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''Bret Maverick'' is an American Western television series that starred James Garner in the title role, a professional
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player in the Old West. The series aired on NBC from December 1, 1981, to May 4, 1982. It is a sequel series to the 1957-1962 ABC series '' Maverick'', as well the short-lived 1979 TV series '' Young Maverick'', and that series' pilot, the 1978 TV movie '' The New Maverick'', all of which starred Garner in the same role (though he appeared only briefly in ''Young Maverick''). In the two previous series, Bret Maverick had been a solitary rounder who travels from riverboat to saloon looking for high-stakes games. In this series, Maverick has settled down in Sweetwater, Arizona Territory, where he owns a ranch (The Lazy Ace) and is co-owner of the town's saloon (The Red Ox). However, he is still always on the lookout for his next big score, and continues to gamble and practice various con games whenever the chance arises. The series was developed by Gordon Dawson, and produced by Garner's company Cherokee Productions (mistakenly dubbed "Comanche Productions" on the end credits) in association with Warner Bros. Television.


Series overview

Almost two decades after the original ''Maverick'' series, and a few years after his appearance in the 1978 TV movie '' The New Maverick'', Bret Maverick has put down roots in the frontier community of Sweetwater, Arizona Territory where he is now the silent partner of the Red Ox saloon that he won in a card game. Maverick's still a gambler, and is not above running various con games to help make the money he needs to keep his businesses afloat. Because of this, he is viewed with suspicion by many of the town's more prominent citizens, especially the town's newly appointed sheriff. Bret's business partner is Tom Guthrie ( Ed Bruce), the town's former sheriff and co-owner of the Red Ox Saloon. (Actor Ed Bruce, a noted country singer, also co-wrote and performed the show's theme song.) Bret's penchant for organizing cons and money-making schemes of questionable legality means that he and ex-sheriff Guthrie are often at odds with each other, although they still remain friends. Also seen as series regulars are Richard Hamilton as Cy Whitaker, the aging but feisty foreman of Maverick's ranch; Ramon Bieri as prosperous local banker Elijah Crow; Darleen Carr as Mary Lou "M.L." Springer, the fetching owner, editor, and photographer of the local newspaper; David Knell as Rodney Catlow, M.L.'s young assistant; and John Shearin as Mitchell Dowd, the town's arrogant and ineffectual sheriff. Also seen frequently are three actors who were carryovers from Garner's previous series '' The Rockford Files'': Stuart Margolin, who played Angel on ''The Rockford Files'' and appeared with Garner in the 1971–1972 series '' Nichols'', appears in a recurring role as crooked Native American Philo Sandeen; Jack Garner, James's brother and a frequent ''Rockford Files'' bit player, plays the role of Jack, the Red Ox's bespectacled bartender; and Luis Delgado, Garner's longtime stand-in, and Officer Billings on ''Rockford'', plays Red Ox employee Shifty Delgrado. Semi-regulars included Tommy Bush as the inept but friendly Deputy Sturgess, and Marj Dusay as Kate Hanrahan, the town's madam.


U.S. television ratings


Cancellation and aftermath

Despite respectable ratings, the show was canceled by NBC at the end of the first season, airing only eighteen episodes. Writer/producer Roy Huggins, original creator of the title character but otherwise unconnected with this series despite Garner's request that he come aboard mid-season, speculated that one reason the new show didn't quite work was that Maverick, traditionally a drifter, had settled down in one place. Huggins and others also noted that this iteration of Bret Maverick was also more of an 'operator' than the 1950s version. While the earlier version of Maverick was certainly a gambler, his code of ethics was unshakable and as a consequence he played cards and other games absolutely fair and above-board—unless and until his opponent had unquestionably proven themselves to be a cheater, in which case Maverick would scheme to get his money back through his own methods of cheating and deceit. In the ''Bret Maverick'' series, however, Bret is somewhat more of a conman and hustler, and one who doesn't only target crooked gamblers. Also, several costumes and hairstyles, particularly of series regular Darleen Carr, reflected the style of the 1980s and not the old west in which the show was set. Jack Kelly, who had alternated the lead with Garner and later Roger Moore in the original 1957–62 ''Maverick'' series, had been slated to return as Bret's brother Bart Maverick in the second season, and briefly appeared at the very end of the only season. A number of scripts for the following season had been written and presented to Kelly, according to subsequent interviews; Bart was going to look after the saloon in Arizona while Bret ranged across the West, thereby making this series closer in conception and tone to the original ''Maverick''. The series' final episode also included a number of other changes to the series set-up: notably, Tom Guthrie was re-elected as sheriff, and sold his interest in the Red Ox to Kate Hanrahan, who immediately reinvented the establishment as an upscale brothel. As well, Mitchell Dowd was appointed to a government position as an inspector of bars and hotels throughout the Arizona territory, where he promised to remain a thorn in Maverick's side. The 2-hour first episode was eventually trimmed and repackaged as a TV movie for rerunning on local stations under the title '' Bret Maverick: The Lazy Ace''. Additionally the series' only two-part episode was similarly repackaged as '' Bret Maverick: Faith, Hope and Clarity''. NBC took the unusual step of rerunning the episodes two additional times - in the summer of 1988 to help provide 'new' programming during a writers strike, and in the summer of 1994 to play off publicity surrounding the Mel Gibson movie remake of the original '' Maverick'' series also featuring Garner. As a tribute to the character featured on this television series and on ''Maverick'', on April 21, 2006, a ten-foot bronze statue of James Garner as Bret Maverick was unveiled in Garner's hometown of
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, with Garner present at the ceremony.


Regular cast

* James Garner as Bret Maverick * Ed Bruce as Tom Guthrie * Ramon Bieri as Elijah Crow * John Shearin as Mitchel Dowd * David Knell as Rodney Catlow * Richard Hamilton as Cy Whittaker * Stuart Margolin as Philo Sandeen * Darleen Carr as Mary Lou Springer * Jack Garner as Jack the bartender * Tommy Bush as Deputy Sturgess


Episode list


DVD release

On April 22, 2014, Warner Bros. released ''Bret Maverick: The Complete Series'' on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time, via their Warner Archive Collection. This is a manufacture-on-demand release, available exclusively through Warner's online store and only in the United States.


Syndication

The series has rerun on Encore Westerns since fall 2008. On December 30, 2018, American TV network
getTV Get (Great Entertainment Television, stylized as get. since 2023, and formerly stylized as getTV) is an American Digital subchannel#Commercial networks, digital multicast television network owned by the Sony Pictures Television#Sony Pictures Tel ...
started rerunning the series. Currently, it airs on getTV on the weekends.


See also

* List of ''Maverick'' episodes


References


External links

*
James Garner Interview on the ''Charlie Rose Show''
{{Maverick 1981 American television series debuts 1982 American television series endings American English-language television shows Maverick NBC television dramas Television series by Warner Bros. Television Studios 1980s Western (genre) television series Television shows set in Arizona Maverick (TV series)