`Correct in Every Detail`: General Custer in Hollywood
Transcription
`Correct in Every Detail`: General Custer in Hollywood
'Correct in Every Detail': General Custer in Hollywood Author(s): Paul Andrew Hutton Reviewed work(s): Source: Montana: The Magazine of Western History, Vol. 41, No. 1 (Winter, 1991), pp. 28-57 Published by: Montana Historical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4519359 . Accessed: 07/08/2012 13:54 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . Montana Historical Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Montana: The Magazine of Western History. http://www.jstor.org in 'Correct , lAr4~~~~~~~~ . "-'^ y ' .-. : ~~~~~~~~~~: 28 j ; "N3 MONTANATHE MAGAZINEOF WESTERNHISTORY Every Detail' General Custer in Hollywood by Paul Andrew Hutton At the conclusion of John Ford'sclassic film Fort Apache (1948), a group of newspaper reporters questions LieutenantColonel KirbyYork (ohn Wayne)about his forthcomingcampaignagainst Geronimo,while also reflecting on the glorious reputationof his regiment. That glory is chiefly derivedfromthe last standof the regiment'sprevious commander,LieutenantColonelOwenThursday (Henry Fonda). Colonel York despised Thursday,who had in reality sacrificed the regiment to racialarrogance,vaingloriouspride, and woundedvanity.The last stand had in fact been a near-routin which Thursdayhad playedlittle part except to initiate disaster. "No man died more gallantly,"Yorkresponds to a reporter'spraise of Atleft,WayneMaunderas Custerin a promotional cartoon,rides into a MonumentValley-likelandscapein Custer(ABC,1967). WINTER1991 John Wayne as LieutenantColonel York discusses "Thursday'sLastCharge"witha groupof reportersin FortApache(RKO,1948). Thursday,his voice sad and drippingwith irony, "norwon more honor for his regiment."Asked if he has seen the grand painting of "Thursday's Charge"now hanging in the nation's capitol, the colonel answers affirmatively. "That was a magnificent work," declares an enthusiastic reporter.'There were these massed columns of Apaches in their warpaintand feathered bonnets, and here was Thursdayleading his men in that heroic charge." "Correctin every detail,"the colonel responds. 29 Montana TheMagazineof WesternHistory f course, as ColonelYorkandthefilm's audienceknow only too well, not a single detailof the paintingwas correct.ButYork has come to understandthat if the sacrificeof his regiment is to have any value it must be as myth. Thatmyth,even if mostlyfalse, can stillprovidean idealof courageandsacrificethatwillgive the new regiment(andthe new nation)strength,pride,and a sense of identity. DirectorFordandscreenwriterFrankS. Nugent understoodthatthe importanceof heroes is not to be foundin the often mundaneor sordidrealityof their lives, but rather in what society makes of them. Ford,who based FortApacheloosely on the Custer story, had no problem in revealing the incompetence,hypocrisy,andbrutalityof the frontier armyor in displayingthe honor, dignity,and heroism of the Native Americans twenty years before it became fashionableto do so. Some critics, who often castigate Ford as a chauvinisticcelebrationist,arepuzzledby the conclusionof FortApache.They failto comprehendits subtlety, which goes, of course, to the heart of understandingand acceptingour most cherished nationalmythsforwhatthey actuallyare.Fordhad no problemwith the ending. Criticand filmmakerPeter Bogdanovichquestioned Ford about the ending of FortApachein a 1967 interview, rightly pointing out that it foreshadowedthe conclusion of an even darkerFord portrayalof frontiermyth in The Man WhoShot LibertyValance(1962): BOGDANOVICH: The end of FortApacheanticipates the newspapereditor'sline in LibertyValance, "whenthe legend becomes a fact,printthe legend."Do you agree with that? FORD: Yes-because I think it's good for the country. We've had a lot of people who were supposedto be greatheroes, andyou knowdamn well they weren't.But it's good for the countryto have heroes to look up to. Like Custer-a great hero. Well, he wasn't. Not that he was a stupid man-but he did a stupidjob that day.1 Despite Ford'sbelief that myth was "goodfor the country,"his artisticvision is dedicatedin both 1. PeterBogdanovich,John Ford(Berkeley:Universityof California Press, 1968),86. 2. WhenJohnFordapproachedFrankNugentto writethe screenplayFordgave Nugenta list of some fiftybooks to readon the Indian wars. LaterFord sent him to Arizonato get a feel for the landscape. "WhenI got back,"Nugentrecalled,"Fordasked me if I thoughtI had enoughresearch.I saidyes. 'Good,'he said,'Nowjustforgeteverything you'veread,andwe'llstartwritinga movie.'"So muchforthe impactof scholarshipon film. LindsayAnderson,AboutJohnFord (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1981),77-79.FortApache,like the other two filmsin Ford'scavalrytrilogy,She Worea YellowRibbon(1949)andRio Grande(1950),wasbasedon aJamesWarnerBellahshortstory.Bellah 30 Winter 1991 Fort Apacheand The Man WhoShot LibertyValance to the explanationof a truth about the past thatwas lost to most of his Hollywoodpeers andto manyhistoriansas well:thatgood men,withnoble motives, can do evil. His truthfulfiction of the Custerbattle,FortApache,remainsthe best of over forty celluloid portrayalsof America'smost flamboyantmilitaryfailure,GeorgeArmstrongCuster.2 The trick,of course,in reviewingthe checkered cinematiccareer of the enigmaticGeneralCuster is to find a film that is correctin any detail,much less one correct in everydetail. Much like John Wayne's ColonelYork in FortApachewe, as the audience viewing these films, must search for a highercorrectnessin themthana mere adherence to fact-and thatcanprovea dauntingtaskindeed. Custer's dead troopers had yet to receive a proper burial before the redoubtableWilliamF. "BuffaloBill" Cody was amazing eastern audiences withhis TheRedRightHand;orBuffaloBill's First Scalp for Custer.Now, you had to admire Cody's grit, for in the summer of 1876 he had abandonedthe eastern stage (wherehe had been doing good box-officebusiness since 1872) to rejoin his old regimenton the plains.Everyonefrom GeneralPhilSheridanon downbelievedthiswould be the last great Indian war, and Cody was not aboutto miss it. Havingheardthe shocking news aboutCuster, the Fifth Regimentwas scouting the rolling hills along WarbonnetCreek, Nebraska, on July 17, 1876,when an advancepartyof LittleWolfs Cheyennes, on their way north to join Sitting Bull, clashed with a smallpartyof soldiersled by Cody. The long-hairedscout, garbed in one of his stage costumes of blackvelvet trimmedwith silver buttons and lace, brought down the only casualtyin the skirmish, an unfortunatelybold Cheyenne warriorwith the ironic name of Yellow Hair (the name was in recognitionof a blonde scalp he had taken). Codypromptlyliftedthe fellow'shair,proclaiming his grisly trophy as "the first scalp for Custer."The soldiers then chased the Indians backto the RedCloudAgency in one of the army's few victories of the GreatSioux War.3 Withinfive weeks Codyleft the army,heading eastwardwhere the opportunitiesfor glory before the footlightswere far greaterthan on the plains. laterwrotethe scriptsfor Ford'stale of the BuffaloSoldiers,Sergeant Rutledge(1960) and TheMan WhoShot LibertyValance(1962). His cavalryshortstories,most of themoriginallypublishedin the Saturday EveningPostin the late-1940s,appearedas JamesWarnerBellah,Reveille (Greenwich,Conn.:FawcettGoldMedal,1962). 3. PaulL.Hedren,FirstScalpforCuster:TheSkirmishat Warbonnet Creek,Nebraska,July17, 1876 (Glendale:ArthurH. ClarkCo., 1980). 4. WilliamF. Cody, TheLife of Hon. WilliamF. CodyKnownas BuffaloBill (Lincoln:Universityof NebraskaPress, 1978), 360; Don Russell,TheLivesand Legendsof BuffaloBill (Norman:Universityof OklahomaPress, 1960),253-57. Paul AndrewHutton The new play,accordingto BuffaloBill,was a fiveact monstrosity"withouthead or tail... a noisy, rattling,gunpowderentertainment."It was Cody's most successful play.4 AfterWarbonnetCreekit became increasingly difficultto tell if artwere imitatinglife orvice versa. Codyhad dressed the morningof July 17, 1876,in his Mexicanvaquerostage outfitin anticipationof a battle with the Indians.He was anxious to later tell his easternaudiencesthathis colorfulcostume was authentic, for he wanted to shed the drab buckskinshe had alwaysworn. Dressed properly for the parthe venturedforth and boldlykilled an Indian in a frontier ritual that immediately reaffirmedhis hero status. He then hurried east, scalp in tow, to exploit this act before audiences hungryfor a look at a "realWildWest"as fresh as the morningheadlines, but alreadyanachronistic to an increasinglyurban,industrialsociety. It was as if the frontierWest was providingthem with living,breathingentertainment.Afterhis premier performanceatWarbonnetCreek (andit certainly was a more dauntingact than ErrolFlynnor John Wayneever hadto perform),Codysimplytook the show on the road in TheRedRightHand, and the profitswere indeed impressive. ' x Then Cody initiated his famous Wild West show in 1883 he continued V/V/ V his personalidentificationwiththe Custer story. Sitting Bull toured for a season with the company,and Custer'sLastStandwas often reenactedas the climaxof the program.As time passed Codyupdatedthe historical pageants,so that the last stand rotatedwith scenes from the SpanishAmericanWaror the Boxer Rebellion,but Cody's first scalp for Custer remained standard fare throughoutthe show's long run.5 Cody was naturallyattractedto the new mediumof movingpictures.As earlyas 1894his Wild West companywas filmed by the Edison Kinetoscope for the peepshow circuit. It was financial disaster,however,thatbroughtCodyinto the film business. Fred Bonfils and HarryTammen, the buccaneeringcapitalistswho owned the Denver Post,forcedCodyintobankruptcyin 1913andthen used himto form,in collaborationwiththe Essanay Company,the Colonel W. F. Cody (BuffaloBill) HistoricalPictures Companyin September1913. 5. The evolutionof Cody'sshowis fullyandablydiscussedin Don Russell,TheWildWestor,A HistoryoftheWildWestShows(FortWorth: AmonCarterMuseumof WesternArt,1970). 6. KevinBrownlow,TheWar,theWestandthe Wilderness (NewYork: AlfredA. Knopf,1979),232. The companywas to filma historicalepic of the Indianwars using manyof the actualparticipants, includingCody,retiredLieutenantGeneralNelson Miles,FrankBaldwin,CharlesKing,DeweyBeard, Iron Tail, Short Bull, and Running Hawk. The scenario for Buffalo Bill's Indian Warswas by CharlesKing, a formerFifth Cavalryofficerwho had been with Codyat WarbonnetCreekand had since become a famous novelist. It included the Battle of Summit Springs, Cody's first scalp for Custer,the deathof SittingBull,andwas climaxed witha re-creationof the tragedyatWoundedKnee. DenverPostreporterCourtneyRyleyCooper,who wouldlaterghostwritethe autobiographyof Cody's wife and write a 1923 Custer novel, The Last Frontier,thatwouldbe twicefilmedby Hollywood, reported that the picture, thanks to Cody and GeneralMiles, "washistoricallycorrect in every detail and that not a featurewas forgotten."6 The government,havingprovidedsix-hundred cavalrymenfor the film, may have been unhappy withCody'sdeterminationto portraythe massacre atWoundedKneetruthfully.CodyandMiles quarreled bitterly during the filming and their long friendshipcame to a stormyend. The governmentdelayedrelease of the filmfor almost a year. When it finallyplayedin New York and Denver, Cody and several Sioux appearedon stage to introduceit. The film was rereleased in 1917 after Cody's death but was never widely distributed."Myobject of desire,"declared Buffalo Bill before his death, "has been to preserve historyby the aidof the camerawithas manyliving participantsin the closing Indianwars of North Americaas could be procured."7 Perhapsin his final forayinto show business, BuffaloBill had, for once, been too truthful. Ben Black Elk, whose father was in the film, claimed that the Interior Departmentbanned it and later destroyed it. No copy is knownto exist today. EvenbeforeCody'sfilmwas completedin October 1913,the Custerstoryhad alreadybeen told at least four times on film.WilliamSelig's 1909onereeler, Custer'sLastStandor OntheLittleBighorn, used a reenactmentof the battleon the actualsite by the MontanaNationalGuardas the centerpiece of its story. More ambitiouswas Thomas Ince's 1912 three-reeler,Custer'sLast Fight. Starringas well as directed by Francis Ford, the brother of John Ford,the movie centered on the old tale that Rain-in-the-Facehad stalked Custer at the Little Bighorn to avenge his earlier arrest. The film ranks as one of the few Custer movies to treat 7. Ibid., 228. See also Russell,BuffaloBill, 457-58,and William Judson,'The Movies,"in BuffaloBill and the WildWest(Pittsburgh: Universityof PittsburghPress, 1981). 