Bat Masterson (TV Series 1958–1961) Poster

(1958–1961)

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8/10
Bat Masterson - A Fun Show to Watch
thuvia-17 January 2007
Good news for fans of Gene Barry and his TV series Bat Masterson (1958-1961)! This show just started airing on the Encore Western Channeel. A marathon of the first 23 Bat Masterson episodes aired this weekend, and the show starts a regular run tomorrow, January 8, 2007, airing on the Encore Western Channel from 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Central Standard Time, each day. I believe it also airs @ 6:00 p.m. CSA on Saturdays.

I remember this show from when I was a child and I found it still fun to watch. Although Bat as portrayed by Gene Barry may be called a dandy, so what? You'll forget all about that the first time he clubs a villain with his cane - and it happens frequently! He's also a crack shot.

And perhaps my favorite part of the show? Almost every episode sports a nice looking gal from 1950s television. Check out Allison Hayes in 7 episodes and Audrey Dalton in 3 episodes; and I just saw Fay Spain in an episode. If you like old television with a great leading actor and some nice eye-candy to go along with it, you'll love Bat Masterson!
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7/10
"He Wore A Cane And Derby Hat, They Called Him Bat, Bat Masterson"
bkoganbing8 July 2008
One of the things about this show that lingers in my mind besides the nattily dressed Gene Barry was the fact that this show eschewed any kind of supporting cast. No sidekicks, no permanent love interests, what you got was Gene Barry as Bat Masterson taming the west in his own small way.

The real Bat was quite the dude himself, maybe not as noble a character as Barry played him. That cane was as effective as the Irish Shillelagh and he used it more to disarm opponents than kill them. He wasn't always the gentleman, Masterson did make a living as a scout and a buffalo hunter and I doubt he was so stylish on the trail.

Barry was a literate and bright western hero, he would have to be because the real Bat Masterson eventually made a living as a newspaper reporter for a quaint metropolitan newspaper. If he didn't always battle for truth, justice, and the American way, he always reported it in a dignified manner.

The real Bat Masterson made his living in the last century, died, and is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. I think he would have liked the way Gene Barry played him.
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7/10
A legend in his own time
krorie10 January 2007
Of all the so-called adult westerns that hit the tube in the mid to late 50's, "Bat Masterson" was one of the best. Gene Barry played his historical character with just the right amount of seriousness and lightness to make what could have been a cardboard creation viable. "Adult westerns" back in those days when the TV west was young meant more talk and less action with stories that supposedly dealt with mature subject matter where characters were not just all good or all bad. In the "Bat Masterson" series, usually there would be a fair amount of action with Bat whipping the meanies with his cane and using his gun only when absolutely necessary.

Another improvement in the TV western wrought by the "Bat Masterson" series was a weekly change of scenery (in reality, all the shows were shot on the same Hollywood lot), not just in Dodge City, Tombstone, or Abilene. "Incident in Leadville" is a good example. Leadville, now a Colorado tourist mecca, was then a silver mining town with its share of claim jumpers and bushwhackers.

Bat rides into Leadville to clear his name. It seems that the lady who runs the local printing press, Jo Hart (Kathleen Crowley), has slandered Bat by lumping him together with notorious outlaws such as King Fisher, a cameo by the fine character actor, Jack Lambert. The local city boss, gambler Roy Evans, portrayed by future "Get Smart" chief, Edward Platt, also has an ax to grind with Jo Hart but wants to put her out of commission permanently. Evans decides to terminate Bat in the process, a notion not to the liking of the man with the cane and derby hat.

