James Drury, Star of 'The Virginian,' Dies at 85
The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
4/6/2020
He played the laconic rancher with no name on the
revolutionary NBC series. Among Westerns, only 'Gunsmoke' and 'Bonanza' lasted
longer.
James Drury, who starred as the no-name, no-nonsense foreman
of the Shiloh Ranch on The Virginian, one of the longest-running
Westerns in the history of television, died Monday of natural causes. He was
85.
His assistant, Karen Lindsey, posted the news on Facebook.
Preparing for his most famous role, Drury appeared in
several Westerns on the big screen, including Good Day for a Hanging
(1959) with Fred MacMurray, Ten Who Dared (1960) at Disney and Sam
Peckinpah's Ride the High Country (1962), working opposite Randolph
Scott and Joel McCrea (who starred in the 1946 film The Virginian).
Drury also supported singers Elvis Presley and Pat Boone in
their respective movie debuts, Love Me Tender (1956) and Bernardine
(1957).
Based on Owen Wister's 1902 novel of the same name, The
Virginian was launched by executive producers Roy Huggins (Maverick,
77 Sunset Strip, The Fugitive, The Rockford Files)
and his father-in-law, future Columbia and Universal studio chief Frank Price.
It aired for 249 episodes on NBC over nine seasons, from
1962-71, and among Westerns, only CBS' Gunsmoke (20 seasons) and NBC's
Bonanza (14) lasted longer. Drury and his co-star Doug McClure, who
played the fun-loving Trampas, were the only castmembers to appear in every
season.
Drury's laconic character was always referred to as
"The Virginian;" he had no name, unlike his horse, a white Appaloosa
called Joe D. The Shiloh foreman may have sported a black hat, but he routinely
did the right thing, rescuing folks and fighting rustlers and outlaws in the Wyoming Territory in the 1890s.
Each episode of The Virginian lasted 90 minutes,
which made for a grueling production schedule.
"It was like doing a movie every week," Drury said
in a 2016 interview. "We had 79 minutes and 30 seconds worth of film,
which was as long as a lot of feature films of the day. It was a very radical
concept. I know Wagon Train went to a 90-minute format for one season,
and there may have been other attempts. But no one has ever been successful
with 90 minutes for a Western series except The Virginian.
"It's a very difficult thing to do logistically, it's a
lot of film to get through. You have to have good stories and good writers.
It's easier to spot a bad script in an hour show than it is in a half-hour
show. And it's a lot easier to spot a bad script in a 90-minute show than it is
in an hour-long show."
Drury noted that producers had to turn in one episode every
week. "But it took eight days to make one, so we had to make two or three at
a time," he said. "On one famous occasion, I was in five episodes of The
Virginian in the same day."
James Child Drury was born on April 18, 1934, in New York City, where his
father was a longtime professor of marketing at NYU. His mother was from Oregon, and he spent most of his younger days on one of
her family's ranches outside Salem.
His maternal grandfather, John Crawford, who had come west
with a wagon train from Missouri in 1875 or 1880, taught him woodsman skills
and marksmanship and instilled in him the values that Drury said he brought to
his Virginian character.
"I've always called it 'The Cowboy Way,' " he said
in 2014. "If it's not true, don't say it. If it's not yours, don't take
it, and if it's not right, don't do it."
Drury overcame a bout with polio, and at age 12 appeared in
a touring company of Life With Father. He attended high schools in Los Angeles and was
expelled from University High on the day before graduation. However, because of
his dad, he was able to get into NYU, and he majored in drama.
After his junior year, he was signed by MGM and had small
parts in Blackboard Jungle (1955), Love Me or Leave Me
(1955), The Tender Trap (1955) and Forbidden Planet (1956).
He was dropped by the studio after a year but picked up by 20th Century Fox and
then Universal.
He appeared on such small-screen Westerns as Cheyenne, Broken Arrow,
Gunsmoke, Wagon Train and Rawhide and in an unsold
1958 pilot that made an earlier stab at The Virginian before he began
his nine-season stay in fictional Wyoming.
