MovieChat Forums > Richard Boone Discussion > The most rugged man ever put on a screen

The most rugged man ever put on a screen


I have developed quite a crush on this man, which might be slightly weird since he passed in 1981! I'm working my way through the 225 episodes of Have Gun-Will Travel and have watched several of his movies.

He is without a doubt the most rugged man I've ever seen on a screen. This belief came to me without intention. Have Gun was on my TV one morning as I was doing some stuff around the house. He had a presence that arrested my attention and hasn't let go.

In my research about him, I've come across many references to how ugly he was. Oh no no no no no. He had that craggy face, but there was something so uniquely handsome, almost to the point of being beautiful, about him.

June 18, 2017 would've been his 100th birthday. I'm so glad I've become aware of his work.

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I've come across many references to how ugly he was. Oh no no no. He had that craggy face, but there was something so uniquely handsome, almost to the point of being beautiful, about him.


I can see why his "craggyness" might be attractive to you. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

However, I was a child in the '50's when "Have Gun..." first aired, and I always thought he was homely, for being a leading man in a series.

People in the movies/TV are generally "prettier" than we encounter in normal daily life.

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I think Richard Boone was one of those film actors who wasn't done justice by still photos. To get the full Boone experience, one had to not only hear his commanding deep voice, but to "see him in motion." He was big on great physical gestures with his hands, which he moved through the air like a conductor with a baton. He knew how and when to point a finger to make a point...you had to laugh when he did it.

Boone may have been less homely when heard and seen moving, but yes, he was never going to be a pretty boy star. Still, his character on Have Gun Will Travel overcame the looks thing by being "the guy who can save the day, the guy who can beat all the other guys." In short, the role made him sexy, even if his face didnt. I believe Richard Boone's voluminous fan mail for Have Gun Will Travel was about 80% female, because they were damsels in distress.

And for a homely guy, he sure had a bright, gleaming, happy SMILE.

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The looks thing became more problematic as Boone aged, gained weight(he could do shirtless scenes on HGWT, but not many years after that), and grew so "craggy" that he was difficult to look at. One critic said of Boone in the 70's, "it looks like he left his face out in the rain."

Boone overcame the loss of looks by "powering up" his voice, his funny line readings, and, as a bad guy, his MENACE.

He sure was hired to play the bad guy a lot after HGWT went off the air: Hombre, The Night of the Following Day, The Kremlin Letter, Big Jake, The Shootist, The Big Sleep.

But he played a number of rugged good guys in the movies(and TV movies), too: Rio Conchos(a very flawed good guy), The War Lord, Madron, Against a Crooked Sky, and the great TV movie "Goodnight My Love."

I liked that about Boone...you found yourself liking his villains and being menaced by his heroes, because he could play various tones at once: funny, macho, authoritative, and often smiling or laughing.

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A large part of Boone's appeal as Paladin, for me, was the kind of man he portrayed, one with a strong moral code, believing in the law, and justice delivered according to that law. He treated people fairly, compassionately, and, even though he was cultured and intelligent, didn't look down on those who did not possess those traits. Who he was transcended what he looked like, and yet his physical appearance was in keeping with the two lives he lived. And yes, his smile was wonderful!

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A large part of Boone's appeal as Paladin, for me, was the kind of man he portrayed, one with a strong moral code, believing in the law, and justice delivered according to that law. He treated people fairly, compassionately, and, even though he was cultured and intelligent, didn't look down on those who did not possess those traits.

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That is a very good and detailed assessment of how Paladins persona was. Multi-levelled, and based on both a professional code AND a personal code. Its a lot more detailed than my just saying "he was the good guy who could beat all the bad guys."

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Who he was transcended what he looked like, and yet his physical appearance was in keeping with the two lives he lived.

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The series was great in opening most episodes with Paladin in well-tailored splendor at his SF hotel...and then moving him out onto the great outdoors in his black outfit. Truly there was a "duality" to Paladin. I also liked how sometimes he realized that his employer had misled him as to the ethics of a job. Paladin would then quit...and often take up the cause of the other side.