All the shows were similar in format. Fans could be assured of being entertained for thirty minutes. The "Bat Masterson" theme song was an added treat, with catchy lyrics and a hummable tune.
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Different but with some historical accuracy
skoyles13 March 2005
I remember this series fondly but even as a kid wondered why Gene Barry did not sport the moustache that Masterson wore almost all of his adult life and did (if I remember correctly) as portrayed in at least one episode of The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. As an adult I have read almost everything written about Masterson, seen as many motion pictures as possible, and find the gambler, sportsman, writer and sometime lawman fascinating. Masterson did carry a walking stick, wore a bowler in at least one famous photograph, was a townsman and loyal friend, was involved in boxing and by all accounts was a cheerful and well-liked man - a lot like Gene Barry. Was this TV series always historically accurate? Not in the slightest! But it did capture something of the real man, a certain insouciance and worldliness lacking in the run-of-the-mill TV cowboy or lawman. 'Tis rather too bad that they never had an episode set later when Masterson was an apparently happily married man and sports writer for a New York newspaper. And yes, I frequently carry a walking stick today and fondly recall "Back when the West was very young/There lived a man named Masterson/ He wore a cane and derby hat/ They called him Bat, Bat Masterson...."
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7/10
"Now in the legend of the West, one name stands out of all the rest..." - From the Bat Masterson theme song
classicsoncall2 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
There were so many great TV Westerns during the late Fifties/early Sixties that you couldn't possibly watch all of them. As a kid, I would never miss 'Trackdown', 'Wanted: Dead or Alive', and 'Johnny Ringo'. Of course, it was my Dad who made the choice of what shows to watch, and not knowing any better, I had a blast with all of them. So as it was, 'Bat Masterson' wasn't on my radar back then, but it's a treat getting caught up with these old time shows as an adult with the ability to compare them with the ones I used to watch.

'Bat Masterson' aired for three seasons on the NBC television network from October, 1958 to September, 1961. Gene Barry was the star, portraying the suave and debonair frontier lawman who rarely used a gun, preferring instead his trusty cane to get the drop on cheating gamblers and otherwise nasty bad guys. During the show's first season, almost every episode reminded us that Bat was a 'legend in his own time' via voice over narration. Like it's contemporary on ABC, 'Tombstone Territory' (ahh, there's another one I couldn't miss!), this show's chronology jumped around, with events taking place generally between the years 1875 to 1886. In the very first episode titled 'Double Showdown', Gene Barry offered a little monologue on the historical Bat Masterson, and the show itself offered an alternate ending. I was surprised as all get out when in the second show of the series, Bat gets shot by a villain portrayed by Broderick Crawford. It usually took a few more episodes of a TV Western for the hero to get winged by an outlaw!

Many of the usual suspects would show up in the series, with character actors of the era like William Conrad, James Best, Alan Hale Jr., Warren Oates and Myron Healey showing up, sometimes more than once as different characters. Almost every episode would feature some lovely gal to provide a romantic interest for our hero, but no one could pin him down as he traveled from town to town in the Old West. Sometimes Bat would run into another historical figure like Wyatt Earp, who posed as a lawyer in episode #2.61, 'The Reluctant Witness', to help his friend and a woman accused of murder. I got the biggest kick out of a third season show titled 'Bat Trap', with Lon Chaney Jr. showing up for a turkey shoot competition. In that one, Bat's cane was rigged to fire a bullet!

