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Friday, April 10, 2026
Maverick (1957)
Maverick
Rating Rating
Run Time: 60 min
Color: Black and White
Aspect Ratio: 1.33 : 1
Sound: Mono
Producer: Warner Bros Television
Genre
  • Western
Seasons: 5
Episodes: 124
Overview

Maverick initially starred James Garner as Bret Maverick, an adroitly articulate cardsharp. Eight episodes into the first season, he was joined by Jack Kelly as his brother Bart Maverick, and for the remainder of the first three seasons, Garner and Kelly alternated leads from week to week, sometimes teaming up for the occasional two-brother episode.*The Maverick brothers were poker players from Texas who traveled the American Old West by horseback and stagecoach, and on Mississippi riverboats, constantly getting into and out of life-threatening trouble of one sort or another, usually involving money, women, or both. They would typically find themselves weighing a financial windfall against a moral dilemma. Their consciences always trumped their wallets since both Mavericks were intrinsically ethical.*When Garner left the series after the third season due to a legal dispute, after which he began a successful movie career, Roger Moore was added to the cast as cousin Beau Maverick. As before, the two starring Mavericks would generally alternate as series leads, with an occasional "team-up" episode.*Partway through the fourth season, Garner look-alike Robert Colbert replaced Moore and played a third Maverick brother, Brent. No more than two series leads (of the four total for the run of the series) ever appeared together in the same episode, and most episodes featured only one. All two-Maverick episodes included Jack Kelly as Bart Maverick. For the fifth and final season, the show returned to a "single Maverick" format as it had been originally in the first eight episodes, with all the remaining new episodes starring Kelly as Bart. The new episodes, however, alternated with reruns from earlier seasons starring Garner as Bret.*Budd Boetticher directed several of the early episodes of the first season until sharply disagreeing with Huggins about Maverick's philosophy, which resulted in Boetticher assigning Bret Maverick's scripted lines to supporting characters and filming the result, thereby attempting to change the whole series by making Maverick into a standard Western hero as found in the earlier Boetticher-directed series of theatrical films starring Randolph Scott. Robert Altman wrote and directed the episode entitled "Bolt from the Blue" starring Roger Moore in the fourth season, with a couple of scenes later purloined and reshot for the subsequent Mel Gibson movie version.*The show was part of the Warner Bros. array of TV Westerns, which included Cheyenne, Colt .45, Lawman, Bronco, The Alaskans, and Sugarfoot.

1. Pappy
First Aired September 12, 1959
The Mavericks set out to investigate when it appears that an 18-year-old gold-digger is set to marry their Pappy. Features dual roles for series stars Garner and Kelly, as "Pappy" Beauregard Maverick and Uncle Bentley, respectively. As well, as part of the proceedings, Bart impersonates Dandy Jim Buckley for most of the episode. With Adam West, Troy Donahue, Henry Daniell, Kaye Elhardt, Virginia Gregg and Chubby Johnson. Series creator Roy Huggins, who had left the show at the conclusion of the previous season, complained in his Archive of American Television interview that Bret and Bart's "Pappy" was never meant to be seen by the audience (in the series' earliest references, he appears to have already died) and that Huggins was disappointed when the first thing the new producer (Coles Trapnell) did was construct an episode including the character. Also note that at one point, Pappy explicitly mentions that he raised two children and didn't want a third; this would seem to contradict the later appearances of Brent Maverick, the third Maverick brother.
2. Royal Four-Flush
First Aired September 19, 1959
Bart runs across conman Capt. Rory Fitzgerald (David Frankham), who still owes him $4000 from a poker game in St. Louis. In an effort to get the money he's owed, Bart sticks to Fitz like glue, and gets mixed up with Fitz's companions: a woman claiming to be the Countess de la Fontaine (Roxane Berard), widowed mining magnate Placer Jack Mason (Arch Johnson), and Jack's suspicious and very protective children. Berard's second of four appearances, the others being "Game of Chance" with Garner and Kelly, "The Resurrection of Joe November" with Garner, and "Diamond Flush" with Roger Moore.
3. The Sheriff of Duck 'n' Shoot
First Aired September 26, 1959
Bret is manipulated into becoming the sheriff of a wildly boisterous town, and tries to outfox?rather than outgun?both the criminals and the town officials who placed him in the job. Bret's brother Bart appears in several scenes. Featuring Peggy McCay as Melissa Maybrook and Chubby Johnson in a large role as the town's genial deputy.
4. You Can't Beat the Percentage
First Aired October 03, 1959
A cowboy is set to kill the new boss of one of Bart's old girlfriends, who now works at a gambling house. With Gerald Mohr as a white-suited saloon owner (similar to his role in the previous season's "Escape to Tampico") and Karen Steele as a fetching blonde with too many men orbiting around her in this fast-paced suspense thriller.