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And yes, his smile was wonderful!

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A reminder to us that ALL of us have features that may be better than others. If you don't have a "perfect face"(and most of us DON'T), you can still be attractive just by using the positives you do have. Your smile. Your voice. Your eyes.

Actors like Richard Boone figured this out early and move on "pushing their physical strengths."

Conversely, lots of "pretty face" actors get stuck in soap operas for the rest of their lives. They can't break through with the character of a Richard Boone. Robert Redford and Warren Beatty had pretty faces and had to act LIKE Richard Boone(quirky, tough, renegade as the Sundance Kid and Clyde Barrow) to break past their prettiness and to become stars.

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BTW, here's a quote (paraphrased) by Richard Boone from around the time that Have Gun Will Travel was a hit. Its about Paladin:

"The great thing is, that if the horse goes out of style, we can convert Paladin into a private eye. Or a scuba diver. Or a sea captain. The basic heroic character can be moved into any time or place."

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Interesting...I read somewhere that Boone did just that with Hec Ramsey!

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Interesting...I read somewhere that Boone did just that with Hec Ramsey!

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Yes...he's a "frontier private eye" of sorts, using scientific research as part of his law enforcement. Hec Ramsey got to rotate for two years on the NBC Sunday Mystery movie with the top-ranked Columbo and the lesser McCloud and MacMillan and Wife.

I have a quote from Boone on Hec Ramsey, too: "Hec Ramsey is Paladin, except older and fatter." Ha. Self-deprecating.

I always seem to forget about Hec Ramsey and the fact that Richard Boone not only did movies like Big Jake and TV movies like Goodnight My Love in the early seventies, but signed up for this TV series(albeit limited episodes per year.) He was BUSY. So busy that he could turn down the villain role in The Sting after it was offered multiple times.

I've read some interesting things about Boone and Hec Ramsey. Though he still officially lived in Hawaii, Boone rented a Hollywood home to make the series. His next door neighbor was Redd Foxx, who saw Boone moving in and said "there goes the neighborhood!" Ha.

Hec Ramsey was produced by Jack "Dragnet" Webb who was inspired by Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid to make the series. But wait: Webb said he "had no interest in those villains" Butch and Sundance(they were punk criminals to him) -- he wanted to make a show about the lawman who pursued them. That kinda sorta led to Hec Ramsey.

Word is that ratings were good but that Webb shut down production when Boone authorized an episode that had "the occult" in it.

I was a big Richard Boone fan but I never watched Hec Ramsey much. I wasn't home when it was on, or was at home and forgot WHEN it was on -- I really should catch up with it some time.

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I could only find one episode on YouTube and nothing else anywhere else. If you are more successful than I have been, I would love to know. I enjoyed the one I saw and want more!

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I could only find one episode on YouTube and nothing else anywhere else. If you are more successful than I have been, I would love to know. I enjoyed the one I saw and want more!

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"They're out there somewhere."

I looked at one on YouTube, too. Boone is very, commandingly Boone-like, but I must admit after having seen him in big budget movies like Hombre, The Kremlin Letter, and Big Jake, he seemed a bit "hemmed in" by the usual TV series production values.

Meant more as fact that gossip, a man who directed Boone on both HGWT and Hec Ramsey -- Andrew McLaglen -- said that when he caught up with Boone on Hec Ramsey he found him a more tired and listless man than on the earlier show. Said McLaglen, "I think he was more into the bottle by then."

THAT said, all sorts of directors and actors said that even if Boone was visibly drinking on set during his final movies and TV shows "it never got in the way of his knowing his lines and giving a performance."

Sort of like all those British stage actors, I guess...

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Hemmed in...I hadn't thought of that until you mentioned it. Good point...

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Word is that ratings were good but that Webb shut down production when Boone authorized an episode that had "the occult" in it.

Wow. I've never heard this. Outside of HGWT, Boone just couldn't catch a break on TV, could he? I wonder if this destroyed Boone and Webb's long friendship.

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Word is that ratings were good but that Webb shut down production when Boone authorized an episode that had "the occult" in it.

