"The Big Valley" Night in a Small Town (TV Episode 1967) Poster

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7/10
James Whitmore is good as the iron-fist Marshall.
kfo949423 November 2011
In this episode Heath, Audra and Ms Barley are traveling by stage-coach to Arizona. On the way they pick up a saloon type woman-of-the-night that is being forced out of a community by local women.

Anyway for the night they pull into a town that is run by Marshall Tom Wills (James Whitmore) who happens to be an old friend of Heath. The problem is that he runs the town with an iron fist. It is his way or the highway. And he wants no loose women in his town. And makes it clear she is not welcomed.

As the story goes on we find that Marshall Wills is not mentally fit to be a law-man. By his actions we find out that he cares not for people in his town and only wants to rule by force. It goes from bad to worse when he tries to force himself on the saloon woman.

So it comes down to Heath trying to rid the town of his disturbed old friend.

There is some good acting in this episode. Susan Strasberg that plays Sally, the loose women, does a good job of making us feel for her situation. And James Whitmore is great as the Marshall Wills. He starts off as a good character and slowly changes into the villain step-by-step until even the viewer knows he must go.

Good episode to watch.
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7/10
A mighty puritanical town
bkoganbing11 April 2015
On the way by stagecoach to Tucson for a horse auction the Barkleys are stopped by a town ladies citizen's committee similar to the one that ran Claire Trevor out of town in Stagecoach. The good women want to rid themselves of saloon girl Susan Strasberg and in her best red dress she leaves on the coach with Barbara Stanwyck, Lee Majors, and Linda Evans.

From the frying pan to the fire is the route for Strasberg who in the next town runs into James Whitmore an old gunfighter, friend of Lee Majors and now town marshal. He runs a mighty puritanical town and he's the only one carrying weapons.

As more and more of Whitmore is revealed that he's a bully with a badge is abundantly clear. The towns people are scared to death of him. But Whitmore has bigger issues than that and it's Strasberg who brings it all to a head.

A plot very much borrowed from W. Somerset Maugham's Rain moved out west Whitmore's Marshal/Reverend Davidson is truly a terrifying figure. He's the main reason to see this Big Valley story.
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4/10
Seems Like a Remake of Have Gun Will Travel episode of 5 years earlier
DetroitsD20 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I watched a 1962 Have Gun Will Travel Episode called "Marshal of Sweetwater" recently and was so surprised that this Big Valley 1967 Episode "Night in a Small town" had basically the same storyline from start to finish. Both had lawman but one was a Marshal (Have Gun) and one was a Sheriff (Big Valley). Even the lawman's name was the same "Tom" in both shows. The "come-on" scene between the lawman and the girl in one was the hotel room while the other was the front door to the saloon, but both had the Star of each of the shows (Palidin from Have Gun and Heath from Big Valley) who was the Friend of the lawman inside the door and heard the scene and then was discovered. The girl in both tried to pacify the lawman and prevent any killing but of course there was still the lawman and old friend confrontation with the friend eventually killing the Lawman. I looked at the writers and all seem different. This is very strange to me and hard to believe it would be a coincidence.
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Whitmore
riogarhed21 September 2017
Whitmore is always worth watching, as savvy an actor, as powerful a presence as you can get. On his ability to attain great stardom a writer in the early Sixties wrote that Whitmore did not pan out as "the next Spencer Tracy." No, but in that age of teen idols could Tracy himself have been the next Tracy? This episode of The Big Valley shows just how easily Whitmore could leave a lasting impression by mining the depth of a character's psychosis up to the very end, where he tops a grinning performance with a maniacal mug showing how nuts he really is and always was. It is not the kind o guy he played in his many brilliant performances over many years, yet aptly this is a Western, for this deeply intelligent, richly acute acting force of nature was the Wallace Stegner of actors.
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