Hi-Yo, Silver! Away!
The story of how the Smithsonian came by its mask rivals in interest the way the Lone Ranger got his
- By David H. Shayt
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2001, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
One who fit the bill was Harold J. Smith, then 30, who had appeared in small roles in Singing Spurs, Yellow Sky and, most notably, Key Largo. Smith was a full-blooded Mohawk from the Six Nations Reservation near Brantford, Ontario. An accomplished boxer and lacrosse player, he had picked up the moniker Silverheels Smith in Canada and later changed his name to Jay Silverheels.
As TV’s Tonto, Silverheels dropped the eagle feather from behind his head but retained the leather headband that, with his buckskin shirt, came to define his costume. What defined his role was a strength and self-reliance that shone through the stilted, broken English of Tonto’s lines.
Moore and Silverheels were inseparable during the show’s eight-year televised run, except during the 1952-1953 season, when Silverheels rode with John Hart while Moore and the network hammered out differences (the details of which remain unclear).
The first televised episode of The Lone Ranger aired on ABC on September 15, 1949. Although set in the Southwest, much of the show was shot at Iverson’s Ranch, in Chatsworth, California, about 15 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Indoor scenes typically used the old Hal Roach Studios in Culver City.
At one point early on, the Lone Ranger’s mask covered most of Moore’s face. Gradually, it shrank to cover only his eyes, and metamorphosed from loose cloth to felt-covered fitted fiberglass that gave Moore better vision. For close-ups, cameramen used a special magenta light, called a hinky dink, to highlight the actor’s eyes that were otherwise hidden in the depths of his mask.
By the time the final episode aired June 6, 1957, The Lone Ranger, one of the first westerns to gallop across the nation’s airways, was competing with Maverick, Cheyenne and Gunsmoke, with many more to follow.
After founding a school for Native American actors a few years after the show’s demise, Jay Silverheels died in 1980 at the Motion Picture and Television Home in Woodland Hills, California. He was 60.
Clayton Moore had continued on as the Lone Ranger, starring in two films and making personal appearances in costume, often on horseback. Still in character, he hawked everything from rental cars to pizza in self-mocking TV commercials.
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Comments (2)
Harvard awarded me a distinquished humanitarian award for my "Lone Ranger approach to repaying my debt to society". That means I like to help people and do it annonymously.It would be fun to have others adopt the Lone Ranger creed, help people, then leave before they know who did it. Nice. I was privledged to meet Clayton Moore, whose life exemplified the Lone Ranger view. Thank You Clayton, George W. Trendle, and others who fostered the philosophy, and gave us (now 70 year olds) a hero to admire and to emulate.
Posted by Bill Niland on April 25,2012 | 08:08 PM
i loved the show,the people,i saw the first show and the last show,i was borned,sep,14,1949,i wish his famly the best ,jack was the best loving fan donnie moore
Posted by donald moore on August 7,2008 | 07:34 PM