Wednesday, March 19, 2025

TOM MIX, KEN MAYNARD, WILLIAM BOYD: The Mystery of Who was Author Harold Robbins's "Nevada Smith"?

The world wide guessing game, as to which fictional character was really whom? Started on January 1, 1961, when the novel, "The Carpetbaggers", written by Harold Robbins, had first been published, and was speedily climbing the best seller lists. To the Hollywood motion picture community, the book reviewers, and the readers, the novel was the real life of Howard Hughes, but using fictional characters.



As my long title indicates, this article focuses upon one of author Harold Robbins's character's, the cowboy actor, "NEVADA SMITH".

Harold Robbins:

Fiction vs reality starred with his own birth. One story states that Harold Rubin was the son of Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire, Francis "Fannie" Smith, and Charles Rubin, and was born on May 21, 1916, in New York City. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Robbins

Another says he was born Francis Kane, an abandoned infant, whose parents were unknown. Adding that he was raised in a Catholic Orphanage in Brooklyn's "Hells Kitchen", and the last of his several foster parents, adopted the boy, giving him the last name of Rubin. In this account, Kane claimed of being a runner for a bookie and other gamblers.

https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/educational-magazines/robbins-harold-1916-1997#:~:text=When%20the%20last%20of%20his,made%20it%20his%20legal%20name.

While a third story, found in author Andrew Wilson's, 2011, "Harold Robbins: The Man Who Invented Sex", claims he was raised by his father, a pharmacist, and a step-mother named "Blanche". Harold's birth mother having died in childbirth.

https://books.google.com/books?id=T4347c2YS18C&pg=PA7#v=onepage&q&f=false 

However, according to the website, "Britannica", https://www.britannica.com/biography/Harold-Robbins

Robbins was known to have fabricated numerous episodes that were repeated by journalists and others who documented his storied existence, paying little attention to consistency or plausibility. The particulars of his life were not untangled until a decade after his death. The childhood he invented for himself was particularly colourful: he claimed to have been raised in a Catholic orphanage and then adopted by a poor Jewish family. He also maintained that he had earned extra money as a child prostitute. In fact, the orphanage where he claimed to have been abandoned never existed. Robbins was actually raised in Brooklyn with three half-siblings by his Jewish birth father, who was a pharmacist, and his stepmother; his birth mother had died shortly after he was born. 

We know as truth, that in 1931, Harold, seen below, dropped out of high school and enlisted in the United States Navy. After which, Rubin claimed to have been the sole survivor of a torpedoed submarine. Problem, no American submarines were ever torpedoed during the entire decade of the 1930's. During the 1940's, he did work, first doing odd jobs, including at "Universal Picture", and at the studio, worked his way up to a screenplay writer. He took the last name of "Robbins", when he wrote his first novel.













That first novel, "Never Love a Stranger", was published in 1948. The book had sold 3-million-copies, by the release of the motion picture version, on June 22, 1958. The story is about a Jewish boy raised in a Catholic orphanage, (Sound familiar?), who runs away into a life of crime. In the motion picture, "Frankie Kane", was portrayed by John Drew Barrymore. His Jewish lawyer friend, "Martin Cabell", was portrayed by 4th-billed, Steve McQueen, whose next motion picture was the cult science fiction film, 1958's, "The Blob".

Robbins's second novel, was 1949's "The Dream Merchants", and tells the "rags to riches" story of "Johnny Edge". A penniless young dreamer who comes to Hollywood and builds a motion picture studio. There was no problem with readers familiar with "Universal Pictures" founder Carl Laemmle, to figure out who "Edge" was freely based upon.

In 1952, Harold Robbins wrote, "A Stone for Danny Fisher". Which tells the story of the Great Depression's effect on a lower-middle class Jewish family from Brooklyn. "Danny" is a boxer that is bribed to throw the "Golden Gloves" championship, but double-crosses the underworld gamblers and wins. He then goes into hiding, leaving behind, the Catholic young woman he loves and his family, for two-years. "Danny" returns to boxing, marries the girl he loves, and the novel ends with "Danny Fisher's" confrontation with the gamblers he double-crossed, and his death by them. 

The original plan was to make a hard-hitting motion picture starring James Dean, but he was killed in a car accident and that screenplay shelved. In 1958, that hard-hitting boxing crime story was rewritten. The new story was now about a singer, who gets mixed up with two women, and some petty crooks. The new version of "A Stone for Danny Fisher", became "King Creole", starring Elvis Presley and Carolyn Jones.

Harold Robbins's, 1961 novel, "The Carpetbaggers", was followed by his 1962 novel, "Where Love Has Gone".  This was an obviously fictionalized version of the love affair between actress Lana Turner, and gangster, "Johnny Stompanato".

Two of the Three Main Characters in "The Carpetbaggers" vs Reality:

The entire novel revolves around "Jonas Cord, Jr". Who appears to be nothing more than a very thin version of Howard Robard Hughes, Jr, as the following 5-comparisons illustrate:

1. "Cord Junior", portrayed by George Peppard in the 1964 motion picture, is the heir to his father's, "Cord Explosives Company". While Hughes, Junior, was the heir to his father's, "Hughes Tools Company".

2. After his father's death, "Jonas" turns his father's business into a major airplane manufacturing company and sets several major aviation records himself. Howard did the exact same things after his father's death.

3. In the novel, "Jonas" creates the airline, "ICA (Inter Continental Airways)". While, Howard created "TWA (Trans World Airways)".

4. "Jonas" built and flew the "Centurion, flying boat". Quoting the character, the "biggest airplane ever built". This was to prove to the United States Navy that the aircraft meet their contract conditions. In reality, Howard Hughes built the "Spruce Goose (Hughes Aircraft's H-4 Hercules)", under the exact requirements. As of this writing, it is still located in a hanger, for tourist viewing, next to the "Queen Mary" in Long Beach, California

5. The novel also looks at "Jonas Cord's" motion picture making, and the actresses in his life. In the late 1940's and the first half of the 1950's, Howard Hughes owned "RKO Pictures".

Which brings me to my look at the real "Jonas Cord", in my article, "HOWARD ROBARD HUGHES, JR.: The Motion Pictures"found at:

https://www.bewaretheblog.com/2018/08/howard-robard-hughes-jr-motion-pictures.html









Above, Howard Hughes in the cockpit of the "Spruce Goose". Below, George Peppard as "Jonas Cord".












Her name was Jean Harlow, she was known for her acting, and her affair with Howard Hughes. Although, that affair may never have happened, and the evidence about it taking place, is extremely vague. That is not to say, Harold Robbins, with his character of "Rina Marlowe", portrayed by Carol Baker in the motion picture, didn't make good sex passages with "Jonas Cord" for the reader.













Above, Jean Harlow, and below, Caroll Baker portraying "Rina Marlowe".


















Fictional biographies can make for sultry reading, and two, 1965 fictional motion picture biographies, as a result of the 1964 motion picture version of Harold Robbins', "The Carpetbaggers", can lead to a studio war to get their version of the life of "Jean Harlow" into movie theater's first. 

One film starred Carol Lynley as "Jean Harlow".















The other played their cards close to the vest, with Caroll Baker, now as the "actual ?" "Jean Harlow".











