAdam GrantEpisode: "Shadow Play"
1964–1965Kentucky JonesKenneth Yarborough "Kentucky" Jones26 episodes
1965Combat!NoahEpisode: "The Farmer"
Dr. KildareWayne WandemeirEpisode: "A Reverence for Life"
1966Walt Disney's Wonderful World of ColorGeorge Tucker, the Sundown Kid2 episodes ("Gallegher Goes West")
1967–1969Gentle BenTom Wedloe56 episodes
1969Judd, for the DefenseProf. Robert BeardsleyEpisode: "The View from the Ivory Tower"
The Name of the GameWalter GraysonEpisode: "Give Till It Hurts"
1970–1977McCloudSam McCloud46 episodes
1970That GirlLewis FranksEpisode: "That Metermaid"
The VirginianJed HainesEpisode: "Train of Darkness"
Swing Out, Sweet LandTom LincolnTelevision special
1971The Forgotten ManLt. Joe HardyTelevision movie
DuelDavid MannTelevision movie
1972Rolling ManLonnie McAfeeTelevision movie
The Great Man's WhiskersAbraham LincolnTelevision movie
1973Female ArtilleryDeke ChambersTelevision movie
Terror on the BeachNeil GlynnTelevision movie
1977Intimate StrangersDonald HalstonTelevision movie
1978CentennialR.J. Poteet12 episodes
PearlColonel Jason ForrestMiniseries
The IslanderGable McQueenTelevision movie
Ishi: The Last of His TribeProfessor Benjamin FullerTelevision movie
1979The Ordeal of Patty HurstCharles BatesTelevision movie
Police StorySgt. Ted BentleyEpisode: "A Cry for Justice"
StoneDaniel Ellis StoneTelevision movie
1980StoneDaniel Ellis Stone9 episodes
Amber WavesBud BurkhardtTelevision movie
The Ordeal of Dr. MuddSamuel MuddTelevision movie
1981The Day the Loving StoppedAaron DannerTelevision movie
1982Don't Go to SleepPhillipTelevision movie
1983–1984Emerald Point N.A.S.Rear Admiral Thomas Mallory22 episodes
1983Cocaine: One Man's SeductionEddie GantTelevision movie
1985Magnum, P.I.Lacy Fletcher, Present DayEpisode: "Let Me Hear the Music"
Going for the Gold: The Bill Johnson StoryWally JohnsonTelevision movie
1986A Winner Never QuitsMr. WyshnerTelevision movie
Headin' Home for the HolidaysTom MillerTelevision special
1987Bluffing ItJack DugganTelevision movie
1987–1988Buck JamesDoctor Buck James19 episodes
1988Disaster at Silo 7Sheriff Ben HarlenTelevision movie
1989The Return of Sam McCloudSam McCloudTelevision movie
1991-1994Captain Planet and the PlaneteersMultiple2 episodes
1992MastergateV.P. Dale BurdenTelevision movie
1993Ancient Secrets of the Bible, Part IINarratorTelevision movie
1994GreyhoundsChance WayneTelevision movie
The Great Battles of the Civil WarRobert E. Lee40 episodes
1994-1995Lonesome Dove: The SeriesBuffalo Bill Cody5 episodes
1997Seduction in a Small TownSam JenksTelevision movie
Stolen Women: Captured HeartsCaptain Robert FarnsworthTelevision movie
2000The VirginianSam BalaamTelevision movie
High NoonMart HoweTelevision movie
2001The BeastWalter McFadden2 episodes
Family LawJudge Richard LloydEpisode: "Sex, Lies and Internet"
2002The SimpsonsBuck McCoy (voice)Episode: "The Lastest Gun in the West"
2003Touched by an AngelEmmett RiversEpisode: "The Good Earth"
2005WildfireHenry13 episodes

Video games

YearTitleRoleNotes
1996Voyeur IISheriff John Parker

Theatre

  • 1950: Come Back, Little Sheba – Performer
  • 1951: Out West of Eighth – Virgil Lavendar

External links

  • at IMDb
  • at the TCM Movie Database
  • at the Internet Broadway Database
  • discography at Discogs
  • Lee, Felicia R. (February 28, 2006). . The New York Times.
  • . Los Angeles Times. February 28, 2006. (information on his ancestry)