"Gunsmoke" Obie Tater (TV Episode 1955) Poster

(TV Series)

(1955)

User Reviews

Review this title
11 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
A wonderfully well acted episode.
kfo949428 April 2013
Here is a sad tale that will pull at the old heart-strings as we have a rancher that has settled outside Dodge by the name of Obie Tater (Royal Dano). It seems that Obie had been out in California and had mined a little gold before making his way back east to Dodge. He spend the gold on a nice stretch of land and is living out his days as a farmer. But the rumor around town is that Obie still has a large amount of gold hidden around his house.

One afternoon two cowboys ride up to Obie's house and are set to rob him. When Obie tells them that he no longer has any money they decide to tie him up and drag him around the prairie. And all the time Obie is telling them he has no gold left.

Three weeks later Obie rides into Dodge and explains to Matt what has happened. They start walking around Dodge in order to see if Obie can identify anyone in town as the two cowboys. They come into the Long Branch where this saloon girl, Ella Mills, takes a shine to Obie. The assault is long forgotten as Obie and Ella start talking and before long they are married.

Marshal Dillon is suspicious of Ella and tells Obie that she may be mixed up with the cowboys. Obie refuses to believe what Matt is saying and the couple ride off to Obie's farm. It is not long before the two cowboys return.

This is a very entertaining, yet sad, episode that was very well played by all the actors. James Arness is settling down in his role and seems comfortable playing the Marshal. Royal Dano, especially at the end, gives a nice performance as the man that was used and abused. Overall a very nice show.
19 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Blinded by Love
wdavidreynolds24 November 2021
Obie Tater lives alone on a farm near Dodge City. Tater settled there after spending some time prospecting in California. A rumor has spread that Obie found gold in California and is a wealthy man, but he denies such claims.

Two men arrive at Obie's farm with plans to steal his fortune. When he denies having any gold, they lasso him and drag him as a form of torture. Through it all, Tater continues to deny he has any gold.

Later, Obie visits Dodge and meets Ella Mills, a new employee working with Kitty Russell at the Long Branch Saloon. Obie is immediately love struck when he is introduced to Ella, and Ella is a willing participant in a one-sided romance because of the rumors about Obie's wealth. Obie realizes the woman is probably not in love with him, but he loves her. They soon marry, despite reservations expressed by Obie's friends.

Matt Dillon is suspicious of Ella's motives and the coincidence of her arrival in Dodge at the same time as the two men who assaulted Obie. When Matt shares his suspicions with Obie, Obie refuses to accept Matt's assertions and becomes angry with the Marshal.

Versatile actor Royal Dano portrays Obie Tater in this story. Anyone who has watched any television from the 1950s through the 1980s is likely familiar with Dano's extensive work. He was immensely talented and could play the most sinister villain as well as silly, comedic roles. Including this appearance, Dano participated in thirteen different Gunsmoke episodes, and those roles ran the gamut of his acting range.

Kathy Adams fills the role of Ella Mills. Adams was an aspiring actress when this episode was produced, but she met and married author Louis L'Amour which led to her quitting acting. This appearance is one of her only two acting credits.

The two would-be thieves are played by Jon Shepodd and Pat Conway. This episode is Shepodd's only Gunsmoke appearance. His biggest role during his short acting career was as the character Paul Martin for one season of the series Lassie. He was replaced the following season by actor Hugh Reilly.

Pat Conway plays the man named Quade. He appeared in four Gunsmoke episodes. Conway would soon begin starring as Sheriff Clay Hollister in the series Tombstone Territory, which originally aired on ABC, although a third season aired in syndication.

This is a profoundly sad episode, particularly because Obie Tater is such a naïve, trusting, almost childlike character. When Quade and Mitch ride into Tater's farm with intentions of stealing his gold, Obie is friendly and accommodating. When he meets Ella, he refuses to listen to anyone expressing caution. He only wants to think of her as a kind, loving person. He wants to believe the best about everyone.

Dano plays the Obie Tater role perfectly. His wry smile, piercing eyes, and lanky frame combined with the "aw shucks" demeanor Dano uses are quite convincing.