31 Montana The Magazine of WesternHistor Olt a picture for boys and trirls of HERE'S all ages. A BEAUTIFUL story of love anid sacriice set in scenes of naturial grandeur. a E T TAIE of the making of a nation. show'\ ing thousands of Indians. plainsmen. tnited States cavalrymen, wagon traiuns The dramatic episode of Custer's last j ^ stand. Indian warfare-the attack on tht fortt-the repulse. You mist see this p)ittlre. Feature ShoNwn Sunday (J2 :!.20- 4: - . I)FSS A at tO--0-;no We ok I)avs fft 1 :05- -1o O\t at Ix Or ga Ch Newspaperadvertisementfor the Scarlet West (First National, 1925) Indiansas vicious savages, leaving no doubt that the Siouxmust be swept aside to makewayfor the greater civilizationthat Ford'sCusterrepresents. SittingBull is portrayedas a cowardwhile Custer appearsas a wise, experiencedcommander.Ford's heroic portrayalof Custer set a patternunbroken in filmuntilhis brothermadeFortApachein 1948.8 LikeFortApache,D. W. Griffith's1912film, The Massacre,presentedanimpressionisticinterpretation of the Custer fight far removed from the penchant for historical detail found in the Ince film.The battleis secondaryto the primarystoryof a pioneer family moving West and of the heroic scout who silentlyloves the pioneer'swife. Unlike the Ince film, the Griffithfilm treats the Indians heroically.An attractiveIndianfamilyis presented in parallelto the pioneer family, but their happy lives are destroyedin a Washita-likemassacreled by a long-haired,Custer-likecavalryofficer.The Indianfather escapes, but his wife and child are 8. VincentA. Heier, Jr., "ThomasH. Ince's Custer'sLast Fight: Reflectionson the Makingof the CusterLegend in Film,"[St. Louis 5 (May 1976),21-26;Brownlow,The War,the Westerners]Westward, Westand the Wilderness, 257-60. 32 slain, and he swears dark revenge. When the Indian leads his warriorsagainst the wagon train, now escorted by the same cavalrytroopers who hadkilledhis family,the soldiers andsettlers form a ring aroundthe young pioneer'swife and infant. Oneby one the whitesperish- gamblerandpriest, general and scout-falling side by side. When the young pioneer arrives with a rescue column he findswife andchild aliveunderthe pile of corpses, the men having made human shields of themselves. Custer is identifiableas the leader of the cavalry, but was not named in the film-possibly because such libertieswere takenwiththe facts of LittleBighorn,and possibly because the Ince film was released at the same time. Nevertheless, The Massacreclearlypresents the essence of the early Custermyth, both in printand on film:the heroic self-sacrificeof Custerand his men to protectthe pioneers and expandcivilization'sborders. Bison Films,the releasingcompanyforthe Ince film,alsoreleasedCampaigningWithCusterin1913 and Custer'sLast Scoutin 1915.Successful novels were the basis of two more Custerfilmsof thatera: Vitagraph's 1916 four-partserial, Britton of the Seventh,featuringNed Finleyas Custer,based on CyrusTownsendBrady's1914novel;andMarshall Neilan's Bob Hamptonof Placer (1921), starring DwightCrittendenas Custerandbased on Randall Parrish's 1910 book. Both films dealt with the theme of a disgracedofficerwho redeems himself at the Little Bighorn. This plot device became commonplacein Custer fiction and films. Custer appearedbrieflyin CliffordSmith'sWildBill Hickok (1923), where he persuades William S. Hart as Wild Bill to strapback on his pistols to bring law and order to the frontier. Custer made another cameo in Metropolitan'sTheLastFrontier(1926), this time assisting Wild Bill and BuffaloBill in a filmbased on CourtneyRyleyCooper's1923novel. RKOremade the film as a serial in 1932 with WilliamDesmond as Custer.9 Several Custerfilms were released to coincide with the fiftiethanniversaryof the last stand.The first was J. G. Adophe's 1925 nine-reeler, The ScarletWest,which used the unusualplotdevice of an Indian hero. RobertFrazierportrayedCardelanche, the educated son of a Sioux chief who attemptsto lead his people over to white culture. 9. Dataon silent Custerfilmsis in KennethW. Munden,ed., The AmericanFilm InstituteCatalogof MotionPicturesProducedin the UnitedStates:FeatureFilms1921-1930(NewYork:AFI,1971);Edward Buscombe,ed., The BFICompanionto the Western(New York:Atheneum, 1988);andAllen Eyles, The Western(NewYork:A. S. Barnes, 1975). CampingWithCuster,releasedin 1913,is most likelya variant releasetitleof CampaigningWithCusterofthe sameyear.Mostcertainly the 1912film Custer'sLastRaidis the same film as Ince'sCuster'sLast Fight.The Ince film is one of the few of these films to have survived; almostall of them have been lost. Paul AndrewHutton battle by a participant.He received a standing ovationfromthe crowdandthen settledin to watch the great tragedyof his youth distortedinto fancifulentertainmentfora peoplecompletelydivorced by Clara Dow, but the gulf between them proves too great and he returns to his own people after from frontiertimes. One wonders if Custer'switheywipe outCuster'scommand.Suchaninvolved dow, Elizabeth,who then lived in New YorkCity, plotwas not allowedto slow the actionin Anthony could bring herself to visit ColonyTheater. TheFlamingFrontierprovedto be the last maJ. Xydias' WithGeneralCusterat Little Bighorn, released the followingyear as part of a series of jor silent film on Custer, although the general films on Americanhistory by Sunset Pictures.10 brieflyrode againin Tim McCoy'sSpoiler'sof the Universal's1926film,TheFlamingFrontierwas Westin 1927. After the rash of commemorative the best publicized of the rash of Custer films, Custerfilms,the storywas neglected for a decade, billed as "the supreme achievement in western had a brief revival of interest in the years just epics.""Againthe story involveda disgraced sol- before World War II, then vanished again as a dierwho wins redemptionat LittleBighorn.Inthis Hollywoodsubjectuntil 1948. case the soldier was former pony express rider By the time filmmakersreturnedto his story, Bob Langdon, played by Hoot Gibson, who is Custer'sheroic image was under assault from a unjustlyexpelled fromWest Point.He quite natu- variety of sources. Most notable of these was rallyheads West and promptlyfinds employment FredericF. Vande Water'shighly successful 1934 as a scout for Custer, played by Dustin Farnum. biography,Glory-Hunter. For fifty-eightyears no Corruptionon the frontierandineptitudein Wash- one had daredto chip awayat the hallowedimage ington underminethe effortsof the heroic Custer of Custer, created by the popular press in the to keep peace with the cheated Indianswho are decade afterLittleBighornandthen carefullynurfinallydrivento the warpath.At the last moment, turedby ElizabethCusterin a trilogyof bestselling Custersends scoutLangdonfor reinforcements, memoirs. Biographies by Frederick Whittaker, and although he is unable to save the Seventh Frederick Dallenbaugh, and Frazier Hunt were wildlyhagiographic,while for those whose tastes Langdondoes defeat the white villain,rescue the were not literaryin nature the Anheuser-Busch heroine,andget reinstatedto WestPoint. Companyhad more than 150,000copies of F. Otto Becker's Custer'sLastFight distributedas a standard prop of saloon decor. This gaudy print, as close to both history and art as many turn-of-thecenturyAmericansever got, earnestlyreinforced the he last stand was message of Custer'sheroic sacrifice.Custer's elaborately staged T with Farnum,who came out of retirement critics, and there were manyboth inside and outto portrayCuster,giving his role the ulti- side the military,held their tongues so long as his mate hero treatment.One ad for the film simply widow lived. But she outlivedthem all, not dying ran a portraitof Farnumas Custer over the ban- until 1933.15 Van de Water, well known in eastern literary ner-"see his sublime courage in The Flaming Frontier."" ThecriticfortheNewYorkTimeswas circles as an editor,critic,poet, and novelist,was however,notingthatFarnum"was heavilyinfluencedin his writingby the debunking unimpressed, in one of his lax moods while impersonatingGen- spirit of the 1920s, best exemplified by Lytton eral Custer."'3 Strachey'spioneeringEminent Victorians(1918). Whenthe filmpremieredat New York'sColony Manyother writershad followedStrachey'slead, Theater on April 4, 1926, General Edward S. andallwere deeplytouchedby the cynicismgrowwas out of WorldWar I, by a rising spirit of antia of He had honor.'4 ing Godfrey special guest militarism,by the workof SigmundFreud,andby distinguished himself as a young lieutenant in CaptainFrederickBenteen's detachmentat Little Bighorn,andhis 1892articlein Centurymagazine 15. Forthe evolutionof the Custermythsee PaulA Hutton,"From Frustratedin his efforts,he leaves the Sioux and acceptsa commissioninthecavalry.Hesoonfalls inlovewiththepostcommander's played daughter, hadoftenbeenpraisedas the best accountof the 10. Munden,ed., AmericanFilm InstituteCatalog,284, 420, 687; IndianapolisStar,December20, 1925. 11. IndianapolisStar,September26, 1926. 12. Ibid.,September23, 1926. 13. New YorkTimes,April11, 1926. 14. Ibid.,April5, 1926. Despite the epic qualitiesand enormous budget of TheFlamingFrontierno copy of the film is knownto exist today. LittleBig Hornto LittleBig Man:The ChangingImageof a Western HeroinPopularCulture," Western HistoricalQuarterly, 7 (January1976), LastStand:TheAnatomyofanAmerican 1945;BrianW. Dippie,Custer's Myth(Missoula:Universityof Montana,1976);RobertM.Utley,Custer andtheGreatControversy: TheOriginandDevelopment ofa Legend(Los Angeles:WesternlorePress, 1962);BruceA. Rosenberg,Custerandthe Epic of Defeat(UniversityPark:PennsylvaniaUniversityPress, 1974); Kent Ladd Steckmesser, The WesternHero in Historyand Legend (Norman:Universityof OklahomaPress, 1965);and EdwardTabor HeroinAmerica:A Historyof Linenthal,ChangingImagesoftheWarrior PopularSymbolism(NewYork:EdwinMellenPress, 1982). 33 -- _t et q? 3gN*rff t t.Jllt l<, ..... t i¢^ . t rhe (]"E1) Ell }.t.1sInd r?rt<1)N ftx i;xll t28} DEAI)UY i;iaP1.?s Girche t, t.';X'& 1745Attg5hlt$'t.)f C,0NFllA' of Deathtz ii^>.^>s<43 srt, u Iwi P4 te'. * iUS @.s g j5t }gt K starring o Francis {-G) o4WEe &->$ - Promotional booklet at left for one of the earliestCusterfilms, ; Custer'sLast Fight FROeV (BisonFilms,1912), av^ ffi oN5^ =4sCuster's Last Fight"l 3 . Reels 10 1 3.ff#tFzt 3 Rejets BISON FIIX PrMs1<1lsclFd by the Ntli\&iY}1K M(}1>IC>Ns O. = 4 0| ' SSll,l)EERS X000 Ite¢}t(!sl!atifi 9tS FEiktl.*_. St'iit}?r:}l'itit'S. ? }.o0/>INDIAWS 0 iNdS>:4<?rife .\1?1!?N i's' ttle' Al. AtXd' lrJS Settll gYett3sMmt ttl ;}'tg ASoM<itaX<t8 [\itsl l:t't) '>ft: r?xwnk an tetP 0 lit.,tXhi t.>tinas W i }Mtt>. = _ % X _ £'1X. Xt.\SS.?tC,}RE>. t[ek e-t s >e f; )'>IMA.N7'D 0N' 'R'XE,t.7r?i't.lt BI<:ii110RN S }3lrvE:}¢,fNt Uli?CXt F \'FItlt srs>.} t>1Eo Fz?.XBrss >oT*Ns E.K.s',9 5 = Ford (center) as §: ov8) Custer, promis ed actionandaccuracy, 0< ^ while a promotional ^ ba poster for William 1 0; Selig's 1909 film, Custer'sLast Stand, at right, made similar claims. 0 10 1 1t1at\1tE. = _ X0 't: trswe;s e ; ;><?ti. .z?.z iti ta¢wrtx Cs? i a .9as>zlssl eldarMa>r Rents.(1apt. I>t.xs atxl (Jen Z zuv4>r s \ :xittalS;: **nter. artd Retw3a.?d st.he fl#;uk<.?* }kxi : ( lA Il+ r. Te7 1 ?\7xt li?ttia?n o - <;t S i l R I,;T) ){I.S (>i)s1.t.4NI 'IllrillKt$ (harge* [X>tO 1'111E,VFItY ,SWS Ot t>TI Senswational}{and-to*tiand tonflicts i55 | : tRhe{.ast .istandof Custer oll the HiM _ The Arrest iat ltain-in-the-Face. he Xndsanl)ang The hxrault of the Indians bv Buffale Bfll The lleath of Sittin; Bull l - EE _ THEAOG IERILLING PA EYER SEEN pz Withoutstretched arms,a man on a hilltop,at right, gestures to a groupof Indiansduringfilming of BuffaloBill Cody's 1913film, TheIndian Wars,while below, Bob Hamptondames Kirkwood)is foundto be a hero in Bob Hamptonof Placer (1921). - L = WIgIllJllillllllllullglltlglJllul|llllllllXllltlgltllll{lll"lnl""|lml_k S | At right,Custer (CharlesDudleyon left) made a brief appearancein Wild Bill Hickok (CliffordSmith, 1923)to persuade WilliamS. Hart (right)to strap back on his pistols. Below, Cody'sFight * * * [ [ n X | <, o 9) With Yellowhandis depictedin a 1922 pen-and-inkby CharlesM. Russell. - . D co D 3^ - l % - - t :e 3 D CD D { a'.