The Oklahoman

Kurt Russell & Taylor Sheridan headline OKC’s Western Heritage Awards

- Brandy McDonnell The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

From a heartwarmi­ng donation by Kurt Russell and a posse of Pistol Petes to a whirlwind appearance by Taylor Sheridan and a homecoming for one of his “Yellowston­e” actors, the 61st Western Heritage Awards packed plenty of highlights. h Hosted by the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, the ceremony annually honors the year’s top releases in Western literature, music, TV and film and inducts new members into the Hall of Great Westerners and Hall of Great Western Performers. Winners received the “Wrangler,” a bronze sculpture created by Oklahoma artist and past honoree Harold T. Holden, at the April 9 ceremony. h The Oklahoma City museum was able to shift the storied awards show back to April after the COVID-19 pandemic prompted the 2020 ceremony to be canceled and last year’s installati­on to be moved to fall, when honorees for both 2020 and 2021 were lauded at the same event. h Here are a few highlights from the 2022 Western Heritage Awards:

1. Kurt Russell honors his father and mother

It took two years, but movie star Kurt Russell was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers to cap Saturday night’s ceremony.

Known for his roles in Western films like “Tombstone,” “The Hateful Eight” and “Bone Tomahawk,” Russell said he normally avoids awards shows.

“They called me up and started asking me about coming here, and as I was about to come up with some excuse, like I usually do ... they said, ‘And we’re going to induct your dad.’ And I said, ‘I’ll be there,’” Russell said with a grin. “I was very fortunate to have what I consider the greatest mom and dad that you could possibly have.”

Along with accepting his honor, the Golden Globe- and Primetime Emmy-nominated actor helped usher his father, the late Neil Oliver “Bing” Russell (1926-2003), into the Hall of Great Western Performers at the museum. Bing Russell is best remembered for playing Deputy Clem Foster on the beloved series “Bonanza.”

At first, the younger Russell said he was especially excited about the dual honors because he planned to surprise his mother, Louise “Lulu” Russell, with a trip to OKC to accept them. But COVID postponed the ceremony, and his mom died May 7, 2021 — four months before the reschedule­d event — at the age of 93.

“I think she would have liked that a lot, and she would have liked you people,” said Russell, who delayed his induction until 2022 after undergoing hip surgery last year.

“There’s an energy in this room that you really don’t feel anywhere else. So, it’s nice to be a part of that.”

2. Taylor Sheridan claims his prize for ‘1883’

In-demand “Yellowston­e” creator Taylor Sheridan has become a regular winner at the OKC event, with one of his many projects roping a Wrangler award at five straight Western Heritage Awards.

But the successful writer, producer and director’s busy schedule has kept him from picking up his prizes in person — until this year.

Sheridan told The Oklahoman he flew into OKC on April 9 to attend the ceremony, and the audience warmly greeted him as he accepted the Wrangler for best fictional television drama for the pilot episode of “1883,” his hit “Yellowston­e” prequel.

“Wow, the last time I got a standing ovation, it started with a court bailiff saying, ‘All rise,’” Sheridan said, grinning from under the brim of his cowboy hat.

He quickly lived up to his billing as “a whirlwind” — as he was described by Oklahoma native, longtime actor and recurring “Yellowston­e” player Rudy Ramos — as he waxed eloquently about the values of the West and promised to “make cows cool.”

“We know what the West is: We know it’s hard work, and we know it’s self-reliance. And we know that it’s depending on your neighbors and your neighbors depending upon you. So, to celebrate that in film is actually, I think, preserving this culture and giving others an opportunit­y to, hopefully, allow some of this to make its way into a place where that doesn’t exist,” he said.

“Since I’m selling Stetsons in Los Angeles, I guess we’re doing it.”

3. Pistol Petes assemble to honor the inspiratio­n for OSU’s mascot

The inspiratio­n for the Oklahoma State University mascot, Frank Boardman “Pistol Pete” Eaton (1860-1958) was added to the Hall of Great Westerners during this year’s ceremony.

Eaton earned the nickname “Pistol Pete” at age 15 when he went to Fort Gibson to hone his shooting skills. A tracker, scout and settler, he worked on ranches and herded cattle over the Chisholm and Santa Fe Trails. He was later a deputy U.S. marshal. He died April 8, 1958, after settling in Perkins.

More than 20 former Pistol Petes who took on the mantle of the mascot at OSU joined Eaton’s family in honoring the iconic Cowboy at the Western Heritage Awards. Even without the familiar mascot costume, they were easy to spot: They all wore matching orange bowties with their tuxedos.

4. Rudy Ramos returns to Oklahoma

In 2019, Ramos was slated to return to Oklahoma and help usher “Yellowston­e” leading man Kevin Costner into the Hall of Great Western Performers. But Ramos got sick the day before he was supposed to fly from his Southern California home to his home state.

This year, he was able to make the trip to Western Heritage Awards to help present “Yellowston­e’s” creator with his Wrangler.

