I’ve been meaning to resurrect this series for ages, and I finally got around to it. Our Character Actor Of The Day is Leo Gordon.
Leo Gordon stands tall as one of the screen’s greatest heavies. At six foot two, with a deep voice and icy stare, he’s one of the few guys around who could really come up against someone like John Wayne (Hondo, McLintock!) or Clint Walker (Cheyenne, Night Of The Grizzly) and not look silly.
Don Siegel, who directed Gordon in Riot In Cell Block 11 (1954, above), called Gordon “the scariest man I have ever met.”
Leo Vincent Gordon, Jr. was born December 2, 1922, in Brooklyn, New York. His family lived in poverty and he left school in the eighth grade to work in construction and demolition. Next came the Civilian Conservation Corps. After that, in 1941, Leo enlisted in the Army and served two years.
After the war, Gordon was arrested for armed robbery in southern California. During the ordeal, he pulled a gun and was shot in the stomach. Leo served five years in San Quentin, where he furthered his education by reading nearly every book in the prison library. (The mugshot was for a fight later, not the robbery arrest.)
Gordon attended the American Academy Of Dramatic Arts on the G.I. Bill — and married one of his classmates, Lynn Cartwright in 1950. They’d work together a number of times (such as Black Patch and some episodes of Adam 12 — often written by Leo) and their marriage would last until his death in 2000.
Gordon was soon cast in the London and Canadian companies of Mister Roberts. After a few years of stage work, Hollywood came calling. Lots and lots of crime pictures and Westerns.
His first Western was City Of Bad Men (1953). Then there’s Gun Fury (1953), Hondo (1954), Ten Wanted Men (1955), Tennessee’s Partner (1955), Yellow Mountain (1954, up top), The Tall Stranger (1957), Quantrill’s Raiders (1958, he’s Quantrill), McLintock! (1963), Night Of The Grizzly (1966), Hostile Guns (1967, below, one of those A.C. Lyles things) and My Name Is Nobody (1973, produced by Sergio Leone). There are lots, lots more.
Gordon turned up in crime pictures like Baby Face Nelson (1957, as John Dillinger), The Big Operator (1959) and The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (1967). You’ll also find him in Tobruk (1967) and The Haunted Palace (1963). He was versatile and he stayed plenty busy.
On TV, Leo Gordon had recurring role on Maverick (below) as Big Mike McComb, and James Garner would later recruit him for several episodes of The Rockford Files. He’s terrific on The Andy Griffith Show as a guy who’s released from prison — and comes looking for Sheriff Taylor. On Cheyenne, he and Clint Walker are great in some real knock down drag out fights.
All in all, he’d go on to appear in more than 170 movies and TV shows from the early 1950s to the mid-1990s. His last feature was Maverick (1994), and his tiny part is the only reason to sit through that thing.
Gordon was a screenwriter, too. He wrote for shows such as Bonanza, Gunsmoke, Maverick, Cheyenne and Adam 12 (right). And he penned features like Black Patch (1957), Hot Car Girl (1958), Escort West (1959), The Wasp Woman (1959), Attack Of The Giant Leeches (1959), Bounty Killer (1965) and Tobruk. There were several novels, too, including the historical Western Powderkeg.
Though often the heavy, Leo Gordon had a way of not just making his presence known, but turning in a real performance. (He’s really terrific in The Intruder.) There’s an odd sympathetic angle to a lot of his villains. He was one of the best.
For a long time Gordon was one of those faces I was familiar with before I knew the name. He had great physical presence and yes, some other hard to define quality too.
It was only much later that I became aware of his writing, which I think adds another dimension to him.
I’ve come to really appreciate his writing. He seems to always try to mix things up a bit. For instance, Black Patch — it might not be a complete success, but he certainly came up with something different.
His Adam 12 episodes (he wrote more than 20) are some of the show’s best.
One of the guys my dad pointed out in my movie/character actor education. I didn’t know about the novels. I’m not surprised – well, only surprised I was so unaware. Something to search for.
A most happy revival.
