Noah Beery, Jr., of the famous Beery family of acting fame (Noah was his dad and Wallace, his uncle), stars as "El Gato," a notorious outlaw but a friend of Josh Randall's. (I swear "El Gato" was on a previous episode but I can't find it listed).
Anyway, this is more of a comedy than the usual drama, as photographer "Archie Warner" (Olan Soule) pays Josh $400 if he can lead him to the famous bandit. He wants to shoot him, and Josh says "Whooa, no way," but it turns out he meant "shoot him" with a camera. You see Archie is jealous that fellow cameraman Matthew Brady has made a big name for himself, getting Abe Lincoln's photograph and he wants to scoop him.
Yeah, it's kind of a goofy episode and this show never did comedy anywhere near as well as it did the drama, but it's not bad. To me, Soule steals the show from Beery.
Soule is a not a name most of us would recognize, but you'd sure recognize his face when you saw this episode. He was on a lot of television shows.....and I mean a lot! Check out his resume, which is extremely long.
Anyway, this is more of a comedy than the usual drama, as photographer "Archie Warner" (Olan Soule) pays Josh $400 if he can lead him to the famous bandit. He wants to shoot him, and Josh says "Whooa, no way," but it turns out he meant "shoot him" with a camera. You see Archie is jealous that fellow cameraman Matthew Brady has made a big name for himself, getting Abe Lincoln's photograph and he wants to scoop him.
Yeah, it's kind of a goofy episode and this show never did comedy anywhere near as well as it did the drama, but it's not bad. To me, Soule steals the show from Beery.
Soule is a not a name most of us would recognize, but you'd sure recognize his face when you saw this episode. He was on a lot of television shows.....and I mean a lot! Check out his resume, which is extremely long.