Roy Rogers passed away on July 6, 1998 but I, for one, will never for get the ever-smiling cowboy that made me want to ride a horse and save the day. Roy Rogers was more than a cowboy, he was a hero and an example to all young boys of what it means to be a man.
Showing posts with label King of the Cowboys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King of the Cowboys. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
HAPPY TRAILS, ROY ROGERS
Roy Rogers passed away on July 6, 1998 but I, for one, will never for get the ever-smiling cowboy that made me want to ride a horse and save the day. Roy Rogers was more than a cowboy, he was a hero and an example to all young boys of what it means to be a man.
Monday, November 28, 2011
A COWBOY IN THE COMICS
Roy Rogers was a hero on screen and in print. Dell Comics created a comic book simply titled, Roy Rogers, starting in January 1948. August 1955. The title changed to Roy Rogers and Trigger in August 1955. The comic book finally rode off into the sunset in 1961.
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Friday, November 25, 2011
Sunday, November 20, 2011
ELTON JOHN SINGS "ROY ROGERS"
Roy Rogers was a hero to kids around the world, including one young Elton John. From his 1977 concert in Wembley Empire Pool, Sir Elton sings "Roy Rogers" from his 1973 album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.
Sometimes you dream, sometimes it seems
There's nothing there at all
You just seem older than yesterday
And you're waiting for tomorrow to call
You draw to the curtain and one thing's for certain
You're cozy in your little room
The carpet's all paid for, God bless the TV
Let's go shoot a hole in the moon
And Roy Rogers is riding tonight
Returning to our silver screens
Comic book characters never grow old
Evergreen heroes whose stories were told
Oh the great sequin cowboy who sings of the plains
Of roundups and rustlers and home on the range
Turn on the T.V., shut out the lights
Roy Rogers is riding tonight
Nine o'clock mornings, five o'clock evenings
I'd liven the pace if I could
Oh I'd rather have a ham in my sandwich than cheese
But complaining wouldn't do any good
Lay back in my armchair, close eyes and think clear
I can hear hoofbeats ahead
Roy and Trigger have just hit the hilltop
While the wife and the kids are in bed
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Friday, November 18, 2011
PORTRAIT OF A KING
The King of the Cowboys, that is. We posted this back in June and it's still one of our favorite images of Roy Rogers. Artwork by Robert Rodriguez.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Saturday, November 12, 2011
THIS IS YOUR LIFE, ROY ROGERS
Roy Rogers is featured on This is Your Life in 1953. Just try to keep a dry eye when he hugs his mom.
Friday, November 11, 2011
COLD STEEL AND A HEART OF GOLD
Roy Rogers played a hero on-screen and off-screen, displaying the noble qualities that go with the role. He spent a lifetime caring for the less fortunate, adopted several children, visited hospitals and created the Happy Trails Children's Foundation for severely abused and neglected children. Roy Rogers was always grateful to his fans who had made him a success and felt a responsibility to share his blessings, care for the needy and love the forgotten. In Roy's own words, "Who am I to be the beloved hero of millions of people? I'm just a hillbilly, an ignorant hillbilly boy from Duck Run".
Thursday, November 10, 2011
ROY AND DALE MAKE IT QUIK
Roy Rogers and Dale Evans take a break from their adventures to pitch Nestle's Quik.
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
A ROY ROGERS TRIBUTE
CommanderPutney at YouTube put together a tribute to The King of Cowboys with an Elvis Presley remix. Now that's a perfect combo!
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
THE STORY OF GOLDEN CLOUD
Also known as Trigger. Roy Rogers became a household name but it was with the help of a golden palimino, originally named Golden Cloud. Roy knew that people loved Trigger as much as they loved him and quickly purchased the stallion, becoming one of the most-loved duos of all time. Read the biography of Trigger at Roy Rogers World.