In the late 1960s/early 1970s we in London were fortunate enough to get some great country music tours visiting. That LP “BUCK OWENS IN LONDON”, recorded at The London Palladium – I was in the audience. So, incidentally, apparently was the girl who later became my wife (we both still love Buck).
Anyway, there were RCA tours, Decca tours and one called the Capitol Country Caravan. That featured among the Capitol stars Tex Ritter. My two buddies and I were in the bar for the circle level, looking through the windows of the Palladium down into the street before start of show when suddenly a black London cab pulled up. Now I seem to remember the first out was Mr. Ritter, closely followed by a huge guy in a dark suit and big black stetson. I remember thinking ‘wow’ that I must be the only guy in London that night that recognised him as Leo Gordon!! He was one imposing sight, I can tell you. Made my evening.
Don’t know what part of that story I like best — the Leo Gordon part of the Buck Owens part. I’m a HUGE Buck Owens fan.
Jerry, what a wonderful story. I bet you were the only guy in London that night to recognize the great character actor Leo Gordon. There will never be another Leo Gordon. I have a copy of his novel POWDERKEG(1991). I haven’t had time to read it yet, but I will the future.
I found this site some years ago. It is all about Leo Gordon and his wife of 50 years Lynn Cartwright Gordon. Tara Gordon, their daughter, knows all the stories and has all those wonderful photographs. https://www.facebook.com/Leo-Gordon-163870180296567/
You definitely wanted him on your side. Unfortunately most of the time he was not.
Have always like him in westerns. Surprised he did not make it big in westerns compared to Lee Van Cleef, Charles Bronson etc. Best regards.
Wonderful story from Jerry I never even knew Leo made it over to
the UK back then.
Tex did sit right in front of us while watching a performance of the
New Kentucky Colonels with Clarence White. circa 1973..
It was at that C & W venue near Tottenham Court Road..The Horseshoe
or something.
Always intrigued by Leo’s friendship with Corman legend has it they were
due to play tennis,it rained so they wrote THE TERROR instead.
According to William Smith Leo knocked the **** out of Lee Marvin and
Neville Brand while making GUN FURY; and this was for real.
Buck Owens, Clarence White — y’all are making me so jealous!
I was also at that New Kentucky Colonels gig in Tottenham Court Road, John. Went under the name of The Bluegrass Club Of London and I went regularly for a while. At that KC gig, in the interval on my way out to the WC, I saw this old guy sitting alone quietly in the foyer area and realised it was one of my boyhood heroes, Tex Ritter. I thought “what the heck” and stopped for a brief chat. He was friendly and nice, didn’t even say he was anybody. Another thing I’ll never forget.
Jerry,I guess we were at loads of the same gigs
before we finally met-(due to Colin I might add)
Not to mention all those B Western conventions that we
both attended.
I always preferred those intimate “pub” type gigs
and it was a thrill in those days to get to speak to some
of my musical heroes like Byron Berline and John Hartford
Dan Crary and Peter Rowan,among others.
At the Kentucky Colonels gig Roland White acknowledged
Tex sitting in the audience.
My best mate, Johnny Keane from County Clare asked
Roland what Herb Pedersen was up to,hardcore Dillards
fanatics that we were.
I also saw The Kentucky Colonels at The Nashville Rooms
and sitting in the front row was The Eagles Bernie Leadon.
Johnny Keane later got to meet Byrds drummer Gene Parsons
who told him a most interesting tale.
One night after a Byrds gig Clarence was in his dressing room
and a roadie said that there was a guy outside who has always
admired his guitar playing and would love to meet him.
Clarence replied that I guess you had better send him in.
The “guy” turned out to be none other than Jimi Hendrix!
I guess my “gig of the century” was The Byrds at Middle Earth
in Covent Garden with Gram Parsons and Doug Dillard.
Johnny Keane and I were blown away by Doug Dillard with his
boots n’ jeans and buckskin jacket.
This was just the time Sweetheart Of The Rodeo was released.
Toby,were those fabulous Dillard & Clark albums ever on your radar?