Well, like most TV Westerns based on legendary characters of the Old West, historical accuracy was left in the dust to come up with entertaining stories, and 'Bat Masterson' was no exception. It was a fun show as far as that goes, and a neat complement if you're a Bat fan to the many movie Westerns based on Masterson's legendary career. If so, you might want to take a look at 1943's 'The Woman of the Town' with Claire Trevor as Bat's girl trying to persuade him into a journalism career, 1947's "Trail Street" with Bat portrayed by Randolph Scott, and the 1956 film 'Masterson of Kansas', where Bat teams up with Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday. Not that historical accuracy matters, all are recommended for fans of the frontier lawman and professional gambler.
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9/10
Searching for relics
krklaus22 March 2014
A sucker for 60's westerns, I wrapped a belt around the piano bench, set it in front of the TV and "rode" it with my western heroes; Roy, Yancy (with his collection of hide-out derringers), Lone Ranger (the original radio Lone Ranger, Brace Beemer, lived just up the road from me)Cisco Kid and Pancho, Wild Bill Hickock and Jingles, El Fago Baca, Mavericks (Bret, Bart and cousin Beau from England)I watched them all and this was one. I assume Bat's cane had a sword in it, most do, and I definitely recall one episode where he warned the town of an impending Indian raid by firing his "cane rifle" at the church tower bell - he was too injured to ride down in time. My question is, does anyone know what happened to this prop? Were there several? A Sword cane, a rifle cane? Modern westerns make at least 3 copies of any significant prop, i.e., Quigley's rifle. One for photos, one for dropping in the dirt, one for star to keep as memento. There were 4 James Bond Aston-Martins(Sean Connery didn't get any of them). Anyway, I was just curious about the cane and if it was functioning, or they just faked it for the film.
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6/10
Nice enough western, terrible theme song
amexspam10 March 2010
I can warmly recall western TV show tunes such as "Johnny Yuma was a rebel he rode through the west". And "All but one man died. There at Bitter Creek". And who could forget "da-dumb, da-dumb, da-dumb, dumb, dumb,de-dumb, dumb dumb" of The Wild, Wild West. And then there's Bat Masterson with "And those with too ready a trigger, Forgot to figure". And "He wore a cane and derby hat,They called him Bat". The show was okay. Paladin was more cerebral. Maverick was funnier. Cheyenne was pithier. Gunsmoke had a taller leading man. Bonanza had color. Even Yancy Derringer had better writing. But Gene Barry did an okay job of being a gentleman Marshall.
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9/10
The Adventures of Bat Masterson, The Man Who Became A Legend In His Own Time
raysond1 July 2015
Based on Richard O'Connor's best selling novel and autobiography,the classic television western series "Bat Masterson" became one of the biggest hits of the 1958-1959 premiere season and introduce audiences to actor Gene Barry who became a major star due to this series which was far beyond the other typical TV-Westerns that came out that period that showed a fictionalized account of the life of real-life marshal/gambler/dandy Bat Masterson. The series was produced by Ziv Television Productions,the company responsible for such hit series as "Stories of the Highway Patrol","Tales of the Texas Rangers",and "Sea Hunt". "Bat Masterson" upon the first episode was an immediate hit that ran for three seasons in prime-time for NBC-TV from October 8, 1958 until June 1, 1961 for 107 episodes all in classic black and white. The theme song to "The Ballad of Bat Masterson" was sung by Bill Lee who was a member of the popular singing group "The Mellomen".

About the show, in just about every episode,took a tongue-in-cheek approach,with Gene Barry's character coming into a sort of ordinary Western town often dressed in expensive Eastern clothing and preferring to use his cane rather than a gun to get himself out of trouble or out of a sticky situation usually to help a damsel in distress or sometimes when dealing with gunslingers or bandits would use a gun whenever the situation got out of hand. In part Bat Masterson each week would roam from one Western town to another who always portrayed himself as a ladies' man traveling the vast and dangerous wastelands of the Old West in search of adventure. The show was so successful that during its three year run on NBC was Nominated for 2 Prime-Time Emmys for Outstanding Actor in a Prime-Time Series(Gene Barry),and also for Outstanding Editing in a Prime-Time Series(Richard L. Van Enger). Also during its run,Bat Masterson brought along a lot of successful writers to go along with the incredible stories in each episode. Top notch writers ranging from Andy White, Don Brinkley, Richard Collins, Harry Essex, to future "I Spy" producers David Friedkin and Morton S.Fine not to mention future "Star Trek",and future "Outer Limits" story consultant Samuel A. Peeples,along with Frank Pittman, Don Ingalls, Stanley Kallis, the husband and wife team of D.D. and Mary Beauchamp, and Ellis Kadison.

Top notch directors added spice to some of the intriguing stories ranging from Alan Crosland, William Conrad, Hollingsworth Morse, to Jesse Hibbs, Monroe Askins, Montgomery Pittman, Earl Bellamy,and future "Dick Van Dyke Show" director John Rich.

Several guest stars included some big name Hollywood heavyweights and newcomers including Robert F. Simon, Richard Eastham, George Macready, to Yvonne Lime, Gary Vinson, Brett King, Douglas Kennedy, Ron Hayes, Gary Vinson, Dan Sheridan, James Coburn, Warren Oates, Edgar Buchanan, to R.G. Armstrong, Gene Nelson, Kenneth Tobey, John Agar, Jack Elam, Frank Silvera, Morgan Woodward, Dabbs Greer, Ross Martin, Elaine Stewart, to future "Star Trek" players DeForest Kelley and Grace Lee Whitney not to mention fresh newcomers like Stephanie Powers, Ralph Taeger,Kevin Hagen, Diane Brewster, future Dukes of Hazzard star James Best,and Dabbs Greer along with 50's scarlet Allison Hayes and Allen Jaffe.