+ -Frontier children Custer,whileBuffaloBill ! during 3"tid filming (Universal, of his ; ; fftop e> -' w-y-- -- R h,} t , 1926), ko s {'t ,r s r __m ¢Tthe-a¢e4" X w t =N t 1 l; i' ** r +'t I i; '% . k __ L _ F}RSRP§CURES < ] F i D6BM tW,+t r"t*l v +^t* ^(q^w X *4POR Ot t#**tfl ^t ^14#tv lvSi^*te v1 81 , = i. o 9 :: = 3 0 : M^RI1;IAQUIE Hep Ete - e tnti 1E = r<; ^^^sf 3em *f Amerivn Hrmo*;#tx ALL NEB Kl%^tf e"*tse i st The $ SEE r L-;rz t** ttttett BRAVEST MAN 4-ft > , B. l - Hu ;S - _i_ Subw s Collrl\1S ye | m n ss_B_ . ___ Newspaperadvertisementat C_ rightpromotesTheFlaming ___ last majorsilent film on Cody,below, seated next to tepee,gesturestoIndian w__ __ .! i F -- avs-%;w ^.t"Um ^w*4W¢¢ = r 2 . t t >;fs;s;e jirr>ttXi;f^7 WX l s of' - L t > tfiS t C 1913film, TheIndianWars. o oq - . D g ls x- @ @F; s^ ;5} t ¢Mi 5 Xhti§, q 21's,#'< $ ; Montana TheMagazineof WesternHistory a new emphasis on social forces at the expense of the previous celebrationof the individual.Many heroes besides Custerwere reinterpretedto suit the times, butwhile otherreputationssurvivedthe attacks,Custer'sdid not. ew books have had so immediateand dramatican impacton both historicalinterpretationandthe popularmindas didVande Water's Glory-Hunter.The biography is simply the most influentialbook ever writtenon Custer. Van de Water created a compelling portraitof a man consumed by ambition, driven by demons of his own creation, and finally destroyed by his own hubris. Gone foreverwas the marblehero of the past. Withina few years the glory hunterinterpretationbecamethe standardportrayalof Custerin the popularpress andfiction.It set the tone for novels such as Harry Sinclair Drago's Montana Road (1935), Ernest Haycox's Bugles in the Afternoon (1944), Will Henry'sNo Survivors(1950), Frank Gruber'sBugles West (1954), Thomas Berger's LittleBigMan (1964),andLewisB. Patten'sTheRed Sabbath(1968).16 Films were changing as well, and at first it seemed as if Hollywoodmight follow the cynical lead of the literaryelites. Adaptingto the revolutionarychanges wroughtby the coming of sound, filmssuch as TheDawnPatrol(1930)andAllQuiet on theWesternFront(1930)exposedthe insanityof war;while LittleCaeser(1930), ThePublicEnemy (1931),andScarface(1931)condemnedthe power of the underworldwhile linking it to societal indifferenceto poverty.Meanwhile,TheFrontPage (1931),Iam a FugitiveFroma ChainGang(1932), and TheDarkHorse (1932) made it clear that corruptionwas not confinedto the mobsters. As social commentariessuch films, combined as they were with a more daring approach to sexualityandviolence, enragedconservativesegments of the Americanpublic.These groupsfound theirvoice withthe 1933formationof the Legionof Decency.WillHays,whohadbeen appointedtwelve years earlierby the majorfilmcompaniesto insure the decency of Hollywood'sproduct,now found a powerfulally in the Legion. His job had proved futileuntilthe church-backedLegiongave him the cloutto cleanup Hollywood.Gonewas the sex and violence,buta successfulattackwas also launched F 16. ForCusterfictionsee BrianW.Dippie,"JackCrabbandthe Sole Survivorsof Custer'sLastStand,"Western AmericanLiterature,4 (Fall 1969),189-202. 36 Winter 1991 againstthe cynical irreverenceand negativetone of the social commentaryfilms. Censorship triumphedso that the slum problemsthat produced the gangsters were replaced by the agonies of youngAndyHardyas he learnedthe socialgraces, and the corruptionsendemic in politicallife were drownedout by the spiritedsongs and high-stepping dancers of Busby Berkeley musicals. The only truly serious topics touched upon were in celluloid versions of classic literature,and even they were cleaned up. Thus was the American cinemamade safe for every shelteredtwelve-yearold in the country.17 In such a stiflingatmosphereno filmwas about to attacka nationalhero like Custer.Furthermore, the very forces in the late twenties that had led to the social commentaryfilmshad also left the western in disreputeas simple-mindedentertainment for the masses. Withthe 1929stock marketcrash the studios retrenched and proved unwilling to finance films of the magnitiudenecessary to tell Custer'sstory.This trendwas exacerbatedby the coming of sound, for the bulky and expensive sound equipment made outdoor action dramas more difficultand costly to film. Prestige westerns continued to be made throughoutthe 1930s, with Cimarronin 1931becoming the only western to date to win the Academy Awardfor Best Picture,but they were limited to only one or two a year. Instead the genre was dominatedby the budget, or B, western. Led by Republic Studio, many independent production companies now rushed to fill the entertainment gap createdby the desertionof the westernby the majors. Stories became increasingly simpleminded and action-oriented, with the singing cowboy emerging as a Hollywood staple. Gone was the starkwestern realismpioneeredby silent star WilliamS. Hart.In its place came the entertaining froth of Ken Maynard,Buck Jones, Hoot Gibson,andGeneAutry.Not untilthe commercial and criticalsuccess of John Ford's Stagecoachin 1939, which also rescued John Wayne from the Republic Bs, was interest in serious, prestige westerns renewed.18 Custer thus turned up in only five films in the decade, with three of them low-budgetserials for the Saturday-matineecrowd:RKO's1932 remake of The Last Frontierwith William Desmond as 17. RobertSklar,Movie-MadeAmerica:A CulturalHistoryofAmericanMovies(NewYork:RandomHouse,1975),173-94.So powerfuland so attentiveto detaildid the censorshipgroupsbecome, thatby 1943 they could pressureProducersReleasingCorporationto change the nameof the maincharacterof the highly successfulBillythe Kidfilm series from the historicalBilly Bonneyto the fictional Billy Carson. Thus, matinee-crowdmoppetswere rescued fromthe glorificationof westernoutlaws.PaulAndrewHutton,"DreamscapeDesperado,"New MexicoMagazine,68 (une 1990),44-57. Paul AndrewHutton Custer;the fifteen-episodeCuster'sLast Stand in 1936with FrankMcGlynn,Jr.,as a ratherelderlylooking Custer (the serial was cut and rereleased as a feature a decade later);and the 1939Johnny Mack Brownvehicle The OregonTrail, with Roy Barcroftas Custer.ClayClementhad a cameo as Custerin TheWorldChanges(1933),a darktale of the rise of a meat-packingmagnate starringPaul Muni.Custer appearsonly long enough to inform Muni'sisolatedDakotafamilythatthe CivilWaris at last over,butthey neverknew it started.Finally, Custeris featuredin the splashiestepic westernof the decade, Cecil B. DeMille's 1937celebrationof ManifestDestiny, ThePlainsman. DeMille'sfilmonce againbroughtCuster(John Miljan)togetherwithWildBill (GaryCooper)and BuffaloBill (ames Ellison),this time with a glamorous CalamityJane (JeanArthur)thrown in for good measure, in a wild tale remarkablefor its fidelity to minute historical detail (the statue on Custer's desk is correct) and its absolute disregardforthe broadoutlinesof the historicalrecord. Custerappearsas something of a domineering father figure to the other characters-scolding, rescuing, ordering. The last stand is briefly depicted in a dream sequence narratedby Anthony Quinn as an Indianwarriorcapturedby Hickok andCody.Rarelyhas the usuallysubtleconnection betweennineteenth-century artworkandtwentiethcenturyfilm been so blatantlydisplayedas in the tableauvivant of the AlfredWaud drawingfrom Whittaker'sbiographythatcomposesthe laststand sequence in the film.Whenan Indianbulletfinally pierces his ever-so-nobleheart, Custer clutches onto the flag he has gallantlydefendedandslowly sinksfromview.The uncharitablycorrectcriticfor the New YorkTimes,a paperwhichhad long since committed itself to the debunked Custer of the Van de Water camp, noted that "Custerrated no more than he received:a brieffadeout."19 Custer was back twice in 1940. First in the personof PaulKellyin MGM'sWyoming,a lightbut entertainingWallace Beery oater filmed in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Beery plays his patented good-badman role, helping Custer clean up a crooked town in a film best remembered as the 18. Twoinvaluableguidesto the westerngenreareBuscombe,ed., BFICompanionto the Western, andPhilHardy,TheWestern(NewYork: WilliamMorrowand Co., 1983).Highlyopinionatedbut delightful,is BrianGarfield,WesternFilms:A CompleteGuide(New York:Rawson Associates,1982),while an equallypersonalbut more anecdotaloverviewis in JonTuska,TheFilmingof the West(GardenCity,NewYork: Doubleday,1976).The standardhistoryremainsGeorgeN. Feninand WilliamK Everson,TheWestern: FromSilentstotheSeventies(NewYork: GrossmanPublishers,1973), while two useful anthologiesare Jack Nachbar,ed.,FocusontheWestern(EnglewoodCliffs,NJ.:Prentice-Hall, 1974) and RichardW. Etulain,ed., "WesternFilms:A BriefHistory," Journalof the West,22 (October1983). 19. New YorkTimes,January17, 1937. initial teaming of the affable star with Marjorie Main. More impressive was Warner Brothers' Santa Fe Trail, directed by Michael Curtizand purportingto tell the storyof howyoungJebStuart (ErrolFlynn)andGeorgeCuster(RonaldReagan) frustrateJohn Brownin Kansasthen capturehim at HarpersFerry.RaymondMassey'sportrayalof Brownas a mad OldTestamentprophetsteals the show, despite the film'spro-southernposture. Not the least of the film'sinaccuracieswas that the real Custer was but sixteen at the time of Brown'sKansasraids.The RobertBucknerscript also had Reagan'sCusteras thoughtfuland introspective,given to furrowinghis browand actually thinkingthat slaveryjust might be wrong-none of which characteristicswas in keeping with the real Custer. Even Reagan,who had just finished his role as George Gipp in Knute Rockne-All American,noticed that the plot was not following his childhoodhistorylessons."IdiscoveredI would again be playing a biographicalrole," he noted, "butwith less attentionto the truth this time."20 The New York Times, later to be at odds with Reaganso often, was in complete agreementthis time:"Foranyonewho has the slightest regardfor the spirit-not to mentionthe facts-of American But history,it will proveexceedingly annoying."21 while SantaFe Trailmay have flunkedas history, it got an "A"as rousing entertainment. T here was no slackening ofCuster's celluloid appearancesin 1941. As the nation warilyconfronteda world consumed by war,andhesitatinglypreparedforits owninevitable entry into conflagration,militaryheroes became quite popular again. Alfred Green's Badlands of Dakota for Universal featured Addison Richards as Custer in yet another horse opera reuniting him with Wild Bill (RichardDix) and CalamityJane (Frances Farmer). Robert Stack, then a young contractactor appearingin only his fourth film, remembered it as "one of the most forgettablewesterns ever made."22 20. Michael E. Welsh, "WesternFilm, RonaldReagan,and the WesternMetaphor," inArchieP. McDonald,ed., ShootingStars:Heroes and Heroinesof WesternFilm (Bloomington:IndianaUniversityPress, 1987),153.SeealsoTonyThomas,TheFilmsofRonaldReagan (Secaucus, NewJersey:CitadelPress,1980),109-14;RonaldReaganwithRichardG. Hubler,Where'sthe Restof Me? (NewYork:Duell, Sloanand Pearce, 1965),95-96;andRonaldW. Reagan,"LookingBackat SantaFe Trail," GreasyGrass,6 (May1990),2-5. 21. New YorkTimes,December21, 1940. 22. RobertStack and MarkEvans,StraightShooting(New York: Macmillan,1980),63. 