With a dark sense of humour, Maverick spoofed itself and
other Westerns (winning an Emmy award for Best Western Series in
1959). Bret Maverick (the then relatively unknown James Garner)
and his brother Bart were much better at cards than gun slinging,
and their life was a constant pursuit of money and the easy life.
The Maverick brothers were not heroes in the traditional
Western sense. They were devious, cowardly card-sharps who
exploited easy situations and quickly vanished when faced with
potentially violent ones.
A popular part of their repertoire for evading difficult
moments were the "Pappyisms" that corrupted their
speech. Quoting their old Pappy and mentor they were likely to
come out with sayings like "My old Pappy used to say 'If you
can't fight 'em, and they won't let you join 'em, best get out of
the county'". In addition to his words of wisdom, Pappy also
left each of his boys a $1000 bill for security against bad times
which they tucked inside their travelling clothes.
Starting out as a straight Western drama (for the first three
episodes), the series soon developed a comedy streak after writer
Marion Hargrove decided to liven up his scriptwriting work by
inserting the simple stage direction: "Maverick looks at him
with his beady little eyes." Other scriptwriters then
followed suit and Maverick took a unique turn away from the more
formal and traditional Warner Brothers Westerns then on the air (Lawman,
Colt.45,Cheyenne and Sugarfoot).
The series was created by producer Roy Huggins and developed
out of a story in which he tried to see how many TV Western rules
he could break and get away with; the script was filmed as an
episode of Cheyenne (the episode was called TheDarkRider) and featured guest-star Diane Brewster as a swindler
and cheat - a role she was later to play in Maverick as a
recurring character, gambler Samantha Crawford.
During the early seasons recurring guest characters popped in
and out of the plots to foil or assist the brothers: Dandy Jim
Buckley (played by Efrem Zimbalist Jr.), Gentleman Jack Darby
(Richard Long), Big Mike McComb (Leo Gordon) and Bret's regular
antagonist, the artful con-woman Samantha Crawford (Brewster).
Among the more amusing episodes, Hadley'sHunters
(in the fourth season) saw Bart enlist the help of Ty Hardin (Bronco),
Will Hutchins (Sugarfoot), Clint Walker (Cheyenne),
John Russell and Peter Brown (Lawman) all playing their
respective characters from the WB stable of Western TV series
(with Edd "Kookie" Byrnes from 77SunsetStrip as a blacksmith).
In the fifth season, an episode entitled ThreeQueensFull was a wicked parody of Bonanza
in which the Subrosa Ranch was run by Joe Wheelwright and his
three sons, Moose, Henry and Small Paul . . .
Actor James Garner and his Warner Brothers studio bosses
clashed when Garner took out a lawsuit against the studio for
breach of contract arising out of his suspension during the 1960
writers' strike. Warners claimed that it was justified in
suspending Garner due to the writers' strike. It was no secret at
the time that Garner had wanted to be released from his contract ,
and in December 1960 the judge decided in favour of Garner.
During the course of the testimony it was revealed that during
the strike Warners had illegally obtained around 100 TV scripts,
and had as many as 14 writers working under the pseudonym of
"W. Hermanos" (Spanish for "brothers").
As a replacement for Garner in the fourth season of the
original series, Warners brought on board Roger Moore, as cousin
Beauregard, a Texas expatriate who had lived in England. When
Moore departed after just one season another Maverick brother,
Robert Colbert's Brent Maverick, a slight Garner/Bret look-alike,
was introduced in the spring of 1961 to alternate adventures with
Bart. Colbert stayed only until the end of that season, leaving
the final (and longest remaining) Maverick, Jack Kelly, to ride
out the last Maverick season (1961-62) alone.
The series came to an end after 124 episodes. Garner moved on
to a successful film career but returned to series television in
the 1970s with TheRockfordFiles (1974-79). He appeared as a guest
star along with Jack Kelly in the 1978 TV movie/pilot The NewMaverick, which produced the short-lived YoungMaverick
(1979-80) series, minus Garner; he also starred in the title role
of BretMaverick (1981-82) which he co-produced with
Warners.
A movie version of Maverick was released in 1994 with
Mel Gibson starring as Bret Maverick. James Garner appeared in a
cameo as Bret's father.
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Bret Maverick
James Garner
Bart Maverick
Jack Kelly
Samantha Crawford
Diane Brewster
Cousin Beauregard
Roger Moore
Brent Maverick
Robert Colbert