My article is "JEAN HARLOW: The 1965 Biographical Motion Picture Race", neither motion picture telling the true story at:

https://www.bewaretheblog.com/2021/05/jean-harlow-1965-biographical-motion.html 


The Third Main Character of "The Carpetbaggers" Possibly vs Reality:

The novel, as I have mentioned, deals with "Jonas Cord, Jr." and the women in his life. However, in "Jonas's" world, since he was born, is a man named he has always known as "Nevada Smith". He is a very old friend of his father's, and a one-time, "B" Cowboy star and producer. "Smith" should be a minor character in the story, but author Harold Robbins stops the story of "Jonas Cord, Jr." mid-way, and takes approximately one-third of the novel to tell the story of "Max Sand", the son of a white prospector - small rancher, and a Kiowa mother, who became "Nevada Smith", then continues the original story of "Jonas", as if the break in his original narrative never happened.

Two-years after the motion picture version of "The Carpetbaggers" was released, a lift from the 1961 novel, became:

NEVADA SMITH released on June 29, 1966




In the motion picture, Steve McQueen portrayed the Harold Robbins character of "Max Sand" aka: "Nevada Smith". He had been portrayed in the 1964 motion picture, as the older "Nevada Smith", by Alan Ladd. In this feature film, Brian Keith was seen as "Jonas Cord, Senior", "Smith's" mentor.











Above, Brian Keith with Steve McQueen in "Nevada Smith". Below, Alan Ladd in "The Carpetbaggers".
















As I previously mentioned, everyone who had read the original novel, "KNEW", without a doubt, who "Jonas" and "Rina" really were supposed to be. Two other of Harold Robbins's characters were also thought known to the world. "Jennie Denton", portrayed by Martha Hyer in the motion picture, was actually Jane Russell. While, "Monica Winthrop", portrayed by Elizabeth Ashley in the motion picture, was actually Hughes's first wife, Ella Botts Rice. 

However, a mystery remained:

WHO WAS MAX SAND IN REAL LIFE?

His Basic Back Story as told by Harold Robbins:

It is the 1890's in Texas, no exact year is given, and three men believe "Max Sand's" father has hidden gold. When he doesn't reveal the gold's location to them. "Max's" father and his Kiowa mother are murdered. "Max" was 16-years-old, when his parents are murdered, Steve McQueen was 34-years-old when he made the movie. Next, he goes after his parent's murderers, using his Kiowa learned tracking skills.

However, "Max" first meets "Jonas Cord, Sr.", a seller of firearms and attempts to rob him. There never was any gold! However, instead of being robbed, "Jonas" befriends the young fire brand and teaches "Max" how to actually use a pistol and not the broken one he tried to rob him with.

Over this large section of the novel, "Max Sand" tracks down each man. The first in Abilene, Texas, the next is in a Louisiana, prison camp. "Max" commits a bank robbery to get at the second murderer in the camp. To get the third, he changes his name to "Nevada Smith", to be able to join the third murderer's gang without recognition. This eventually leads to a shoot out at a river between the two men. "Max" out draws his parent's murderer, and shoots him multiple times, but not fatal. That third man wants the other to kill him, but "Max Sand" rides away, leaving the third calling out for death. 

When the reader first meets "Nevada Smith", in the novel, "The Carpetbaggers", he is a former "Stock Holder" in the "Hughes Tool Company", and a former "B-Western" cowboy movie star. The specific year is not mentioned for the novel's opening, but it is during the 1930's, and "Jonas Cord, Jr." is producing his first motion picture, "The Renegade", starring "Rina Marlowe", in her first movie.

"Jean Harlow's" actual first movie was as an "uncredited extra, not confirmed", in actor George O'Brien's, 1928, "Honor Bound". "The Renegade" is closer to Howard Hughes, 1943, "The Outlaw", starring his discovery Jane Russell. Whom Howard needed to have the "TWA" aircraft designers, design at bra for. In the novel, it is "Rina", in "The Renegade", that the bra had to be designed for. 

Since the publication of the novel, three Western actor's name's have come up and debated as the actual source for the character of "Max Sand". Harold Robbins went to his grave without naming his source and I will mention all three candidates in the order of being thought to be the model for "Nevada Smith".

TOM MIX

















We know that Harold Robbins's character of "Nevada Smith" was born in Texas to a Native American mother. 

Tom Mix was born on January 6, 1880, as Thomas Hezikiah Mix, in Mix Run, Pennsylvania. Never heard of it? Mix Run is an unincorporated village in Gibson Township, Cameron County, Pennsylvania. Which was named for Tom Mix's great-great-grandfather, who founded the village.

Tom Mix's married life and military career had there moments. He enlisted during the "Spanish American War", but never left the United States. During this time, Tom forgot to return after his furlough ended, and while on furlough, married Grace I. Allin on July 18, 1902. Fortunately for the AWOL soldier, he was not court-martialed, but his marriage ended in one-year. Next, in 1905, he married Kitty Jewel, but this marriage also only lasted one-year. Also, in 1905, Tom Mix rode, with a group of horseman he belonged to, in Theodore Roosevelt's inaugural presidential parade. Which years later, confused motion picture publicists into claiming he was one of "Roosevelt's Rough Riders". 

On January 10, 1909, Tom Mix, married the 3rd of his 5-wives, Olive Stokes. About this time, Mix went to work at the 110,000-acre, "Miller Brothers 101 Ranch", in what used to be Oklahoma's, Indian Country until November 16, 1907, when Oklahoma received Statehood. The brothers had a "Wild West Show" that they started, locally, in 1907, but when Tom Mix arrived in 1909. The brother's took it nationally with Mix winning the 1909, National riding and shooting contest, in Prescott, Arizona. His skills caught the eye of the "Selig Polyscope Company", and that same year, Tom Mix, made his first 5-motion picture shorts, consisting of:

October 21, 1909, "The Cowboy Millionaire", October 25, 1909, "Briton and Boer", November 8, 1909, "Up San Juan Hill", November 25, 1909, "On the Little Big Horn; or, Custer's Last Stand", and December 2, 1909, "An Indian's Wife's Devotion".

On July 13, 1912, Tom and Olive's daughter Ruth was born.

"Selig Polyscope" was based in Chicago, Illinois, had been filming in Las Vegas, New Mexico, but built a movie studio, seen below, in the Edendale area of Los Angeles in 1909. One of several small movie makers that came to this four square block pre-Hollywood location, at the start of the Southern California film industry.










I happened to live in Newhall, California, in the Santa Clarita Valley, and came upon the following information related to Tom Mix from the "Santa Clarita Valley History (SCVHistory.com)" website at:

https://scvhistory.com/scvhistory/birchard1993_015.htm

Actor-director-producer Tom Mix and his Selig Polyscope production crew relocated their operation from Las Vegas, N.M., to Newhall-Santa Clarita Valley in 1916. They erected a small Western movie town on the south side of Market Street between Newhall Avenue and today's Main Street. After Mix signed with William Fox in 1917 most filmmaking was done at the Fox (formerly Selig) lot at Edendale (Echo Park-Silver Lake) near Glendale, where Mix lived, although he continued to use Newhall occasionally through the mid-1920s. Surviving into the 21st Century are two bungalows at today's 24247 Main Street that were built in 1920 (per County Assessor records, which can be a little off in the 1910s-20s.) 
There is no evidence to suggest Mix ever set foot in Newhall prior to 1916. 