In its last year, The Virginian was rebranded as The
Men From Shiloh, but its ratings suffered. Asked in the 2006 book A
History of Television’s The Virginian, 1962-1971 if he was relieved that
the show had been canceled after such a long run, Drury responded: "I felt
very sad. No relief. I had no need for relief. I would have gone on for another
10 years."
Drury starred as Captain Spike Ryerson in the short-lived
1974 ABC series Firehouse and went on to guest star on Alias Smith
and Jones, The Adventures of Brisco County Jr., The Fall Guy
and other shows. His big-screen résumé also include the war film The Young
Warriors (1967).
He played Texas Ranger captain Tom Price on the first three
episodes of Walker, Texas Ranger in 1993 and had a cameo in TNT's 2000
movie adaptation of The Virginian, starring Bill Pullman as the man
with no name.
His third wife, Carl Ann, died in August; they were married
for 40 years.
DRURY, James (James Child Drury)
Born: 4/18/1934, New York City, New
York, U.S.A.
Died: 4/6/2020, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
James Drury’s
westerns – actor:
Gunsmoke (TV) – 1955, 1959, 1961 (Booth Rider, Jerry Cass,
Johnny Reed, Tom)
The Last Wagon – 1956 (Lieutenant Kelly)
Love Me Tender – 1956 (Ray Reno)
Bitter Heritage (TV) – 1958 (Jesse James, Jr.)
Broken Arrow
(TV) – 1958 (Tahzay)
Bronco (TV) – 1958 (John Smith)
Decision (TV) – 1958 (The Virginian)
Man Wihout a Gun (TV) – 1958 (Cort Hamish)
The Rifleman (TV) – 1958, 1961 (Lloyd Carpenter, Spicer)
The Texan (TV) – 1958 (Johnny Kaler)
Zane
Grey Theater
(TV) – 1958, 1959 (Roy Richards, Jess McHugh)
Black Saddle (TV) – 1959 (Neal Adams)
Cheyenne
(TV) – 1959 (Bill Magruder)
Death Valley Days (TV) –
1959 (Joe Plato)
Elfego Baca (TV) – 1959 (Deputy Joe Monroe)
Have Gun – Will Travel (TV) – 1959 (Tony DeVries)
Good Day for a Hanging – 1959 (Paul Ridgely)
Lawman (TV) – 1959 (Clay, Stan Bates)
Rawhide (TV) – 1959, 1961 (Kenley, Johnny Adler, Rance)
Trackdown (TV) – 1959 (John Ward)
Ten Who Dared – 1960 (Walter Powell)
Toby Tyler or Ten Weeks with a
Circus – 1960 (Jim Weaver)
Wagon Train (TV) – 1960, 1962 (Justin Claiborne, Cole
Crawford)
The Yank (TV) – 1960 (Mathew Dorn)
The Rebel (TV) – 1960 (Paul Travers, Bert Pace)
Stagecoach West (TV) – 1961 (‘Stace’)
Ride the High Country – 1962 (Billy Hammond)
The Virginian (TV) – 1962-1971 (The Virginian)
Alias Smith and Jones (TV) – 1971, 1972 (Sheriff Lom
Trevors, Sheriff Tankersley)
The Devil and Miss Sarah (TV) – 1971 (Gil Turner)
The Bull of the West (TV) – 1972 (Man from Virginia)
When the West Was Fun: A Western
Reunion (TV) – 1979
The Fall Guy (TV) – 1983 (The Virginian)
Walker, Texas Ranger (TV) – 1993 (Captain Tom Price)
The All American Cowboy (TV) - 1985
The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw (TV) – 1991 (Jim)
The Adventures of Brisco
County Jr. (TV) – 1993,
1994 (Ethan Emerson)
Maverick – 1994 (Riverboat Poker Player)
The Virginian (TV) – 2000 (Rider)
Hell to Pay – 2005 (JT Coffee)
Tales of the Cap Gun Kid – 2011 (Ranger Captain)
Billy and the Bandit (TV) – 2019 (Grandpa)
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