Several great episodes from the "Bat Masterson" series stand out ranging from "Double Showdown"(the pilot episode), "Dynamite Blows Both Ways", "Death by Decree", "Dead Man's Claim", "Incident At Fort Bowie", to "A Noose Fits Anybody", "Six Feet of Gold", "License To Cheat", "Election Day", "Buffalo Kill","General Sherman's March Through Dodge City",to "The Conspiracy"(Parts 1 and 2), "The Fourth Man", "The Treasure of Worthy Hill",to "A Matter of Honor", "Jeopardy at Jackson Hole"(which was the final episode of the series). After the success of Bat Masterson's run ,actor Gene Barry went to star in the detective series "Burke's Law" in which he played a Beverly Hills millionaire who was chief of detectives of the Los Angeles Police Department that lasted from 1963 to 1966 for ABC. In 1968 he starred in the 90- minute detective drama series "The Name of the Game" that also starred Robert Stack and Tony Franciosa.
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7/10
They called him "Bat"...
redcinnamon13 January 2023
This was a quirky Western, with its foppish smart-ass hero. Pretty unusual for the time it was on TV-- not like the usual Westerns. Gene Barry was a good choice for the lead character, with just the right amount of dry wit, but I totally agree with another reviewer, who noted that Bat was the only certainty in any episode. No other regular characters, and not even a main setting.

I really have to complain here about a couple of things that drive me crazy: "They called him Bat" -- The real man's name was Bartholomew (hence "Bat") William Barclay Masterson, but when asked for his name, this guy leaves out his first name. (???) Also, "He wore a cane..." -- Um, no, you can't "wear" a cane. Hats, yes, canes, no.

One more gripe-- They don't even try for historical accuracy. I saw an episode this afternoon where the town mayor's secretary has a platinum blonde hairdo reminiscent of some starlet from the 1940's! Every time I watch an episode, I see something equally aggravating.

Still, now that I've aired my complaints, it's a pretty fun watch, and you get to see a whole lot of recognizable guest stars.
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10/10
He was all the series said and more!
alan94911 January 2007
Bat Masterson was born in Illinois in 1855. His real name was William Barclay Masterson. His brother Ed was two years older. Eventually they would have two more brothers and two sisters. The family eventually moved to Kansas, where they built a farm in Sedgwick County. Bat and Ed were close and often went hunting and fishing together. He didn't think much of book learning and would sneak out of the schoolhouse whenever he could.

He got his first job at seventeen. He and Ed graded railroad bed for the Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe railroad. Shortly afterward, he became a buffalo hunter supplying meat to the railroad crews. His headquarters was a small community called Adobe Walls, Texas. He was there when Indians led by Comanche war chief Quanah Parker, attacked the town on June 27, 1874.

Bat and friend Billy Dixon were just getting ready to leave when the

He dabbled in politics over the next few years and became closer friends with Roosevelt. He and promoter Tex Rickard even sat down with him one day to discuss military strategy for the upcoming fighting in World War I. Roosevelt became ill from a fever contracted in a South American jungle and died on January 6, 1919. Bat was quite broken up over the death of his friend.

Bat spent his last years writing his columns and visiting gyms. He was always very active in the fighting business. On October 25, 1921, he went to work as usual. But right in the middle of typing his article, he died of a sudden heart attack. His wife died in 1932.

Please go to: http://hometown.aol.com/gibson0817/bat.htm and read his "Real Life" It is even better than the series.
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9/10
A fun time
dwright5311 January 2007
This was a fun series that wasn't supposed to be taken seriously. Gene Barry was perfect as the suave Masterson, who apparently made a living playing cards at nearly tavern west of the Mississippi River. It was a preview for his role in "Burke's Law" five years later. Like with all westerns of that era, there is a lot of drinking, fighting, kissing and killing. The bad guys wore black hats and the women were (almost every time)gorgeous -- even if they seem to be wearing 10 pounds of clothes. Watchas well for some guest character actors who later went on to modest successes (like James Best, Louise Fletcher, Ross Martin).It's worth a half hour of your time.
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Cool, Unusual Series of Suave, Elegant, Arrogant Dandy in Old West
trpdean4 March 2002
I had to respond to that post. This WAS cool, unlike almost all the the westerns on television, and this child badly wanted (and received) a bat like Bat Masterson or his birthday. Gene Barry had the cool sure arrogance in this character that America was later to see in Burke's Law and the Name of the Game. In a different area of the country, this character would have been a great robber baron or 15 years ago,a great merger and takeover artist!