Above left foreground is Tom Mix and his film crew in 1916. The location is thought to be near Newhall's, "Veterans Historical Plaza".

Continuing with the article from the "SCVHistory" website, my reader finds:

Tom Mix's press was carefully plotted by publicists with fertile imaginations and a Rolodex (or equivalent) full of gossip columnists. If they wanted the public to believe Mix personally jumped over Beale's Cut on his Wonder Horse Tony in 1923's "Three Jumps Ahead," then that is what got reported.

By the time of Mix's arrival in Newhall in 1916, the "fake news" mongers were already out of control. They'd have us believe that sometime prior to or during 1916, Mix was elected mayor of Newhall (Newhall didn't have a mayor); that he served as town sheriff (he didn't); he created a telephone system (Newhall had 2 to 3 telephones from 1912 -1916 and 5 in 1917); and he even established the town's first traffic laws.

The latter is particularly absurd considering, first, that Mix was arrested and fined $50 for recklessly driving through Newhall in 1920; and, second, the manner of his death 20 years later.

Note:

The above article mentions the March 25, 1923, Tom Mix Western, "Three Jumps Ahead". So, let us take a look at that motion picture directed, at the time, by Jack Ford, better known, later, as director John Ford. 



In the above quote, the mention of the highlight of the picture was Tom Mix and "Tony, the Wonder Horse" jumping over the local "Beale's Cut". I turn to the website, "moviesites.org" at

https://www.moviesites.org/beales.htm

The article opens with:

Beale's Cut (formerly known as both the San Fernando Pass and the Newhall Pass) is located southeast of San Fernando Road between Sierra Highway and the Antelope Valley Freeway and has been used in numerous films since the silent era.

Starting the next paragraph, my reader will find that:

In John Ford's 5-reeler, Three Jumps Ahead (1923), Tom Mix is seen jumping over Beale's Cut. Careful examination of the jump scene reveals a noticeable size disproportion between the jumping horse, the rider (Mix), and the Cut's physical width. In all likelihood, the "jump" was an early special effects photo composite.Several stuntmen have claimed credit for this jump, including Andy Jaurejui of Newhall, who apparently doubled for Tom Mix in several promotional trailers for Three Jumps Ahead. Fox Film's Tom Mix was known to have spent quite a bit of time shooting in the Newhall area from 1916 to the mid-1920s.











Returning to my article prior to speaking to the movie "Three Jumps Ahead":

Between "The Cowboy Millionaire", October 21, 1909 and "The Heart of Texas Ryan", February 12, 1917, Tom Mix made 100-shorts for "Selig Polyscope". 















Above, the first appearance of Tom Mix's horse "Tony, The Wonder Horse", in 1917's, "The Heart of Texas Ryan".

"Selig" had been having major financial services, and in 1917, the studio was bought out by movie maker, William Fox, and became part of his company, "Fox Films".

Those one-hundred "Selig" films was making Tom Mix a favorite western actor, but it was William Fox's studio that made him a major star. According to the "Tom Mix Museum" website at:

https://www.tommixmuseum.com/about-tom

Tom was good for Fox Studios and they were good for Tom. When he was hired by Mr. Fox, Tom was paid $350. a week. A lot of money in 1917 but he became one of the highest paid movie stars of his time eventually earning over $17,000 a week. In addition to being on a solid financial footing the Fox Studio movies played to a much wider audience than the Selig movies. The wider exposure afforded by Fox undoubtedly contributed to Tom's move from a simply prolific actor to genuine world famous movie star.  

Tom Mix's first 4-Fox Motion Pictures, co-starred Victoria Forde, and the first title was "Hearts and Saddles", released on March 19, 1917.  

 

 



Over their movies together, Tom Mix had fallen in love with his co-starand he divorced Olive, before the end of 1917. In 1918, Tom married Victoria, and in February 12, 1922,   their daughter, Tomasina "Tommie" Mix was born.




Above, Tom and Victoria Mix

Returning to the Tom Mix Museum website my reader finds that":
Initially Tom's films at Fox were similar to those he had made at Selig. One reel quickies. The public, however, was becoming impatient with 15 minute movies and soon Tom and Fox were making multi reel feature films. In 1917 Tom made four one reel comedies and two feature dramas. In 1918 he made six feature films and only one single reel. As Tom became more popular the budgets for his films grew, his costumes became more elaborate and and he became more popular at the box office. Tom Mix made 85 films with Fox studios making both he and William Fox millionaires. The days at Fox were Tom's finest in the motion picture industry. Sadly only a few of the movies from this period are available in the United States today.

The old "Selig Polyscope" lot was basically empty and not really used. Tom Mix went over to it and built a 12-acre Western shooting set that became another of his "Mixville's".

By 1927, William Fox was getting tired of making films with Tom Mix, besides the Western movie market was getting flooded with similar western actors. Among those were, Hoot Gibson, Harry Carey, Randolph Scott, Buck Jones, Newhall, California's own William S. Hart, and even Gary Cooper. One list indicated there were 126-Westerns made and released in 1927. As a result, Fox let Mix go.

He left films and toured on the "Keith-Albee-Orpheum" vaudeville circuit. While threatening to leave the United States and tour Argentina, because no film company seemed to want him.

In July, 1928, Tom Mix moved to "FBO (Film Booking Offices of America)" aka: "FBO Pictures Corporation", made five movies, got in trouble with the owner, Joseph Kennedy, and walked.

At this time, Tom Mix had became a friend of the aging Wyatt Earp. Who was now living in Los Angeles, Mix would be a pallbearer, on January 13, 1929, for the hero of "The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral".

Tom was a big spender and a pilot, and at one time had bought his own airplane. While, Victoria Mix kept spending her husband's money and took their daughter on several trips to Europe. Then the stock market crashed in 1929, and cost the couple their Arizona ranch and Hollywood mansion. Tom, needing income, signed with the "Sells Floto Circus", and started to tour.




Followed by Tom Mix being charged with income tax evasion for 1925, 1926, and 1927. There was no proof that he was aware that those taxes were not paid by his accountant, but he signed the papers and paid a very large fine.




In 1931, Tom and Victoria Mix divorced, and in 1932, Tom Mix married Mabel Hubbard Ward. He was back making movies, when "Universal Pictures" offered him leads in talking films. His second sound movie was based directly on the actual, Max Brand novel, 1932's, "Destry Rides Again", about a man framed for murder and finding the real murderer to clear himself. The screenplay used the actual Max Brand story, and not just the title, as in the 1939 Marlene Dietrich, James Stewart, movie.





For "Mascot Pictures, Tom Mix starred in the cliff-hanger-serial, "The Miracle Rider", Chapter One, was first released on May 18, 1935.







Above, Edward Hern portraying "Janss" and Tom Mix portraying Tom Morgan.