Monday, November 7, 2011
Sunday, November 6, 2011
BIO OF A KING
The King of the Cowboys, that is:
Roy Rogers, the King of the Cowboys, was actually born in the city. It was in Cincinnati, Ohio, on November 5, 1911, that Leonard Slye (later to be known as Roy Rogers) was born to Mattie and Andy Slye. Years later, the building where he was born was torn down to make way for Riverfront Stadium (recently renamed Cinergy Field), the home of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team. Roy liked to say that he was born right where second base is now located. But the Slye family was never cut out for city life, so a few months after Roy was born, Andy Slye moved his family to Portsmouth, Ohio (a hundred miles east of Cincinnati), where they lived on the houseboat that he and Roy's uncle built. When Roy was seven years old his father decided it was time they settled on solid ground, so he bought a small farm in nearby Duck Run. Living on a farm meant long hours and hard work, but no matter how hard they worked the land there was little money to be made. Roy often said that about all they could raise on their farm were rocks. Eventually Andy Slye realized that he'd have to return to his old factory job at the United States Shoe Company in Cincinnati if he was going to be able to support his family. Since his father would be able to return home only on weekends, this meant that even more of the responsibilities for farm chores fell onto Roy's young shoulders.
Mattie Slye suffered from lameness as a result of the polio she had contracted as a child, and Roy always marveled at the way she was able to raise four active children (Roy and his sisters, Mary, Cleda, and Kathleen) despite her disability. Still, farm life agreed with Roy, who often rode to school on Babe, the old, sulky racehorse his father had bought for him. According to Roy, "We lived so far out in the country, they had to pipe sunlight to us." Living on the farm meant they had to make their own entertainment, since radio was in its earliest days and television was far in the future. On Saturday nights the Slye family often invited some of their neighbors over for a square dance, during which Roy would sing and play the mandolin. Before long he became skilled at calling square dances, and throughout the years he always enjoyed finding opportunities to showcase this talent in his films and television appearances.
It was also while he was growing up on the farm in Duck Run that Roy learned to yodel. Andy Slye had brought home a cylinder player (the predecessor to the phonograph) along with some cylinders, including one by a Swiss yodeler. Roy played that cylinder again and again and soon began developing his own yodeling style. Before long, Roy and his mother worked out a way of communicating with each other by using different types of yodels. Mattie would use one type of yodel to let Roy know that it was time for lunch, another to warn that a storm was brewing, and still another to call him in at the end of the day. Roy would then relay that message to his sisters by yodeling across the fields to them.
By the time Roy had completed his second year of high school, it was clear that their farm would never support the family, so he made the difficult decision to drop out of school and take a job with his father at the shoe factory in Cincinnati. Roy quickly discovered that factory work was just as hot, monotonous, and unpleasant for him as it was for his father. Since his older sister Mary had married and moved to Lawndale, California (close to Los Angeles), Roy and his father decided they should quit their jobs, pack up the car, and take the family out to visit her. Somehow their old car held together, and they eventually made it to Lawndale. (The old Dodge family car in which they made that trip is now on display at The Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Museum.) After a four-month visit the Slye family returned to Cincinnati, but by now the cold Ohio winters couldn't compete with the lure of California's warmer climate. A few months later Roy returned to Southern California, where the rest of his family soon joined him. Although the Depression was growing worse by the day, Roy and his father had hoped that jobs would be easier to find on the West Coast than they were in Ohio. However, California turned out to be just as hard hit as the rest of the country. Jobs were hard to come by, and they didn't tend to last very long. Roy worked at anything he could find, including driving a gravel truck on a highway construction crew until the truck's owner went bankrupt. In the spring of 1931 Roy went up to Tulare (located in central California's farm belt), where he picked peaches for Del Monte and lived in the same labor camps John Steinbeck wrote about so powerfully in his classic novel, "The Grapes Of Wrath".
To read the rest of Roy Rogers' bio, head over to The Official Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Website for the rest of the story about The King of the Cowboys.
Saturday, November 5, 2011
DSTG! SALUTES ROY ROGERS
It's Roy Rogers Month here on Don't Stand There Gawping! Today is Roy Rogers' birthday, he would have been 100 years old. Strong, handsome and a gentleman cowboy, he thrilled audiences on radio, movie screens and television. With a career beginning in music, he had big hits with "Cool Water" and "Tumbling Tumbleweeds". It wasn't long before Hollywood took notice of the young yodeler and put him in the movies, with his first film appearance in 1935. Rogers soon became a hero to children with his winning smile and integrity. His religious faith and concern for the less fortunate only cemented his inspiration to kids throughout the country. He openly talked about his faith and love for his family and country. With over 100 films under his holster, he passed away on July 6th, 1998, leaving behind a world that needs more heroes like Roy Rogers.
Friday, June 10, 2011
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