Cheyenne The Complete Series
We didn’t know that this seven-season success had racked up so many ‘TV firsts’ on its scoreboard. Clint Walker clicked with America as a roving cowboy do-gooder, solving problems and perforating bad guys on a tri-weekly basis. The series is now more impressive in this deluxe remaster; Warners entreé into broadcast TV emphasized quality in all departments. The 107 episodes co-star seemingly every supporting actor in Hollywood.
Cheyenne The Complete Series
Blu-ray
Warner Archive Collection
1955 1953 / B&W / 1:33 / 107 episodes / 5,560 min. / Street Date April 22, 2025 / Available at MovieZyng / 139.99
Starring: Clint Walker, (+, over 10 episodes) Clyde Howdy, Chuck Hicks, Jack Mower, Lane Chandler.
Sampling of guest stars: Don Megowan, Robert J. Wilke, Peter Whitney, Jean Byron, James Garner, Leo Gordon, Diana Brewster, L.Q. Jones, Rodolfo Acosta, Denver Pyle, Michael Pate, Gregg Palmer, Gerald Mohr, Dennis Hopper, Whitney Blake, Mala Powers, Alan Hale Jr., Joanna Barnes, Joy Page, Marie Windsor, Ann Robinson, Merry Anders, R.G. Armstrong, Lisa Gaye, Lisa Montell, Steve Brodie, William Phipps, John Doucette, Dan Blocker, Julie Adams, Lee Van Cleef, Dub Taylor, Nancy Kulp, Lorne Greene, Rod Taylor, Doris Dowling, Fay Spain, Arthur Hunnicutt, Richard Denning, Barbara Lawrence, Beverly Michaels, Angie Dickinson, John Carradine, Joan Weldon, Kathleen Crowley, Audrey Totter, Evelyn Ankers, Connie Stevens, Paula Raymond, Angela Greene, Edmon Ryan, Jean Willes, Sally Kellerman, Roy Roberts, Edward Andrews, Carlos Rivas, John Dehner, Claude Akins, James Drury, Faith Domergue, Ellen Burstyn, James Coburn, Dawn Wells, Tom Drake, Ellen Corby, Victoria Vetri, Adam West, Donna Martell, William Windom, Jack La Rue, Michael Landon, Kasey Rogers, Joyce Meadows, James Stacy, Slim Pickens, Karl Swenson, George Kennedy, Venetia Stevenson, James Hong, Percy Helton, Ray Danton, Joan Caulfield, Beulah Archuletta, Sid Melton, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez.
Cinematography: Harold E. Stine, Carl E. Guthrie, many others
Music Composers: William Lava, Leith Stevens, Stan Jones, Paul Sawtell
Written by (over 4 episodes) Warren Douglas, Dean Reisner, Berne Giler, George F. Slavin
Executive Producer: William T. Orr
Produced by (over 10 episodes) Arthur W. Silver, Burt Dunne, Roy Huggins, Boris Ingster
Directed by (over 10 episodes) Richard L. Bare, Leslie H. Martinson, Lee Sholem, Robert Sparr
About a year ago the Warner Archive Collection gave us a complete western TV show in HD, Colt .45. We were impressed with the high-quality transfers, far better than anything we could see before. Back in the late 1950s, the Prime Time TV lineup was jammed with scores of half-hour oaters, each trying to stand out as special.
This new ‘complete’ package from the Warner library covers the entire Cheyenne The Complete Series. We all know that title, even if its music theme isn’t as memorable as that for, say, Maverick. Clint Walker passed away in 2018 but he’s still a favorite star for many.
Cheyenne is an hour-long (actually 40 to 50 minute) western show about Cheyenne Bodie, a rather generic frontier hero made distinctive by a very tall and personable actor. Clint Walker has the desired heroic voice, and is heard singing now and then in the show. His Cheyenne has all the virtues of a boy scout plus a naturally decent and gentle nature, that is tested every week in a new conflict. Cheyenne doesn’t stay in any particular town for long. He meets a mostly new cast each week, dropping into an entirely new situation. As this is the 2nd half of the 1950s on television, Gunsmoke morality prevails: no matter how complicated the moral issue, it is always possible to separate the good from the bad. The clear-headed Cheyenne just does what feels right, which is always the best course. Yet most issues are settled with righteous violence. Won’t those lawbreakers ever learn?