A sad footnote is that both Clarence and Tex had died prematurely within a year of that gig.
My ‘country’ tastes were, I guess, more mainstream Nashville and Bakersfield, John. Have never cared for ‘rock’ music at all – Buck, George, Marty, Ray Price and the great E.T. were where my heart resided, then and now. That is quite separate from Bluegrass which I have loved for over 50 years and follow to this day.
Hi Jerry,
As you know quiet a lot of rockers came from a Bluegrass
background,Clarence,Chris Hillman,Pete Rowan,Dave Grisman,
Bernie Leadon and so on.
I guess you were dismayed when Jim & Jesse and The Osborne
Brothers went electric..a sign of the times I guess.
I too love “real” Bluegrass but also love The Byrds,Flying
Burrito Bros,later Dillards and lots that followed.
I get fed up when Gram Parsons gets credited with “inventing”
Country Rock..actually if anyone invented that format it would have
to be Ricky Nelson and The Everly Brothers.
Having said all this a lot of my “Country” friends,alive and deceased
have the same views as you do especially in relation to the greats
that you cite.
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s “Circle” album was certainly a
game changer in respect to all of this.
I love those Dillard & Clark records, especially the first one. Sundazed did a real remastering job on it a while back, by the way.
That Parsons-era Byrds is certainly a “gig of the century.” (There’s a bootleg from one of those shows, I think in the UK.)
I like the fact that top bad guy Leo Gordon has introduced us all to some good bluegrass and country music.
They were good times when Peter Rowan, Flaco, Townes, Dan Crary, Joe Ely etc. toured UK on fairly regular basis. Quick, throw Guy Clark in there!
More Leo over at Jeff Arnold’s West….Jeff has just featured A.C.Lyles’
HOSTILE GUNS with a great grizzled latter day Leo photo.
Good to see increased traffic over at Jeff’s 15 replies on a recent post
with Jerry a regular and now Walter joining in the fun too.
I’m waiting for The Hannibal 8 get more replies though Toby informs me
the number of “hits” continue to grow.
Despite an up market relapse Toby informs me things will soon be back
in the gutter where they belong! 🙂
Jerry, what a really neat Tex Ritter story. Tex is one of the good ones. If my memory serves me right, I think it was before Christmas, 1968 when Tex Ritter was on a TWA airplane flight from Nashville, Tennessee to Miami, Florida. The plane was hijacked to Havana, Cuba. The hijackers were a couple, a male and female. No one was injured and when Tex and the other passengers on the TWA flight were back in the USA, FBI agents showed them photos of fugitive Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver, thinking Cleaver might have been the male highjacker. After this I remember seeing Tex on the Grand Ole Opry TV show being escorted on stage by a man dressed to look like Fidel Castro, cigar and all.
If anyone is interested Leo Gordon and Clint Walker staged some of the best fight scenes on film. Clint Walker and Leo Gordon-Their Best Brawls https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpCItyfNOTM&t=20s
Tex was one of the good 0ones, Walter, indeed. Around 1954 the BBC here showed a batch of his Grand National B-westerns on TV. I was 6 or 7 then and so enjoyed Tex on White Flash besting the ‘black hats’!!
Great tribute to a fine actor. Always liked him in The Tall Stranger because he played a sympathetic character for once.
Well, another surprise pop-up. The other day talking about Harry Lauter he suddenly pops up in a Gilligan’s Island episode and last night Leo Gordon popped up in a Death Valley Days episode. One of my Friday Night Westerns is Death Valley Days, now with President Reagan, in “Badge Without a Gun” Leo pops up to torment Pres. Reagan who refuses to carry a gun when being a marshal. Instead he beats Leo up and throws him out of a bar!!! YES, now this was fantastic entertainment!! Great scene, Leo later shows up and naturally dispenses our anti-gun sheriff with a gun. That’s what you get for not believing in guns. Luckily, in real life Reagan was all pro-gun. Ahh, the good old days.
Walter thanks for the clips on the brawls between Leo Gordon and Clint Walker! They are exciting indeed! Best regards
Chrisk, your welcome. Just think Leo and Clint did all that without the use of doubles.
