"Gunsmoke" Milly (TV Episode 1961) Poster

(TV Series)

(1961)

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8/10
A woman's lot in the old west
AlsExGal25 September 2022
The episode opens with Milly and her brother wandering around Dodge hungry and in rags looking for their father. Literally, they are in filthy rags, as in their clothes could fall from their bodies at any minute! With Milly being seventeen this could become a completely indecent situation! Dad is a hopeless bum who converts into alcohol any money that he finds, yet says how he raises his kids are his business in a time when it really was that way.

Milly visits a girl she knew before she got married and realizes the girl was poor before, but because of marriage she is financially secure and no longer hungry. Thus Milly decides the only way to change her fate is to get married. She borrows a dress from her friend and visits three bachelors in search of a husband. The first is old and fat and he knows it. He figures she is playing a joke on him with her proposal and runs her off. The second is a confirmed woman hating bachelor and also runs her off. The third one is closer to her age - a moonshiner - and likes the idea of sex with the girl but not the idea of marriage ties. She manages to escape his attempted assault.

Milly is angry at these men. Her age is between that of a woman and a child, so she comes up with a rather pointless childish revenge for the very adult feeling of that of a woman scorned, although it seems she dodged three bullets from my perspective. She and her brother vandalize the property of the men who rejected her. The result yields more than she bargained for, but it also gives her and her brother a way out of their impoverished situation.

At the beginning I figured that one of the three men would turn out to be a diamond in the rough, that he and Milly would agree to a marriage of convenience that would evolve into love. Nope, there are very few traditional happy endings on Gunsmoke.
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7/10
A Pessimistic View of Humanity with Stellar Acting
wdavidreynolds20 July 2019
In a 20-year run, one can expect some odd episodes here and there, and this is definitely one of the more offbeat Gunsmoke episodes.

Jena Engstrom plays Milly Glover, a poor 17-year-old who lives near Dodge with her little brother Joey and their horrible father, Bart, who is a drunk and only sees his two children as nuisances. Milly is too proud to accept help from anyone, despite the fact she and Joey are starving.

After visiting her friend, Laura, who shared Milly's poor background until she married a man named Sam that provides a good home, nice clothes, furniture, and plenty of food, Milly decides her best course of action is to get married. The problem with her idea is that she only considers three of the worst scoundrels one could imagine as husband candidates.

From that foundation, this episode takes some unexpected twists and turns as it moves toward a somewhat inconclusive conclusion.

There are some things about this episode I find quite disturbing. For one, too many of the characters are sadistic monsters. Milly tends to ignore offers for help from the kind people she encounters--namely Miss Kitty, Matt, and her friend Laura. But she pursues hopeless relationships with some of the most ornery, sadistic, downright evil people she could ever hope to meet. Maybe her upbringing by her useless, monstrous father has made her resolved to that kind of life.

Another thing that bugs me is that Engstrom, who is a fine actress and handles the role here well, seems to be miscast. Many other characters refer to her as being ugly. Engstrom was an attractive young lady at that time. It is difficult to see her as many of the other characters in the episode describe her.

The view of marriage here is quite negative. Even Milly's friend Laura seems to have only married her husband for the things he can provide. Marriage in this story is only a matter of convenience. (This is a common thematic element in John Meston's stories.)

I think the most troubling aspect of this episode is John Meston's characters. There are just too many people who have virtually no redeeming qualities. We naturally want to root for Milly and Joey, but Milly repeatedly refuses people that could help in favor of uncaring, unfeeling scoundrels. One has to think Meston wrote this episode with an unusually pessimistic outlook on humanity. However, I also wonder if Meston was attempting to write Milly as more heroic than she actually comes across in the story. Maybe he just missed the mark?

There are some great performances here. Engstrom always stood out in any of the shows in which she appeared during this time. Billy Hughes as Joey is another actor that had a tendency to shine in the opportunities he was given. Malcolm Atterbury plays Bart Glover with the necessary level of drunken meanness. Sue Randall, perhaps best known as Miss Landers on Leave It to Beaver, makes a brief appearance here as Laura.

Don Dubbins as Ed Potts is a stark contrast in this episode to the character Orkey Cathcart he would play just a few episodes later in the season in the "Marry Me" episode. James Griffith as the extremely cruel Harry Tillman and Harry Swoger as mean ol' Sam Lawson are both memorable in any appearance they make.

