"The Virginian" The Accomplice (TV Episode 1962) Poster

(TV Series)

(1962)

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8/10
Classic Stars bring class to classic TV.
mark.waltz18 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I got interested in Wagon Train with an episode that game Judith Anderson appeared on. Joan Crawford took me to Route 66. I found Barbara Stanwyck simply Untouchable. When the veteran movie and stage actors provide critical interest by appearing on TV, it gives that series a boost, not only in the ratings but as works of art as well. In the case of Betty Davis, I have seen her on several anthology series and of course her 80 something movies. I probably had not seen "The Virginian" in years, so finding her in an episode while exploring her television career brought me back to a series I distinctly remember watching in reruns as a child.

When the stars I mention appear on an established series, they are most likely playing a person of mystery, suddenly thrust into the midst of the regular characters, and briefly providing them with some drama and a touch of class as they show the mostly younger actors a thing or two about their craft. Davis plays the witness to a bank robbery where the manager was killed and falsely identifies Doug McClure as the robber. But with pal Gary Clarke how to find the truth, knowing for certain that McClure is innocent, Davis has to make her move especially when she recognizes the eyes and a scar of the real culprit and blackmails them for $10,000 with a promise of perjuring herself.

Coming out the same year as "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane", this was one of Davis's continued efforts as a working mother to remain in front of the camera. Her performance is subtle and only has a select bit of Davis's clicky speech pattern. She is dignified and subtle, but planning a con that the audience somehow knows she won't get away with. Yet there is plenty of sympathy for her even though it's lies she tells digs her in deeper. The script is good, and even if Davis had not been cast with the part going to a less well-known actress, it still would have been a good one.
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7/10
For a little perjury
bkoganbing14 August 2017
Bette Davis guest stars in this Virginian episode as a spinster lady who is a teller at a bank. Outwardly content she seethes with bitterness. So much so that she's willing to risk a little perjury for a life of ease and comfort.

All she has to do is swear that Doug McClure was the second man in a bank robbery where the bank robber shot and killed the president of the bank. McClure has already been arrested on the say so of the man who swears Trampas was his partner in crime.

In the meantime the real second man Lin McCarthy is in town under the guise of a newspaper reporter. The highlight of the episode is his confrontation with Davis. Both are really cool customers and Davis tells the story of her bitter life. She almost gains your sympathy.

Good thing McClure has James Drury around to put things together for him.

For Bette Davis fans a must.
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what's to like, except one thing...
CaptWinkie24 October 2023
Starts out with Trampas getting arrested on his birthday while eating cake in the bunkhouse with Betsy and the crew. Everyone knows he is reckless but innocent, the trick is getting it proved. The weight of the law, good friends, good lawyers and straight sheriffs trying to find the truth were brought to bear in this first great legal trial and - what will be typical of most hereafter - their verdict was incorrect and profound.

On eyewitness testimonies and no evidence, Trampas is set to go behind bars for twenty years and the Virginian helpless to do anything about it. The little miscarriage of justice thing would have perhaps been satisfied during appeal but i doubt it. Our fair-haired cowboy was only saved by an unlikely confession, which is also a recurring theme where courtroom trials are involved--it's aggravating and stupid imo because other trials that we don't see are vindicating other innocents or vice versa. If they just wanted to make a point with this show, that would make sense, but it keeps happening all through the series.

"Smile when you say that" is a common phrase in instances when one is speaking truth but it cannot be revealed as such, it has to look like a joke. When the Virginian spoke to Miss Miller and told her he would follow her around, he wasn't kidding and he wasn't going to use his own money to do it. If it also references the book, that's great.

The part Bette Davis played was well written enough that any of a number of guest stars would have done justice to the part; in fact, Bette may have been a little too old since her character lost her mother "as a young girl" and she took care of her father "for twelve years". It was just super cool that she even showed up on tv because movie stars didn't do that at the time. When the Virginian opened her robe to reveal the dress underneath, i was shocked because it was Bette Davis that he was exposing that way--had any of a number of other guest stars played the part, it wouldn't have had the same effect maybe. Same thing when Trampas claps a hand on her mouth!

The best thing, the only thing, the singular mission of this show isn't law or satisfying censors or the great guest stars- it's the relationship between Trampas and the Virginian. It's early in the series but it would have played the same way at the end: "(blank) is Guilty, Trampas is just Stupid!" -solid Virginian and probably cross-stitched on a pillow somewhere. But did you see his face when he walked into his hotel room and there was Trampas? Did you see Trampas' face when the Virginian offered his horse? It's the thing they developed in the first season that turned into real life for them. On the series, as it progressed, they couldn't spend more or less equal time on the same show due to production schedules, so they alternated taking the lead while the other at times leant support. McClure also made movies at Universal for the first several years he was doing the Virginian, so he didn't lead as often either. Echo of Another Day, Riff-Raff and Impasse would be more first season episodes to see.
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