Malvern Daily Record

Gail Davis: A Familiar Face

- With Dr. Ken Bridges

In the days when westerns dominated the new invention of television, one Arkansas actress charmed audiences across the nation with her colorful portrayals. Gail Davis, once called by longtime friend

Gene Autry “the perfect western actress,” was a familiar face on television and film in the 1950s.

Born Betty Jeane Grayson in Little Rock in 1925 to a physician, she lived for several years in Mcgehee before the family settled permanentl­y in Little Rock in her teens. As a youngster, she loved performing in front of audiences and was a gifted singer. The future star was also very athletic, taking up swimming and tennis and became an expert horse rider. She competed in a number of rodeos, including becoming a trick shot expert. She would graduate from Little Rock High School and went on to the University of Texas at Austin where she studied dance and drama.

It was at UT that she met and married her first husband, Bob Davis, and eventually had a daughter. After her graduation in 1946, the three went to California where she earned a contract with MGM studios. Davis recounted that the studio could not have another “Betty Davis” as an actress with the studio, and a stage hand suggested the name Gail.

She soon made a few appearance­s in westerns, including The Far Frontier with Roy Rogers in 1948. along the way, she met Gene Autry, who was very impressed with her acting and soon took her under his wing. Davis would appear with him in Sons of New Mexico in 1949. Ultimately, she would appear in 15 movies with Autry and acted in more than 30 movies altogether.

In 1950, she made guest appearance­s on the popular programs The Cisco Kid and The Lone Ranger. She continued to appear in films and made numerous appearance­s on The Gene Autry Show with her mentor.

In 1954, Davis was set to star in the television series Annie Oakley. In the process, she became the first woman to portray the lead character in a television western. Her career in westerns and real- life expertise with a gun made Davis a natural match. The real Annie Oakley, famous for her sharpshoot­ing skills, performed for 17 years as part of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show and died in 1926. The television version, however, fictionali­zed her life, portraying the heroine as a crime- solver and a one- woman force for justice in the Old West. The show, produced by Gene Autry and co- starring Brad Johnson, ran from 1954 to 1957.

Davis was proud of her portrayal of Oakley and how the character doled out her own justice without killing. She remarked years later, “Annie Oakley had to deal with the same ruthless characters -- rustlers and killers -- that the cowboys dealt with. And she did it without ever killing a one of them.”

In 1960, she was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Davis would marry three times, divorcing twice. One of her later appearance­s included a 1961 episode of The Andy Griffith Show, but by the 1960s, her career had begun winding down. By the 1970s, she retired from acting completely.

Gail Davis died in 1997, but left behind many fans. In 2002, she was honored by the City of Hot Springs with her inclusion onto the Arkansas Walk of Fame; and in 2004, she was inducted into the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth.

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