37 IDERING ERROL AT YOU OLIVIA 1~~~~~~~~EB i a^^^PQB^^~~~~~~~~~LSI 1~~U Few lobbycards said it all as well as the one abovefor TheyDied withtheirBoots On (WarnerBrothers, 1941),while CrazyHorse (AnthonyQuinn)at right ,rabsthe SeventhCavalry's ruidonin the finalcharge at LittleBighornin the same film.Below,WildBill Hickok (GaryCooper) argueswith Custer (ohn Miljan)in ThePlainsman (Paramount, 1937) whether T Allreproductions courtesyPaulAndrewHutton unlessnotedotherwise. I. the arrowis mightierthan the quill. ' i -i JX C D Cladin buckskins,Custer, above,takes aim at Little Bighornin AlfredWaud's illustration, Custer'sLast Stand,fromFrederick Whittaker's1876biographyof Custer,while at right,John Miljan as Custer in The Plainsman (Paramount, 1937) creates a living tableau of the Wauddrawing. said I L --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~7 RonaldReagan,above,smiles his ~~~~~~~~~~~-1 familiarsmile as George Custer,but ErrolFlynn'sJeb Stuartgives the orders in Santa Fe Trail (WarnerBrothers, 1940).Aboveright,with good wishes fromGeneralsSherman(Warner Richmond), Terry (Kenneth Harlan), and Custer (RoyBarcroft),pioneer scouts JeffScott (JohnMackBrown) andDeadwood(FuzzyKnight)agree to help quell outlawraidsin OregonTrail (Universal, 1939).Atright,Custer(Paul Kelly)confrontsJoseph Calleiaas the villainin Wyoming(MGM,1940). familiarsmilea oElizabeth ErrolFlynn 1940).AboverigDied . scene with r Oliviade Havillandas Custer and !as Custerfroma They in their On ~~~~~~~~~~Boots (Warner Brothers, 1941) ~MontanaThe Magazine of Western HistoryWinter Two powerfulHollywoodtycoons clashed early in 1941 over Custerfilms. Both Jack Warnerand Sam Goldwyn developed prestige westerns on Custer,andthen arguedbitterlyoverjust who had priorityrights to the story. Custerbelongs to the public domain, of course, so neither possessed exclusive "rights,"but Warner triumphed and Goldwyneventuallygave up on his film. He had envisioned SeventhCavalryas a sure-firebox-office winnerto followthe success of his 1940hit The Westernerwith GaryCooperandWalterBrennan. Goldwyn planned to reunite these two stars in SeventhCavalry,with Brennan (who had won an AcademyAwardfor his Judge RoyBean portrayal in TheWesterner)as a villainousCusterand Cooper as a CaptainBenteen-likeofficer. It was WarnerBrothers' TheyDied with their Boots On that went into production.The title was from Thomas Ripley's 1935 popular history of western gunfighters, a property purchased by Warnersbut never developed.It was a majorfilm forWarners,with $1,357,000eventuallybudgeted for the production.MichaelCurtiz,the directorof swashbucklingadventurefilms such as Captain Blood, The Chargeof the LightBrigade,and The AdventuresofRobinHood,was scheduledto direct the film but was replaced by RaoulWalsh once ErrolFlynnwas cast as the lead. Flynnand Curtiz had clashed on previousfilms andwouldnot work together again.Walsh,also a masterof the adventure film, with such classics as WhatPrice Glory? and High Sierra to his credit, was just as importantlya great drinkingbuddy of Flynn.23 The originalscript by WallyKline and Aeneas Mackenzieclearly was influencedby the Van de Waterbiography,butthe studiodecidedto rewrite the scriptto betterfitthe Flynnpersona.Associate producerRobertFellowsproperlycharacterizedit as a "fairytale, with no attempt at adherence to historicalfact."Still, screenwriterLenoreCoffee, calledin to punch-upthe romanticscenes between George and Elizabeth, was horrified by "really shocking inaccuracies"in the script. She was ignored, and, despite her majorcontributionto the finalscript,denied screen credit.24WarnerBrothers had firmlydecided to treat GeneralCusterin the same swashbucklingmanner in which they had handledRobinHood in 1938.The tenor of the times influencedthe decision. "Inpreparingthis 23. RudyBehlmer,Inside WarnerBros. (1935-1951) (New York: Viking,1985),173-74. 24. TonyThomas,RudyBehlmer,andCliffordMcCarty,TheFilms ofErrolFlynn(NewYork:CitadelPress,1969),106-11.See alsoKingsley Michael Curtiz,Raoul Walsh, Canham,The HollywoodProfessionals: Errol HenryHathaway(NewYork:A.S. Barnes,1973),andPeterValenti, Flynn:A Bio-Bibliography (Westport:GreenwoodPress, 1984),30-31, 72-73. 25. Behlmer,Inside WarnerBros.,175-78;John E. O'Connor,The Indian:Stereotypes inFilms(Trenton: New Hollywood ofNativeAmericans JerseyStateMuseum,1980),42. 40 1991 scenario,"screenwriterMackenzie assured producer Hal Wallis, "allpossible considerationwas given the constructionof a storywhichwouldhave the best effectuponpublicmoralein these present days of nationalcrisis."25 While Lifemagazinelamentedthatthe film"glorifiesa rashgeneral,"and the New York Times accused "writers in warbonnets"of scalping history, the only critics that Warner Brothers cared about lined up in drovesto see TheyDied withtheirBootsOn.It was a huge success at the box-office.26 The impressive action sequences in the film were particularlydifficultto shoot. Because of the excessive numberof injuriesto horses caused by the use of the "RunningW"inWarners'TheCharge of theLightBrigade(1936)the AmericanHumane Association had successfully sued the studio to stop the cruel practice.27To the increased difficulty in portrayinghorse falls were added new Screen Extras' Guild rules preventing directors from hiring only experienced riders. Many old cowboyshad driftedintothe employof the studios in the silent era and for years they formed a reliable cadre of cheap talent for riding scenes in westerns.Walshandotherdirectorshadbeen able to hire specific cowboys for actionscenes in their films, but the new union rules changed all that.28 In the opening days of filming the cavalry charges, more than eighty of the inexperienced riderswere injured.Three men were killed.As the buses carryingthe extras left the studio for the LaskyRanchin Agoura,where the battle scenes were shot, they were followed by an ambulance. One day AnthonyQuinnhired a hearse to follow the ambulance,which panicked the extras and sent them scurryingbackto the studio.Eventually Walsh got the experiencedriders he wanted.29 The film follows Custer from West Point to LittleBighorn,andonly in the openingsequences is the harder edge of the original script still evident.ButCuster'svainbuffooneryandrashness in the West Point and CivilWar sections of the film quickly give way to thoughtfulheroism once he reaches the frontier. 26. Life,11 (December8,1941), 75-78;NewYorkTimes,November 30, 1941. 27. Fine wires were attachedto leg bandson a horse'sfrontlegs, withthe otherends tiedto logs buriedin the ground.Slackbetweenthe horseandlog alloweda stronggallopbeforethe horse'sfrontlegs were suddenlyjerkedfromunderhim. Dramaticscenes of horses plunging forwardor turningsomersaultswerethe result.Neitherhorse norrider hadto be trainedfor such stunts.Manyhorses werekilledin the fallor had to be destroyedbecause of brokenlegs. AnthonyAmaral,Movie Horses:TheirTreatment andTraining(Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967), 9-20. 28. Amongthe old westernerswho gravitatedto Hollywoodwere Wyatt Earp, CharlieSiringo,Al Jennings, EmmettDalton, and Bill Tilghman.Formoreon the cowboyswho providedthe essentialcadre ofroughridersforthemoviessee DiannaSerra Posse: Cary,TheHollywood The Storyof the GallantBand of HorsemenWhoMadeMovieHistory (Boston:HoughtonMifflin,1975). Paul AndrewHutton Flynnbroughthis usual charmand elan to the Custerrole, of course, and was ably supportedby Olivia de Havilland,who had been teamed with him seven times before, as ElizabethCuster.This is the only film to deal with the relationshipof the Custersat great length, with the scriptdisplaying a great reliance on Elizabeth'sbooks as source material.30 StanleyRidges played RomulusTaipe, the villainoussoldier turnedpolitician,who is obviously based on Grant'svenal Secretaryof War, William W. Belknap. John Litel portrayed Custer'smentor,GeneralPhilSheridan,while Charley Grapewinwas along for comedy relief as a crusty CaliforniaJoe. G. P. Huntley portrayedCuster's Britishadjutant,who is calledLieutenantButlerin the film, although named Cooke in the original script.The characteris obviouslybasedon Custer's true adjutant,WilliamW. Cooke,who was a Canadianknownas "Queen'sOwn,"the same nickname given to the Butler characterin the film. Having faced recent lawsuits over historical films, the studios often changed the names of real characters to avoidpossible litigation. The film is one of the few westerns to make the importantconnection between the CivilWar and national expansion. After the Gettysburg sequence, where the inexplicableplot device of an accidental promotion thrusts Custer into high commandso thathe can save the Unionby turning back the rebel cavalry,the war is told through a series of effective montages. The new national hero returnshome to Michiganto wed Elizabeth and settle into civilianlife. He is approachedby Taipe to lend his name to a shady stock deal but angrilyrejects the offer,proclaiming:"I'llgamble with anything,my money, my swordand even my life. Butthere's one thing I won'tgamblewith,and that is my good name!" Recalledto activeservicethroughthe influence of his wife, he quicklyorganizesthe Seventh Cavalryfroma bandof misfitsandoutcastsintoa crack regiment that breaks the power of the hostile tribes. Custer pledges to CrazyHorse (Anthony Quinn) that in exchange for peace he will guard the sacred Black Hills from white intrusion. In another bow to western art, the scene between FlynnandQuinnis basedon CharlesSchreyvogel's paintingCuster'sDemand. This interferes with the railroad-building scheme of Taipe and his accomplice,Ned Sharp (ArthurKennedy),andtheyconspireto haveCuster 29. RichardSchickel, TheMen WhoMade the Movies(New York: Atheneum,1975),47-48;BusterWiles,MyDays WithErrolFlynn:The of a Stuntman(SantaMonica:RoundtablePublishing, Autobiography 1988),97-100;andWilliamR. Meyer,TheMakingof theGreatWesterns (NewRochelle,NewYork:ArlingtonHouse, 1979),108-21. 30.TonyThomas,TheFilmsof Oliviade Havilland(Secaucus,New Jersey:Citadel,1983),181-87. recalled to Washingtonwhile they plantfalse rumors of gold in the Black Hills. Custer'sattempts to expose their conspiracy before Congress is ruled as hearsay,admissableonly as a dying declaration.Frustrated,Custer is finallyable to convince PresidentGrant(JosephCrehan)to restore him to his command.Realizingthat the Seventh Cavalrywill have to be sacrificedto give General Sheridanmore time to mobilize troops to defeat the enragedandbetrayedIndians,Custermarches towardLittleBighorn. The night before the battle Custer writes a letter exposing Taipe which, as a dying declaration, will be admissableas evidence. He asks his adjutantto carryit backto the fort,explainingthat he does not wish a foreigner sacrificedin such a "dirtydeal"as the comingbattle.Butlerindignantly refuses, reminding Custer that the only real Americanspresent are in the LittleBighornvalley waitingfor the Seventh. Custerthen knowinglyleads the Seventh Cavalryto its doom.Andwhat a glorious doom it isenacted against a powerful Max Steiner soundtrackcountering"GarryOwen"againsta rythmic, ragged Indiantheme. With his troopers all dead aroundhim,his pistolsempty,his longhairdancing in the westernbreeze, Custerdrawshis saberand falls from a shot from Crazy Horse's rifle as a charge of mountedwarriorsrides over him. The finalvictory,of course, belongs to Custer. ElizabethandSheridanuse his finalletterto force Taipe's resignationand to receive a pledge from Grantto return the Black Hills to the Sioux. As Sheridancomforts Elizabethwith the assurance that her husband "wonhis last battle-after all," Custerand his regimentmarchoff into a celluloid sunset to the strainsof "GarryOwen." f only historical realitycouldhavebeen so sublime.Novelist and screenwriterGeorge MacDonald Fraser, in his marvelous book TheHollywoodHistoryofthe World,dismisses They Died with their Boots On as "typicalHollywood dream-rubbishof the worst kind," a viewpoint echoed by other critics at the time the film was released and ever since.31 31. GeorgeMacDonaldFraser,TheHollywood Historyof theWorld: From One Million YearsB.C.to ApoclypseNow (New York:William Morrow,1988),200.Fraseris the authorof severalscreenplaysas well as the successfulFlashmanseries of novels.Thatseries includesone of the best availableCusternovels,FlashmanandtheRedskins(NewYork: AlfredA.Knopf,1982).Twoothercriticaldiscussionsofthe relationship ofwesternfilmsto westernhistoryareJonTuska,TheAmericanWestin Film: CriticalApproaches to the Western(Westport:GreenwoodPress, 1985),andWayneMichaelSarf,GodBlessYou,BuffaloBill:A Layman's GuidetoHistoryandtheWestern Film(Rutherford, NewJersey:Fairleigh DickinsonUniversityPress, 1983). 