Five-years later, after only one more movie and a 1940 short, but a "Ralston Purina" radio program. On October 12, 1940, after visiting Ed Echols, the Pima County Sheriff, Tom Mix had to take a detour 18-miles south of Florence, Arizona. His car overturned and he was killed.









The second "B" Cowboy Actor considered for "Max Sand" was:

KEN MAYNARD







Like Tom Mix, stunt man, cowboy actor, and producer, Ken Maynard wasn't born in "Max Sand's", Texas! However, he was, like Harold Robbins's, older, "Nevada Smith", a sometimes western movie director, and screenplay writer.

Kenneth Olin Maynard, was born on July 21, 1895, in Vevay, Indiana. The town was founded by Swiss settlers in 1802. In 1814, Vevay, became the country seat of Switzerland County, Indiana. Ken was one of 5-children, and his younger brother, Kermit, who was often confused with him, would also star in Western movies. Kermit had an Engineering Degree from "Indiana University".






Above, Ken, below, Kermit





Ken had become an accomplished horseman, and appeared at rodeos doing trick riding, and moved on to carnivals and circus's. It is mentioned frequently, that Ken Maynard was part of "Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show", that ended its 30-year run in 1913. When the United States officially entered the First World War, Ken Maynard joined, and served in the United States Army through the war's end. After the war, Ken joined the "Ringling Brothers Circus".

Perhaps all of the above paragraph is true, and perhaps not, as some sources, such as the website "Travalanche", counter at:

It is generally given that he spent his early years in rodeos, carnivals, state fairs, and circuses, that he served in World War One, and that he was a trick rider with, Buffalo Bill's Wild West, and Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Baileybut some of this may be lore generated by studio publicity operatives.
Another look at this period in Ken Maynard's life, is found on the website, ingenweb.org at:


In an article entitled "Switzerland County", subtitled, "Kenneth Olin 'Ken' Maynard", by Sheila Kell is found, in an article posted by Ms. Kell, but written by Mrs. Stanton Taylor:
It was in Tompkinsville on December 8, 1916 that Ken Maynard was married to Arlie Harlan of Tompkinsville. 

It should be noted that the United States entered the First World War on April 6, 1917, that ended on November 11, 1918


Verifies Ken Maynard was married to a Arlie Green Harlan, and annotates "one child", but like the above article. Does not mentioned when, or how this marriage ended. However, it does rise questions over when Ken Maynard was in the army, what he did, and has the year of his start in motion pictures wrong.
After his marriage Ken worked neighboring county fairs and appeared in rodeos throughout this area. In 1919 he and his bride moved to Louisville, Ky., and he was stationed for a time at Camp Knox, now Fort Knox. After starring some time with Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus, Fox brought him to Hollywood. Fox never used him but he soon found a job. He made his film debut in 1924 in "Janice Meredith." 


FACT in Los Angles, Ken Maynard was approached by Vincennes, Indiana, born silent screen "B" cowboy star, Buck Jones, seen below, about becoming a western actor. Verified as accurate, after his discharge from the army, Buck Jones had been working at the "Miller Brothers 101 Ranch", and appeared in their shows. With his pregnant wife, he came to Hollywood, and ended up with William Fox hiring him as the back-up and stunt double for Tom Mix. Now, Buck Jones, got Ken Maynard his first acting job with the "Fox Films Corporation".





Ken Maynard's first film role was as an uncredited stunt man, in the 1923, "Fox Films Corporation's" western, "Brass Commandments", starring William Farnum. He followed that western with director William A. Wellman's, 1923 western, "The Man Who Won", starring William's brother, Dustin Farnum. Ken Maynard had 10th-billing portraying "Conroy" in the feature film. Maynard's 4th picture, was the first time the name John Ford appeared as a director, and not Jack Ford. The 1923 film title was "Cameo Kirby", and it was also the first on-screen appearance of actress Jean Arthur. What Ken Maynard's role was is apparently, unknown, and in the picture he was uncredited. 

As to the question of when Maynard's marriage to Arlie Green Harlan ended. I turn to the website, "Find a Grave", at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/3056/ken-maynard That website does not even mention Arlie, but lists Ken Maynard's first wife as Jeanne M. Knudsen Jensen, with only a married year of 1924 listed. "IMDb" correctly shows her as Jeanne M. Knudsen, and not with her second husband's last name.

However, the site does list Ken Maynard as having a son, William HARLAN Maynard, but the boy died 15-days after his birth, on January 16, 1918, ten-months prior to the end of the First World War. Again, going to the question of what did he actually do in the United States Army during the war?

It was at this time, that the actor wanted to move upward from mainly stunt work and into fully credited roles. He left "Fox", and on August 5, 1924, the American Revolutionary War feature film, "Janice Meredith", premiered in New York City. The title role went to actress Marion Davies, 7-years after she became "The Partner" of Newspaper magnet, William Randolph Hearst, who also produced the picture.  Buried in the uncredited role of "Paul Revere", was Ken Maynard, but things began to change with his next role.

In December of 1924, Ken Maynard found himself with the lead role of "Tex Sherwood", in the silent western, "$50,000 Reward", produced by J. Charles Davis, whom the actor had signed a contract. The motion picture also introduced Maynard's white stallion, "Tarzan", actually named by Edgar Rice Burroughs after meeting the two.






"The Demon Rider",
released in November 1925,  wasn't just a film title, stunt man turned star Ken Maynard was performing stunts that the other stunt men wouldn't touch. To be sure that the audience knew it was Ken doing them, producer, J. Charles Davis, had director Paul Hurst, and cinematographer Frank Coter, use plenty of tight shots on Ken Maynard and "Tarzan, King of all Horses".




Below, Ken Maynard, on the town during this period.





"The Demon Rider" was immediately followed by, "North Star", released on December 27, 1925. The story is very routine, but has two names that are of interest. The picture starred, with 1st-billing, "Strongheart the Dog", Ken Maynard was 3rd-human-billed as "Noel Blake", but 5th-human-billed, portraying "Archie West", was Clark Gable.





Above left to right, 1st-human-star, Gloria Lee Corbin portraying "Marcia Gale", Strongheart the Dog, portraying "North Star", standing, Ken Maynard, sitting, Clark Gable, and standing 2nd-human-star, Stuart Holmes portraying "Dick Robbins".

Oh, the other interesting name was Gary Cooper, uncredited, portraying a "Townsman".


Ken Maynard was hired by "First National Pictures", because of his name recognition, and made  a series of westerns. These westerns would have scenes reused later in sound westerns. I look at them in my article, "John Wayne and "Duke the Devil Horse", found at: https://www.bewaretheblog.com/2019/08/john-wayne-and-duke-devil-horse.html 

What happened, was in September 1928, the control of the studio was taken over by "Warner Brothers", and on November 4, 1929, "Warner Brothers" completely absorbed the company. This meant that all films made by "First National Pictures", became the now named, "Warner Brother's First National Picture's" property.

Enter John Wayne, and a short cut for the studio to make quickie sound westerns. They took the original screenplays for the series of Ken Maynard westerns, shot new footage with "The Duke", but used action footage of Maynard from the silent originals. 

The following "Bold Print" is from my linked article:

The idea was to save as much money as possible for Warner Brothers First National Pictures. Someone came up with remaking five of Ken Maynard's silent motion pictures that the studio owned. All they had to do was match up Maynard's look to the actor of these "new" "B" Westerns and the studio could use stock footage from the original.