Viewers of the episode must endure the dark, pessimistic view of humanity in order to treasure the excellent, individual performances. It is definitely a memorable story.
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8/10
Milly
OleJoe23 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I had a more positive impression of this story.

Milly seeks to improve the situation of herself and her brother by marrying an older man only to be rejected by two of the men she approached and attacked by the third. The unexpected rejection leads her to seek revenge on the men, leading to tragic results -- the two men who rejected her shoot one another blaming each other for the vandalism inflicted on their property by Milly, and the lustful attacker is killed by Milly's father, not because he tried attacking his daughter, but because he refuses to pay the father for Milly.

I had a problem with the ending, too, because it seemed cheap -- a widow who has no part in the story agrees to adopt Milly and her brother. Happy ending, I guess.

But, what I liked about the show were the performances of the guest cast, particularly Jena Engstrom as Milly. Jena Engstrom's acting career lasted four years and I have liked her in every show I have seen her in. She played a lot of characters like Milly -- young women dressed in rags with serious "Pa" issues, but the characters were never the same; it was like there was a back story she had worked out for her character.
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10/10
Jena Engstrom is Great Against Horrible Odds!
Johnny_West11 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Jena Engstrom's bright acting career was only from 1961 to 1964. She appeared on Gunsmoke twice. This was her first time, and she provided an outstanding performance as a young woman, Milly Glover, who deals with an endless amount of difficulties with a naive kindness that is amazing. She had a great ability to present herself as an innocent girl trying to do the right thing.

Milly has four horrible people in her neighborhood. The worst one is her vile alcoholic father, who tries to sell her to one of her abusive neighbors. Her father, Bart Glover, was played by William Atterbury, who was on Gunsmoke eight times. Atterbury usually played some third rate thug, background character, victim, or just an all-around loser character. In this episode, he gets a featured role as a lowlife father.

Atterbury visits neighbor Ed Potts, in order to sell him Milly as a wife. Potts was played by Don Dubbins, who had a knack for playing women-abusing brutes. He had previously tried to kidnap and rape Miss Kitty in the episode "Kitty's Injury," and got killed for his troubles. This time around Dubbins tells Milly's dad how little he thinks of Milly, and how she isn't worth much. To Atterbury's credit, he clubs Dubbins to death, and steals his moonshine whiskey jug.

The race to the bottom doesn't end there, as Milly tries to get hitched with two other local neighbors, who manage to be even more despicable and grotesque than Dubbins and Atterbury. Harry Swoger is one of her nasty nieghbors, and career nasty guy James Griffith is the other one. Both of them treat Milly like trash, and she gets even by provoking them into a gunfight with each other.

All the while, Milly and her brother are dressed in rags. Marshal Dillon and Miss Kitty see them a couple of times in Dodge, and do nothing to help them. Miss Kitty could put the poor girl and her brother into new clothes for a couple of dollars, but she does nothing. Dillon offers them lunch, but does not insist that they have to leave town with a full meal. Both of them are very disappointing in how they do absolutely nothing but stand by as Milly and her brother are clearly heading towards death.

There is no ending or resolution to anything. Milly tells Dillon that she has a confession to make. Will Milly end up in jail, or an orphanage? Nothing is resolved. Neither Dillon or Miss Kitty step in with their resources to make life any better for Milly. Of course, Milly and her brother are never seen again in any future Gunsmoke episodes, so the mystery will live forever.
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5/10
The episode left more questions than it answered
kfo949414 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In this episode we are introduced to a seventeen year old girl Milly Glover and her nine year old brother Joey Glover. The problem with the two is they only have a father who happens to be a cad. All he does is drink and has no time nor money for the two children. In fact the two are starving because their father will not bring back any food to their shack.

Milly has a friend that use to be in the same boat until she got married. So Milly dresses up in her best dress and goes to single farmers in the area asking if they will marry her and take her brother. But she is met with an assortment of rejection. Since all the men were much older than Millie, she comes into violence and even into possible sexual abuse.

Then for some reason the story kind of goes off key and centers on the father of the two kids. The father ends up killing someone and while in jail will not even visit with his kids.

The ending of the episode leaves more questions than it answered. By the time the credit roll I, as a viewer, felt some what cheated. After following the children from the beginning of the program we were no better off about their future at the end of the show.

Wish they had done a better ending.
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