5. The Cats of Paradise
First Aired October 10, 1959
Bret gets involved with Modesty Blaine (Mona Freeman) in a scheme to sell cats to a town plagued with rats. There he faces Buddy Ebsen as a trigger-happy sheriff, Richard Deacon as the town's undertaker, and Lance Fuller as a black-clad business-card carrying gunfighter modeled on Paladin. Historically, this episode takes place after 1876, as the sheriff was a witness to the 1876 death of Wild Bill Hicock (which is established in dialogue as having taken place some time ago). Modesty would return 12 episodes later in "The Cruise of the Cynthia B".
6. A Tale of Three Cities
First Aired October 17, 1959
Bart is held up at gunpoint by a female robber (Pat Crowley), and then is kicked out of town by the sheriff. Arriving in the neighboring town of Brotherly without a penny, Bart tracks the robber while making inspirational anti-gambling lectures?so that he can get paid in food. Ben Gage does his Marshal Matt Dillon parody again; also featuring Ray Teal as a sheriff.
7. Full House
First Aired October 24, 1959
Bret is mistaken for one Foxy Smith, who is assembling ten of the West's most notorious outlaws for a major heist. Members of the gang include Cole Younger (Gregory Walcott), Billy the Kid (Joel Grey), Sam Bass (Kelly Thordsen), and an amorous Belle Starr (Jean Willes). In historical terms, this episode would have to take place in 1876 or earlier, as Cole Younger started a 25-year prison sentence that year?except that "Belle Starr" was not known by that name until she married Sam Starr in 1880. Also, note that Billy the Kid appears in this episode despite it being prominently mentioned 4 episodes earlier (in "The Sheriff of Duck 'n' Shoot") that he had already been killed by Pat Garrett. Garner performs a bravura pistol-twirling exhibition as part of the plot, and Nancy Kulp briefly appears as a drunken waitress with slightly slurred speech.
8. The Lass With the Poisonous Air
First Aired October 31, 1959
While winning regularly at a series of private Denver poker games, Bart leaves promptly every afternoon for a rendezvous with a mysterious femme fatale (Joanna Moore). The story for this episode is credited to Roy Huggins, who had left the series at the end of the previous season. With Stacy Keach, Sr.
9. The Ghost Soldiers
First Aired November 07, 1959
An extremely beleaguered Bret must figure out some way to cope with an ocean of Native Americans laying siege to an almost-empty fort. Everyone inside seems about to be killed, including him. This episode is told from multiple perspectives.
10. Easy Mark
First Aired November 14, 1959
Bart's paid handsomely to impersonate cactus-fancier Cornelius Van Rennselaer Jr. on a railroad journey, but he doesn't realize that others on the train will stop at nothing to keep "Cornelius" from completing his trip. With Edgar Buchanan, Pippa Scott, Jack Buetel, and Nita Talbot as a woman hired to "distract" Cornelius?and who does so with notable enthusiasm. Buchanan and Buetel co-starred as Roy Bean and Jeff Taggart in the 1956 NBC television series Judge Roy Bean.
11. A Fellow's Brother
First Aired November 21, 1959
Bret is wrongly identified as a wanted thief and killer, and must contend with a bumbling sheriff and bounty hunter who are determined to capture him for the reward money, as well as vengeful family members of the killer's victim ... and a would-be sidekick whose hero-worship of Bret almost always makes things worse. Though a major cog in the episode's story, Bart appears only briefly. With Adam West as a gunslinger.
12. Trooper Maverick
First Aired November 28, 1959
Caught gambling in a frontier fort, Bart forgoes 180 days in the stockade by enlisting in the cavalry?with a secret mission to expose a traitorous ring of thieves. With Suzanne Lloyd.
13. Maverick Springs
First Aired December 05, 1959
Bret is hired by a wealthy Texas woman to bring her wayward brother home from Saratoga Springs. The project soon gets trickier than Bret anticipated, and eventually brother Bart is called in to help. With Kathleen Crowley as the gold-digging Melanie Blake, Tol Avery as the villain, and Sig Ruman as Bart's accomplice Professor Kronkheit. The 1970s episode of The Rockford Files entitled "The Great Blue Lake Land Development Company" bears some similarity to this episode?in interviews, Rockford writer Stephen J. Cannell has credited elements of some Maverick episodes as inspirations for many of The Rockford Files scripts.
14. The Goose-Drownder
First Aired December 12, 1959
Bart and Gentleman Jack Darby are stranded in a decaying Nevada ghost town during a week-long downpour (a "goose-drownder") ? but the tedium is broken when a stagecoach turns up carrying a desperate gang, including one of Bart's lost loves (Fay Spain). This Maverick variation on Key Largo features the final appearance of Richard Long as Darby. This is also the only instance of one of the five recurring supporting characters from the "Shady Deal at Sunny Acres" episode appearing after writer/producer Roy Huggins' departure at the end of the second season because most had all moved, as regulars, into new television series such as Bourbon Street Beat (Long, Howell), 77 Sunset Strip (Zimbalist, later also Long), and Leave It to Beaver (Brewster), and were consequently unable to appear as semi-regulars on another show. Also featuring H.M. Wynant and Will Wright.
15. A Cure for Johnny Rain
First Aired December 19, 1959
Bret and his travelling companions are held up at gunpoint on a stagecoach. Later, when Bret arrives in the frontier town of Apocalypse, he encounters the thief again: Johnny Rain (William Reynolds), the most beloved citizen in town. But Johnny has no memory of the hold-up at all?at least while he's sober...
16. The Marquesa
First Aired January 02, 1960
Adele Mara guest stars as a woman with a competing claim on a saloon which Bart wins in a poker game. Other guest stars are Rodolfo Hoyos, Jr., as Miguel Ruiz, Jay Novello as Pepe, and Morris Ankrum as Judge Jason Painter. Edward Ashley makes his first of two appearances as Nobby Ned Wingate (here spelled "Wyngate"), another rival gambler very similar to Dandy Jim Buckley for Bart to tangle with.
17. The Cruise of the Cynthia B
First Aired January 09, 1960
Bret is conned into buying an almost worthless?and seemingly cursed?riverboat. Mona Freeman returns as Modesty Blaine, another victim of the same conman. Bart appears only briefly.
18. Maverick and Juliet
First Aired January 16, 1960
En route to visit Pappy in St. Louis, Bret runs afoul of two families of feuding Missouri hillbillies. Soon, both Bret and Bart are caught up in the deadly war between the Montgomerys and the Carterets (who are patterned after the Montagues and the Capulets from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.).
19. The White Widow
First Aired January 23, 1960
After Bart's entire bankroll is stolen from a hotel safe, he accepts a position as a bodyguard for widowed bank president Wilma White (Julie Adams) who has been receiving death threats. With Pilar Seurat as Wilma's maid.
20. Guatemala City
First Aired January 30, 1960
Bret searches for an ex-girlfriend in tropical Guatemala and befriends a female street urchin. With Suzanne Storrs and Patric Knowles.
21. The People's Friend
First Aired February 06, 1960
After foiling an assassination attempt on a state senator, Bart is convinced to run for election in his place while the senator recovers from the bullet wound he received. Bart campaigning as a local politician foreshadows events to take place later in Jack Kelly's real life. Francis De Sales appears as Mayor Culpepper.
22. A Flock of Trouble
First Aired February 13, 1960
Bret wins a herd of sheep in a poker game, thinking they're cattle.....and soon discovers that the locals have an absolute murderous hatred of sheep farmers.
23. The Iron Hand
First Aired February 20, 1960
Having lost everything to Nobby Ned Wingate (Edward Ashley) in a poker game, Bart is forced to find work for himself and his disgruntled companions on a cattle drive. The title, incidentally, is meant literally; the villain wields his prosthetic iron hand like a club to murderously bludgeon those who cross him. Features a plump and acne-scarred Robert Redford in a supporting role.
24. The Resurrection of Joe November
First Aired February 27, 1960
Bret accepts a well-paying job from an old family friend to dig up a grave, so that the body may be interred elsewhere?but the job soon becomes much more complex, and dangerous. Set primarily in New Orleans during Mardi Gras, with Roxane Berard, Joanna Barnes, Nita Talbot, and Don 'Red' Barry.
25. The Misfortune Teller
First Aired March 05, 1960
Bret rides in to a small Wyoming town where he's never been before, and is immediately thrown into jail, accused of having killed the town's mayor. The episode features another spoof of Gunsmoke's Marshal Matt Dillon with Ben Gage; a turn by Alan Mowbray as Bret's astrology and numerology obsessed lawyer; and Kathleen Crowley in her phenomenally seductive Mae West-like role of Melanie Blake, last seen in "Maverick Springs" (which is briefly discussed). Half a century later, Kathleen Crowley was the one actress from the series that Garner singled out in his autobiography "The Garner Files" to express his admiration for her acting ability at length.
26. Greenbacks, Unlimited
First Aired March 12, 1960
Bret is hired to track down a safecracker who is believed to be getting ready to rob the Denver State Bank. With Gage Clarke as a timid gambler with a surprising secret, and John Dehner as gang leader Big Ed Murphy, a role that Andrew Duggan would play in a subsequent season.