Pistols 'n' Petticoats

1966

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1
7.1| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 17 September 1966 Ended
Producted By: Universal Television
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Pistols 'n' Petticoats is an American Western sitcom

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Universal Television

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Reviews

Interesteg What makes it different from others?
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
Melanie Bouvet The movie's not perfect, but it sticks the landing of its message. It was engaging - thrilling at times - and I personally thought it was a great time.
Staci Frederick Blistering performances.
bkoganbing Pistols 'n' Petticoats debuted on CBS back in 1966 and back in those days CBS was known as the rural network. With such shows as Andy Griffith, The Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction, and Green Acres, this was the network of red state America in that decade. You could forget about the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights Revolution, marijuana and other drugs, on this network it's like they never existed.Unfortunately this show which had some really good moments did not quite finish its first season due to the death of its star Ann Sheridan, the movies former 'Oomph Girl'. As ill timed a demise as ever happened in Hollywood.For those who never saw the show it concerned a rustic family named Hanks. Ann Sheridan and her parents Douglas Fowley and Ruth McDevitt and her daughter Carole Wells. They're a family of sharpshooters with a lot of rustic charm, right in keeping with the commitment of CBS to rural entertainment. In the first episode Carole Wells has returned from the east where the family has sent her to finishing school to learn some social graces.When sufficiently provoked however Wells could match any of her family shot for shot. The finish came off her in a crisis moment.Another regular on the show was Gary Vinson who played the inept son of a famous lawman who inherited his job. Carole despite his klutziness had a thing for him. Just a civilian version of Captain Wilton Parmenter from F Troop.It wasn't a great show, but it had some good comic moments. And it was the farewell gig of one of the screen's reigning beauties Ann Sheridan.
theowinthrop I am not sure what was the first television series that suffered from the loss of a cast member by his or her death. I think it may have been WHAT'S MY LINE? because the original show had the great radio comic and wit Fred Allan as one of the players, and he died while still appearing on the show. That was in the 1950s.But WHAT'S MY LINE? was game show, so replacing Allan was not hard. In 1966, a comedy show appeared on the CBS line-up on Saturday nights called PISTOLS 'N' PETTICOATS. In it the Hanks family, headed officially by grandpa (Douglas Fowley) and grandma (Ruth McDivitt), but really headed by Henrietta (Ann Sheridan) were known for their abilities as sharpshooters (even Henrietta's niece, Lucy (Carole Wells). "The story goes that granma was best at shootin' buttons off a rustler's vest. Granpa kept his gun in trim - nobody messed around with him..." as the theme song went. All of the characters would surprise the villains with their skills in the episodes. It was just as well that they were so good, as the local sheriff (Gary Vinson) was a clumsy stumble-bum - and Lucy's boyfriend.Sheridan was at the end of her career - really beyond that. She had not done anything really big on screen since her heyday in the 1940s (I suppose I WAS A MALE WAR BRIDE was her last big production). But she was a favorite with audiences, who had named her the "Oomph Girl", and she had a spark opposite Cary Grant in WAR BRIDE, or Jimmy Cagney or Ronald Reagan or Bette Davis and Monty Wooley in THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER. Still, I recall that when news of her casting came out in 1965 it struck many as odd. Why did she decide to do it?I don't think we will ever know. Sheridan had appeared in about half the episodes when she left the series and died of cancer. It was a shocker at the time.The show stumbled on, but unlike it's near contemporary F-TROOP it never found the proper balance that made the latter a big hit (and a revivable show too, for that reason). Both shows had a good ensemble, but the scripts of F-TROOP seemed better thought out, even experimental. In one F-TROOP episode entitled "THE DAY THEY SHOT AGARN", the entire episode was about Agarn being court-martial-ed on the mistaken belief he murdered the missing Sergeant O'Rourke. All through the episode somebody is singing a mournful tune about his execution (which never is completed). At the end, when O'Rourke (Forrest Tucker) returns, and Agarn (Storch) is cleared, they are talking to Captain Parmenter (Ken Berry) and trying to figure out who has been singing this depressing song. O'Rourke and Parmenter look around and see some derby-hatted gentleman singing it nearby, and they order him out of the fort!That did not happen on PISTOLS. The stories were rather routine, for all the hard work of the performers. I only can recall one for an ironic aspect - Pat Buttram played an unscrupulous mountain man whose family cheated people. In an early episode he is caught by the family and he ends up going to jail. He returns in another episode, and he is a "reformed man" now. I recall he notices a little boy dropped a silver dollar on the floor of a store, and (naturally) he steps on it to hide it from the boy. He picks it up, but suddenly he feels ashamed at his greed. He calls the boy over and returns the dollar to him. Why should I recall this scene from a show? Well, it's Pat Buttram, and of course in the late 1960s he found his television immortality shortly as the great Mr. Haney on GREEN ACRES - the ultimate in weird swindlers. Haney would not, perhaps, have robbed a boy of his dollar, but the fact that both characters are swindlers made me remember Buttram's performance on PISTOLS. But note - he is a supporting player in an episode or two. It's not like recalling the performances of the leads. And I can't recall them too well now. But I recall performances by the leads from F-Troop to this day. One can blame the death of it's star for the demise of PISTOLS 'N' PETTICOATS, but one can also recognize that good shows survive due to clever scripts above everything else.
jaerrbaer1 I watched this show when I was 16 years old and have never laughed this hard since. I would laugh myself sick when this show was on. I was saddened when it went off the air. It was a lead-in to Gunsmoke and was a family tradition to watch the Saturday (I think) night Westerns. My mother didn't find it as funny but my dad did.
artzau I loved this show about a family of gunslingers that, as in the credit song recalled "Grandma shooting the buttons off a rustler's vest." The show was rather stock 60s TV mind pablum but still enjoyable to sit down and vege out on, laughing at the goofy situations. Not to mention, it was a pleasure to see Robert Lowery, Ruth McDevitt and the immortal Lon Chaney Jr., all vets whose faces you've seen hundreds of times before. And then, there was the beautiful Ann Sheridan who tragically died of cancer, still working up to the last. In some of the last sequences, where she was only in small scenes, she was so weak, she could hardly stand. It was hard to watch but still, it was an inspiration to see this courageous woman.

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