I love watching Clayton Moore as The Lone Ranger and Tonto I had finished watching all The Lone Ranger Show. How I wish there will be more Clayton Moore's show for me a 75 yrs senior citizen ha ha
Maybe our age has a little distance in speaking of years. I watch this movie long ago in black & white T.V. screen but now no more Lone Ranger on Flashback to watch again on t.v., only in Internet ...on Cell phone...love to watch them on the horse ...saying Hi ho silver away...
Lone ranger, lassie, was one of the two main shows i watched in the 60's. I had white bunny I called silver. Also had a kid set of the lone rangers stuff. Pants, shirts, gun belt, guns, hat, mask, silver bullets. The whole outfit.
Clayton Moore was such a nice man; I only knew him as the cousin of my BFF's father, but I liked him, and he was very kind to me. He always had a story of some kind. One of his stories was that he couldn't even go to the bar in the hotel he was staying in, because there was always some drunk who wanted to pick a fight with the Lone Ranger. "The Lone Ranger may always be 35, but Clayton Moore is 63, and he doesn't fight with anybody these days!" He called Jay Silverheels a good man and a dear friend. He grieved his loss for years. Most people have no idea how much Clayton put into the series. He didn't just act -- he designed costumes and makeup; he owned Silver and had him specially trained; he even changed scripts on the fly when something in a script wasn't working. He invested in having the classic Lone Ranger costume made of rubberized wool. It was hot and uncomfortable, but it didn't wrinkle even when he jumped off the horse. When the studio executives told him he could no longer wear his black mask, he was deeply hurt. He felt that they were discarding all he'd done for the franchise. And he hated the movie they made -- it was too violent, to full of profanity. He thought that kids couldn't betaken to see it, and that it was robbing kids of a hero. He had taken the role seriously, and took its legacy seriously. Like most good men, he didn't think that being a good man was anything special. He thought it was being a good example that mattered. Upholding a good reputation mattered. Being someone kids could look up to mattered. Even when he was touring wearing black sunglasses, he was still working to get back the rights to the mask. He thought it stood for something. He was right, in a way -- but in my view, the mask was just part of the costume. It was the man who stood.
The Lone Ranger and Jay Silverheels were great actors,and so forth, good moral men, yet, I wonder if he,they made it right with God, came to the Lord Jesus Christ, forgiveness of sins,,and make Christ Savior and Lord of his life! Good works won't get you to Heaven! Jesus said,KJV Jn.10:7 I am the Door, Jn.14:6 I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life, no man comes to the Father but,by Me.Jn.3:16. Great show.🙏
I love when the Lone Ranger and Tonto ride off in the end that one cowboy to the right of the screen watches them leave. One can only imagine what was going through his mind, especially after hearing "Hi ho Silver! Away!"
Gah, I thought this was going to be a short documentary on the fact that Clayton Moore and John Hart both played him during the course of the show. Took me until the opening scene to realize it's an episode of the show.
Nice to see Tonto get an acknowledgement at the end finally. Always wanted to see sidekicks get more to do or some more mention in these type shows... Be nice to see them solve a crime or mystery once in a while. It would add to show why they are needed, not just to run errands.
I like the kind of mask the Lone Ranger wears in this chapter. covering all his nose, it's the mask l used to see in the comics of the early fifties , regrettable the wonderful drawings of that time started to decay later on and the drawing quality was isufferable .and the same happend to Tarzan and other characters of Dell comics
OK, let's be honest. The best ride off into the sunset scene is in "Blazing Saddles". Sheriff Bart and the Waco Kid being driven off in that Cadillac limo is classic.
Does anyone remember when Merita Bread sponsored the show and it opened with waving grain. It was magic back then. In my time traveling mind it still is.
Interestingly, he wore a "cut down" mask for all of the first episodes. It was Clayton's opinion that they changed his mask when they knew they might later try to replace him with another actor, and they wanted it to cover more of his face and thus make the contrast between actors less noticeable. When Jack Wrather purchased the show, he and Clayton agreed to go back to the "first" smaller mask, and from then on he wore that.
You know, watching these illustrates to me exactly why the lone ranger movies all seem to fail. They have none of the moral character of these shows. The movies try to get overly complicated, overproduced with too many special effects and silliness. They need to take the material more seriously, but keep it simple at the same time.
We always watched it on BBC TV in the UK, as well as Champion the Wonder Horse, The Cisco Kid, Bonanza, The Virginian, The High Chaparral, Wells Fargo, Sugarfoot, Bronco Lane, Maverick, The Dakotas... and so on. BBC is a the national public broadcaster paid for by licence fees (today 150UKP p.a., or188USD). So, no commercials. Series shown on commercial TV here obviously depend on advertising but it is less overwhelming than in the States. You wouldn't _believe_ how much US culture a Brit absorbs from the Hollywood machine between cradle and grave!