We began by watching the first three shows. The first features actor James Garner in a supporting role. He had been considered to play Cheyenne, and he seems to be purposely underplaying so as not to steal the spotlight from Clint Walker. L.Q. Jones almost has a continuing comic character, but he was dropped after just a few shows. The show’s overall appeal rests almost completely on the personality of Clint Walker. His Cheyenne is quiet, reassuring and stable. There’s danger and action but Cheyenne will sort it out for us, in every show.
Walker never changed his basic character no matter the role. When he signed on for in Robert Aldrich’s The Dirty Dozen, his character ended up being the Mr. Clean of the outfit, easily cowing the hood played by John Cassavettes. Looking at cast lists for Cheyenne we see that many favorite actors return for two or three episodes, but always as different characters. Perhaps the rationale was for the series to have no continuity, to enable episodes to be rebroadcast or syndicated in any order.
The shows aren’t short-changed for technical quality or basic direction. WB’s production planners took the already- streamlined assembly line for ‘B’ pictures (which TV shows more or less replaced) and made it even more efficient. These shows look like real movies, albeit shorter; the editing and audio work show few signs of corner-cutting. Close-ups are not overdone, as seemed to be the m.o. for Jack Webb’s incredibly cheap Dragnet. Hour-long dramas like Cheyenne would soon replace half-hour quickie shows with maybe 17 minutes of real story.
Obviously part of the plan from the beginning was to make extensive use of Warners’ stock film library. The studio occasionally recycled ‘money’ scenes from older productions, but WB’s TV shows dug deep in the archive for good action scenes where the stars’ faces weren’t too visible. An already-filmed stagecoach robbery would provide the production value. All that was needed was a reasonably-matched coach and the right color cowboy hats, for close-ups on the back lot or a sound stage. We see the picture quality drop a bit for the older stock shots, something we never could see on old 14-inch B&W TVs.
Cheyenne stayed solvent for an entire seven seasons. No, we didn’t watch everything in the set, or even one-tenth of the contents of the WAC’s fat box. Since there’s no continuity between most shows, we chose our ten episodes to watch by looking up actors we wanted to get a closer look at. Why is James Coburn showing up in a 1961 episode, after his big splash in The Magnificent Seven? What does Rod Taylor look like in 1955, his first year in Hollywood? We then took a gander at favorite actresses … Audrey Totter, Angie Dickinson, Ellen Burstyn, Victoria Vetri even. We’re accustomed to seeing these people in much bigger features, sometimes playing iconic parts. What were they like trying to get somewhere on the Warners TV career treadmill?
Everyone I saw looked very good. The actors include numerous Hollywood veterans looking for solid work after being dropped from studio contracts. TV wasn’t yet considered the place to catch The Golden Ring, but neither did it disqualify standout talent from supporting work in features.
Cheyenne is said to be the very first hour-long drama shot on film specifically for TV. It’s the first series produced by one of the big 5 studios. Jack L. Warner finally realized that TV wasn’t going away. If costs could be controlled, the tube might be even more profitable than feature films. The first deal with ABC positioned Cheyenne as one title in a revolving show called Warner Bros. Presents. Clint Walker’s show played in rotation with two more new shows based on old Warners movies. Casablanca starred the gruff noir leading man Charles McGraw, and Kings Row featured Jack Kelly and Robert Horton. Each title aired a completed 60-minute show every three weeks. Casablanca soldiered on for a full season, but Kings Row was canceled almost immediately.
Jack Warner’s plan was to do what Walt Disney had done, use a weekly TV show to promote his studio’s feature product. The first shows were only 40 or so minutes in duration, leaving the balance of the hour (minus commercials) for what were basically commercials for WB. This new ‘content’ was hosted by star Gig Young, who presented specially-filmed interviews and staged behind-the-scenes ‘moments’ from big 1955 releases like Helen of Troy and Giant. Some of these making-of bits have been used as extras on WB home video presentations, such as Land of the Pharaohs and The Searchers.
The WB Presents concept collapsed after the first season, but the conversion of ‘B unit’ filming to TV production was a success. William T. Orr became the czar of WB TV, with the marching order to keep costs down as low as the Guilds would allow. As TV was a new medium, the negotiations for Guild contracts raged in a fifteen-year battle recorded on the front pages of the trade papers. The idea of residual payments for TV appearances wasn’t fully resolved in 1955. That presumably kept supporting players working for minimums. William Orr wasn’t signing any established stars, and instead leveraged the paucity of starring opportunities to sign its initial headline players to very harsh contracts. They resembled old-school studio contracts: the stars’ lives were dedicated to filming at a breakneck pace, and their downtime was taken to fulfill a busy publicity schedule, dictated by the studio.
But the deal did not necessarily include the old-time perks that created the ‘star treatment:’ drivers, assistants, and other dedicated support people. The only way forward was to be so successful and popular that the studio couldn’t replace you. James Garner eventually earned his place as a feature film star, but his initial contract period didn’t pay a great deal. He’d be able to cash in only much later, returning to TV with enough clout to demand a proper slice of the pie.
Until the Guilds got the upper hand around 1960, Warners and executive producer Orr had a lot of control over their TV productions — and their stars. It must have been rough on newcomers surprised that they had become TV stars known coast-to-coast … but without life-changing compensation or even more control of their daily lives. When the star of Colt .45 held out for more money, he was replaced. Roger Moore didn’t like his WB setup, and returned home to England to continue his TV career.
Clint Walker was very smart casting. He had been plucked out of nowhere to play Cheyenne Bodie; his only previous screen credit was in a 1954 Bowery Boys movie, Jungle Gents, although he may have already filmed his scenes in The Ten Commandments. Walker also chafed against his contractual strait-jacket, and in the third season there were a few weeks when it looked like he might be replaced. Ty Hardin was the possible new Cheyenne, but peace was reestablished. Hardin got his own series, Bronco. Walker stayed on with Cheyenne for 7 full seasons. Although he got the opportunity to star in some feature westerns, when speaking of Cheyenne he usually said he’d be happy if it went on forever.
We’re told that writer-producer Roy Huggins was the main man in charge of the creative launch on Cheyenne and its success in the first season. Huggins wrote his share of films noir, comedies and westerns before making a huge mark in television. He had his flops, but he’s also known as a key creator for the TV shows 77 Sunset Strip, Maverick, Run for Your Life, Baretta and, with Stephen J. Cannell, James Garner’s The Rockford Files.
The Warner Archive Collection Blu-ray of Cheyenne The Complete Series is a genuine monster box with a price that doesn’t seem steep when one realizes how many hours of entertainment are included. It’s a full 107 episodes that begin at about 42 minutes in duration and then expand to 52. The episodes include all the original titles and ‘bumpers’ acknowledging the sponsor, General Electric.
The first season is 15 episodes and most of the following seasons are twenty episodes. Each year comes in its own keep case, 30 discs in all. That adds up to 90 hours of programming … and some collectors out there will want to see them all. It may be a form of snobbery, but I never liked watching old TV shows as presented on cable TV stations — most have been time-compressed to fit in more commercials. These Blu-ray episodes look better than what we saw back in the day, with music and sound work to match. We’re told that some Cheyenne music was repurposed from Max Steiner’s score for The Fountainhead.
All remastered from 4K scans, the shows look immaculate. When watching an episode, one must remember that original TV audiences didn’t see the wider and taller frame we see here, because TV monitors were adjusted to over-scan, cropping part of the image on all four sides. When Warners converted a couple of episodes into a feature film (Gold, Glory and Custer, 1964) a 1:85 scan may not have cropped away anything essential from the top or bottom of the frame.
The one extra is a good 2006 featurette, in SD only, that gives Clint Walker a nice platform to talk about his experience on the show.
Disc 1 Season ONE – Episodes 1-4
Mountain Fortress 41:47
Julesburg 41:34
The Argonauts 42:26
Border Showdown 40:53
Disc 2 Season ONE – Episodes 5-8
The Outlander 42:26
The Travelers 42:53
Decision aka The Black Hawk War 42:03
The Storm Riders 43:24
Disc 3 Season ONE – Episodes 9-12
Rendezvous at Red Rock 42:27
West of the River 43:16
Quicksand 45:54
Fury at Rio Hondo 43:00