41 Winter 1991 Montana TheMagazineof WesternHistory filmare The historicalerrorsin this particular legion:Custerwas not promotedto generalby he mistake;hewasnotacivilianaftertheCivilWar; wasmorethanwillingto engageinshadybusiness dealsreflectiveoftheGildedAgeinwhichhelived; he did not organizethe Seventhin Dakota,but ratherin Kansas;he didnotprotecttheBlackHills butratheropenedthemup;he wasnotthe enemy of the railroadcapitalistsbuttheirbest friendon the northernplains;he was not a defenderof Indianrights;he did not knowinglysacrificehis regimentatLittleBighornto saveothers;Custer's hairwascut shortat the timeof the battleandhe didnotcarrya saber,nordidanyof his men;the Siouxwere not protectedin their rightsto the BlackHillsas a resultof his sacrifice;andon and on andon.Butwhois trulysurprisedby that?Itis simplyridiculousto expectfilmsto be trueto the factsof history.Theyareworksof fiction.If, by chance,theyuse a storyto tell us a greatertruth aboutourselvesandourpastthentheyhavesucdiverceededas art.If theygive us a momentary then heart, our at or tug smile us sion andmake atwhattheyaretheyhavesucceededadmirably popularentertainment. TheyDied with theirBoots On is wonderfulenreflectiveofour tertainment-arousingadventure dreamsofhowwe wishourpastmighthavebeen. But there is a veneer of truth Custerwas a dashing,romanticsoldier;he and Elizabethdid the Siouxwerea terhavea storybookmarriage; people;andthelaststandwasindeed riblywronged theresultofeventssetinmotionbyvenalcapitalists andinept,corruptpoliticians.Perhapsthe film's greatestartistictriumphis incuttingtotheessence of the Americanlove affairwithCuster thatthe soldierwasthe best his nationhad golden-haired to offeras thepeople'ssacnficeto somehowatone fortheghastlytreatmentoftheNativeAmericans. Vine Deloria,Jr., hammeredhome the same messageagainin the titleto his 1970bestseller: Therewere dramaticchangesin the western filmgenreduringthe waryears.The majorfilmmakerstendedto producefewerprestigewesterns, lavishingbudgetsinsteadon escapistfare (thiswas .theheydayof the MGMmusical)or on filmsconcernedwiththewareffort.Theindependents,of course,continuedto crankoutformula westernsat a prodigiousrate,with RoyRogers overtakingGeneAutryin 1943as the topwestern star.Severalof the prestigewestmoney-making the trendtoernsthatweremadeforeshadowed filmsthatfollowed wardsocialandpsychological the war.MostnotableamongthesewereWilliam Wellman'sThe Ox-BowIncident (1942)with its bleakvisionof the frontier'smoralcode;Howard Hughes'TheOutlaw(1943)andKingVidor'sDuel with in the Sun (1946)withtheirpreoccupation eroticism;and RaoulWalsh'sPursued (1947), western.32 perhapsthe firstFreudian-inspired Thile none of these themesis explicitin the firstpost-warCusterfilm, v John Ford'sFort Apache (1948), it is neverthelessclearthatmuchoftheglossyveneer that surroundedCuster'simagein the past had been wornaway.Whilehigh courageand selfsacrificeare majorthemesin Ford'sfilm,just as they were in TheyDied with their Boots On, this timeCusterwasnotto be the hero. as suchbyfilmcriticsatthetime, Unrecognized tellingof the Custer FortApacheis a fictionalized storywiththe localeshiftedto the Southwestto Valley.By makeuse of Ford'sbelovedMonument changingthe historicalsettingto the starkmoral his Valley,byfictionalizing universeofMonument theshackles storyline,andbyfreeinghimselffrom of historicaldetail,Fordsavedhimselffromthe kindof factualcriticismleveledattheWalshfilm andallowedhis artisticvisionfullrein.The result is a masterpieceof this peculiarlyAmericanart thatcomescloserthananyotherCusterfilm form CusterDied For YourSins. the great contradictionsof the explaining November to late in release film's the By chance, life,death,andlegend.33 1941coincidedwithArnericanentryinto World protagonist's WarII.AsthepeoplereeledfromthenewsofPearl 33. Few filmmakershavebeen as discussedas Ford,arguablythe theycouldclearly WakeIsland,andBataan, Harbor, greatest directorin the historyof film. For studies that considerFort ofCusterand Apache identifywiththeheroicself-sacrifice in some detailsee Tag Gallagher,JohnFord:TheMan andHis the Seventh Cavalry.The greedy capitalists, Films(Berkeley:Universityof CaliforniaPress,1986);Anderson,About FilmsofJohnFord(NewYork:Citadel Ford;J.A.Place,TheWestern crookedpoliticians,andgallantsoldiersof They John (Bloomington: Press,1974);AndrewSarris,TheJohnFordMovieMystery Died with theirBoots On madepedect sense to a Indiana University Press, 1975); Joseph McBride and Michael Ford(NewYork:DaCapoPress, 1975);JohnBaxter, peoplemarchingoutof economicdepressionand Wilmington,John TheCinemaofJohnFord(NewYork:A. S. Barnes,1971);PeterStowell, intowar. JohnFord (Boston:Twayne,1986);andtwo more biographicalworks, 32. Buscombe,ed., BFI Companion to the Western,42-45,426-28.For more on the postwarwesternsee PhilipFrench,Westerns (NewYork: OxfordUniversityPress, 197D;andJimKitses,Horizons West:Anthony Mann, Budd Buetticher, Sam Peckinpah: Studies ofAuthorship Within the Western (Bloomington:IndianaUniversityPress, 1969). 42 X l t v V Ford(NewYork:DialPress, 1979);andDanFord, AndrewSinclair,John Pappy:TheLifeofJohnFord (EnglewoodCliffs,New Jersey:PrenticeHall,1979). Ford'simpressivebodyof cinematicworkon the American frontierexperienceandon Americanhistoryin general,obviouslyhad a dramaticimpacton the nation'scollectiveimaginationconcerningits past. His workis well worthstudyas art, as culturalartifact,and as a lesson on popularhistory. Paul AndrewHutton "Alegend is more interesting than the actual facts,"Fordonce said in commentingon Custer.34 In FortApachehe does not celebratethat legend, but rather explains it. Henry Fonda's Lieutenant Colonel OwenThursdayis a textbook soldier bitter over his postwarreductionin rank from general and anxious to escape from his new frontier assignment by some glorious deed. His rigidity antagonizeshis subordinates,and none more so thanJohnWayne'sCaptainKirbyYork.Whenthe corruptpractices of Indianagent Silas Meacham (GrantWithers)force Cochise (MiguelInclan)to bolt the reservation,Thursday sees his chance. ThroughYork'seffortsthe Apachesarepersuaded to returnfromMexico to meet withThursday.But the colonel disregardsYork'spromisesto Cochise and preparesto attack. Protesting this duplicity, York is accused of cowardice by Thursday and orderedto the rear to protectthe pack train.The troops then follow Thursday into Cochise's ambush,withthe colonelunhorsedearlyinthe charge. The wounded Thursday ignores York's offer of escape and rejoinshis doomed command. Thursday's tragic flaw, like that of the real Custer,is that he is unableto restrainan individualityborderingon megalomania.A martinetwhen it comes to enforcingmilitaryregulations,he cannot himself abide by the rules of his community, the cavalry.His every action is directed by personal desires, not communityneeds or moralvalues. His contemptforritualis madeapparentin his reluctanceto fulfill his duty by dancing with the sergeant-major'swife at the NCOBall, and by his refusal to engage in courtly discussion with Cochise. In the end he disregards better advice and leads his men into a deadly trap. ('"Theyoutnumberus four to one. Do we talk or fight?"asks Yorkjust before the battle. "Youseem easily impressed by numbers, Captain,"Thursday responds.) His soldiers follow Thursday because they are solidly members of the community-he leads them into slaughter because he is not. Yet Thursday,for all his faults, is a leader, and so he ignores escape and rejoinshis command.35 The Indiansremaintangentialto the maintheme of Fort Apache. Cochise is presented as a wise leaderwho wishes to avoidwarwhile his Apaches are an honorable, cheated people. Unlike other celluloidlast standswhere the men die spreadout as individuals,in FortApachethe littlebandof soldiers forms a tight knot. Thursday stands with 34. Sinclair,JohnFord,142. 35. Formoreon FortApachesee RussellCampbell,"FortApache," The VelvetLightTrap,17 (Winter1977),8-12; WilliamT. Pilkington, "FortApache(1948),"in WilliamT. Pilkingtonand Don Graham,eds., Western Movies(Albuquerque: Universityof New MexicoPress, 1979), TheWestThatNeverWas(Secaucus,NewJersey: 4049;andTonyThomas, CitadelPress, 1989),104-11. them, finallya member of the communityhe disdained. A distant rumble of hooves builds to a crescendo as the Apachessuddenlyburstonto the scene, ride over the soldiers, and just as quickly vanish into the swirlingdust. Their appearanceis only fleeting as they claimtheirvictoryand affirm both Thursday'sdishonorand his heroism.36 The Indianvictoryin FortApacheis turnedinto a spiritualvictoryfor the defeatedsoldiers,just as Custer'sLastStandachieveda poweras legend far greaterthananyvictoryCustermight havewon at Little Bighorn. Just as John Wayne's York reaffirmsthe importanceof Thursday'ssacrifice at the conclusion of FortApache,so did soldiers of Custer's generation protect his reputation.General WilliamT. Shermannoted in an 1876 letter that Custerhad made several tacticalmistakes at Little Bighorn, "but his gallant fight and death spread the mantle of oblivion over such trivial errors."37 Similarviewswere expressedby Captain FrederickBenteen, who had commandeda wing of the Seventh at Little Bighorn and who might well havebeen the modelforthe Yorkcharacterin FortApache.Observingthat Custerhad been enshrinedwith a monumentat West Point,Benteen noted that despite his own contemptfor the dead man,Custer'sexamplewas good forthe cadets:"if it makes better soldiers andmen of them, why the necessity of knocking the paste eye out of their idol?"38 Sherman,Benteen,andmanyothersin the army participatedin a quiet coverup of Custer's folly so that the armyand the nationmight have a glowing myth. Although Ford exposed the truth behindthe Custermythin FortApachehe was not attacking it. On the contrary,he reaffirmedits usefulness. ord made no apologiesfor his treat- ment of the Indians in his films. He was hardly a romantic in his approach to the Indian wars, often comparing the plight of the Indiansto thatof the Irish."Let'sface it,"Fordtold Peter Bogdanovich, "we've treated them very badly-it's a blot on our shield;we've cheated and robbed, killed, murdered,massacred and everything else, but they kill one white man and, God, out come the troops."39 36. In the originalJames WarnerBellah short story, Thursday arrives on the stricken battlefieldafter the massacre and commits suicide.JamesWarnerBellah,"Massacre," SaturdayEveningPost,219 (February27, 1947),18-19,140-46. 37. RobertM. Utley, ed., "Shermanon Custerat LittleBig Horn," LittleBig HornAssociatesNewsletter,9 (October1975),9. 38. W. A. Graham,TheCusterMyth:A SourceBookof Custeriana (Harrisburg: StackpoleBooks, 1953),325. 39. Bogdanovich,John Ford,104. 43 ] 2> - t ! ;'S2t¢istit t; * i ' i * ,'mteus $;*1 w;¢.rs.(sseL. t.,FItttlS sr LS rf r . slbY ¢¢AZl.ES t¢ $s$ tlxe>##n ! < | 2ttEZ tSb t#¢o;ew r..ffi . !0r r>Xtt k . EthanEdwardsdohn Wayne)confrontsCuster(Peter Ortiz)overaWashita-likemassacrein a scene cutfrom TheSearchers(WarnerBrothers,1956). tw$tS:s:Wr The battleragesaboutCusterandhis menin the realisticlast standsequencefromTonka(WaltDisneyProductions,1958). 0 Col. OwenThursday (HenryFonda) makes his plan while Capt.York dohn Wayne), Capt. Collingwood (George O'Brien), and Sgt.-MajorO'Rourke(Ward Bond) look on in FortApache(R;KO, 1948). 44 3t. . o. ttJ ES X ,9rt tstiat # S " 2*r] ;s-Z.ls LlOYD BRIDGES*XHN XRSND&MARIE WIND9R W;ES I Jv3, j ]J + rz '-:+#t1 t i steg 5_it[ffi_ - t:li§,, i/ - * vv j $.'g1 9 D05='t',i',A',', £/.WSB t56Y'r ;{.8 r sM 't4'Ot! e ji-F .2i! . sere*NNFD'Y." rK ^; ,^ +sYa 1. .zj v-: +^<- P ',A:tzsts r',<dg 8,) s* w{z Eg^fEX1aSiE-Xo> TEN THOUSAND ARROWS F I BLACKEN THE SKYF*.*t t ANARMY OFSABRES g BlAZES INTHE SUN!!! _ [s _ _, /f W.R.Frank f $1te9Q*& | Lobbyposters and advertisementsfor(clockwise) ChiefCrazyHorse (Universal International, 1955), Tonka (Walt Disney Productions, 1958), Bugles in theAfternoon(Warner Brothers,1952), Little Big Horn (Charles Marquis Warren, 1951),and SittingBull (Paramount,1954). .fffitlil E MAGNiflStAT | w WASTMAN | t ss, is w;DALE IERTSON COLORt MARY * 3. CARRQL MURPHY NAISH i WOUNT P5gs5:cec> Allreproductionscourtesy Paul Andrew Hutton unlessnotedotherwise. E; _i, M #-- 4e io+o-; < w s -- # tis r - W ^W- 5ks e ? n ,- 4 *X R^;^X^Y l''vestt.lvaND ivi CAR-T1'. RtARill!V8;V,0 - 1. KFR 45 Montana The Magazineof WesternHistory Still,Fordapproachedthe plight of the Indians with a balancedperspective.'The Indiansarevery dear to my heart,"Ford declared.'There is truth in the accusation that the Indian has not been paintedwith justice in the Western, but that is a false generalization.The Indian did not like the white man, and he was no diplomat.We were enemies and we fought each other. The struggle againstthe Indianwas fundamentalin the history of the FarWest."40 f the major Custer films before Fort Apache,only the Ince and DeMillefea- tureshaddealtinsultinglywiththe Indians, whileTheMassacre,TheScarletWest,andTheyDied with their Boots On had all treated them sympathetically.Hollywoodtended to followthe general dichotomyof Americanliteraturethat alternated between images of the Indian as nature'snobleman and as debased savage. While westerns had long been populatedby noble red men (often as trustyside-kicks),crookedIndianagents,whiskey traders,andvarioustypes of Indianhaters,the vast majorityof films in the genre treatedthe nativesas part of a harsh environmentthat was to be conquered. Few films attemptedto developthe basic humanityof Indiancharactersadequately.41 The 1950 box-officesuccess of Delmer Daves' BrokenArrowforever altered the Hollywoodapproachto Indians,however,andresultedin a long string of films with Indianheroes (invariablyportrayed by whites).42The western was simply following a trend toward social commentary that began immediatelyfollowing World War II with films like Lost Weekend(1945), The Best Yearsof OurLives (1946),and TheSnakePit (1948).Films concernedwith racialjustice were especiallypopular, as evidenced by Gentleman'sAgreement (1948),HomeoftheBrave(1949),Pinky(1949),and No Way Out (1950). While such message films 40. Sinclair,JohnFord,149. 