Variations of this theme of a man so trusting that others deceive and use him would be repeated in future episodes of Gunsmoke, as well as a plethora of other series, some which were not westerns. The story also explores the human longing for love, and its ability to diminish material desires, which is a timeless notion.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Excellent early episode.
ohshaw5 January 2020
Royal Dano is wonderful in this first of his many guest appearances on Gunsmoke, showing us every emotion in the book. While the episode is mostly dark and sad, it also has its lighter moments, including Matt singing (for the first time on the show), and some fun interaction between James Arness and Amanda Blake in The Long Branch. This is a fine, classic episode.
13 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Kathy Adams
batjacole18 June 2017
This beautiful co-star has only two credits for her career, but served a much greater role in life, as the wife of Louis L'Amour, who, together with her sons, managed Mr. L'Amour's catalogue! Kathy married L'Amour in 1956, and traveled throughout the world with him, until his death in 1988. She and her son Beau maintain the Louis L'Amour website.
22 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Royal Dano
mitchrmp11 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Another great performance by Royal Dano. He seems to be great with parts of characters who are victoms of circumstance. I first saw him in Little House on the Prairie (very old by that point). Then I saw him in Rifleman. Royal always gives a great performance that make me want to cry!

Though we could probably see from the get-go what role the woman played in Obie's life, I couldn't help but still hold out hope that she and Obie could settle down and be happy together. I think it could have happened, but again circumstances make that possibility impossible.

And in the end...well, I won't reveal the end, but I wanted to cry with Royal Dano. He really tugs at your heartstrings!
13 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Touching episode
dcat-537234 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I can only affirm the warm reviews of this show. Royal Dano portrays one of the most affecting characters of the early "Gunsmoke" years, and James Arness's acting, in only the fifth show of season 1, has matured rather astonishingly into a more nuanced Matt from the mannered, self-conscious style that made episode 2 so difficult to watch. Note during the showdown with the bad guys, when one threatens to do him harm, Matt/Arness answers with "That'll be the day," echoing the familiar John Wayne line (which inspired Buddy Holly's classic rock 'n' roll evergreen) from "The Searchers." Given that Wayne got Arness the job on "Gunsmoke" and had him under contract to his production company, it's a little tribute to Duke. But it's not superfluous--it bespeaks Matt's strong character and self-assurance, qualities Arness would develop in greater abundance as he grew into Matt. Nice touch.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Good episode but not great
LukeCoolHand22 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This was an entertaining episode. Royal Dano always makes a very watchable character. He falls for a woman who only cares for the gold she thinks he has, and the fool marries her anyway. She is in cahoots with 2 men who recently dragged him and almost killed him. The 2 men set her to marry him so he'll tell her where the gold is. That doesn't work. I'll not give away the ending. Anyway very good episode.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Guest Star's Performance a Highlight
tjphoto-3591518 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Royal Dano is the guest star portraying Obie Taylor, a man who many in Dodge have assumed is sitting on gold or money after his return from the gold fields of California. Lowly and shabbily dressed Obie certainly doesn't show any signs of wealth. But two strangers appear at his farm and drag him mercilessly in trying to get him to reveal where the gold is. Obie tells Marshall Dillon, who attempts to identify the offenders with Obie to point them out. Obie also repeats what he's been saying to everyone in town--that he has no gold fortune.

That effort is sidetracked when Obie becomes smitten with a beautiful bar girl at the Long Branch Saloon. He doesn't seem to realize, or else doesn't care, that the woman is leading him on with some ulterior motive that becomes clear soon enough. After he marries her and they settle down on his run-down farm, the two bad guys return and reveal their scheme with the new wife to force Obie to tell where the gold is.