Above, one of the posters for Ken Maynard's "The Unknown  Cavalier", released November 14, 1926. The film became "Ride Him Cowboy", released on April 23, 1932. Instead of Ken Maynard and his white horse "Tarzan". Viewers would see John Wayne and his white horse, now called
"Duke the Devil Horse".






Above Ken Maynard in "The Unknown Cavalier", and below, John Wayne in "Ride Him Cowboy". Wayne was dressed as close to Maynard as possible. So that in long shots, he became the other actor, and the audience was fooled.



An interesting piece of trivia, is that "Ride Him Cowboy", was directed by Leon Schlesinger. Who two years earlier took over Warner Brother's animation department and created the "Looney Toons" and then "Merrie Melodie" cartoons.

My reader will find more information about the original films and re-makes in my above linked article.

In either 1925, or 1926, depending upon the source, Ken Maynard married Mary Leeper. Again, I could not locate any sold information on why the marriage ended in 1939.





Back in 1929, Ken Maynard moved to "Universal Pictures", and became "The First Singing Cowboy". The following comes from my article "John Wayne Was a Singing Cowboy: Singing Cowboys and Cowgirls in the Movies and on 1950's Television" bringing "Happy Trails to You"at:



THE WAGON MASTER released on September 8, 1929




















The above publicity sheet, designed to get theater bookings for "The Wagon Master", is a reflection of Hollywood at the start of talking pictures. Right above "CARL LAEMMLE PRESENTS" is an important line:

Two negatives, one talking and singing, one silent.

Not all of the movie theaters in the United States were equipped to run sound feature films yet, and the owners could request, from "Universal Pictures", a silent version of "The Wagon Master".

With "The Wagon Master", rugged, handsome, leading silent "B" Cowboy, Ken Maynard, became the first "Singing Cowboy".

















Above, Ken Maynard, portraying "The Rambler", sings to co-star Edith Roberts, portraying Sue Smith. This was her last feature film out of 159. Sadly, in 1935, Edith Roberts passed away at the age of thirty-six, while giving birth to her only child.

In "The Wagon Master", Maynard sang two songs, "The Cowboys Lament", and, "The Lone Star Trail", both recorded for "Columbia Records". They also became the titles of two record albums "Columbia" and Ken Maynard made.

However, Maynard was a hard person to work with and part of that problem came from his drinking. After one year with "Universal Pictures", the first singing cowboy was released and picked-up first by forgotten, "Poverty Row" studio, "Tiffany Productions", and next, forgotten, "Sono-Art-World Wide Pictures".

In 1933, "Universal Pictures" rehired Ken Maynard, who was an accomplished musician, and he appeared in "The Fiddlin' Buckaroo", released on July 20, 1933, playing the violin. That picture was followed by, "The Trail Drive", released on September 4, 1933, with Maynard playing the banjo instead.

  

















Above, Ken Maynard and his white stallion, "Tarzan".

Author James Horwitz, in his 1978, "They Went That Away", relate the last meeting between Ken Maynard and Carl Laemmle, founder and owner of "Universal Pictures". This was right after the April 16, 1934, release of "Honor of the Range",  Laemmle asked Maynard, why did he make such an awful movie? According to Horwitz, Ken Maynard's reply was:

Mr. Laemmle, I have made you eight very bad pictures," and walked out on Laemmle and Universal.

Later, in 1934, producer Nat Levine hired Ken Maynard to star in a cliff-hanger serial, "Mystery Mountain", with the idea of making a series of major westerns with Maynard. On November 15, 1934, their movie "In Old Santa Fe" opened and was a big hit.




On December 3, 1934, Chapter One of the 3-hour-43-minute cliff-hanger, "Mystery Mountain", premiered.





Both Ken Maynard's alcoholism and the actor's unprofessional attitude toward his fellow actors and crew, resulted in his firing. Nat Levine promoted a radio western singer from "In Old Santa Fe" to lead his next motion picture. That singer's name was Gene Autry!

During this period, Ken Maynard worked at the "Cole Brother's Circus";




Maynard next showed up on-screen in "Colombia Pictures", 1935, "Western Frontier". Working for "Columbia Pictures" lasted for another 7-pictures, before they let him go. Then on July 16, 1937, Ken Maynard hit rock bottom with "Boots of Destiny", from the long forgotten independent film company, "Grand National Films, Inc", that went bankrupt in 1939. During that same period, he made some films for "Colony Productions", owned by producer Arthur Alexander, the nephew of Carl Laemmle, that lasted into March 13, 1940, with "Phantom Rancher". 

According to the website, "Western Clippings":


That same year, in October, Ken Maynard married Bertha Rowland Denham, a performer in his circus.




For the next 3-years, it appears that Ken Maynard just appeared in his own Circus/Wild West show.





Once again, Ken Maynard returned to the motion picture screen. When low-budget film company,
"Monogram Pictures", teamed him up with another long time "B" Cowboy, Hoot Gibson, in "Wild Horse Stampede", released April 16, 1943.





On December 3, 1943, a third long time "B" Cowboy, Bob Steele, was added to the "Monogram" series, in "Death Valley Rangers".






Ken Maynard, after "Harmony Trail", released December 1, 1944, returned to a small circus operation, but lost it to creditors. His marriage to Bertha ended in 1968 as his debts mounted up. He had an unknown benefactor that kept Ken Maynard going and it is believed that was Gene Autry. In 1972, Ken Maynard had two very small roles in a movie entitled "Bigfoot", and the never released,
"The Marshall of Windy Hollow". On March 23, 1977, 73-years-old, Kenneth Olin Maynard passed away from cancer.


The final candidate for being the model of "Max Sand (Nevada Smith)", became the first western television star..


WILLIAM BOYD






On June 5, 1895, William Lawrence Boyd, was born in Hendrysburg, Ohio. His father Charles William Boyd was a day laborer, and the boy's mother was Lida Wilkins Boyd. One source has the Boyd family moving from Cambridge, Ohio, to Tulsa, Oklahoma, between 1909 and 1913. Another has the family moving to Tulsa, Oklahoma, when William was 7-years old, which meant the year was 1902. What, and how long his education was, is unclear. One site says he moved to California after his father's death, another after the death of both parents. According to the website, "Find a Grave" at:


Charles William Boyd died in 1913, and Lida Alberta "Birdie" Wilkins died in 1922, but her name at that time was Lida Alberta "Birdie" Wilkins Burton. However, I have not been able to find out where the last name of "Burton"came from, but probably a second marriage. However, when, and where was her son at that time?

In Oklahoma, William found jobs as a grocery clerk,  and an oil field worker. According to the website "ancestors.familysearch.org":


On February 6, 1917, Laura Margaret Maynes married William Lawrence Boyd in Los Angeles, California, and they would have one son, name not mentioned. According to the website, "wikitree.com" at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Maynes-78 "The marriage was not to last, and the pair divorced a couple of years later."

When the United States joined the First World War, William Boyd went to enlist in the army, but was classified exempt, because of a heart condition. He became a California orange grove picker, and auto salesman, before coming to Hollywood.