This was fun - and Barry was a sort of James Bond (Roger Moore variety) in the Old West.
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8/10
Western Channel Marathon
Tapestry67 January 2007
This was a very cool series and the Western Channel (STARZ) is running the Bat Masterson marathon today 1/6/07. Yesterday they were running the Rifleman marathon with Chuck Conners. They will be airing these episodes daily at 4pm starting tomorrow. Bat Masterson series was short sweet and to the point entertainment. Gene Barry was obviously having fun in this series I know he played a character similar later on, only he changed his horse for a limousine. Each story was self contained. With really bad guys and of course the wimpy henchmen that would give up the information that Bat needed to get the bad guy. I spotted Ross Martin from the original Wild Wild West(Artemus) in one of the shows and as these other shows roll through I am sure a few other character actors will show up. If you get a chance between whatever football games are running take a peek this is entertainment not deep psycho-babble ;)
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8/10
Consistently entertaining with excellent leading man
tobermil29 May 2023
I love everything about this show - the length (half hour), the cinematic way it is filmed, the well-performed, stunts and the clever writing, with a nice mix of humor and suspense. Gene Barry approaches the role like a Old West James Bond. He's ultra-suave and seems like a dandy but really he's more of a crusader, righting injustices and seemingly having a beautiful woman waiting for him in every town. If you've been alive long enough, you'll recognize several of the episode actors, from William Conrad to Alan Hale. I stumbled upon this while browsing selections on Amazon Prime and couldn't be happier I found this obscure little gem.
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"He wore a cane...
jonesy74-122 October 2005
and Derby Hat. They called him Bat." I always wondered how you could "wear" a cane? Oh well.

Boy, could that guy USE that cane, though. Hoooooey! He could trip you or bonk you on the head faster'n you could order up some prize-fight tickets.

This was really an odd Western. I came across on old episode preserved on a DVD with several other old Western t.v. show episodes. A woman shows up in a scene and Barry gives her a google-eyed double take. Campy acting. But, much better than Wyatt Earp (Earp had been one of the real-life Bat Masterson's buddies), starring Hugh O'Brien, which tried to take itself seriously - but didn't succeed.

Still, this was a fun show. I enjoyed it, even though I was but a tyke when it aired. It introduced me to Gene Barry, who would later star in "The Name of the Game" with Tony Franciosa and Robert Stack.

I enjoyed Barry's cameo in the newly released "War of the Worlds" (Spielberg version).
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Mat Basterson
bndalton13 March 2003
If you like genre bending shows like "Cop Rock," musicals like "Guys and Dolls," your favorite character on Star Trek is Neelix, your favorite reality show is the Bachelor/Bachelloret, you think PeeWee Herman is a genius, or you wish Clint Eastwood would do more movies like Bridges of Madison County, you'll probably like this "Western." Everything Western fans love about Westerns is unintentionally mawked. The only thing missing is a sidekick/butler named Quesso dressed in a bunny suit riding a three legged donkey.
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Fancy Dan tames the old west
helpless_dancer30 January 2001
Hollywood's version of the old west comes alive in this portrayal of a nattily dressed dude with a cool cane who bops thugs over the head instead of giving them a lead enema. Would be a very non-violent, politically correct law and order serial if done today. From what I have read of the real Bat Masterson, one could smell him coming from a quarter mile off and he was regularly drunk as Cooter Brown. I suppose this bilge gave the ladies another handsome actor to swoon over every thursday night while the hubby sat in his easy chair ignoring her except when requesting another brew. Gimme Roy Rogers or Lash LaRue any day over this dandified sissy. And that song! ...a man of steel the stories saaayyyy, and ladies eyes all glanced his waaayyy, the man who had the fastest guuunnn, they called him Baaattt, Bat Masterson! Drivel, absolute, vomitous drivel!
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