Bret Maverick
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For a more comprehensive article about the character named Bret Maverick, created by Roy Huggins and portrayed by James Garner, see Maverick (TV series).
Bret Maverick | |
---|---|
Genre | Western Comedy |
Starring | James Garner |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 18 |
Production | |
Location(s) | California |
Running time | 60 mins. |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC |
Picture format | 1.33:1 |
Audio format | monaural |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Maverick Young Maverick |
External links | |
IMDb profile |
Bret Maverick is a 1981 television series featuring James Garner in the role that made him famous in the 1957 series Maverick: a professional poker player traveling alone year after year through the Old West from riverboat to saloon. Although the ratings were respectable, the show was unexpectedly canceled by NBC at the end of the first season. Jack Kelly had been slated to return as Bret's brother Bart Maverick in the second season, and briefly appeared at the very end of the first and only season. A number of scripts for the following season had been written and presented to Kelly, according to subsequent interviews.
The 1978 TV-movie The New Maverick could be said to be the pilot for both this series and the 1979 failure Young Maverick, a short-lived series which had featured Charles Frank as preppie former Harvard student Ben Maverick, the son of Roger Moore's character Beau Maverick (although Moore only appeared in the original series).
The production of this series was linked to Garner's quitting midway through the sixth season of The Rockford Files in 1979/1980. Because he couldn't finish The Rockford Files, although he was contractually obligated, he made a deal that he would reprise his Maverick role in a new series.
Other recurring cast members of this series, set in a small Arizona town, include country singer Ed Bruce as a sheriff, Stuart Margolin as a crooked Native American, and Darleen Carr as a fetching editor of the local newspaper. The 2-hour first episode was eventually trimmed and repackaged as a TV movie for rerunning on local stations under the title Bret Maverick: The Lazy Ace.
Roy Huggins, unconnected with this series despite Garner's request that he come aboard mid-season, speculated that one reason the new show didn't quite work was that Maverick, traditionally a drifter, had settled down in one place; this was going to be rectified the following season, in which Bret would travel while Bart ran the saloon in Arizona.
As a tribute to the character featured on this television series, on April 21, 2006, a ten-foot bronze statue of James Garner as Bret Maverick was unveiled in Garner's hometown of Norman, Oklahoma, with Garner present at the ceremony.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Roy Huggins' Archive of American Television Interview
- Bret Maverick on the Internet Movie Database
- James Garner Interview on the Charlie Rose Show
- James Garner interview at Archive of American Television - (c/o Google Video) - March 17, 1999