Several sources show Boyd's first motion picture role as an extra, in director Cecil B. DeMille's, 1920, "Why Change Your Wife?". That is incorrect, William Boyd's first role was as an uncredited extra, but the motion picture was director Cecil B. DeMille's, 1918, "Old Wives for New". The new actor's next role, was also uncredited, in 1919's, "Was He Guilty", followed by actor - director, Donald Crisp's, 1920's, "The Six Best Cellars", leading to not a role as an extra, but the uncredited role of a "Naval Officer at Hotel", in director Cecil B. DeMille's, "Why Change Your Wife?".

On September 24, 1921, William Boyd married actress Ruth Miller. Miller had 3rd-billing portraying "Zilah - a marriage market prospect", in Rudolph Valentino's, 1921, "The Sheik". 

The following is from the website, "A Silent Film Review", at:

According to Cecil B. DeMille’s autobiography, while filming an elaborate pool party sequence for the 1922 film Saturday Night, character actress Julia Faye leapt into the water. The top of her patent leather swimsuit burst open on impact– in full view of camera, crew and cast. William Boyd was working as an extra in the scene and he leapt into action. He turned Faye towards him and held her close, shielding her from the camera with his body and making it look like they were simply a romantic couple. After the scene ended, he lent her his coat.
Faye was DeMille’s longtime mistress and she told the director of Boyd’s gallant conduct. DeMille was doubly impressed that Boyd had not only saved Faye’s modesty but had also done so in a way that did not spoil the take. He personally thanked Boyd, was impressed with his fearless demeanor and made it his goal to help the young man get a foothold in Hollywood.

In 1924, Ruth Miller and William Boyd had divorced.

19-motion picture's after the bathing suit incident in 1922's, "Saturday Night". Now found, William Boyd in director Cecil B. DeMille's, 1925, "The Road to Yesterday", 4th-billed in the actor's breakout role of "Joe Moreland". 




This story had a married couple, "Kenneth Paulton", portrayed by Joseph Schildkraut, and "Malena Paulton", portrayed by Jetta Goudal, attempting to keep their marriage together. Also, found on the above website is this description of the motion picture that has the actor time traveling to tell the story.
Cecil B. DeMille’s first feature from his shiny new studio,The Road to Yesterday is the epic tale of two couples, marital strife, a fiery train wreck, flappers, ministers and a touch of time travel. You know, keeping things simple. It is also notable as the film that started William “Hopalong Cassidy” Boyd on his path to stardom.

 





















On April 4, 1926, Cecil B. DeMille gave William Boyd the lead in his silent epic:

THE VOLGA BOATMAN



William Boyd portrayed the title character, "Feodor, a Volga Boatman".



Elinor Fair portrayed "Vera, a Princess". Fair and William Boyd had been married on January 13, 1926.












Victor Varconi portrayed "Prince Dimitri".















Found in the "Exhibtors Herald" for March and June 1926, at:

https://archive.org/details/exhibitorsherald25unse/page/n16/mode/1up 

Vera, a princess engaged to a Russian nobleman, falls in love with Feodor, a young boatman. A revolution breaks out and the threatened princess is saved by the boatman, and brought to an inn as his wife. Here they are both captured by the royal army, where the woman’s former sweetheart makes her dance for the drunken soldiers. The boatman shoots one of them, and he and the princess are ordered to be shot. They are saved in time by the revolutionists, who force the noblemen to assume their places as boatmen. Realizing they are in love with each other, the boatman and the princess go their way.

William Boyd was now a matinee idol, and a major leading man. 7-motion pictures later, and Boyd appeared in Cecil B. DeMille's religious epic:

KING OF KINGS premiering in New York City on April 19, 1927

















Above, Michael D. Moore billed as Mickey Moore, portraying "Mark", and William Boyd portraying "Simon of Cyrene". Below left to right, Jacquline Logan portraying "Mary Magdalene", Josephine Norman portraying "Mary of Bethany", and William Boyd.


















Right after DeMille's, "King of Kings", William Boyd went under contract with "Pathé Exchange". The company would become part of "Radio Pictures", which eventually became "RKO Pictures".

The following is from the website for "RKO Pictures" at: https://rko.com/history-2/

1928

Two titans of their age – David Sarnoff, President of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) and Joseph P. Kennedy, father of the future President and owner of the Film Booking Office of America (FBO), a movie distribution company – met at an oyster bar in Manhattan. By the time the meal was over, they’d agreed to combine RCA’s Keith-Albee-Orpheum theater chain with Kennedy’s company (as well as the fledgling Pathe Studios) to form Radio-Keith-Orpheum, or the RKO Corporation.

In April, 1928, "Cecil B. DeMille Productions", released "Skyscraper", starring William Boyd. DeMille had instructed, recently arrived from the Soviet Union, uncredited authoress, Ayn Rand to rewrite the screenplay. Her screenplay would be the basis for her 1943 novel, "The Fountainhead".






On January 22, 1929, a part-talkie-part-silent motion picture, "Lady of the Pavement", directed by   D. W. Griffith, was released starring William Boyd.















On December 28, 1929, the "all music. all sound. all dialogue" motion picture "His First Command" was released. The feature film starred William Boyd and featured Dorothy Sebastian.













The only motion picture William Boyd made during 1930, was "Officer O'Brien", released on February 15, 1930.

On November 30, 1930, William Boyd and Einor Fair's divorce became final. In December, William Boyd married Dorothy Sebastian in Las Vegas, Nevada. 

The following is from the website "Radio Classics", written by Ivan G. Shreve, Jr, and dated June 5, 2019, found at http://www.radioclassics.com/happy-birthday-william-boyd/

William Boyd’s contract with RKO came to an end due to an event that could have been the plot of a Hitchcock film.  An actor named William “Stage” Boyd was arrested on gambling, liquor, and morals charges…but the newspaper story that told of “Stage’s” misfortune featured a picture of the other William Boyd.  The paper apologized for its error the following day…but as Boyd himself told the story: “The damage was already done.”  Boyd’s decision to change his billing from “William Boyd” to “Bill Boyd” didn’t help his career much, with acting jobs becoming harder and harder to come by.

The following are two articles about William "Stage" Boyd with William Lawrence Boyd's photograph. The first article is dated February 28, 1931, the year is determined by "Stage's" age.



The below obituary is dated March 21, 1935, the day after William "Stage" Boyd passed away.
 


The following is a photo of William "Stage" Boyd.













Apparently, still happening as of this writing, articles about William Lawrence Boyd, or his alternate self, "Hopalong Cassidy", have used the year 1931, from the top newspaper article, as the year Boyd's contract with "Radio Pictures" was cancelled. Whomever originally stated that year, was wrong by 3-years. Apparently again, every article that contained a bio of William Lawrence Boyd, has kept that mistake going as fact.










In 1931, "BILL" Boyd,  made and released 3-movies for"Radio Pictures". All beyond the date, of the first news article. Another 5-features, were filmed after 1931, with his last motion picture for "Radio Pictures", entitled, "Emergency Call", released on May 26, 1933.