“Taylor Sheridan is an actor’s dream,” said Ramos, who is of Native Indian and Mexican heritage. “I’ve been doing been making films and television and doing stage plays for 52 years, and I’ve always gotten the respect of my fellow actors. But I’ve never been shown the respect that I get on the set of ‘Yellowston­e.’”

A Lawton native, Ramos got his start when he was cast as a Pawnee youth named Wind on the 1970-71 season of the TV series “The High Chaparral.” Now, he’s come full circle with his recurring role in another popular Western: On “Yellowston­e,” he plays Felix Long, an elder on the fictional Broken Rock Indian Reservatio­n.

“It’s that time that I start playing grandpas, and I love my part,” Ramos told The Oklahoman.

5. ‘ Tombstone’ star donates dad’s hat

Finally in OKC to be honored, Russell — whose cinematic credits include

“Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” “Overboard, “Silkwood” and many more — followed the proverb it is more blessed to give than receive.

The prolific actor brought the cowboy hat his father wore on “Bonanza” to the ceremony — and then announced that he was donating to the museum.

“Their house was being sold, and it was kind of weird: You’re watching the house you grew up with go away. I went over there, and there were a couple items left. And one of them was his hat from ‘Bonanza.’ This hat,” Russell said, dropping the brown topper on the podium.

“So, Dad, here you are, coming into this Cowboy Hall of Fame ... and so very simply, I’m going to leave something for the museum.”

6. Burt Reynolds posthumous­ly honored

Along with the Russells, the Hall of Great Western Performers this year added Burt Reynolds to its starry ranks.

Before he died in 2018 at age 82, Reynolds built a prolific 60-year career as an actor, director and sex symbol. He started with recurring roles on TV shows like “Gunsmoke,” “Riverboat” and “Hawk,” and by the 1960s, the Michigan native was earning multiple roles in Western films and TV series. By the 1980s, he was a bona fide movie star, and he earned a 1998 Oscar nomination for “Boogie Nights.”

Gordon Whitener, who produced one of Reynolds’ final films, 2017’s “The Last Movie Star,” helped usher the actor into the hall. He said the term “icon just doesn’t even begin” to do justice by Reynolds.

7. OKC mayor meets ‘ Tulsa King’ producer

Among those to greet Sheridan at the Western Heritage Awards was Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt, one of more than 1,100 folks to attend the sold-out soiree.

Holt posted on Twitter April 11 that he gave his “personal welcome and gratitude” to Sheridan at the ceremony, since one of the Oscar-nominated writer’s anticipate­d Paramount+ series is actually filming in OKC.

Tentativel­y titled “The Tulsa King,” Sheridan’s upcoming series is a Sylvester Stallone star vehicle about a New York gangster who relocates to the Sooner State after serving a 25-year prison sentence.

Although some lensing has been done in Tulsa, Holt confirmed that the series, sometimes referred to as the “Untitled Tulsa Project,” is now being filmed in OKC.

8. Mo Brings Plenty pays homage to his heritage

Native American actor and first-time Western Heritage Awards emcee Mo Brings Plenty, who stars on “Yellowston­e” and has a role in the upcoming blockbuste­r “Jurassic World Dominion,” closed the show by speaking fondly of his childhood. Growing up on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservatio­n in South Dakota, he said he would emulate Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull.

“I also saw dust devils: I’d take my mom’s clotheslin­e rope, and get on my horse and I’d go chase them down like Pecos Bill. I often thought, ‘Man, I want to ride like Will Rogers.’ So, growing up, I’d hold on tight to my heritage of the Lakota Nation. But I also hold on tight to those who make me feel like I’m part of their family — and that’s each and every one of you,” he said.

 ?? SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Top from left: Kurt Russell speaks before accepting the 2022 Hall of Great Western Performers; Taylor Sheridan accepts the award for Outstandin­g Fictional Drama Presentati­on for the “1883” Season 1, Episode 1 during the Western Heritage Awards at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, April, 9.
SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN Top from left: Kurt Russell speaks before accepting the 2022 Hall of Great Western Performers; Taylor Sheridan accepts the award for Outstandin­g Fictional Drama Presentati­on for the “1883” Season 1, Episode 1 during the Western Heritage Awards at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, April, 9.
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 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Mo Brings Plenty speaks during the Western Heritage Awards at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Saturday, April, 9.
PHOTOS BY SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN Mo Brings Plenty speaks during the Western Heritage Awards at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Saturday, April, 9.
 ?? ?? Chickasaw Nation Gov. Bill Anoatubby accepts the award Outstandin­g Traditiona­l Western Music Album for “Montfor:The Chickasaw Rancher.”
Chickasaw Nation Gov. Bill Anoatubby accepts the award Outstandin­g Traditiona­l Western Music Album for “Montfor:The Chickasaw Rancher.”
 ?? ?? Geoff O’Gara and Yufna Soldier West accept the award for the Outstandin­g Documentar­y.
Geoff O’Gara and Yufna Soldier West accept the award for the Outstandin­g Documentar­y.

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