<Archive Obituary> Ward Bond (November 5th 1960)
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<Archive Obituary> Ward Bond (November 5th 1960)
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Bill Schenley
2007-11-06 04:29:44 UTC
Permalink
Ward Bond Dead; TV And Film Actor;

Star of 'Wagon Train' Series on N.B.C.

Had Appeared in More Than 200 Movies

Photo: Loading Image...

FROM: The New York Times (November 6th 1960) ~
By The Associated Press

DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 5

Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.

Mr. Bond, who was the star of the television series
"Wagon Train," was to have made a personal
appearance tomorrow in the Cotton Bowl at
halftime of the game between the Dallas Cowboys
and the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football
League.

His wife, Mary Lou, made the trip to Dallas with him.

In Films 30 Years

It took television to make Mr. Bond a nation-wide
star after nearly thirty years as one of the
better-known supporting actors in Hollywood.

The vehicle that carried him to the top was "Wagon
Train," which rolls across the country's home
screens each Wednesday evening over the National
Broadcasting Company network.

As Major Seth Adams, the wagonmaster,
Mr. Bond presided over adventures set in the Old
West that brought entertainment to millions of
American viewers. The show was reported to have
been the favorite TV import in England.

Three years ago, when "Wagon Train" first went
on TV, Mr. Bond was less enthusiastic about its
possibilities than he was later when it became a
proven success that mercilessly destroyed
competition on other channels.

"Heck, I'm ready to be Major Seth Adams the rest
of my life," he was quoted in a recent interview.

The 6 foot 4 inch 215-pounder was a natural for
Westerns. White-haired, grizzled and rugged, he
was an outdoor type who did his own horseback
riding and disdained stand-ins. He was so much
at home in his role that he altered the scripts when
he felt the writers had not captured the spirit of his
part.

Despite his love of the open spaces, his outdoor
activities were confined to hours on camera as
television's pressures kept him from sailing his
thirty-seven-foot boat or going hunting.

Mr. Bond was born in Bendelmen, Neb. When
he was 20, he entered the Colorado School of
Mines but dropped out soon after to go to work
for several years. He returned to college at the
University of Southern California from which he
was graduated in 1931.

It was college football that made an actor out of
the student. He was a tackle on Coach Howard
Jones' Trojans. A teammate was John Wayne.
John Ford, the motion picture director, came over
to look at the team to cast some of its members
for a film he was making. Mr. Bond and
Mr. Wayne were among the chosen.

In future years, Mr. Bond appeared in all
Ford-directed movies that starred Mr. Wayne.
He was busy in other movies, too. Between
college and television lay more than 200 parts that
made him a familiar figure in motion picture
houses. He was perhaps best known for Westerns,
and he fired lethal barrages both for the good and
bad sides in more than a hundred of the breed.

He appeared in "Fort Apache," "The Quiet Man,"
"It Happened One Night," "Fugitive," "Johnny
Guitar" and "Mister Roberts," among many others.

Mr. Bond was bitterly anti-Communist and became
embroiled in many of the industry disputes over
Communism in the movies and in the fight over
McCarthyism. When Premier Khrushchev visited
Hollywood in 1959 during his United States tour,
the actor flew the American flag over his home at half
staff.
---
Photos: Loading Image...

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Loading Image...
(w/Robert Horton)

Ward Bond in art:
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Loading Image...
(w/John Wayne)

The Searchers (trailer)


Wagon Master [1] (as Elder Wiggs)


[1] Jim Thorpe's last movie
Brad Ferguson
2007-11-06 05:10:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Schenley
Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.
This is one of the earliest celebrity deaths I can remember. Maybe
it's the earliest, except for George Reeves.

I never missed Wagon Train during its first few years. Ward Bond was
terrific. I remember, back then, occasionally seeing Bond in an old
movie on TV and thinking how weird it was to see him looking so much
younger. Now it's the opposite.