I could not locate what "BILL" Boyd did between "Radio Picture's, Emergency Call", and his next on-screen appearance, May 11, 1934, starring in "Cheaters", from "Liberty Pictures". A film company found in rented office space, on "Hollywood's Poverty Row", Gower Street at Hollywood Boulevard





Next, Bill Boyd appeared in a motion picture from the Australian motion picture company, "Invincible Films", and distributed in the United States by "Chesterfield Pictures", "Port of Lost Dreams" was released on October 15, 1934.





Both"Liberty Films" and "Chesterfield" would be bought out in 1935 by Herbert J. Yates, and become two of the pieces he merged together to form "Republic Pictures".

The same writers who claimed Bill Boyd had lost his contract with "Radio Pictures" in 1931. Also claimed he was "virtually destitute and without a job", until his next movie in 1935, referenced in
"Time Magazine", November 27, 1950.

It should be pointed out that Dorothy Sebastian Boyd was let go by "Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer" in 1930, but was picked up by "Columbia Pictures" for 1931, and let go at that year's end. After which, she freelanced. Between being dropped from "MGM", until her husband's 1935 feature film, she appeared in 11-film-productions.

Over at "Paramount Pictures", was producer Harry "Pop" Sherman, whose last of only 3-previous productions, was 1921's, "Miss 139". Sherman had purchased the motion picture rights to the character of "Hopalong Cassidy" from author Charles E. Mulford. Between 1906 and 1941, Mulford
would write a total of 28-novels featuring the character. At this time, "Pop" Sherman had just sold the "Paramount" executives on making a "Hopalong Cassidy" feature film.


A casting call went out, and Harry Sherman planned on casting Bill Boyd in the 6th-billed role of "Red Connors", see the "b-westerns.com" article, "William Boyd as Hopalong Cassidy" at: 

Hollywood history or myth is that character actor James Gleeson may have been a contender for the Hopalong Cassidy role. In actuality, Gleeson was announced as Hopalong, and there were mentions in Hollywood tradepapers including June, 1935 issues of film daily. 

 











Above, the familiar 1930's, 1940's face of James Gleeson.

Bill Boyd made his case to be the title character and going against tradition, no white hat, and a hero all in black, was given the role.



















Above left, Harry "Pop" Sherman and with his name restored, William Boyd, portraying, at the time of the first motion picture "Bill Hop-a-long Cassidy". The first motion picture of what would be a series, premiered on July 30, 1935. 



For trivia fans, the role of "Red Connors", was portrayed by Frank McGlynn, Jr., seen below, whose total film appearances between 1924 and 1934, were 42. He passed away from tuberculosis on March 29, 1939.













James Ellison, billed as Jimmy Ellison, portrayed "Johnny Nelson", Among Ellison's film roles, are portraying "Buffalo Bill Cody", in director Cecil B. DeMille's, 1936, "The Plainsman", co-starring with Gary Cooper as "Wild Bill Hickok", and Jean Arthur as "Calamity Jane". Starring as "Robert Curtis" in the seldom seen werewolf movie, 1942's, "The Undying Monster", and portraying "Wesley Rand", in producer Val Lewton's, 1943, "I Walked with a Zombie", directed by Jacques Tourneur, from a screenplay by Curt Siodmak.













Paula Stone portrayed "Mary Meeker". This was her first on-screen appearance of 15, through 1939. She was mainly a legitimate stage and radio actress. 

George "Gabby" Hayes portrayed "Uncle Ben". My article is "George 'Gabby' Hayes: Being a 'B' Cowboy 'Sidekick" riding the range at:

https://www.bewaretheblog.com/2020/03/george-gabby-hayes-being-b-cowboy.html 














Above left to right, Paula Stone, William Boyd, and George "Gabby" Hayes.

Charles Middleton portrayed "Buck Peters". On April 6, 1936, the actor first portrayed the role he is most remembered for, "Ming the Merciless", in the first "Flash Gordon" cliff-hanger, starring Buster Grabbe. 














The First "Hoppy" Screenplay:

That first screenplay was written by Doris Schroeder, she was a prolific "B" western screenplay writer, and would write, or co-write with different writers, several of the other motion pictures in the series through 1948. Along with films for Don Red Barry, Bob Steele, Tom Tyler, Tim Holt, and more forgotten "B" Western Heroes.

This screenplay is very important, because the audience finds out how "Bill Cassidy" becomes "Hop-a-Long Cassidy". Early in the 60-minute movie, "Bill" is shot in the leg during a gunfight, which gives him his signature "Hop". A character trait that would be dropped in later screenplays. 

The basic story is very routine, "Bill Cassidy" and his sidekick, "Johnny Nelson", who's there also to fall for the girl, "Mary Meeker", and attract young women to the movie. Now find themselves in the middle of a budding range war between two cattle ranchers, each believing the other is stealing his cattle. Of course "Hoppy" discovers the truth, gets the two cattle ranchers join forces, and the bad-guys are taken down.
















One of the comments by the film critics, and the "Paramount Pictures" executives, was about William Boyd's white hair. They thought his premature white hair made "Hoppy" appear a lot older than the character should be. However, the fans had no problem and his hair color. To them, it gave William Boyd's "Hopalong Cassidy", a wise, and mature look, that his young fans listened too.













The second entry in the series was released only 3-month's later, because of the major box office the first film brought to the studio. "The Eagle's Brood", was released on October 25, 1935.


Note that William Boyd's character's name was now "HOPALONG CASSIDY", and not Clarence Mulford's version of "HOP-A-LONG CASSIDY".























James Ellison, still billed as Jimmy Ellison, was back as "Johnny Nelson", he would appear in the role for 4-more feature films.



















Above left to right, James Ellison, William Boyd, and John Merton portraying "Ed".

George "Gabby" Hayes was back, but in the role of "Bartender Spike". Starting with the next feature film, he would become "Windy", then "Windy Jenkins", and "Windy Haliday" for 18-more "Hoppy" feature films.












Between the "Hopalong Cassidy", April 14, 1936, "Three on the Trail",  and the June 16, 1936, Canadian made crime adventure mystery, "Go-Get-'Em, Haines", starring "BILL" Boyd portraying "Steve Haines". William Boyd divorced Dorothy Sebastian in May 1936.

With April 16, 1937's, "Hills of Old Wyoming", Russell Hayden first appeared as "Lucky Jenkins", replacing James Ellison in the series. Hayden would appear in the character for 25-films.














Above left to right, William Boyd, George "Gabby" Hayes  portraying "Windy Halliday", unidentified Native American actor, and Russell Hayden.

In May 1937, 23-years-old actress, Grace Bradley, went on a blind date and met 42-years-old, William Boyd. On his birthday, June 5, 1937, the two married and remained married until his death on September 12, 1972.

On November 15, 1941, "Paramount Pictures" released "Secret of the Wastelands", the last "Hopalong Cassidy" motion picture from the studio, BUT NOT THE LAST "HOPALONG CASSIDY" feature film. On October 23, 1942, "United Artists" picked up the series and released "Undercover Man". 



In 1943, "United Artists" stopped making the films, and Harry "Pop" Sherman picked up producing the films, but by 1946, he no longer cared about the series, dreaming about making "Epic Movies". Instead, he only made two Joel McCrea westerns, one in 1947, and one in 1948. Harry Sherman passed away on September 25, 1952.

