Change Your Image
OutOfTheAshes
Reviews
Gunsmoke: Hawk (1969)
Good Episode, Good Acting
This is a good episode of 'Gunsmoke.' Louise Latham does her usual good job playing a woman who was abducted by Indians when she was 16 and had a child as a result of multiple rapes.
The child she abandoned when she was rescued--Hawk, played by the able Brendon Boone--finally seeks to speak with her after having observed her on 3 secret previous visits to her farm. She rejects him, but through a series of logical dramatic turns they end up in danger together and she ends up embracing him with regret and love.
There is a really good, and truthful, moment at the end when Hawk leaves Dodge to return to his job as an Indian policeman and rides by his mother who does not publicly acknowledge him but watches him leave with longing in her eyes. Latham and Boone are really good as is the actress who plays her daughter and his half sister.
Love, Sidney (1981)
Quietly Groundbreaking
One of the earlier comments about this film is a rant about how it marred the life of a young gay. It wasn't intended to. In the day in which this show was made, you couldn't be as open about being queer as you can now and the producers were always trying to find a way to place Sidney's humanity ahead of his sexuality so that viewer's would see him first as a person and second as a gay person.
His loneliness was not the result of his being gay, it was the result of his not having made lasting relationships. Remember, Sidney wasn't all gay men, he was just A gay man. He was living outside of the stereotype the way we all do.
It wasn't a great show, but it surely was a well-intentioned one and it was very well acted by the two leads.
It's hard to appreciate now, but Tony Randall was taking a huge chance when he took this role. Playing gay used to cost actors work in other projects and if you look closely at Randall's resume, you will see that his career did take a few hits from having taken on this role.
Kudos to Randall and Swurtz and the producers and writers who were trying to tell a story about some humans and the ways that humans create connections and family. Big kudos to all of them for having the guts to make one of those characters a gay man.