The Short Humour Site









Home : Writers' Showcase : Submission Guidelines : A Man of a Few More Words : Links

Writers' Showcase

The Lone Ranger: A Thug? Say It Ain't So!
by Don Drewniak

During the October through March period in the early to mid-1950s when the weather made playing baseball on a Saturday afternoon either impossible or miserable, the Park Theater in Fall River was the place for kids to go.

If ever there was a bargain, this was it. For a quarter, or the shaking of a piggy bank mixture of pennies, nickels and dimes, kids were treated to several cartoons, a serial, a newsreel, two feature films (usually westerns or science fiction) and a stage show in between the two movies. There is not a single one of the westerns (or as most kids called them, “Cowboys and Indians”) that I remember. However, among the science fiction films that I recall seeing (or think I recall seeing) at the Park Theater were The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Man from Planet X, The Thing from Another World, When Worlds Collide, Red Planet Mars, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Invaders from Mars, It Came from Outer Space, Phantom from Space, Creature from the Black Lagoon, Killers from Space and Them!

My two favorites were Them! and The Thing from Another World (better known as The Thing). Them! was the first of the 50s giant-insect films and one of the first to use radiation from atomic explosions as a causal factor in science-fiction films.

The Thing scared me more than any of the other Park Theater science-fiction movies. A crashed flying saucer, along with an alien encased in ice, was uncovered by a U.S. Air Force crew in the Antarctic. The alien was brought back to a remote research outpost. It broke free when an Air Force corporal covered the block of ice containing the alien with an electric blanket which, unbeknownst to him, had been previously turned on.

The ice melted thus freeing the plant-based alien who went on a destruction and killing spree. Some years later, I found out that the part of the alien was played by James Arness, who went on to gain fame playing the part of Marshall Matt Dillon on television’s Gunsmoke.

The shows at the Park Theater consisted of on-stage performances by either clowns, jugglers or magicians. There might have been other acts, but these are the only ones still roaming around in my memory. The big moment, however, came right after the end of the day’s act — the drawing for prizes. Several hundred sugar-hyped kids began screaming and yelling while holding their precious ticket stubs. The sugar, of course, was the result of having stuffed themselves on Sky Bars, Hershey’s Chocolate Bars, Milky Way’s, Tootsie Rolls, M&Ms, Peanut M&Ms, Snickers and 3 Musketeers.

Somehow, all were convinced that the screaming and yelling would increase the odds of winning one of the dozen or so prizes. Ultimately, the winning of a prize (something I never did) probably proved to be as disappointing as not winning. Why? The values were roughly akin to what one “wins” today after spending ten dollars or so at a boardwalk arcade.

I don’t remember the theater being anything less than filled for those Saturday afternoon extravaganzas.

During the second half of the 50s (as I matured), I frequented the Academy Theater in downtown Fall River and area drive-in theaters. Among the classics that helped me gain an appreciation of the arts were The Blob, The Amazing Colossal Man, The Incredible Shrinking Man, Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, It Conquered the World, Attack of the Crab Monsters, Attack of the 50 Foot Woman and I Married a Monster from Outer Space.

******

In the early days of television, it was often difficult for kids (younger than I was, of course) to distinguish what was real from what was not. Despite the visible strings that “animated” Howdy Doody, legions of four, five, six and even some seven-year-old kids could not be convinced that he wasn’t real.

While still restricted to watching television on my Uncle Al’s set as our family had as yet to purchase a television, next to the Adventures of Superman, my favorite program was The Lone Ranger. With three or four episodes featuring the Lone Ranger and Tonto firmly etched in my nine-year-old brain, I ventured off to the Park Theater knowing that a new serial, Radar Men From the Moon, was about to begin. Cartoons over, onto the screen flashed, “A Republic Serial.” This was quickly followed by a long-range shot of a flying figure not unlike Superman without a cape. That image rapidly disappeared with a close-up showing the figure wearing a round, silver-colored helmet with large openings for its mouth and two eyes. The helmet was cone shaped above the head.

“Look, it's the Tin Man,” screamed a kid sitting three seats from me. Every kid sitting within a radius of twenty feet laughed. The flying “Tin Man” was the hero, Commando Cody.

The beginning was every serial-loving kid’s dream. Kaboom! An oilfield went up in flames. Kaboom! An electric transmission line was destroyed. Kaboom! A large office building was blown apart. Cheers from the audience.

The scene then switched to a laboratory where Commando Cody (wearing a suit) had been working on a rocket ship. With him was a good-looking, young female (a staple of serials and science-fiction movies of the era) and a male scientist. He had to be a scientist because he was wearing a lab coat.

Newspaper in hand, the female read an article to her companions that described the thirteenth explosion, one that had taken place at “Area Defense Headquarters.”

At this point, a Mr. Henderson (wearing a suit, of course), who “only answered to a few people in the country,” returned from a visit to Washington, DC (where else?) and informed the threesome that the government believed the explosions may have been from an atomic-ray machine. How was this deduced? Astronomers had been noticing “an unusual amount of atomic activity on the moon.” Laughable now; quite plausible in the early 50s.

Henderson quickly put it all together, “Atomic activity on the moon, atomic blasts on Earth.” The solution? Commando Cody would pilot his untested rocket to the moon.

Scene shift. The open back of a truck. Two men inside (wearing suits, of course). A device that had to be the dreaded atomic-ray machine. An approaching train. Kaboom! Cheers from the audience.

Thug One said with a laugh, “That did it.” And added a line or two more about getting to a pass where a troop train would be coming through.

“Hey,” I yelled, “that guy sounds like the Lone Ranger.”

“Shut up, kid,” said someone sitting behind me.

He sounded older than me, so I figured it wouldn’t be a good idea to shower him with a half-full container of orange soda.

Reports came to Commando Cody about the train wreck, the nearby truck with two men in it and something that looked like large gun. Cody changed into his flying suit, which included a rocket backpack, and ran outside.

“Look at that,” said another kid who was sitting nearby, “he takes off just like Superman.” Looking back on those days, I wonder if the actors shared the same springboard.

Cody managed to intercept the two and opened fire with a pistol. The bad guys ran out of ammunition and hightailed it, leaving the truck and the atomic-ray gun behind. For whatever reason, Commando Cody didn’t go after them.

During that sequence, not only did I once again recognize the voice as that of the Lone Ranger, I also got a facial close-up. Yes, I was old enough to know that both Superman and the Lone Ranger were fictitious characters played by actors. But the Lone Ranger as a thug in the employ of Retik, the evil ruler of the moon?

Say it ain’t so.

Oh, no! Episode One of the twelve-part serial ended with Commando Cody, then on the moon, apparently vaporized by Retik who used a ray-pistol. Now, I knew Cody couldn’t have been vaporized, but like thousands of kids around the United States (and more than a few adults) I couldn’t resist going back for Episode Two. True to the world of serials, the film had been turned back forty seconds or so. Added was Cody ducking behind a shielding object. It was the object that had been vaporized. Surprise!

In all, I watched five of the twelve episodes, including the last one. During a film career that spanned twenty-one years beginning in 1937, Clayton Moore appeared in over two hundred films, serials and television programs (including 169 Lone Ranger episodes). His film career ended with the second of two feature-length movies, The Lone Ranger and the Lost City of Gold (1958). This followed The Lone Ranger (1956).

For the next forty years, in the guise of the Lone Ranger, Moore crisscrossed the United States making personal appearances, television guest shots and commercials. He embraced his Lone Ranger identity and carved out a successful post-film career.

The Lone Ranger
ABC Television, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons