Monday, March 28, 2011
Jack Kelly: Look What I Found! :)
Friday, March 25, 2011
Jack Kelly: Happy Birthday Nancy Kelly

Thursday, March 24, 2011
Jack Kelly: Kings Row - The Rest of the Story Pt. II
I'm sorry for not posting Part II of the Kings Row photo feature sooner. I've been having some problems with my router. It appears the router problems have been routed for the time being, so let's go on with the show:

The natty gentlemen pictured above are
"Doctors Mitchell (L, Jack Kelly) and Tower (Victor Jory)" who
are enjoying "a light moment in the mail order romance
between a lonely small-town widower and a scheming young
woman in the Kings Row story to be presented on Warner Brothers Presents, Tuesday, November 15 (1955), 7:30 p.m., EST, over ABC-TV." JK in a tense scene from "Lady in Fear".
Dr. Mitchell appears puzzled by the unusual present a
young couple receives in "Wedding Gift". That's Dennis Hopper
as "Tod" and Natalie Wood as "Renee". This is dialogue for the scene shown above,
from the actual script of "Wedding Gift".
*****************************
Stay tuned for a birthday tribute to another talented member of the Kelly family.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Jack Kelly: Happy Saint Patrick's Day! :)
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Jack Kelly: Kings Row - The Rest of the Story - Part I


I can tell you, however, that this is another still from "Two of a Kind". And, the lovely lady is Myrna Fahey, who would later appear in several episodes of Maverick, including "Duel at Sundown" and "Mano Nera".
Now, here's a very distinguished looking JK with winsome Nan Leslie, his King's Row co-star, in a still from the episode "Wedding Gift":
Stay tuned for more Kings Row stills--coming after a pause for Saint Patrick's Day in TDS. :)
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Jack Kelly: TV's Reluctant Top Gun Sounds Off - Pt. II :)
Here's Part Two of the 1960 TV Weekly article:
"'I [JK] banged my head against a wall for two years before the thing finally equalized itself. It wasn't anyone's fault. It's just a peculiarity of the audience that it picks out one guy in shows like this and makes him No. 1. Sort of the same situation exists this time, but I really hope the same condition doesn't arise.
'After all," Kelly went on easily, "we're both in the same show getting the same exposure. And I know how hard Roger is going to have to work. When this 'top gun' business comes up about two people who are working together...well, you know what can happen.'
Actually, of course, Kelly walked out on the show only a few steps behind Garner. Warner Brothers talked him into coming back, however.
'I'd have come back anyway,' he said. 'I came back because it was the smart thing for me to do. Jim? Well, I figure he knows what he's doing.'
The question now before Kelly, Moore, Warners, ABC, et al is whether the series will be as successful without Garner was it was with him.
'I hope it won't hurt us,' Kelly shrugged. 'It don't think it will if Roger and I hit it off as well as Jim and I did. We clicked together right from the start. That's why I say now, don't call me 'top gun'.'"

"I think we should send the 'Bundle from Britain' (Roger Moore) back to the British. When are we ever going to get the Maverick situation straightened out? The program was so good, but it sure has slipped, especially since they dropped Bret."
The editor replied: "They didn't drop Bret. He dropped himself from the series. Let's give Moore a chance to fill the gap."
Of course, Roger Moore ultimately didn't fill the Maverick gap. JK ended up being the only "gun" during the series' final season, although brother Bret did appear in reruns.
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Jack Kelly: TV's Reluctant Top Gun Sounds Off - Pt. I :)
Just a few posts back, we saw Jack Kelly dubbed one of "TV's Top Guns" by the writer of a 1962 magazine article about television westerns.
However, JK actually shunned the title of top gun on Maverick. The following 1960 TV Weekly story explains why:

Being a 'top gun' can have its disadvantages--even if it's only in a TV series.
Which is why Jack Kelly, who inherited all rights to that title on ABC's Maverick show when Jim Garner decided to go looking for greener ranges, says 'It's something I can do without.'
The handsome, happy-go-lucky Kelly learned the hard way what it means to play second fiddle, or gun, to a co-star. For at least the first two years of Maverick it was commonly regarded as Garner's show, even though they alternated in the starring roles and shared equally high ratings.

'I know from personal experience that it's terribly discouraging,' Kelly said, shaking his head. 'My problem was that Jim starred in the first six shows before I got on the air. So naturally, all the promotion was about him. The show came with a built-in star. When people thought of Maverick, they thought of Jim."
Don't miss Pt. II - plus, a TV Weekly reader's reaction to Maverick's newly discovered relative - next time in TDS. :->