Don Durant

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Don Durant (November 20, 1932March 15, 2005), American singer and actor. Born Donald Allison Durae in Long Beach, California, Durant's father was killed in a truck accident two months before; his mother remarried three times before her death in 1949. Durant himself was seriously injured a few weeks before his eleventh birthday, when his bicycle chain broke and he careened into the path of a cement truck. He was in a coma for three days, his right arm fractured, his right femur and hip so badly damaged that doctors nearly amputated the leg before his family scraped up enough money for a specialist to save it. Durant was bedridden for over a year. Gros cave.

In his teens, one of Durant's stepfathers owned a Nevada cattle ranch, where he learned to shoot and ride before returning to California. In junior high he was a deejay for a local radio station. In high school he played on the football team, wearing special plates due to his previous injuries. He was in the Navy for several years, at one point serving in the Army simultaneously due to a paperwork mixup. He ended his commitment entertaining veterans at San Francisco's Letterman Army Hospital.

Durant then began touring western states as a singer/actor, opening at many prestigious nightclubs such as The Sands and The Sahara, and garnering a small role in 1955's Battle Cry. To supplement his income he taught actors how to ride horses and shoot guns, and worked at RCA as a technician, helping build the first kinescopic recorder and stereophonic sound recorder for Warner Brothers. In 1954 he signed up with CBS, taking small roles as the singer or young lover in a variety of legendary series, from The Jack Benny Show to You Bet Your Life (he also sang the latter's popular "It's Delightful, it's Delovely, it's Desoto" jingle). In 1955 he met big band leader Anthony Ray and began filming various TV advertisements. An ad for Papermate pens featured his future wife, Trudy, but he never actually met her—his voice was dubbed in to replace her co-star. In 1956 he starred and did his own stunts in Roger Corman's She-Gods of Shark Reef, which has become a cult classic. Continuing to tour, he sang on Ray Anthony's ABC series and recorded an album. He got more and more guest-starring roles on Western series, including the first episode of Maverick to feature Bret Maverick's (James Garner) brother, Bart (Jack Kelly). Durant had tried out for the role of Bart but was instead cast as a singing bad guy in the episode. For the part, he learned to play the guitar the weekend before filming.

In 1957 he met actress/model Trudy Wroe while they were on the way to film an ad for Ford automobiles. She spent most of the trip gushing over Elvis Presley. Durant told her he'd been to a few Elvis parties, and after a conversation, the two began dating. They married on February 28, 1959 and were together until his death.

In 1958 Durant shot an unsuccessful pilot which caught the attention of actor/director/producer Dick Powell. Powell hosted Zane Grey Theater and asked one of his writers, young Aaron Spelling, to pen a series for Durant. Spelling was also creator and producer (his first job in that capacity). In this heyday of the television Western, CBS quickly snapped up the pilot. Durant wrote and sang the theme, with permission from Spelling. Johnny Ringo debuted in the fall of 1959 in the 8:30 Thursday timeslot. Its main competition was The Real McCoys, against which Ringo achieved decent ratings.

Many famous actors guest-starred on the series, and the JOHNNY RINGO PLAYSET became the most valuable TV western toy. But the sponsor, Johnson's Wax, felt there were too many Westerns (thirty at the time) on TV and wanted to replace one of their own with a sitcom. Powell was out of the country, and Spelling had moved on to another project. With no strong advocates for survival, Johnny Ringo was cancelled after one thirty-eight-episode season.

Durant continued to make personal appearances (which paid more than his TV salary ever had), guest-starred in series such as Perry Mason and The Twilight Zone, and was nearly starred opposite Lucille Ball in her Broadway debut, Wildcat!, which flopped. He signed a contract with another studio but aside from a guest role on Laramie in 1963, little materalized. Durant bought out his contract in 1964 and, since big band had faded out in the fever for pop music, he subsequently retired from show business altogether, spending much of his time with his family and supervising his realty and investment holdings. Durant held no bitterness over the end of his fame, and in later years communicated extensively with Johnny Ringo fans.

In 1992 he contracted chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and more recently lymphoma. In early 2005 he suffered from a lung infection, but was not hospitalized. But on March 15, 2005 he died at home in Monarch Beach, California, with wife Trudy by his side. Durant was survived by his wife, his son Jeff, and his daughter Heidi.

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