41. For the image of Indiansin film see GretchenM. Batailleand CharlesL.P. Silet,eds., ThePretendIndians:ImagesofNativeAmericans in theMovies(Ames:IowaStateUniversityPress, 1980);and RalphE. Friarand NatashaA. Friar,The OnlyGoodIndian .. TheHollywood Gospel(New York:DramaBook Specialists,1972). For the broader contextsee BrianW. Dippie,TheVanishingAmerican:WhiteAttitudes and U.S.IndianPolicy(Middletown: WesleyanUniversityPress, 1982); RobertF.Berkhofer,Jr.,TheWhiteMan'sIndian:ImagesoftheAmerican IndianfromColumbus to thePresent(NewYork:AlfredA. Knopf,1978); A StudyoftheIndianand RoyHarveyPearce,SavagismandCivilization: theAmericanMind (Baltimore:JohnsHopkinsPress, 1965);Raymond WilliamStedman,Shadowsof theIndian:Stereotypes in AmericanCulture(Norman:UniversityofOklahomaPress,1982);andRichardSlotkin, Regeneration oftheAmericanFrontier, ThroughViolence:TheMythology 1600-1860(Middletown: WesleyanUniversityPress, 1973). 46 Winter 1991 quicklyvanishedin the early1950sas racebecame a more devisive nationalissue, the trend toward racial-justicewesterns continuedthroughoutthe decade. Because Indian people were neither a visible nor politically organized minority at the time, and because the "Indianproblem"had alreadybeen settled by conquest, little controversy resulted from such films.43 It was only naturalfor Hollywoodto demythicize Custer,everthe symbolofthe Indianwarsand the cavalry,and use him as an evil counterto the new Indian heroes. As such, the moviemakers finallygot to the point their literarycousins had reached in the 1930s. With rather monotonous regularityCusterwas portrayedin both films and novels throughoutthe 1950s and 1960s as a vain racistin search of personalglory at the expense of innocent,usuallyquitepeace-loving,natives.This new Custerimagewas so all-pervasiveby 1971that Life magazine labeled the Custer BattlefieldNational Monument in Montana "a sore from America'spast"and suggested its elimination.44 The Custerfilms of the 1950s aidedin dramaticallyalteringpublicperceptionsofthe Indianwars. The first three Custer films of the decade, however, were quite traditional.Both Warpath(1951) and Buglesin theAfternoon(1952) used the Little Bighornbattle as a convenientbackdropfor conventionalrevenge sagas. Custerwas not an important character in either film. James Millican in WarpathportrayedCuster as arrogantand contemptuousof his Indianfoe, while ShebWooleyin Bugles in the Afternoongave no hint of Custer's personalcharacteristics(even though Custerwas a central, and negative, characterin the Ernest Haycox novel upon which the film was based). Little Big Horn (1951), despite the clever use of Otto Becker's barroom print as an advertising motif, did not portray Custer or his last battle. Instead, the film, produced by Charles Marquis Warren,western novelist turned scriptwriterand director,is a varianton the horrormovie in which everymemberof the cast stupidlygoes one-by-one down into the basement. In this case it is a squad of soldiers, led by feuding officers LloydBridges andJohnIreland,who ride offto warnCusteronly to meet horriblefates one-by-one. John Ford returnedto Custertwice in this period.She Worea YellowRibbon(1949)begins with a SeventhCavalryguidonwhippingin the wind as 42. SomeexamplesincludeBattleatApachePass (1952),Hiawatha (1952),Conquestof Cochise(1953),Apache(1954),Taza,Sonof Cochise (1954),BrokenLance(1954),WhiteFeather(1955),TheIndianFighter (1955),andTheSavage(1953)which,althoughbasedonL.L.Foreman's 1942Custernovel,TheRenegade,alteredthe storyanddroppedCuster fromthe film. 43. Sklar,Movie-Made America,279-80. 44. AlvinJosephy,"TheCusterMyth,"Life,71 (uly 2, 1971),55. Paul AndrewHutton ahead with her role despite havingjust had a leg amputatedbecause of cancer.She died soon after the film was completed. Columbia'sSeventhCavalry,released the next year, was based on a Glendon Swarthoutstory about a cavalryofficer accused of cowardicefor missing LittleBighorn but who redeems himself by leadinga suicidemissionto buryCuster'sdead. RandolphScott plays the officer who constantly defendsCuster'sreputationagainstthe aspersions cast by MajorMarcus Reno and others. Such a defense of Custerwas alreadya Hollywoodrarity. Custer,as portrayedby BrittLomand,was particularlysadisticandracistin WaltDisney's Tonka (1958).Lomandplayedthe villainin the successful DisneyZorrotelevisionseries, andhe broughtthe same gracefulsnarlto his Custerrole. Based on DavidAppel'snovel, Comanche,the film purportedto tell the story of the only cavalry mount to survive Custer's Last Stand and of the young Indianboy who cared for him. Sal Mineo playedthe Siouxyouth,WhiteBull,whose love for the stallion,Tonka, causes his banishmentwhen he frees the horse to preventits mistreatmentby a rival brave. The horse eventually becomes the mount of CaptainMyles Keogh (Philip Carey), who previouslyappearedas a particularlyvibrant memory in Ford's She Wore a Yellow Ribbon. Custer'smaniacalhatredof the Indiansbrings on war, and at Little Bighorn the kindly and heroic Keogh is killed by White Bull's rival. When the Indian attempts to scalp the fallen officer he is trampledto death by the enraged horse. White Bull fights with the Sioux in the battle and is terriblywounded.Foundon the battlefieldwithhis horse, they are both nursed back to health by the soldiers. The army seems to hold no grudges in this Disney version of history, for the horse becomes the mascotof the cavalrywithWhiteBullas his uniformedstable attendant. The battle in Tonka is among the best ever filmed, with the terrain fairly correct and troop movementsfollowingthe sketchy details that are available.Custer does not even get his standard gallantdeath scene, being shot early in the battle razy Horse is given credit for wiping as he huddles behind a dead horse. Of the Custer out the Seventhin the 1955 film, Chief films to date only Tonkaand LittleBig Man have CrazyHorse,althoughthe battle is not de- deviatedfromthe stereotypicallast stand image. picted. Victor Mature, terribly miscast as the PhilipCarey,who portrayedCaptainKeogh in Sioux does the can. The best he warrior, mystical Tonka,was promotedto the role of Custerin The FranklinCoen and GeraldAdams script was at Great Sioux Massacre.This 1965 Columbiafilm least fairly faithful to history. More interesting also markeda returnto familiarterritoryfor directodayis the behind-the-scenestragedythataccom- tor Sidney Salkow,who had directedSittingBull. paniedthe makingof the film.Twenty-three-year- Also starringin the film was Cherokeeactor Iron old SusanBall,who playsCrazyHorse'swife,went Eyes Cody, another alumnus from Sitting Bull, where he hadportrayedCrazyHorse. Codybegan 45. New YorkTimes,November28, 1954. his career in pictures in 1912 in Griffith'sThe a voice-overnarratorinformsthe audience:"Custer is dead. And aroundthe bloody guidon of the immortal Seventh Cavalrylie two hundred and twelve officers and men."That fact dictates the action that follows in this splendid technicolor western scriptedby FrankNugent and Laurence Stallings and based on the James WarnerBellah short story,'"WarParty."In Ford's The Searchers (1956),againscriptedby Nugent, the aftermathof a Washita-likemassacreis depicted.Custer'scavalry is seen herding captivewomen and children throughthe snow into an armypost, while "Garry Owen"plays on the soundtrack.In a scene cut from the final release print,John Wayne as antihero Ethan EdwardsconfrontsPeter Ortizas an arrogantCusteraboutthe massacre.Onlya publicity still andthe originalscriptremainto remindus of Custer's fleeting appearance in the single greatest western ever made. In Sitting Bull (1954) a glory hunting, racist Custer played by Douglas Kennedy manages to frustratethe effortsof Dale Robertsonas an army officerandJ. CarrollNaish as an incrediblynoble SittingBullto preventwar.The SidneySalkowand JackDeWittscriptthen has Custerdisobeyinghis orders in a headlong rush to destroy the Sioux. Afterthe last standPresidentGrantcomes west to save Robertson from a firing squad and make peace with Sitting Bull. This history rewritewas too much for the New YorkTimesfilm critic,who noted that "Grantwas an optimisttowardIndians, but he wasn't an absolute fool: and that is apparentlywhatsome scriptwriterstake the poorpublic to be."45Naish, an Irish-Americanwho had portrayedGeneralPhilSheridaninRio Grandein 1950 and was to play GeneralSantaAnna in Last Commandin1955,seemed to be everycastingdirector's favoritehistoricalcharacter.This was his second outingas SittingBull,havingplayedthe role in the 1950 musical,Annie Get YourGun. 47 Re#gs #" jt*.--I 'ii : All photographs courtesy Paul Andrew Hutton unless noted otherwise. .Glory e s ; a L l AndrewDugganas the Custer-like GeneralFrederick McCabe,right, gives the command tomarch in TheGuys(United Artists,1965). , .:-, . Castof the short-lived 1967televisionseries, Custer,upperleft, shows, kneeling:Slim Pickens as CaliforniaJoe and Michael Dante as Crazy . . T_ Horse; standing: Peter Palmeras Sgt. James Bustard,RobertF. Simonas Gen.Alfred Terry,WayneMaunder as Custer,and Grant Woods as Capt.Myles Keogh (ABC,1967). Below left, Richard Mulligan'sCuster assumes a stance of mock-heroicsin Little Big Man (CinemaCenter Films, 1970). ., . ,N t RichardMulligan'sderangedCusterprepares to execute DustinHoffman'sJack Crabbat LittleBighorn.Paddingin his back indicates arrowsare coming. (LittleBig Man, Cinema CenterFilms, 1970) 48 A Custerlunges with t upraised X sword * andpistol barrel -* in hand 40at left 9 t w , M J 2 4<1 _ t W S - n j F3_ in detailfromOttoBecker'sturn-of-the-century lithograph, Custer's LastFight.JamesMillican, aboveright,strikesa similarposein a publicityshotforWarpath(Paramount, 1951). BarryAtwateras Custerplanshis strategy,disregardingthe adviceof scout CheyenneBodie (Clint Walker),aboveleft, in the 1961"Gold, Gloryand Custer,"a two-partepisode of the televisionseries, Cheyenne (ABC,1961).Aboveright,Leslie Nielsen (left),long before achieving stardomin DavidandJerryZucker's comediesAirplaneandNakedGun, portrayedCusterin ThePlainsman (Universal,1966).Below right,Robert Shawfinds himself surroundedin Custerof the West(Cinerama ReleasingCorp.,ABC,1968). I r r.ru #S cvw - v kp < o; 5 t 49 Montana The Magazineof WesternHistory Winter 1991 The western had thrived during the 1950s, Massacre,and later appearedin The Plainsman, and Fort with their Boots Died On, Apache, reachinga newmaturityandattractingHollywood's They in Custer films.46 toptalents.Majorstarsappearedregularlyin presfor a record appearances certainly film the Custer by sympathizing tige westerns throughout the decade, with the begins Carey's with the plight of the Indians,but his head is soon genre accounting for nearly 30 percent of the turnedby the blandishmentsof a connivingpoliti- major studios' total feature production.Yet, just cian.Believingthata greatvictoryoverthe Indians as for the Sioux at LittleBighorn,at the western's willbe his ticket to the WhiteHouse, Custerdisre- moment of greatest triumphthe seeds of doom gards the advice of MajorReno (oseph Cotton) were alreadysown.48 andCaptainBenteen (DarrenMcGavin)andleads Early television was desperate for programthe Seventh to its doom. The most interesting ming, and old budget westerns filled the bill. Features starringTim McCoy,Hoot Gibson,and Bob aspectof the battleis the ludicrousjuxtapositionof borrowed from Steele became standardfarewhile serials such as of mountain shots scenery long filmed Custer'sLast Standfrom 1936fit particularlywell Sonoran desert Bull with closeups Sitting into television time slots. It was William Boyd, nearTucson. Also released in 1965 was ArnoldLaven'sThe however,who provedjust how lucrativetelevision could be. He stopped making HopalongCassidy Glory Guys. Sam Peckinpah's script, based on films in 1948 and promptlylicensed the rights to HoffmanBirney's1956novel, TheDice of God,has something of the raw realism and violent action his sixty-six films to television. By 1950 Boyd oversawa Hoppyindustryestimatedat$200million thathe wouldbringto the western as a directorby decade's end, but for the most part the film re- as the incrediblesuccess of his televisionwesterns mains a pedestrianretelling of the LittleBighorn