A beautiful actress such as Jane Russell should have gotten the " drop " on Clayton Moore and stole hos Lone Ranger , sleek coboy outfit for herself; she would have looked very foxy dressed as the Lone Ranger herself !
I wonder why Mr. Silverheels had to wear his hair tied back like he did. He was a Native American and playing one, too. Why couldn't he wear his hair loose?
Jay Silverheels was not a Native American. He was a Canadian Indian, Western Canada I believe. Search for the Biography on him, it is really good. As to his hair who knows that wasn't addressed in the documentary.
Oh wow....these were the good ole days.
Im 52 and watched these episode's as a youngon.
Memories for sure!
I'm 45 so I definitely know what u mean ...kudos to my friend
I love watching Clayton Moore as The Lone Ranger and Tonto
I had finished watching all The Lone Ranger Show. How I wish there will be more Clayton Moore's show for me a 75 yrs senior citizen ha ha
Maybe our age has a little distance in speaking of years. I watch this movie long ago in black & white T.V. screen but now no more Lone Ranger on Flashback to watch again on t.v., only in Internet ...on Cell phone...love to watch them on the horse ...saying Hi ho silver away...
Lone Ranger and Tonto were my heroes as a kid, and I still enjoy watching
Lone ranger, lassie, was one of the two main shows i watched in the 60's. I had white bunny I called silver. Also had a kid set of the lone rangers stuff. Pants, shirts, gun belt, guns, hat, mask, silver bullets. The whole outfit.
..and this great man.. still lives on..in all of these saved videos..on your..very own.. You Tube ..episodes..of the great.. Lone Ranger..
I remember when I was a kid I would always watch this show with my family and still do on today!!!!!!
Clayton Moore was such a nice man; I only knew him as the cousin of my BFF's father, but I liked him, and he was very kind to me. He always had a story of some kind. One of his stories was that he couldn't even go to the bar in the hotel he was staying in, because there was always some drunk who wanted to pick a fight with the Lone Ranger. "The Lone Ranger may always be 35, but Clayton Moore is 63, and he doesn't fight with anybody these days!" He called Jay Silverheels a good man and a dear friend. He grieved his loss for years.
Most people have no idea how much Clayton put into the series. He didn't just act -- he designed costumes and makeup; he owned Silver and had him specially trained; he even changed scripts on the fly when something in a script wasn't working. He invested in having the classic Lone Ranger costume made of rubberized wool. It was hot and uncomfortable, but it didn't wrinkle even when he jumped off the horse. When the studio executives told him he could no longer wear his black mask, he was deeply hurt. He felt that they were discarding all he'd done for the franchise. And he hated the movie they made -- it was too violent, to full of profanity. He thought that kids couldn't betaken to see it, and that it was robbing kids of a hero. He had taken the role seriously, and took its legacy seriously.
Like most good men, he didn't think that being a good man was anything special. He thought it was being a good example that mattered. Upholding a good reputation mattered. Being someone kids could look up to mattered. Even when he was touring wearing black sunglasses, he was still working to get back the rights to the mask. He thought it stood for something. He was right, in a way -- but in my view, the mask was just part of the costume. It was the man who stood.
63 years of age?
The Lone Ranger and Jay Silverheels were great actors,and so forth, good moral men, yet, I wonder if he,they made it right with God, came to the Lord Jesus Christ, forgiveness of sins,,and make Christ Savior and Lord of his life! Good works won't get you to Heaven! Jesus said,KJV Jn.10:7 I am the Door, Jn.14:6 I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life, no man comes to the Father but,by Me.Jn.3:16. Great show.🙏
@@leonardlugo7878 It is not up to us to wonder where they will end up. The mystery of the Father is able to do anything.
I love when the Lone Ranger and Tonto ride off in the end that one cowboy to the right of the screen watches them leave. One can only imagine what was going through his mind, especially after hearing "Hi ho Silver! Away!"
Clayton was a class act on and off the screen. Unfortunately the tv studio executives treated him badly..
Really I didn't know that
That’s why he was fired at the 3rd season and John Hart took his place. They recanted when the ratings fell to #7.
Gah, I thought this was going to be a short documentary on the fact that Clayton Moore and John Hart both played him during the course of the show. Took me until the opening scene to realize it's an episode of the show.
Nice to see Tonto get an acknowledgement at the end finally. Always wanted to see sidekicks get more to do or some more mention in these type shows... Be nice to see them solve a crime or mystery once in a while. It would add to show why they are needed, not just to run errands.
RIP Clayton Moore & Jay Silverheels
My opinion is that Clayton Moore was the only Lone Ranger
Ed
John Hart did a good enough job during Season 3.
