Clayton Moore -- AKA The Lone Ranger -- And His Fan Base
Welcome back to The
Jade Sphinx – we took a short hiatus at the end of the summer and have returned
for what is, I hope, the start of an interesting Fall Season.
First up, a special treat
for Jade Sphinx readers – an interview with Clayton Moore (1914-1999), who
played The Lone Ranger on television from 1949 to 1957; I originally conducted this interview more
than 15 years ago, when Moore released his autobiography, I Was That Masked Man
(1996). Since its initial magazine
publication, the interview has been buried in my files. Here is the first of three parts.
James Abbott
Actor Clayton Moore was forever changed by a
part he played.
When offered the part of the Lone Ranger in
1949, television's first western program, to Moore it was just another heroic
role, much like the heroes he had played in the classic Republic serials.
But it changed him.
After a brief hiatus from the part, he
returned to it with a renewed appreciation.
He had remembered listening to The Lone Ranger with his father in his
native Chicago, and as he began to explore who the Lone Ranger was and what he
represented, he realized that the Lone Ranger was more than a character for an
actor to play. To Moore, the Ranger came
to embody a way of living and thinking, of realizing the heroism inherent in
every man. And as he grew more and more
into the role, the Lone Ranger became a larger part of his life.
Clayton Moore has succeeded in a life
well-lived. The line between this modest
actor and the cowboy hero is a thin one:
Clayton Moore is the Lone Ranger.
Moore has compiled his many adventures in his
new autobiography, I Was That Masked Man, which he wrote with Frank
Thompson. Still energetic, unfailingly
courteous and stalwart as ever, Mr. Moore has been making appearances at book
signings throughout California. Fans
young and old meet him with hushed awe, only to be relaxed by Moore's
easy-going charm.
We honored
to have caught up with him at a recent book signing.
I
understand that during your boyhood you wanted to be either a cowboy or a
policeman?
Yes.
When I was a kid I was just in awe of men like Tom Mix and William S.
Hart. When my friends and I would go to
the movies, it was Westerns that we wanted to see. There was just something about it, riding the
range and living in the West, that excited me.
After the movies we kids would play cowboys and Indians and I always
wanted to play the hero.
I thought being a policeman would be the closest I would come to being a Western lawman... so I'm glad I grew up to become the Lone Ranger, because I really got to be both a cowboy and a policeman!
Tell us a
little bit about your boyhood?
I had a real nice childhood with my family and
my brothers. My father was quite a
hunter, liked duck hunting and geese hunting and pheasant hunting, so we were
well brought up in all the stages of duck hunting and all the fun things like
that when we were kids. We lived in
Chicago, but we went away every summer and that's where I got my love of the
outdoors.
Were you a
very athletic child?
Yes, yes. I had a good athletic training in the old
Illinois Athletic Club in Chicago. One
day I was doing some acrobatic work and Johnny Behr saw me. He asked me if I wanted to try the trapeze
and I found I had a real knack for it.
He thought we had the making of an act and we started working on that.
Was being
an acrobat your first brush with show business?
Yes, that's correct. We asked some friends to join us and we were
called the Flying Behrs. We played a lot
in the Chicago area, and we even performed in the 1934 World's Fair.
When did
you realize that acrobatics might not have been for you?
We started doing stunts an the
trampoline as well. I landed wrong
during a workout and bounced off the side of the trampoline, hurting my
knee. Then I starting to think that acting
might be safer.
What did
you do next?
I did some modeling work with the
Robert John Powers Agency in New York.
My older brother Sprague had been modeling for local newspapers and
catalogues. I modeled for a time in Chicago
and then went to New York to get acting experience. It was a fine way to make a living, but not
what I wanted. I didn't think I was
doing what I wanted in New York so opted for California to fulfill my life's
dream, to be a movie cowboy. That's what
I wanted to be!
I headed for Los Angeles in 1937 and soon got
into some pictures.
Once you
got to Hollywood you worked with people like Rowland V. Lee?
Rowland V. Lee directed the Son of
Monte Cristo. He was a very nice man to
work with and an excellent director. He
stood up for his actors and helped them get a handle on their roles. It was a very relaxed set and that was a fun
picture to work on.
You also
worked with Bela Lugosi?
He and I worked together in Black
Dragons. I tell you, I had a good
education at Monogram and Republic Studios working with people like that. Lugosi seemed a little shy, he would stay in
his dressing room most of the time. I
don't think he was stand-offish, just shy.
When the camera was on, though, he was letter perfect. He had a way with dialogue that was
special. I never worked with anyone like
him.
All those serials and programmers were real
work, they put you through the ropes and made an actor out of you. I'm happy to say that some people considered
me to be the King of the Serials, so I like to think that I made good!
More Clayton Moore Tomorrow!
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