promoted a wide array of merchandising.Gene Autry went over to television in 1950, followed story. Andrew Duggan's General McCabe is yet another Indian-hatingracist blinded by personal soon after by Roy Rogers. Their products, and a host of other television westerns, employed the ambitionwho finallygets just what he deserves. The most impressiveCusterfilm of this period conventions of the B-westernand aimed for the was never made. Wendell Mayes wrote a marvel- same juvenile audience.The impacton the small ous scriptfor Twentieth-CenturyFox, titled 'The independentproductioncompanieswas devastatDay Custer Fell," and Fred Zinnemann,of High ing. Althoughthey had enjoyeda boom by selling Noon fame, was set to direct it. RichardZanuck their productsto television in the late-1940s,they approachedCharltonHeston to take the Custer were nowconsumedby the very mediumthey had nurtured.In 1958, the greatest of the indepenpartbut Heston declined, saying, "Idon'tsee how film who can make a serious about a man dents, Republic,went under. you seems to have been not only egocentric, but muddleheaded.He was neitheraverygood soldier nor a very valuableman."47 The eighteen-milliondollar project eventuallycollapsed as a result of the financialdebaclethatcrippledFox in the wake of the studio'sproductionof Cleopatra. Talt Disney broke with the major Leslie Nielsen had a cameo as Custer in the filmstudiosin 1954andbegan producing 1966Universalremakeof ThePlainsman,whilethe ? v programsfor the fledgling ABCnetwork. LittleBighornwas used as a preludeto the action His Disneylandtelevision programrevolutionized in Red Tomahawk,released by Paramountthat the neophyte mediumwith a three-partseries on same year. The latterhas the distinctionof being the life of Davy Crockett. By the time the last the last of a series of A. C. Lyles' B-westerns, episode of the trilogyaired on February23, 1955, markingthe finalgasp of that particularfilmtype. a nationalcrazeof unprecedentedproportionswas Despite this rash of Custer films, the western underway.Soon every moppet in Americahad a genre was reachingthe end of the celluloidtrail,at coonskin cap and every networka stable of horse least temporarily. operas. These new television westerns, like the Davy Crockett programs, emphasized high productionvalues and aimedfor an audiencebeyond the kindergartencrowd. In the fall of 1955 ABC 46. IronEyes Codyand CollinPerry,IronEyes:MyLifeas a HollywoodIndian (NewYork:EverestHouse, 1982). 47. CharltonHeston, 1956-1976(NewYork: TheActor'sLife:Journals E. P. Dalton,1976);WendellMayes,TheDay CusterFell (unpublished screenplay,1964). 48. JohnH.Lenihan,Showdown: ModernAmerica in the Confronting Western Film(Urbana: UniversityofIllinoisPress,1980);andBuscombe, ed., BFI Companionto the Western,45-48. 50 49. J. FredMacDonald,WhoShottheSheriff?TheRiseandFallofthe TelevisionWestern(New York:Praeger, 1987), 15-85;Paul Andrew in MichaelA. Hutton,"DavyCrockett:AnExpositionon HeroWorship," Lofaroand Joe Cummings,eds., Crockettat TwoHundred:New Perspectiveson theMan and theMyth(Knoxville:Universityof Tennessee Press, 1989),20-41. Paul AndrewHutton The new westerns reflectedthis growingdisenchantment with both the present and the past. Heroism and self-sacrificegave way to greed and self-interestin filmslikeHombre(1967)andMcCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971).Those who could not adjust to an increasingly corrupt society were destroyed by it, as in BillyJack (1971), TheLifeand by 1959.49 Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972), and Tom Horn The overexposurecaused by television, a loss of faithin old conventions,andthe deathor retire- (1980). Racism continued as a majortheme, but ment of major stars all contributed to a stark the triumphofjusticethathadmarkedthe endings decline of the western in the 1960s. While 130 of BrokenArrow and CheyenneAutumn, was rewestern feature films had been released in 1950, placedwith tragedy,as in Tell ThemWillieBoy is Here(1969),orgenocide, as in SoldierBlue(1970). and sixty-eight in 1955, only twenty-eightwere released in 1960, down to twenty-twoby 1965. Finally,westernheroes were regularlydebunked: Muchofwhatwasmadesimplyparodiedthe genre, Wyatt Earp in Hour of the Gun (1967) and Doc such as Cat Ballou in 1965 or WaterholeNo. 3 in (1971);Jesse James in The GreatNorthfield,Minnesota Raid (1971) and The Long Riders (1980); 1967,or playedoffthe new conventionsofviolence importedwiththe Italianwesterns of SergioLeone BuffaloBill Cody in BuffaloBill and the Indians and others. Other filmmakersbecame obsessed (1976);Billythe KidinDirtyLittleBilly (1972);and with the death of the frontier,usuallytinged with Pat Garrettin Pat Garrettand Billy theKid (1973). a romanticnostalgiafor whatwas lost. LonelyAre Custer made perfect grist for the mill of the celthe Brave (1962), TheMan WhoShotLibertyVal- luloid debunker. ABCTelevision, in attempting to exploit the ance(1962),RidetheHighCountry(1962),andButch the all used fixation of the 1960s, presented a heroic and Sundance Kid this (1969) youth Cassidy theme, but it was Sam Peckinpah'sviolent 1969 Custerin a 1967 series starringWayneMaunder. masterpiece The WildBunchthat most fully real- Titled Custer,the program'sadvertisingemphaized its potential.The westerns that followed The sized that its hero was "long-haired,headstrong, WildBunch became so focused on the closing of flamboyant,and a maverick."Despite the haircut, the West that they helped close out the western.50 America'syouth did not warm to the program, The dark tragedy and explicit violence of the while Indiangroupsgot ratherheatedlyoutraged. westerns of the late sixties and early seventies The National Congress of the American Indian demandedequal time to respondto the premiere clearly reflected the times in which they were made. While the decade began with a burst of episode, declaringthat"glamorizingCusteris like the of and with election bright promise glamorizingBilly the Kid"because he "endorsed optimism John F. Kennedy and the unveiling of his "New a policy of genocide and massacredvillage after Frontier"assault on povertyand racism,it ended villageof Indians."51 Newsweekcriticizedthe show, with dark alienation dominating a nation torn pointing out that Custer was not a suitable hero asunder by domestic unrest and foreign war. Po- because he "wascourt-martialedtwice, once left liticalassassination,continuingracism,andresult- his men to die, discardeda son squired through Indian wenching, and had a reputationfor cruant black militancy,the self-servingdeception of the people by two presidential administrations, elty."52 Itwas disinterest,however,thatfinishedoff and above all the frustratingand divisiveVietnam Custerin midseason-the ratings were abysmal. War all tore at the social fabric and undercut Long-hairedmaverickor not, a heroic Custerwas nationalidentity.The ecology movementled to a a tough sell in the sixties. new view of wilderness conquerorsas ecological Televisionhadoftendealtwiththe Custerstory, most especially during the 1950s western craze. exploiters.Indiancivilrightsorganizationsrose to Custer had proven the basis of particularlycomprominence,pointingout that their ancestorshad lived in harmonywiththe land.Manynow came to pelling episodes of The TwilightZone, Cheyenne, view Indiancultureas a more rational,naturalway Gunsmoke,Time Tunnel,and Branded.But after of life. No group was more effected by these new ABC'sdebacle with Custer the general lost his views than the young, who were, of course, also popularitywith producers. When he did appear the main patronsof motionpictures. again, in the 1977 NBCHallmarkHall of Fame launchedHugh O'Brienin TheLifeand Legendof WyattEarp. CBScounteredwith James Arness in Gunsmoke,andthe TVadultwesternwas born.By the 1958-1959season six of the top seven programs on television were westerns, with fortyeight westernseries gallopingacross the airwaves 50. Forthe filmsof this periodsee Nachbar,ed., Focuson the Western,101-28;French,Westerns, 135-67;Hardy,TheWestern, 274-363;Tuska, Filmingof the West,559-84;and Buscombe,ed., BFICompanionto the Western,48-54. 51. FriarandFriar,OnlyGoodIndian,274-75. 52. Newsweek,70 (August7,1967),51;NewYorkTimes,September TVGuide 7,1967;P.M.Clepper,"He'sOurGeorge," (September23,1967), 32-34.In an effortto recoupsome of their losses, the producerscombinedseveralepisodesof the televisionshow andreleasedit in Europe as a feature,titledTheLegendof Custer. 51 s w\s i i8 ' t . w Ez . TIs X a The men of FortApacheawaitthe finalonslaughtin Fort Apache'sversionof the last stand (RKO,1948). F^Fsi :'s x B& RobertShawas Custerloadshis lastbulletand yells the chargein CusteroftheWest(Cinerama Releasing,ABC,Inc., 1968). \S,Xo - yu r --R t John Miljanas Custer,above,is the last to fallin ThePlainsman(Paramount,1937), while a smallcadre,below,fights to the last in TheScarletWest(FirstNational,1925), and Custeris overrun,lower right,in The FlamingFrontier(Universal1926). AllphotographscourtesyPaulAndrewHutton. ErrolFlynnas Custeris the lastto die in TheyDied withtheirBootsOn (WarnerBrothers,1941). -ii s_,5 ^ / ;*tz \ _ 52 - > t A _* , _ 9 x> < H*o JL -- Paul AndrewHutton teleplay of 'The Court-Martialof George Armstrong Custer,"it would be as a near-ravinglunatic. James Olsen's unhinged Custer was derived fromDouglasC.Jones'bestsellingfantasynovelin whichCusteris the onlysurvivorofLittleBighorn.53 Two trends of the dying western genre-the European western and the end-of-the-frontier western-were combined with the gimmickryof cineramain Custerof the West(1968). Filmed in Spainand starringEnglish actor RobertShaw as the title character,the film made a sincere if misguided effortto deal with the complexitiesof frontier expansion and the Indian wars. Custer is a hell-for-leathersoldier who loves a fight for the sake of a fight,butwho findsthe one-sidedwarfare with the Indianstroubling.He is even more worriedby the onrushingindustrialrevolutionandthe impersonalimpactit will have on combat.'Trains, steel, guns that kill by thousands-our kind of fighting is done,"he tells visiting Indians.In destroyingthe Indiansthis Custeris also destroying the only warriorsleft who are just like himself. Shaw postures, broods, and agonizes until he finally rushes purposefullyto his doom at Little Bighorn.Custeris the lastmanaliveon the stricken field, and the Indians pull back to allow him to leave. Unwillingto face life in a corrupt,changing world,Custerplacesa single bulletin his pistoland shouts the charge. Custerof the Westwas a bust at the box office, andcriticalreviewsattackedits semi-positiveview of its protagonist.CharlesReno,a grandnephewof Major Marcus Reno, sued the film's producers, claiming his ancestor was slandered by Ty Hardin's portrayalof him in the film. The New York StateSupremeCourtdismissedthe case in Custer's only victoryduringthe sixties.54 The 1960s also witnessed a revitalizationof interestin the plight of the AmericanIndian,both past and present. Ironically, much of this new sensitivity to past injusticewas a direct result of the VietnamWar.The Indianwas often used as a vehicle by literaryartists to attackAmericaninvolvement in Vietnam. Arthur Kopit's critically acclaimedplay,Indians (filmedin 1976by Robert Altmanas BuffaloBill and theIndians) and Ralph Nelson's SoldierBlue (1970) use an Indianwars theme to attack the Vietnam War. Indian civil rights groups became increasinglyactive during 53. PaulA. Hutton,"Custer'sLastStand:Background,"TVGuide (November26,1977),39-42.See alsoJohnP. Langellier,"MovieMassacre:The CusterMythin MotionPicturesandTelevision,11 Research Review:TheJournalof theLittleBig HornAssociates,3 June 1989),2031. Custerappearedagainin the 1979televisionmovieTheLegendofthe GoldenGun,whereKeirDulleaportrayedhimas a GeneralMacArthur clonecompletewithsunglassesandpipe.Anothertelevisionmovie,The LegendofWalksFar Womanin 1982,featuresthe LittleBighornbutdoes not portrayCuster. this period,encouragedby the nationalreception ofVineDeloria'sbestsellingmanifesto,CusterDied For YourSins,in 1969.Indiantopicsbecameallthe rage among eastern publishers, especially after the enormous success of Dee Brown'sBury My Heart at WoundedKneein 1971. rthur Penn's 1970film,LittleBig Man, fit perfectly into its times, provingto be the second-highestgrossing movie of the Based on Thomas Berger's deeply ironic year. novel, the film follows the travailof Jack Crabb (DustinHoffman)as he aimlesslymoves backand forth between the worlds of the Indians and the whites. Crabbgraduallycomes to recognize the purityof the simplerCheyenneway overthe decadence of the white world.The leaderof the whites is, of course, Custer-bloodthirsty, opportunistic, arrogant,and finallystarkravingmad. Director Penn and screenwriter Calder Willingham made no pretense at objectivity. Penn used his film as a vehicle to attackthe arrogant, wrong-headedbrandof leadershipthat prolonged the fightingin Vietnamratherthanadmita mistake.Custer,Pennfelt, was "soinfatuatedwith his capacity to win, so racially assured that he belonged to a superiorbreed,"thathe led his men into a hopeless battle, and thus made the perfect historicalmetaphor."AlthoughI am focusing on history," Penn explained in a press release, "I believe that the film is contemporarybecause ... history does repeatitself."55 The detailed, and fairly accurate,depiction of Custer's attack on Black Kettle's village on the Washitais used as anobviousparallelto the MyLai Massacre, even to the casting of orientalactress Amy Eccles as Crabb'sIndianwife killed in the slaughter.Soundbytes as if fromthe Vietnam-era six-o'clocknews appear,as when Custer defends the Washitamassacre to a shocked subordinate: 'This is a legal action, lieutenant.The men are under strict orders not to shoot the womenunless, of course, they refuse to surrender.History will confirmthe largermoralright is ours." At LittleBighorn Custeris trappedby his own arrogance,ignoringevidence of a trapratherthan "changea Custer decision."The battle is a rout, 54. New YorkTimes,October2, 1968,March18, 1960. 