What makes this episode so compelling is the performance of Royal Dano as Obie. He's masterful at creating a sympathetic, heart-breaking character who has been happy just to have such a pretty woman in his life, no matter what her reasons or how things turn out. Her demise in the ultimate reckoning scene leaves Obie in tears, mourning the loss of this pretty woman who had made his life seem so uplifted that he would have given all he had as long as she was with him. It turns out he had a lot of money stashed away from his gold mining success, after all, but he only cares about the tragedy of losing this woman. Dano's performance as Obie ends with this powerful sense of loss.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
And Here's How Mitch, Quade And Ella Totally Victimized Obie Tater
As the story goes in this gripping episode from TV's "Gunsmoke" (1955)..... Over time rumor has spread far & wide that retired prospector, Obie Tater has a literal wealth of gold that he's secretly hidden somewhere on the property of his modest ranch.

And, with that in mind - You can be dead-certain that there are gonna be some unbelievably greedy-minded culprits (in and around the neighborhood) who are willing to stoop to the most dastardly and mean methods imaginable in order to get Obie to reveal the whereabouts of this buried treasure.

And, so, as things turn out - The friendly, yet, very gullible Obie Tater falls victim (in the worst way) to a trio of ruthless plotters who really turn the screws on him, big-time, getting his to squirm and squeal like never before.
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Haven't Spoke to a Woman in Years
Johnny_West6 April 2020
Most of the career of Royal Dano consisted of playing various types of of dim-witted, genetically deficient, inbred, web-footed, backwoods hillbillies, mountain folks, or miners. In this episode, Dano plays Obie Tater, an ignorant uncultured miner who might be rich. Dano specialized in mumbling his lines, looking pathetic, and walking with a creepy shuffling gait. Here he focuses on mumbling like he is talking with a piece of sausage in his mouth.

Obie starts out by getting attacked by some bandits looking for his gold. Then he is seduced by a gold-digging saloon gal. Dano played the same role a few years later in an episode of Wanted: Dead or Alive, called "The Matchmaker" (season 2, episode 3, 1959). Marshal Dillon is trying to help Obie (Royal Dano) find the thugs who tried to rob him.

As Dillon takes Obie into the Longbranch Saloon to look around, Obie stops in his tracks. Obie gasps when he sees women, and says "I ain't spoke to a woman in years." Obie has a full beard, and he looks like he has never taken a bath, and is full of lice. The saloon gal that Obie likes says a few nice things to Obie, but she looks at him with a combination of disgust and horror. A day later Obie marries her. He tells Marshal Dillon that it was love at first sight. When Dillon suggests that she might be in it for his money, Obie gets offended. It would have been great if Obie had done the famous Billy Bob Thornton Sling Blade line and said "Obie Taters wants pertaters."

A couple of weeks later, Dillon and Chester ride out to see how Obie is doing, and his wife and her two friends have him cornered in the barn, fighting for his life. Dillon and Chester try to help Obie, and he apologizes to Dillon for not trusting Dillon's advice. At that point the exciting climax is triggered, and all hell breaks loose, including a lynching, gun-fight, violence against women, and more. The ending was chock full of action, drama, and tragedy.
11 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Dano Showcase
dougdoepke28 September 2007
With his mournful voice, sad eyes, and cadaverous body, Royal Dano, doesn't look or sound like anyone else. He was best playing a victim of one kind or another. Here, he plays the hapless Obie Taylor, a lonely farmer said to have brought back a pile of gold from his time in the California gold rush. Trouble is that he denies it in a convincing way and certainly doesn't look like he has a dime. Nonetheless, the hidden gold rumor reaches the usual greedy types and two of them drag Obie, hoping he'll reveal the location. Now the marshal is interested, even as Obie is smitten by comely saloon girl Ella (Kathy Adams) who makes eyes at him.

Final scene gives the inimitable Dano a chance to tug at everyone's heart-strings. I still remember his portrayal of Abe Lincoln on the old Omnibus show, probably the most moving portrayal ever. Anyway, it's a pretty good entry, waiting around to see what will happen to Dano. In passing-- I didn't know Dodge stocked up on Maidenform bra's, but Miss Adams certainly sports an uplift model. In fact, the last shot looks like the two biggest peaks in the flat state of Kansas-- so, hang around, guys.
20 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed