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Hoot Gibson

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Hoot Gibson
Black and white portrait photograph of Hoot Gibson in about 1922.
Gibson, c. 1922
Born
Edmund Richard Gibson

(1892-08-06)August 6, 1892
DiedAugust 23, 1962(1962-08-23) (aged 70)
Resting place
Inglewood Park Cemetery, Inglewood, California
Other namesEd "Hoot" Gibson
Edward Gibson
Hall Gibson
Ed Hall
Occupations
  • Actor
  • director
  • producer
Years active1910–1960
Spouses
(m. 1913; div. 1920)
Helen Johnson
(m. 1922; div. 1930)
(m. 1930; div. 1933)
Dorothea Dunstan
(m. 1942)
Children1

Edmund Richard "Hoot" Gibson (August 6, 1892 – August 23, 1962) was an American rodeo champion, film actor, film director, and producer. While acting and stunt work began as a sideline to Gibson's focus on rodeo, he successfully transitioned from silent films to become a leading performer in Hollywood's growing cowboy film industry.

During the period between World War I and World War II, he was second only to cowboy film legend Tom Mix as a box office draw. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.

Early life

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Born Edmund Richard Gibson[1] in Tekamah, Nebraska on August 6, 1892,[2] he learned to ride a horse at age two.[3] His family moved to California when he was seven years old.

Gibson had a seventh-grade education. "I never had plans to be anything," he explained. "I never took to farming very well, and cattle weren't anything to me, but I was crazy about horses. I just planned to live with horses and ride horses."[4]

Gibson gave varying accounts of how he got his "Hoot" nickname. In an episode of You Bet Your Life (January 19. 1956), he said he acquired the nickname "Hoot" when he used to look for hoot owls in caves as a child in Nebraska. A more likely account was offered by Gibson in an interview: "I got a job at the Owl Drug Company. I delivered things, riding a bicycle. That is where I got the name of Hoot. It came from 'Owl'. The boys started calling me Hoot Owl, and then it got down to Hoot, and Hoot has been with me ever since."[5]

Career

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Acting was a minor sideline for Gibson; he competed in rodeos to make a living. In 1912, he won the all-around championship at the famous Pendleton Round-Up[6] in Pendleton, Oregon and the steer roping world championship at the Calgary Stampede.[citation needed]

Gibson's career was temporarily interrupted when he enlisted in the United States Army during World War I as a sergeant in the Tank Corps.[7] When the war ended, he returned to the rodeo business and became good friends with Art Acord, a fellow cowboy and movie actor. The two participated in summer rodeo, then went back to Hollywood for the winter to do stunt work. Gibson recalled, "I went right out to Universal, where I had done stunt riding before the war. I got a part in a picture, a two-reeler, with Breezy Eason directing. I had a juvenile part in this picture, and it was bigger than the lead. [Studio head] Carl Laemmle saw the picture, and he wanted to know who that guy was. Someone told him that I had been with Harry Carey before and played a couple of parts that Harry Carey had give me -- first man that had ever given me a part -- and Laemmle said, 'Well, give him a lead.' That's the way I got started in two-reel westerns at Universal. Altogether they ran about 60 westerns. Then I was graduated into full-length features with Jack Ford -- who is now John Ford, but we always called him Jack. From then on I made eight pictures a year at Universal, up through and including 1930."[8]

Out o' Luck (1921) with Gibson
Lobby card for Gibson's film The Winged Horseman (1929)

Later films

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Hoot Gibson left Universal, only to find that other studios weren't interested in making western features. He signed with independent producer M. H. Hoffman, who kept him working steadily through 1935. Hoffman's Allied Pictures was absorbed by Republic Pictures, where Gibson made a few features and a serial, The Painted Stallion. Gibson also worked for independent producer Walter Futter, and was reunited with old friend Harry Carey for a few features at RKO.

Gibson was off the screen after The Painted Stallion, but was coaxed out of retirement by producer Robert Emmett Tansey. The "trio" format was then popular among western fans -- Republic had The Three Mesquiteers, Monogram had The Rough Riders and The Range Busters, and Columbia had Charles Starrett joined by Russell Hayden and Cliff Edwards. Tansey teamed Hoot Gibson with screen veterans Ken Maynard and Bob Steele to form The Trail Blazers. Eleven features were released by Monogram through 1944; these were Gibson's last starring vehicles.

Financial difficulties and later life

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Gibson's years of substantial earnings did not see him through his retirement. He had squandered much of his income on high living and poor investments. By the 1950s, Gibson faced financial ruin, in part due to costly medical bills from serious health problems. To get by and pay his bills, he earned money as a greeter at a Las Vegas casino. For a time, he worked in a carnival and took virtually any job his dwindling name value could obtain. At one point he hosted a booth at rodeos that encouraged ranchers to raise nutria. He also appeared in an episode of Groucho's You Bet Your Life, filmed in December 1955. He made the final game with his fellow contestant, but did not win the big money, though he earned himself a share of the $440 prize money for the show.[9]

Personal life

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On September 6, 1913, Gibson married Rose August Wenger, a rodeo performer.[10] They had met at the Pendleton Round-Up in Oregon sometime between 1911 and 1913. Under the name Helen Gibson, she became a major film star in her own right for a time, notably in the lead role of The Hazards of Helen. Census records for 1920 indicate they were living separately; Hoot Gibson listed himself as married; Helen listed herself as widowed.[11]

Gibson married vaudeville actress Helen Johnson on April 20, 1922, in Riverside, California.[12] They had one child, Lois Charlotte Gibson. They were divorced on February 2, 1929, in Hollywood, California.[13]

Gibson married film actress Sally Eilers on June 28, 1930.[14] The marriage ended in 1933.[citation needed]

Gibson married a final time to Dorothy Dunstan, a 22-year-old yodeler, on July 3, 1942.[15]

Death

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Hoot Gibson died of cancer in 1962 in Woodland Hills, California at age 70, and was interred in the Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, California.[16][17]

Legacy

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In 1960, for his contribution to film, Gibson was inducted to the Hollywood Walk of Fame and was honored with a star at 1765 Vine Street in the Motion Pictures section.[18] In 1979, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[19]

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References to Gibson in American media include:

  • From Here to Eternity (1951): "'I wonder,' he said,' what ever happened to old Hoot Gibson? I can just barely remember him. My God, he had grey hair when I was just a kid."[1]
  • The Carpetbaggers (1961): "'The Bijou's got a new Hoot Gibson picture,' Tommy said."[1]
  • The Bullwinkle Show: Hoot Gibson is mentioned in "The Lion and the Aardvark" episode of Aesop and Son.
  • The Beverly Hillbillies (1963): A phony relative, Jake Clampett, manipulates the Clampett family into pursuing Hollywood dreams in an attempt to further his own filmmaking ambitions. Granny is on to him when he isn't familiar with Hoot Gibson, but Jake wins her over by promising her a role in a Hoot Gibson picture.[20]
  • Petticoat Junction (1966): In Season 3 Episode 27, "Second Honeymoon", Charlie and Floyd (The Cannonball engineers) are discussing the poetic quote, "As each returning spring renews the promise of youth, so a second honeymoon renews the dream of love in two blissful hearts."[21] Charlie attributes the quote to Hoot Gibson. Charlie adds, "He said it to his horse."[21]
  • Myra Breckinridge (1968 novel): "More than ever was Buck, revoltingly, the Singin' Shootin' Cowboy, so inferior in every way to Hoot Gibson."[1]
  • Laverne & Shirley (1977): Hoot Gibson is mentioned in "Guilty Until Proven Not Innocent" Season 2 Episode 11. Shirley exclaims, "Good God! It's the devil and Hoot Gibson!"
  • Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe (1987 novel): "Most of those guards are pretty simpleminded old boys ... they'll go to a picture show and see Tom Mix or Hoot Gibson and then they come back and ride around the farm, pulling their guns, trying to be cowboys."[1]

Filmography

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References

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  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Hoffmann, Henryk (2012). Western Movie References in American Literature. McFarland. pp. 68–69. ISBN 9780786493241. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  2. "Hoot Gibson". History Nebraska. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  3. Hoot Gibson, published in Hollywood: The Oral History by Jeanine Basinger and Sam Wasson, Harper Collins, 2022, p. 3.
  4. Gibson, Hollywood: The Oral Historyp. 3.
  5. Gibson, Hollywood: The Oral History, p. 12.
  6. Wallis, The Real Wild West.
  7. "Hoot Gibson". Nebraskahistory.org. January 11, 2006. Archived from the original on November 15, 2006. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  8. Gibson, Hollywood: The Oral History, pp. 12-13.
  9. "YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  10. "Cupid Ropes Ed 'Hoot' Gibson". East Oregonian. Oregon, Pendleton. September 8, 1913. p. 1. Retrieved January 15, 2017 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  11. 1920 United States Census for Los Angeles, California, Sheets No. 19A and 10B
  12. "'Hoot' Gibson Weds Helen Johnson". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Missouri, St. Louis. Associated Press. April 21, 1922. p. 19. Retrieved January 15, 2017 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  13. "Mrs. Hoot Gibson Given Divorce". The Indiana Gazette. Pennsylvania, Indiana. International News Service. February 7, 1929. p. 13. Retrieved January 15, 2017 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  14. "Hoot Gibson Weds Miss Sally Eilers". Lebanon Daily News. Pennsylvania, Lebanon. Associated Press. June 28, 1930. p. 10. Retrieved January 15, 2017 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  15. "Dorothy Dunstan Bride of Hoot Gibson at Las Vegas". The Wilkes-Barre Record. Pennsylvania, Wilkes-Barre. July 29, 1942. p. 6. Retrieved January 15, 2017 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  16. "Hoot Gibson, Film Cowboy, Dies. Made His First Movie in 1915; Broke Into Motion Pictures as a Stunt Man. Last Role Was in 'Horse Soldiers'". New York Times. August 24, 1962. Retrieved March 9, 2010.
  17. Brooker, John (2017). The Happiest Trails. Lulu.com. p. 366. ISBN 9781365741227.
  18. "Hoot Gibson". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  19. "Hall of Great Western Performers". National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
  20. "The Clampetts Go Hollywood". The Beverly Hillbillies. Season 2. Episode 9. November 20, 1963.
  21. 1 2 "Petticoat Junction: Season 3, Episode 27 script | Subs like Script". subslikescript.com. Retrieved October 9, 2021.
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