Ed Dancer
‘Tks
That is for sure..
No maybes about it !
R.I.p.lonerangeryouwillneverbeforgotten
WOW The Lone Ranger that I use to watch on TV with lots of commercials
Ed
Thank you for posting this ... great stuff.
I like the kind of mask the Lone Ranger wears in this chapter. covering all his nose, it's the mask l used to see in the comics of the early fifties , regrettable the wonderful drawings of that time started to decay later on and the drawing quality was isufferable .and the same happend to Tarzan and other characters of Dell comics
Yeah! Early episodes of Season 1 & all episodes of Season 5 didn't show the mask cover his nose.
OK, let's be honest. The best ride off into the sunset scene is in "Blazing Saddles". Sheriff Bart and the Waco Kid being driven off in that Cadillac limo is classic.
Well, if we're being all honest and stuff... not everyone liked Blazing Saddles.
Does anyone remember when Merita Bread sponsored the show and it opened with waving grain. It was magic back then. In my time traveling mind it still is.
I remember the waving grain!
Lone Ranger always caught the bad guys!
that trigger was a beautfiul horse
❤ I THINK THAT YOU ARE CONFUSED BECAUSE TRIGGER WAS ROY ROGERS HORSE, 🐎 AND WHAT DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH THE LONE RANGER OR TONTO ❓❓❓❓❓
Is this a John Hart episode? And I agree with the guy who said Clayton Moore is the ONLY Lone Ranger!
Clayton Moore
In the credits it lists Clayton Moore, so I guess it's him.
Yes it is Clayton Moore!!@@guapoviejo9135
Without a doubt,It is Clayton Moore!!!
John Peel 👀😂👍
This was one of the more unusual episoides.
I Never Knew They Treated Clayton Moore So Badly
This was from 1950. B&W, slender Moore wearing 40s make up, before he cut down the mask.
Interestingly, he wore a "cut down" mask for all of the first episodes. It was Clayton's opinion that they changed his mask when they knew they might later try to replace him with another actor, and they wanted it to cover more of his face and thus make the contrast between actors less noticeable. When Jack Wrather purchased the show, he and Clayton agreed to go back to the "first" smaller mask, and from then on he wore that.
You know, watching these illustrates to me exactly why the lone ranger movies all seem to fail. They have none of the moral character of these shows. The movies try to get overly complicated, overproduced with too many special effects and silliness. They need to take the material more seriously, but keep it simple at the same time.
right
Which movies do you mean, STNeish? I know for certain Johnny Depp's production is no favorite of mine...
20:04. He becomes the Flying Dutchman (music from Wagner)! That is a ghost ship.
public public I luv u so much eyery
SugarTomAppleRoger But That Was First Than The Flying Dutchman
Podrias subir este episodio pero en audio latino por favor saludos
I need to know where I can find all of the music used in these series.
P
Goodstuf
Gunfire, Kemosabe.
Can you add some more commercials and banners??? Take it from 99% to 100
We always watched it on BBC TV in the UK, as well as Champion the Wonder Horse, The Cisco Kid, Bonanza, The Virginian, The High Chaparral, Wells Fargo, Sugarfoot, Bronco Lane, Maverick, The Dakotas... and so on. BBC is a the national public broadcaster paid for by licence fees (today 150UKP p.a., or188USD). So, no commercials. Series shown on commercial TV here obviously depend on advertising but it is less overwhelming than in the States. You wouldn't _believe_ how much US culture a Brit absorbs from the Hollywood machine between cradle and grave!
Keemosabi his friend Tonto put his mask on back to fronto."
Can you add some more commercials and banners???
I guess you don't have an ad blocker installed?
A beautiful actress such as Jane Russell should have gotten the " drop " on Clayton Moore and stole hos Lone Ranger , sleek coboy outfit for herself; she would have looked very foxy dressed as the Lone Ranger herself !
Where film this place?
To many adverts
Films: to who??
I wonder why Mr. Silverheels had to wear his hair tied back like he did. He was a Native American and playing one, too. Why couldn't he wear his hair loose?
Jay Silverheels was not a Native American. He was a Canadian Indian, Western Canada I believe. Search for the Biography on him, it is really good. As to his hair who knows that wasn't addressed in the documentary.
@@routeoneauto Mr. Silverheels was born on the Six Nations on the Grand River reservation in Branford, Ontario, Canada.
Kat. Didn’t’t I just say he was Canadian? Is Brandford, Ontario, Canada in Canada?
@@routeoneauto Isn't Canada on the North American continent? Ithink it. David of Dogpatch
Tonto should know correct English by now.
This is fake . There ain't no way the lone ranger and tomtoe both could locked up in that safe. No way. They could of made a move .
I'm sure of it
Bob Brawley 😕👎
It's a show