IIRC the show explained the transition to the new wagonmaster (played
by John McIntire) by saying that Bond's character had been killed by
Indians. Try doing that now, why don'tcha?

(Only 57?!? Good God.)
Post by Bill Schenley
Mr. Bond was bitterly anti-Communist and became
embroiled in many of the industry disputes over
Communism in the movies and in the fight over
McCarthyism. When Premier Khrushchev visited
Hollywood in 1959 during his United States tour,
the actor flew the American flag over his home at half
staff.
For some reason, I love this. Maybe it's the nostalgia factor, or
maybe it's just that it's a great story.
A
2007-11-07 07:13:28 UTC
Permalink
x-no-archive: yes
Post by Brad Ferguson
Post by Bill Schenley
Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.
This is one of the earliest celebrity deaths I can remember. Maybe
it's the earliest, except for George Reeves.
Same for me. Except add Lou Costello (Mar. 3, 1959; just 3 days
shy of his 53rd birthday) to that early celebrity death remembrances. I
wasn't yet into Rock 'n' Roll back then, or I would have had to add Buddy
Holly, The Big Bopper, and Ritchie Valens (Feb. 3, 1959) to those other
greats.
Post by Brad Ferguson
I never missed Wagon Train during its first few years. Ward Bond was
terrific. I remember, back then, occasionally seeing Bond in an old
movie on TV and thinking how weird it was to see him looking so much
younger. Now it's the opposite.
IIRC the show explained the transition to the new wagonmaster (played
by John McIntire) by saying that Bond's character had been killed by
Indians. Try doing that now, why don'tcha?
(Only 57?!? Good God.)
Post by Bill Schenley
Mr. Bond was bitterly anti-Communist and became
embroiled in many of the industry disputes over
Communism in the movies and in the fight over
McCarthyism. When Premier Khrushchev visited
Hollywood in 1959 during his United States tour,
the actor flew the American flag over his home at half
staff.
He makes John Wayne look like a flaming liberal!
Post by Brad Ferguson
For some reason, I love this. Maybe it's the nostalgia factor, or
maybe it's just that it's a great story.
Sure is, probably some of each!
Jim Beaver
2007-11-06 07:27:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Schenley
Ward Bond Dead; TV And Film Actor;
Star of 'Wagon Train' Series on N.B.C.
Had Appeared in More Than 200 Movies
Photo: http://www.fiftiesweb.com/wt/ward-bond-rmsm.jpg
FROM: The New York Times (November 6th 1960) ~
By The Associated Press
DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 5
Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.
Mr. Bond, who was the star of the television series
"Wagon Train," was to have made a personal
appearance tomorrow in the Cotton Bowl at
halftime of the game between the Dallas Cowboys
and the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football
League.
His wife, Mary Lou, made the trip to Dallas with him.
In Films 30 Years
It took television to make Mr. Bond a nation-wide
star after nearly thirty years as one of the
better-known supporting actors in Hollywood.
The vehicle that carried him to the top was "Wagon
Train," which rolls across the country's home
screens each Wednesday evening over the National
Broadcasting Company network.
As Major Seth Adams, the wagonmaster,
Mr. Bond presided over adventures set in the Old
West that brought entertainment to millions of
American viewers. The show was reported to have
been the favorite TV import in England.
Three years ago, when "Wagon Train" first went
on TV, Mr. Bond was less enthusiastic about its
possibilities than he was later when it became a
proven success that mercilessly destroyed
competition on other channels.
"Heck, I'm ready to be Major Seth Adams the rest
of my life," he was quoted in a recent interview.
The 6 foot 4 inch 215-pounder was a natural for
Westerns. White-haired, grizzled and rugged, he
was an outdoor type who did his own horseback
riding and disdained stand-ins. He was so much
at home in his role that he altered the scripts when
he felt the writers had not captured the spirit of his
part.
Despite his love of the open spaces, his outdoor
activities were confined to hours on camera as
television's pressures kept him from sailing his
thirty-seven-foot boat or going hunting.
Mr. Bond was born in Bendelmen, Neb. When
he was 20, he entered the Colorado School of
Mines but dropped out soon after to go to work
for several years. He returned to college at the
University of Southern California from which he
was graduated in 1931.
It was college football that made an actor out of
the student. He was a tackle on Coach Howard
Jones' Trojans. A teammate was John Wayne.
John Ford, the motion picture director, came over
to look at the team to cast some of its members
for a film he was making. Mr. Bond and
Mr. Wayne were among the chosen.
In future years, Mr. Bond appeared in all
Ford-directed movies that starred Mr. Wayne.
He was busy in other movies, too. Between
college and television lay more than 200 parts that
made him a familiar figure in motion picture
houses. He was perhaps best known for Westerns,
and he fired lethal barrages both for the good and
bad sides in more than a hundred of the breed.
He appeared in "Fort Apache," "The Quiet Man,"
"It Happened One Night," "Fugitive," "Johnny
Guitar" and "Mister Roberts," among many others.
Mr. Bond was bitterly anti-Communist and became
embroiled in many of the industry disputes over
Communism in the movies and in the fight over
McCarthyism. When Premier Khrushchev visited
Hollywood in 1959 during his United States tour,
the actor flew the American flag over his home at half
staff.
---
Photos: http://www.fiftiesweb.com/wt/ward-bond-ebsm.jpg
http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/7/7d/180px-Ward_Bond.JPG
http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/W/htmlW/wagontrain/wagontrainIMAGE/wagontrain.jpg
(w/Robert Horton)
http://www.uoregon.edu/~mharrsch/Wardbond.jpg
http://www.portraitsbylarrysnode.com/searchers1.jpg
(w/John Wayne)
The Searchers (trailer)
http://youtu.be/hHWzLo3ygNk
Wagon Master [1] (as Elder Wiggs)
http://youtu.be/JiLhDzFTxUY
[1] Jim Thorpe's last movie
Jim Beaver
2007-11-06 07:35:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Schenley
Ward Bond Dead; TV And Film Actor;
Star of 'Wagon Train' Series on N.B.C.
Had Appeared in More Than 200 Movies
Photo: http://www.fiftiesweb.com/wt/ward-bond-rmsm.jpg
FROM: The New York Times (November 6th 1960) ~
By The Associated Press
DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 5
Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.
Mr. Bond, who was the star of the television series
"Wagon Train," was to have made a personal
appearance tomorrow in the Cotton Bowl at
halftime of the game between the Dallas Cowboys
and the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football
League.
There was an urban legend of sorts that Bond was in Dallas to meet singer
Johnny Horton ("North to Alaska," "The Battle of New Orleans") to offer him
a role on "Wagon Train." Horton died the same day in an automobile accident
in South Central Texas. (My grandmother was one of the nurses who attended
him.) But he wasn't on his way to Dallas, to meet Bond or anyone else.
People come up with the weirdest stuff to create stories about.
Post by Bill Schenley
The 6 foot 4 inch 215-pounder was a natural for
Westerns. White-haired, grizzled and rugged, he
was an outdoor type who did his own horseback
riding and disdained stand-ins.
He disdained stand-ins, huh? Meaning he did his own stunts? I wish people
who write these things in the press would take a moment to learn the proper
terminology. A stand-in doesn't do stunts in place of an actor. A stand-in
stands on the actor's marks while the crew lights him and works out camera
moves. A stunt double does stunts in place of an actor. (Rule of thumb: a
stand-in, while doing that job, never appears on film.)

And while I'm grousing about terminology, it's casting director, not casting
agent. I've never heard the term casting agent except in news stories or
conversations with people outside the business.
Post by Bill Schenley
Mr. Bond was born in Bendelmen, Neb.
Benkelman.

Jim Beaver
Charlene
2007-11-06 09:53:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jim Beaver
Post by Bill Schenley
Ward Bond Dead; TV And Film Actor;
Star of 'Wagon Train' Series on N.B.C.
Had Appeared in More Than 200 Movies
Photo: http://www.fiftiesweb.com/wt/ward-bond-rmsm.jpg
FROM: The New York Times (November 6th 1960) ~
By The Associated Press
DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 5
Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.
Mr. Bond, who was the star of the television series
"Wagon Train," was to have made a personal
appearance tomorrow in the Cotton Bowl at
halftime of the game between the Dallas Cowboys
and the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football
League.
There was an urban legend of sorts that Bond was in Dallas to meet singer
Johnny Horton ("North to Alaska," "The Battle of New Orleans") to offer him
a role on "Wagon Train." Horton died the same day in an automobile accident
in South Central Texas. (My grandmother was one of the nurses who attended
him.) But he wasn't on his way to Dallas, to meet Bond or anyone else.
People come up with the weirdest stuff to create stories about.
Post by Bill Schenley
The 6 foot 4 inch 215-pounder was a natural for
Westerns. White-haired, grizzled and rugged, he
was an outdoor type who did his own horseback
riding and disdained stand-ins.
He disdained stand-ins, huh? Meaning he did his own stunts? I wish people
who write these things in the press would take a moment to learn the proper
terminology. A stand-in doesn't do stunts in place of an actor. A stand-in
stands on the actor's marks while the crew lights him and works out camera
moves. A stunt double does stunts in place of an actor. (Rule of thumb: a
stand-in, while doing that job, never appears on film.)
And while I'm grousing about terminology, it's casting director, not casting
agent. I've never heard the term casting agent except in news stories or
conversations with people outside the business.
Post by Bill Schenley
Mr. Bond was born in Bendelmen, Neb.
Benkelman.
I see the AP's reputation (ahem) for accuracy in obituaries goes back
longer than I realized.

wd43
A
2007-11-07 07:18:06 UTC
Permalink
x-no-archive: yes
Post by Jim Beaver
Post by Bill Schenley
Ward Bond Dead; TV And Film Actor;
Star of 'Wagon Train' Series on N.B.C.
Had Appeared in More Than 200 Movies
Photo: http://www.fiftiesweb.com/wt/ward-bond-rmsm.jpg
FROM: The New York Times (November 6th 1960) ~
By The Associated Press
DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 5
Ward Bond, movie and television star, died in a
motel here today of a heart attack. He was 57
years old.
Mr. Bond, who was the star of the television series
"Wagon Train," was to have made a personal
appearance tomorrow in the Cotton Bowl at
halftime of the game between the Dallas Cowboys
and the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football
League.
There was an urban legend of sorts that Bond was in Dallas to meet singer
Johnny Horton ("North to Alaska," "The Battle of New Orleans") to offer
him a role on "Wagon Train." Horton died the same day in an automobile
accident in South Central Texas. (My grandmother was one of the nurses
who attended him.) But he wasn't on his way to Dallas, to meet Bond or
anyone else. People come up with the weirdest stuff to create stories
about.
Post by Bill Schenley
The 6 foot 4 inch 215-pounder was a natural for
Westerns. White-haired, grizzled and rugged, he
was an outdoor type who did his own horseback
riding and disdained stand-ins.
He disdained stand-ins, huh? Meaning he did his own stunts? I wish
people who write these things in the press would take a moment to learn
the proper terminology. A stand-in doesn't do stunts in place of an
actor. A stand-in stands on the actor's marks while the crew lights him
and works out camera moves. A stunt double does stunts in place of an
actor. (Rule of thumb: a stand-in, while doing that job, never appears
on film.)
And while I'm grousing about terminology, it's casting director, not
casting agent. I've never heard the term casting agent except in news
stories or conversations with people outside the business.
Post by Bill Schenley
Mr. Bond was born in Bendelmen, Neb.
Benkelman.
I see the NY Times was just as sloppy (and slanted, too) in its
reporting then as it is today.

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