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Posted by Joe Cimoch [172.70.175.32] on Wednesday, February 02, 2022 at 09:31:36 :

Gene Autry Power Wagon

Gail Davis as Annie Oakley, and Jimmy Hawkins as her kid brother Tagg, pause beside a Gene Autry Flying A Power Wagon in 1953, to enjoy some Canada Dry. (Photo courtesy Jimmy Hawkins.)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

Flying A Productions was a primarily western television production company founded in 1950 by singer and motion picture star Gene Autry. The company offered four syndicated and three network programs until all seven of its series had halted production by 1957 or moved to another studio. Autry also had a Flying A Pictures company for B movies. By 1960, Autry's business interests included the California Angels baseball team.

Television series
Autry's first television series, The Gene Autry Show, aired on CBS from 1950 to January 1956. The second Flying A (the "A" stood for Autry) Production, The Range Rider, was broadcast from 1951 to 1953; it starred Jock Mahoney and former child actor Dick Jones.
In 1955, Jones obtained his second Flying A series which ran for forty-two episodes, Buffalo Bill, Jr., with Harry Cheshire and Nancy Gilbert, a fictional portrayal of a youthful Texas marshal and his younger sister, both named for but unrelated to William Frederick Cody and Calamity Jane.

Another Flying A Productions, Annie Oakley, which aired from 1954 to 1957, starred Gail Davis as the western sharpshooter Annie Oakley, with Brad Johnson and Jimmy Hawkins also in the cast. In 1955, The Billboard declared Annie Oakley the "Best Non-Network Western Series" and Davis as "Best Performer Appearing Regularly in a Non-Network Western Series."

In addition to The Gene Autry Show, the Flying A offered two other network series, Cavalcade of America, an anthology drama from 1952 to 1957 on NBC and then ABC, and The Adventures of Champion, based on Autry's famous horse; the series aired on CBS from 1955 to 1956.

From 1952 to 1954 the Flying A produced Death Valley Days, a western anthology hosted by Stanley Andrews as "The Old Ranger", Ronald W. Reagan, Robert Taylor, and Dale Robertson. In 1954, the brothers Dorrell (1899-1997) and Stuart E. McGowan (1904-1999) severed their ties with Autry and launched their own production company,[7] which produced Death Valley Days from 1954 to 1956. Then McCann-Erickson took over the program.[8] Later, Filmmaster and then Madison produced Death Valley Days until its concluding episode in the spring of 1970. The series began on October 1, 1952,[9] with an episode focusing on how Death Valley obtained its name. It closed with its 452nd half-hour segment in the 26-episode 18th season on April 24, 1970, with the oddly-named "Early Candle Lighten".



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