55. GeraldAstar,"TheGoodGuysWearWarPaint,"Look,34 (December1, 1970),60;LittleBig Man (CinemaCenterFilmsPressbook, 1971),4. See alsoJohnW.Turner,"LittleBig Man(1970),"in Pilkington andGraham,eds., WesternMovies,109-21. 53 Montana The Magazine of WesternHistory with no lines of defense or order. Custer,entirely unhinged,wandersaboutrantinguntilstruckdown by arrowsjust before he can kill Crabb.This time there is to be no glory, no heroism,no redemptive sacrifice-just a well-deservedand ignoble death. This harshlyideologicalportrait,while containing some elements of truth, is ultimately even more wildly inaccuratethan TheyDied with their BootsOn.RichardMulligan'sCusteris a preening buffoonwho cannot be taken seriously. He is all conceit and bluster, failing entirely as menacing devilor as a particularlydangerousopponent.The sense ofironythatmarkedThomasBerger'snovel, where Custer is always larger than life, is gone entirely from the film version. Finally,the great Indianvictory at Little Bighorn is trivialized,for there canbe no honorin defeatingsuch a cowardly band of soldiers led by such a complete idiot. LittleBigMan is a disturbingtragedyclothedin the conventionsof broadfarce. It fed on the conventions of the westerngenre, holdingthem up to ridiculeandsometimesturningthemupsidedown. Custer,thatmost famousof allfrontierwarriorsthe hero, the martyr,the sacrificeof his race-was now exposed as a clown dressed up in a soldier suit.LittleBig Man strucka responsivechordwith audiences and for two decades had the finalword on GeneralCusterand his celebratedlast stand. Winter 1991 western,was cancelledin 1975.John Forddied in 1973,HowardHawksin 1977,JohnWaynein 1979, RaoulWalshin 1981,and Sam Peckinpahin 1984. No one stepped forwardto take their places. By 1980 only six westerns were released by the studios. Finally,in 1980,the coupdegracewas applied to the genre by the collapse of United Artists studio afterthe criticaland commercialfailureof Michael Cimino'sHeaven'sGate. Custer'scelluloid career rose and fell with the fortunes of the western film. He persisted as a heroicfigureon filmfarlongerthanhe didin print, but in all cases he proved a remarkablyresilient and flexible historical figure. From a symbol of heroic self-sacrificein the winning of the West, Custer graduallyevolved into a symbol of white arroganceandbrutalityin the conquestandexploitation of the West. As the popularperceptionof the military,the environment,the Indians,andthe West changed, a new Custer myth emerged in place of the old. But always,the fascinationwith this dashing if misguided soldier held firm-at least so long as the western film prospered. These Custer films have been like glass windows-sometimes opening up a pathway to an understandingof the past, as in FortApache-and other times staying shut to mirrorthe times in whichthey were made,as with TheyDiedwiththeir BootsOnandLittleBig Man.We can neverhope to discernthe facts of historyfromthem,butthe best of them can effect a truthfulfiction well worth contemplationandperhapstell us somethingabout ourselves. The video cassette revolutionof the 1980s has given a new life to many of these old features. finished with have Majorfilmssuch as ThePlainsman,TheyDied with ollywood may Custer after Little Big Man, but he re- their Books On, Fort Apache,and Little Big Man turnedin the 1974Frenchfilm Touchepas are all now easily accessible on videotape. Even la Femmeblanche.MarcelloMastroianni'sCuster minortitles, such as LittleBig Horn,Buglesin the was a "milksopbraggartanddandyinfatuatedwith Afternoon,and SeventhCavalry,are reaching enhis own success." The last stand was filmed in a tirelynew audiencesas a result of video sales and Paris excavation pit with Vietnamese refugees rental outlets. This, of course, has remarkably increasedthe audienceandinfluenceofolderfilms, playingthe Sioux.DirectorMarcoFerrerifoundit "laughable"that "the conquerors are eventually so that the impactof a film will no longer be tied wiped out too. That'swhat happenedat LittleBig only to the generationof its release period.Errol Horn and what will happen tomorrow, I hope, Flynn's Custer can now compete with Richard But Ferreri's Marxist vision of Little everywhere." Mulligan'sCuster for the hearts and minds of a Bighornwas neverreleased in the UnitedStates.56 vast video audience, both now and far into the future. Hollywood appeared to be finished with the Custerstory, andperhapswith the western genre 56. BrianW. Dippie,"PopcornandIndians:Custeron the Screen," as well.Anew, darkervision of the pasthad settled Cultures,2 (no. 1, 1974),162-63.Custerreturnedto the screenin a 1976 on a torn and dividednation.Guiltand self-doubt spoofof earlyHollywood,WonTonTontheDog WhoSavedHollywood, where Ron Leibmanplays the actor Rudy Montague,who portrays had replacedprideandoptimism.The westerns of Custerin the film withinthe film;the overblown1981western, The the 1970s reflected this nationalmalaise, finally Legend of theLoneRanger,whereLincolnTatehada cameoas a rather foolish Custer;and in the 1984 comedy, Teachers,in which Richard cannibalizingthemselves andparodyingthe genre Mulliganreprisedhis Custerrole while portrayingan escapedmental out of existence. At the same time, the old masters patient who dressedupas historicalcharacters.Bythe 1980sHollywood left the scene. Gunsmoke,the last great television viewedthe Custerstoryonlyas comicrelief. 54 The real George A. and Elizabeth Custer in their study at Fort Lincoln,DakotaTerritory, 1873 Fi ~ _~Painted Rosanna Arquette as The Elizabeth real George A, Custer Indians prepared for battle (Fourphotos from Son of the MorningStar [ABC,19911) Gary Cole as Custer barks orders as his troops attempt to form a battle line. _ Gary Cole's Custer takes aim. Winter 1991 Montana The Magazineof WesternHistory We mayalso assume thatHollywoodis not done with General Custer either. The enormous success of LonesomeDoveon television,coupledwith the recenttriumphof KevinCostner'sDanceswith Wolvesatthe movietheaters,has heraldedto many the return of the western. These two features approachedour western heritage from decidedly differentpoints of view, but both.dealtwith their subjects on a grand scale, treatingtheir material seriously and recreating a compelling past for their audiences. A t the same time therehas been a re- super stardomand the mini-seriesfinallyfound a home at ABC.It will air on February3 and 4 with GaryCole as Custer, RosannaArquetteas Elizabeth, Dean Stockwell as Sheridan, and Rodney Grant(whois alsofeaturedinDancesWithWolves) as CrazyHorse. Indian war buffs will be enthralled by the program'scarefulattentionto historicaldetail.Its remarkablefidelityto the historicalrecordmarks it as by far the most accurate version of Little Bighornever filmed.It will be as drama,however, that the mini-serieswill have to win over a mass television audience. If the program proves successful it mayyet salvage Custer'ssullied popular reputation.Thatwill onlybe fitting,since for eight decades film has been the leadingfactorin determining the popularperception of this endlessly fascinatingfrontiersoldier. Whateverthe impactof SonoftheMorningStar, we canbe certainthatcreativeartistswillcontinue to interpretand reinterpretthe Custer story. It is too powerful a tale to be long ignored. Custer, dying again,and again,and againwill continueto provideaudienceswithlessons aboutthe past,the present, and the future. But, of course, he never really died. Ultimately,that bold young warrior achievedhis greatest ambition-immortality. A markablerevivalofinterestinCuster.Evan S. Connell'sfree-wheelingexplorationof Custer and his singular, epic moment at Little Bighorn,SonoftheMorningStar,was the surprise bestseller of 1984. Timelisted it as one of the top books of the decade.Connell'sportraitof Custeras a brave, experienced, but driven soldier full of compelling contradictionsdid much to rehabilitate his reputation.That was followed in 1988 by RobertM. Utley'sdefinitivebiography,Cavalierin Buckskin:GeorgeArmstrongCusterand the Western MilitaryFrontier,which gave an even more PAULANDREWHUTTONis associateprofessorof positive portraitof its protagonist. intheUniversity ofNewMexico,Albuquerque, history Son of the Morning Star was promptlydevelto this magazine,andauthorof frequentcontributor oped as a television mini-series.Scriptedby Mel- numerousworkson westernhistoryandpopularculissa Mathison (who wrote E. T.), the production ture,including hisprize-winning, PhilSheridan andHis initiallyhadKevinCostnersignedto portrayCuster. Army(1985).His TheCusterReaderwillbe published NBC,not feeling that Costner was a big enough latethisyear,andhe is currently writingamajorbiographyof DavyCrockett. star, passed on the project. Costner went on to Movies ConcerningCuster The following theatrical films have concerned Custer or his last battle. Some of the silents, however, may be variant titles of the same film: Custer'sLast Stand [On The LittleBig Horn] (1909); Custer'sLast Fight [For the Honorof the Seventh]and also Custer'sLast Raid (1912);The Massacre(1912);TheBig HornMassacre(1913); Campingwith Custer(1913); Campaigningwith Custer(1913);Custer'sLast Scout (1915);Britton of the Seventh (1916); Bob Hampton of Placer (1921);WildBill Hickok(1923);TheScarletWest (1925); The Flaming Frontier (1926); The Last Frontier(1926);WithGeneralCusterat the Little Big Horn (1926);Spoilersof the West(1927);The Last Frontier(1932);The WorldChanges(1933); 56 Custer'sLast Stand (1936, serial re-released as feature in 1947); The Plainsman (1937); The OregonTrail(1939);Wyoming(1940);SantaFe Trail (1940);BadlandsofDakota(1941);TheyDiedwith theirBootsOn(1941);FortApache(1948);SheWore a YellowRibbon(1949);Warpath(1951);LittleBig Horn (1951);Bugles in theAfternoon(1952);SittingBull (1954);ChiefCrazyHorse(1955);Seventh Cavalry (1956); Tonka (1958); The Canadians (1961); The Great Sioux Massacre (1965); The GloryGuys(1965);DueSergentidelGeneraleCuster (1965); Red Tomahawk(1966); The Plainsman (1966);TheLegendof Custer(1967);Custerof the West(1968);LittleBig Man (1970);Touchepas la FemmeBlanche(1974);WonTonTontheDog Who Saved Hollywood(1976); The Legendof the Lone Ranger(1981);and Teachers(1984). The Many Faces M Custer | RonaldReaganin Santa Fe Trail (Warner Broth- _ ? . gS g xw~~ GaryColein g Son ofthe ono Star t Morning (ABC, 99) ers, 1940) ... HenryFondaat rightas Custerlike characterOwenThursdayin FortAbache(RKO,1948) i- A' TherealGeorgeArmstongCuster, aboveleft,poses for CivilWarphotographerMathewBradyin 1865, whileJohn Miljanat right strikes the same pose for ThePlainsman (Paramount, 1937). y AndrewDuggan,below, as Custer-likecharacter,General McCabe,in GloryGuys(United" Artists,1965) " BrittLomandin Tonka(WaltDisney Productions,1958) RI _:.., ' JamesOlsenin TheCourt MartialofGeorge Armstrong Custer (NBC,1977) _ I '.i 'A, 8 jl . ? '"S BarryAtwaterin Cheyenne(ABC,1961) 7j ErrolFlynnin"TheyDied w ith their Boots On Ll. . (WarnerBrothers,1941) = ; ' -. i Joe Morrosin Time Tunnel (ABC,1966) 57