LAREDO Ep. 40  11-25-66
"Road to San Remo"


Written by CALVIN CLEMENTS
Directed by IRVING J. MOORE

Guest Cast
CLAIRE WILCOX as Gussie Smith
DABBS GREER as Ira
VAL AVERY as Sheriff Daniels
ALLEN JAFFE as Indian Pete
CHARLIE BRIGGS as Woods
LANE BRADFORD as Charley Smith
JAN ARVAN as Dealer
STEVE RAINES as Stage Driver

Joe and Gussie
.On the stagecoach from Austin, Joe's nap is disturbed by a bored Gussie who reckons that Joe wouldn't be ignoring her if she were nineteen instead of nine.  Joe takes a look when Gussie produces a box that makes sounds like a rattlesnake but disappoints her by not reacting when a spring loaded fake jumps out of the box.  Joe does react when Indian Pete and his gang stops the stage and demands that Gussie get out.  Joe tells her not to forget her "pet".  He uses the fake snake to spook Pete's horse and shoots one of the gang.  Joe declines Gussie's request for a scalp.

On the stage to Laredo Gussie is
bored,  Joe ignores her.

Joe wakes up when Gussie
gets out her snake

Indian Pete stops
the stage

Joe has Gussie get "her pet"

The fake snake spooks
Indian Pete's horse
Indian Pete's horse spooks

Gussie says good-by, sort of

Chad's happy it's payday

The Captain checks the  books

The boys are overdrawn
Gussie is going on to San Remo and makes her good-byes to Joe.  Joe is back from Austin just in time for payday.  But payday turns into a $5 loan from the Captain because they're all overdrawn.  Chad talks Reese and Joe into pooling their money to play double or nothing at the saloon.  Reese is thrilled when Chad  wins twice and wants to walk away with the $60.  But Chad can never leave well enough alone.  So they end up broke and wondering how they're going to eat.  Gussie, who's found out the stage doesn't go to San Remo where her Uncle Charley is waiting, offers them $100 to drive her there.  Reese finds out on the way that the seemingly wealthy little girl has paid her way through Texas bouncing checks on an account with only $10.

How to make $5 stretch?

Bad answer; lose it gambling.
Gussie
$100 for a ride to
San Remo

Gussie's offer is tempting
Gussie and Reese
Gussie makes friends

They reach San Remo
The storekeeper
A suspicious
The livery man
almost deserted town
On the road to San Remo, Indian Pete makes another try for Gussie and loses another of his men.  When the group gets to San Remo, they find only three residents in town.  The livery owner and storekeeper claim not to know where Charley Smith lives.  When Chad locates the sheriff, he finds an old enemy.  Daniels, a proficient gunfighter, gunned down a friend of Chad's who never carried a gun.  He got away with it by buying off some witnesses.  What  stings Chad is Daniels' reminder that Chad never tracked him down.  Chad isn't comforted by Joe's reminder that he was just a kid back then.

Chad finds the sheriff

And recognizes an enemy

Daniels

Gussie's on an adventure

But Joe is  worried

Indian Pete
Indian Pete shows up in San Remo and is shot by Daniels before he can give anything away.  Daniels tells them where they can find Charley Smith.  However, when they go out to his place, they find the cabin Uncle Charley described to Gussie in his letter, but the man who claims to be Charley Smith is not Gussie's uncle.  Chad and Reese are shot at when they discover an oil well on the property.  They round up the gang in the confusion caused when he sets the oil on fire.  Gussie finds a grave site which they suspect is Uncle Charley, killed for his oil land.  The phony Charley tells all when threatened with a bucket of hot oil down his throat.  Daniels killed Uncle Charley.  Chad takes off for town alone, refusing to wait for the others.

Fake Uncle Charlie

Chad & Reese find an oil well

And set it on fire

Uncle Charley's grave

Hot oil threat

Chad heads for a show down

Chad with something 
to prove

Chad is shot

He finds the culprit

The storekeeper
Chad looks for Daniels in town but is shot by the storekeeper who claims Daniels made him do it.  Chad's subsequent shoot-out with Daniels proceeds in true TV Western hero style with Daniels getting off two shots before Chad plugs him.  When the liveryman takes aim at Chad's back, Joe takes him out -- also in hero fashion.  He first warns him to "hold it" and gives him the chance to whirl and get off a shot before Joe plugs him.

TV's most graceful
drop, roll & shoot

Daniels shoots first

But Chad shoots
best

The livery man takes aim

Stopped by Joe

Joe scolds Chad
Joe asks Chad what he thought he was doing coming into town without him.  Now that its all over, Chad admits he doesn't know.  Of course we all know he had to prove he could take on Daniels.  But we're glad to see Chad and Joe working together again.

The little heiress 
says good-by

A handshake for Chad

A kiss for Joe
Back in Laredo, Gussie starts writing checks as though she already  had her oil money.  Unfortunately for them, our Rangers told everyone about Gussie's oil fortune and vouched for her checks.  When the Captain lets everyone know they won't be good until Gussie comes of age - in twelve years, he also has the Rangers make good on the checks.  Suddenly Gussie's good-by gifts - three silver studded saddles with their initials - don't look so good.  Then Chad decides he's got "that old tingling feeling".  They're off to the saloon to turn the saddles into double or nothing gambling stakes.  And it's unlikely Chad will heed Reese's plaintive plea that they quit after they double the money once.

Chad has a plan to recoup

that Reese doesn't like
NiteOwl Review:   This was our favorite second season episode and definitely a top ten.   San Remo plays like a first year episode, a plus in our view.   All the elements we liked:  Chad conning Reese with Joe's encouragement, Chad coming to grips with an event in his past, Joe and Reese coping with a precocious child.  We liked Peter Brown's take on a Chad who has some demons to take care of and the little interaction at the end where Joe chides Chad for coming back to town without him.  We know Laredo was popular for its comedy but we craved a little serious interaction sometimes.

For an actor who had so much enthusiasm for the physical action involved in his craft, its somewhat surprising how well William Smith interacted with children.  Three of Bill's best Laredo episodes featured him with child actors: "Meanwhile Back at the Reservation" with the young Kurt Russell,  "Deadliest Kid in the West" with Gina Gillespie and this one.  Bill hasn't had much opportunity to share the screen with children since Laredo.  The idea of Falconetti (RMPM), Moon (C.C. & Co.)  or one of Bill's other psycho killers interacting with a young child would just be too disturbing.

Query:  None of us knew that oil was valuable in the 1870's.  Anyone out there know when Texas oil became more than something to poison the water?
 
 

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