William Boyd felt otherwise about the "Hoppy" series, and starting with "Fool's Gold", released on a lower budget, October 9, 1946, the actor produced the last 12-features.

When the last "Hopalong Cassidy" motion picture, Number 66, "Strange Gamble", was released on October 8, 1948, William Boyd sold, or mortgaged whatever he had, and purchased the rights to the catalogue from Harry Sherman for $350,000, 1948 dollars.

After he purchased the catalogue, William Boyd went to a local NBC television station and offered to rent one the "Hopalong Cassidy" features for a nominal fee. It was accepted, and this would lead to more rentals, and a television series.

The following is from my article "HI HO SILVER, AWAY: THE 1950'S, When WESTERNS Dominated the Air Waves", found at:

https://www.bewaretheblog.com/2018/01/xxxxx.html

June 24, 1949, saw the premier of the first television Western series, with one of my favorites "Hopalong Cassidy". "Hopalong Cassidy" was a hero in black and a perfect 1950's role model. He respected women, and didn't smoke, swear, or drink alcohol. His favorite drink was Sarsaparilla, an early form of Root Beer. William Boyd started in the role in 1935

The original feature films had been purchased by William Boyd, who portrayed "Hoppy", and the complete films ran on Los Angeles's own  KTLA-TV, part of the Paramount Pictures Network, and then later on other of their stations. After the run ended, Boyd struck a deal to edit them down for broadcasting on the NBC television network. Also, NBC made 40 new half programs, which ran with repeats of the edited films through 1954.

Even after the series went off the air. William Boyd was in demand for personal appearances as "Cassidy". He had smartly bought the rights to the name at the time he acquired the films.  Below is a picture of  William Boyd, as I remember him, and "Hoppy's" faithful horse "Topper". As you will see in the beginning, every Cowboy, or Cowgirl hero, seemed to have a faithful horse.

 
























William Boyd, who first was seen on the motion picture screen in 1920, was not only a likable screen personality, but the same in real life. Especially with children, who became "Hoppy's" fans. The picture below is from 1950.

Hoppy2 small.jpg

Boyd was a shrewd businessman. First by purchasing his old "Hopalong Cassidy" motion pictures that were to be destroyed. Next, by seeing the future of the infant medium television, and putting the two together. He also realized the power of merchandising his character. Soon his young fan base wanted everything related to "Cassidy".  William Boyd, became the first person to have their image, in this case as "Hopalong Cassidy", placed on a lunch box.



In 1950, when the above lunch box appeared, made by Aladdin Industries. Their sales jumped from 50,000 to 600,000 in that year alone.

Then here were:








William Boyd had created a major television personality, with the majority of the merchandising profits going to him. The lawyers, agents and sponsors wanting their cuts of his profits. Had met their match, because William Boyd had the Registered Ownership of the name "Hopalong Cassidy".

"Hoppy" outfits and cap guns became extremely popular and there were many five to ten year old boys playing Cowboys and Indians with those "Official Pistols".

William Boyd was so popular that "Life Magazine" put him on the cover and had a long article inside.




On May 26, 1951, in Venice, California, on the Beach front. An amusement park called "Hoppyland" opened, with William Boyd both as an investor and making appearances as "Hopalong Cassidy".






The Amusement Park was on 80 acres, but low attendance forced its close down in 1954
.

Returning to this article, as I mentioned, William Boyd passed away on September 12, 1972, from Parkinson's disease and heart failure.

Conclusion, or Non-Conclusion:

The obvious two problems with the three candidates for "Max Sand", are the facts that none of the three were born in Texas, or had a Native American mother. So, is there any other major silent screen to sound Western actor that fits Harold Robbins's description?

Actually no, because of those same two problems, if they're really associated with the actor Robbins based "Nevada Smith" on. Perhaps, as we know he had a tendency to exaggerate his stories, and those two problems never existed.

Eliminate the place of birth and parents, and any of the following, like the above three, could fit the character.

The first major Western movie star, was Gilbert M. "Broncho Billy" Anderson. The silent screen Cowboy, was an actor, director, producer, and writer, and invented the anti-hero cowboy in shorts starting in 1906. However, he was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, to Jewish immigrant parents.























William S. Hart was also an actor, producer, screenplay writer, and director. However, he also was not born in Texas, but Newburgh, New York.























Harry Carey, Senior, was a silent and sound Western hero. A friend of director John Ford, and one of the mentor's for John Wayne. However, Henry DeWitt Carey, II, was born in New York City.






















Walter Huston, father of director John, appeared in several Westerns, and portrayed "Doc Holliday", in producer and director Howard Hughes's, "The Outlaw". As I mentioned, the movie that introduced Jane Russell. However, Huston, also a singer, was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.























Johnny Mack Brown started out in silents, portrayed "Billy the Kid" in 1930, co-starred with Jean Harlow in 1931 film inspired by Al Capone, and starred in a large group of low-budget westerns. He was born in Dothan, Alabama.





















Wild Bill Elliott, born Gordon Nance, had started out in silent films. The hard hitting cowboy actor, portrayed the popular Sunday newspaper cowboy hero, "Red Ryder" in several motion pictures. However, once more, Nance had not been born in Texas, but Pattonsburg, Missouri.






















THE POSSIBLE REAL "MAX SAND" aka: "NEVADA SMITH"!

With the 3-original-names, everyone was concentrating on a major cowboy actor as the model for "Max Sand". What if, he was a SUPPORTING/CHARACTER ACTOR?

This actor was born in 1899, in the town of WEED, in the NEW MEXICO TERRITORY, which bordered Texas. Later in his acting career, he worked at "Universal Pictures", and this overlapped with the time that Harold Robbins worked there.

From my article about this actor:

George's father, William Russell Strange's, Irish line, had married wives from the Native American Cherokee Nation, and he brought that bloodline to his sonWhile his mother, Sarah Eliza Byrd Strange, brought her son a more historic marriage She was descended from the 1614, British born, Virginia settler, John Rolfe, and his Powhatan Native American wife, Pocahontas. Making Sarah's son the eighth- generation grandson of the couple.

 













From my article's opening:

This is a look at the many talents of one particular character actor and a real Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, cowboy!

If you've seen many 1930's and 1940's "B" Western's, you've seen the above face portraying the bad-guy's henchmen. Should you been a fan of television's "Gunsmoke", you've seen the face portraying "Sam, the bartender". 

My article about actor Glenn Strange is: "GLENN STRANGE: The Monster Sings!", found at:

https://www.bewaretheblog.com/2022/07/glenn-strange-monster-sings.html 

I mention "The Monster", because Glenn Strange also portrayed the "Frankenstein Monster" in three "Universal Pictures", including 1948's, "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein".


Have I solved "The Mystery of Who was Author Harold Robbins's "Nevada Smith?", perhaps not, because the only person who really can answer that died on October 14, 1997.

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TOM MIX, KEN MAYNARD, WILLIAM BOYD: The Mystery of Who was Author Harold Robbins's "Nevada Smith"?

The world wide guessing game, as to which fictional character was really whom? Started on January 1, 1961, when the novel, "The Carpet...