He was a great supporting actor and played a great bad guy.I asked Kino Lorber if they had plans to release THE TOUGHEST MAN IN ARIZONA and they said no so I have ordered the German release.Does anyone else have this film?I have also taken a chance and ordered the Japanese release of BANDOLERO because it is 6 mins longer then other releases .Whether this includes the extended scene with the hangman ,I will have to wait to find out .I doubt it,but one can only hope.I will let you all know.
Graham, Too bad about THE TOUGHEST MAN IN ARIZONA which
actually is a far better film than SINGING GUNS….would this suggest
SINGING GUNS sales were poor.
BANDOLERO one of the better later Stewart Westerns-nice bit for Jocko
as Raquel Welch’s beau.
I watched the German Blu Ray recently and had forgot how downbeat
the ending was.
Actually the William Smith quote of Leo beating up Marvin and Brand
must have come from Smith’s Laredo co star Brand.
I read an interview of Smith years back where the guy interviewing Smith
asked about his reputation of being “the hardest man in Hollywood.”
Smith replied,no, that that title belongs to Leo Gordon.
Smith also stated that his brawl with Clint in ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN
was the longest fight filmed without using stunt doubles.
Smith did admit Eastwood broke one of Smith’s ribs during filming but never
let him know because he would have felt real bad about it….what a guy!
Years back I met a guy who knew Irish “Bad Boy” actor Del Henney.
Del is most famous for playing the key thuggish rapist in STRAW DOGS.
Del was a decent actor as well as a tough guy in real life as legend would
have it He is excellent playing heavies in cult UK TV shows like THE SWEENY
and THE PROFESSIONALS.
While playing another heavy in BRANNIGAN Del and The Duke were
“horsing around” one day and The Duke,it would seem,lifted him
clear off the ground-quiet remarkable since The Duke was clocking
70 and Del was a very well built 6 footer.
My contact at Sidonis tells me they have a deal with Paramount and will release some nice titles in the near future .They are still waiting to get the appropriate material from Sony for COUNT THREE AND PRAY.Fingers crossed.
Love that “DUKE DAYS” header, Toby.
Graham that Sidonis news is both good and bad.
If they can hitch a deal with Paramount why not the likes of
Koch,Explosive and Indicator and other Euro labels especially
those that love Westerns.
Knowing the sort of things Sidonis love we would surely get tons of
Republic/Allied Artists titles as well as possibly ALL of the A.C.Lyles
Westerns.
I can foresee the future when much sought after titles like RIDE THE MAN
DOWN,JACK SLADE,DRAGOON WELLS MASSACRE,AT GUNPOINT
and ROAD TO DENVER are appearing in lovely restorations with those
darned “forced” subs.
Cannot someone persuade Sidonis to stop doing this!
If Paramount have restored all these Republic library titles that we
are led to believe then there is far too much for the likes of Olive and
Kino Lorber to cope with-other companies need a bite of the cherry.
I would happily buy ALL the titles mentioned and loads more besides were
it not for the forced subs thing.
One things for sure Paramount are only too happy to lease out titles
especially if they are sitting on an ever increasing vault of 4K restorations-
I only hope the likes of Koch and Explosive show interest in releasing these
films.
John K ,I have suggested an A C Lyles western boxset.As I have said before ,if you don’t ask you don’t get.Surprisingly ,some of my Sidonis DVDs are without the forced subs.
Leo Gordon shows up in hundreds of movies, tv shows, commercials and background of some celebrity charity sporting events. Since I became aware of him 12 – 15 years ago when I started collecting and watching old westerns, I have been shocked at how many different appearances I have seen him in while watching retro movie & tv channels. I watched a video short of 1960s commercials and he was in one of the car commercials! Very likable guy, prolific actor and writer. His work with James Garner was always awesome.
Just yesterday, I bumped into his episode of Little House On The Prairie from 1979 — “The King Is Dead.” He was terrific in it.
And today, he was on Adam 12. i love it when he turns up as an actor on writer on that show.