Wow. I've never heard this.

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I read this in the comprehensive David Rothel biography, so I'm banking on it. ( A lot of my trivia material on Boone is from that book, I found it a wonderfully intimate portrait of a "one level down" sort of star -- he was still an interesting man.)

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Outside of HGWT, Boone just couldn't catch a break on TV, could he?

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I guess not. The Richard Boone Show seemed pre-set to be cancelled by the suits; and Webb's strong influence undercut Boone's flamboyance on Hec Ramsey. And, evidently, led to the show's end.

Perhaps Boone was smart to pass on Hawaii 5-0.

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I wonder if this destroyed Boone and Webb's long friendship.

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It sure sounds like a good reason -- for BOONE to end it. But if Webb had some pre-set "Code" that forbade occult stories and Boone pushed him...well...

I might add that various Hollywood types were always trying to cast Jack Webb in their productions. They wanted him for Dean Wormer for Animal House, for instance. Webb always said no -- by then, he was "hermetically sealed" with his own production company turning out very successful, very distinctive product. (Dragnet, Adam-12, Emergency...)

But one wishes that Webb would have branched out and done some other folks movies.

PS. Boone's co-star on Hec Ramsey was the rather Young Jimmy Stewart-like Rick Lenz, who didn't last very long, but did last long enough to appear with Boone AND Jimmy Stewart in Wayne's final film, The Shootist. But Lenz has no scenes with Boone or Stewart.

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I read this in the comprehensive David Rothel biography, so I'm banking on it. ( A lot of my trivia material on Boone is from that book, I found it a wonderfully intimate portrait of a "one level down" sort of star -- he was still an interesting man.)

I agree the Rothel book is wonderful, and the style of presenting the information through interviews adds a special layer. It's as if we are eavesdropping on a conversation between the two.

The pictures add a scrapbook-like quality as well which I love.

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I agree with with ecarle that one had to hear the voice and see Boone move to get the full experience. I read once that he moved like a cat. No doubt that was influenced by his dance training with Martha Graham right after his World War II service. I also agree that he had a smile that warmed his face right up softening every craggy line. I've seen some actors smile, but it's a fake smile that only involved peeling their lips back from their teeth (Rosie O'Donnell does this). Not so with Boone. When he smiled, it was with every square inch of his face and eyes. His smile transformed his man face into one with a boyish quality.

I also agree with Lacecap that Paladin had all those intangible traits that made him attractive. Women love a man who can take care of business, provide them a sense of safety, and treat others well.

Also, as was discussed on another thread with a brilliant point by another poster, the black and white TV experience showcased his features better than color. That's another part of his appeal I believe.



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Richard Boone, a direct descendant of Danial Boone, cannot possibly be described as ugly! And I am a straight-as-they-come (welcome to the Planet of the Single-Entendre) man. Richard Boone is in the same class with Sean Connery, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Liam Neeson as The Masculine Male, the Enkidu character from Gilgamesh, the world’s oldest recorded story. Have Gun, Will Travel is a masterpiece.Not for nothing, Richard Boone was the voice of Smaug the Dragon on the US network TV broadcast of the animated version of The Hobbit; and he was brilliant.

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R_Kane, agree that Have Gun was and still is a masterpiece. I could never tire of it because of Richard Boone who is the ultimate attention arrestor! What presence he had!

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What I like about his portrayal as Paladin is that he could be tough and erudite at the same time.

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If you want something "off the beaten track" as far as Boone goes, you can find bootleg copies (it will have to be bootleg, sadly, as it's never gotten proper home video release) of "The Richard Boone Show," which was his very next gig after "Have Gun Will Travel" ended. It's an anthology series he hosted, and starred in most episodes of, that featured a company of 15 actors. It was a really good show, and garnered Boone an Emmy nomination, but sadly lasted only a single season (1963/64). Most people have never heard of it, and because of that, it will probably never be released on home video, which is a pity, because like most shows of its time, it was shot on 35mm film, and would clean up beautifully to HD if someone ever went to the trouble and expense.

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