Featurette: The Lonely Gunfighter: The Legacy of Cheyenne (SD) 13:44
Disc 4 Season ONE – Episodes 13-15
Star in the Dust 42:46
Johnny Bravo 42:36
The Last Train West 43:20
Disc 5 Season TWO – Episodes 1-4
The Dark Rider 41:23
The Long Winter 50:15
Death Deals the Hand 50:24
The Bounty Killers 50:15
Disc 6 Season TWO – Episodes 5-8
The Law Man 50:20
Mustang Trail 50:24
Lone Gun 50:10
The Trap 49:57
Disc 7 Season TWO – Episodes 9-12
The Iron Trail 50:20
Land Beyond the Law 50:26
Test of Courage 50:09
War Party 50:27
Disc 8 Season TWO – Episodes 13-16
Deadline 50:18
Big Ghost Basin 50:06
Born Bad 50:26
The Brand 50:17
Disc 9 Season TWO – Episodes 17-20
Decision at Gunsight 50:28
The Spanish Grant 50:22
Hard Bargain 50:07
The Broken Pledge 50:17
Disc 10 Season THREE – Episodes 1-4
Incident at Indian Springs 52:47
The Conspirators 52:51
The Mutton Puncher 52:46
Border Affair 52:48
Disc 11 Season THREE – Episodes 5-8
Devil’s Canyon 52:45
Town of Fear 52:48
Hired Gun 52:51
Top Hand 52:46
Disc 12 Season THREE – Episodes 9-12
The Last Comanchero 52:50
The Gamble 52:51
Renegades 52:52
The Empty Gun 52:52
Disc 13 Season THREE – Episodes 13-16
White Warrior 52:45
Ghost of the Cimarron 52:48
Wagon-Tongue North 52:51
The Long Search 52:54
Disc 14 Season THREE – Episodes 17-20
Standoff 52:47
Dead to Rights 52:50
Noose at Noon 52:52
The Angry Sky 52:47
Disc 15 Season FOUR – Episodes 1-4
Blind Spot 50:07
Reprieve 50:11
The Rebellion 50:15
Trial by Conscience 49:41
Disc 16 Season FOUR – Episodes 5-8
The Impostor 49:59
Prisoner of Moon Mesa 49:45
Gold, Glory and Custer: Prelude 50:13
Gold, Glory and Custer: Requiem 51:45
Disc 17 Season FOUR – Episodes 9-11
Riot at Arroyo Seco 52:16
Apache Blood 49:44
Outcast of Cripple Creek 52:15
Disc 18 Season FOUR – Episodes 12-13
Alibi for the Scalped Man 50:09
Home Is the Brave 50:13
Disc 19 Season FIVE – Episodes 1-4
The Long Rope 52:20
Counterfeit Gun 52:17
Road to Three Graves 52:23
Two Trails to Santa Fe 52:18
Disc 20 Season FIVE – Episodes 5-8
Savage Breed 52:17
Incident at Dawson Flats 52:21
Duel at Judas Basin 52:23
The Return of Mr. Grimm 52:24
Disc 21 Season FIVE – Episodes 9-11
The Beholden 52:25
The Frightened Town 52:20
Lone Patrol 52:20
Disc 22 Season FIVE – Episodes 12-13
Massacre at Gunsight Pass 52:25
The Greater Glory 52:23
Disc 23 Season SIX – Episodes 1-4
Winchester Quarantine 51:58
Trouble Street 51:57
Cross Purpose 52:10
The Young Fugitives 52:09
Disc TWENTY-FOUR Season SIX – Episodes 5-8
Day’s Pay 52:08
Retaliation 52:09
Storm Center 52:08
Legacy of the Lost 52:09
Disc 24 Season SIX – Episodes 9-11
The Brahma Bull 52:05
The Wedding Rings 52:07
The Idol 52:11
Disc 26 Season SIX – Episodes 12-13
One Way Ticket 52:07
The Bad Penny 52:06
Disc 27 Season SEVEN – Episodes 1-4
The Durango Brothers 52:09
Satonka 52:12
Sweet Sam 52:13
Man Alone 52:15
Disc 28 Season SEVEN – Episodes 5-8
The Quick and the Deadly 52:13
Indian Gold 52:12
Dark Decision 52:13
Pocketful of Stars 52:11
Disc 29 Season SEVEN – Episodes 9-11
The Vanishing Breed 52:15
Vengeance Is Mine 52:18
Johnny Brassbuttons 52:12
Disc 30 Season SEVEN – Episodes 12-13
Wanted for the Murder of Cheyenne Bodie 52:15
Showdown at Oxbend (52:11)
Cheyenne The Complete Series
Blu-ray rates:
TV shows: Very Good
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent
Supplements:
Featurette The Lonely Gunfighter: The Legacy of Cheyenne (SD).
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: 30 Blu-ray discs in 7 Keep cases in card box
Reviewed: June 27, 2025
(7346chey)
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Glenn Erickson answers most reader mail: cinesavant@gmail.com
Text © Copyright 2025 Glenn Erickson
I don’t know if you were able to pick this up watching random episodes, but those early Warner Brothers TV shows sometimes adapted familiar movie scripts. The first season show, “The Argonauts”, is no less than a remake of the second half of Treasure of the Sierra Madre with Edward Andrews and Rod Taylor as the prospectors and Clint Walker himself taking over the Walter Huston role.
I noticed some “Maverick” episodes were based on books.
I was watching an episode of SUGARFOOT when it started to seem like I’d already seen it–the bad guy about to be hanged suddenly began to scream nd cry like a baby. This disgusted the local delinquents so much they agreed to go straight. Recognize that scenario? It’s the plot of ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES.
One of the early episodes was based on ‘Charge at Feather River’. I knew something was up when Cheyenne shows up in a hat that is too small. It must have been the same hat Guy Madison wore in the film. WB needed to match up footage from the climactic battle from ‘Charge’. You can see Cheyenne’s size change when they switch back and forth between Clint and Guy.
‘Hidden Fortress’ was based on ‘Rocky Mountain’ and during that final battle you can clearly spot Dickie Jones amongst the carnage. In that one, Vasquez Rocks fills in for the New Mexico locale of ‘Rocky Mountain’.
Wait—you list Roy Huggins’ most notable TV credits—and leave off The Fugitive? Oh, for shame! 😁
We enjoyed Cheyenne and those WB westerns immensely. Clint walker was a great example of American values when I was a boy. I’ll get these blu rays
Clint Walker has never been given his due. It was sad to see him doing stuff like ‘The Great Bank Robbery’, or ‘More Dead Than Alive’.
They kept the lights on, but…stupid Hollywoodland!
I bought this Warner Archive box set to get the second season of the Cheyenne season. In my opinion, a season that includes the best number of great 50 minute long Westerns ever on television in one season. Arthur W. Silver, the producer of most of these episodes. had started out his career at Warner Brothers about 20 years earlier writing press books for Warner movies, before advancing up to producing movie trailers. In 1955, Warner Brothers and the ABC network were on the ropes, anything went to get viewers. Silver took over production of “Cheyenne” and the effect was immediate. The Bounty Killers episode featured a homicidal U.S. Marshal Moxon, who decided that the cost of transporting bounty prisoners back alive was not profitable enough, so he killed them to save on transportation expenses. The Breen Production Code would never have allowed this episode to get a movie release. Moxon’s cynical attitude is always present in some law enforcers today. Look at the incident on June 27 when an ICE assault team in full desert camouflage gear, led by a Marine, got into a house in Baghdad West (oops, Huntington Park). The Marine had a 5 foot long flexible nylon tube of plastic explosive on his shoulder. He pressed this military breaching explosive against the house’s door frame. Once a distance away, in the driveway, he lit the DET cord in his hand and. . . boom! Splintered doorway shards flying everywhere. I include below the subtitles for the showdown at the end of this Cheyenne episode. One of a kind. And the War Party, The Iron Trail and Big Ghost Basin episodes from season Two are almost as good.
The Bounty Killers
Season One, Episode Four
771
00:46:53,227 –> 00:46:55,479
Cheyenne: I said that as long as I wore this badge
772
00:46:55,604 –> 00:46:58,565
I’d see that you got there alive.
773
00:46:58,691 –> 00:47:01,193
You’ll have to take it from me.
774
00:47:01,319 –> 00:47:03,362
Marshal Moxon: It’ll be a pleasure.
775
00:47:03,487 –> 00:47:04,779
Step aside, Sevier.
776
00:47:06,991 –> 00:47:09,576
Get movin’ or I’ll give it to you now.
777
00:47:09,702 –> 00:47:10,786
Cheyenne: Do as he says.
778
00:47:10,911 –> 00:47:13,872
[ominous music]
779
00:47:36,645 –> 00:47:39,481
You can still do like I said last night
780
00:47:39,607 –> 00:47:41,984
quit and let me take Sevier in.
781
00:47:42,109 –> 00:47:45,070
[laughs]
782
00:47:48,282 –> 00:47:49,866
Moxon: You know, Cheyenne,
the trouble with you is
783
00:47:49,992 –> 00:47:51,326
that you’re as much of a grandfather
784
00:47:51,452 –> 00:47:53,620
as Barnes is, even more.
785
00:47:53,746 –> 00:47:55,664
[ominous music]
786
00:47:55,790 –> 00:47:57,583
[Laughs]
787
00:47:57,708 –> 00:48:00,544
Me quit? That’ll be the day.
788
00:48:02,129 –> 00:48:04,840
Yes, sir, a real grandfather.
789
00:48:04,965 –> 00:48:06,633
[gunshot]
790
00:48:06,759 –> 00:48:09,511
[dramatic music]
Quick shot of Moxon lying face down, stretched dead on the ground, as Cheyenne talks.
791
00:48:20,022 –> 00:48:22,232
Cheyenne: We’ll bury him and go on to Kansas.