Article research by Bob Vickers
..
| Roy Rogers…
King of
the Cowboys .. Roy Rogers earned the title King of the Cowboys for his enormous popularity in films, on television and radio, and in personal appearances. But before starring in his first film, Rogers earned his eventual place in the Country Music Hall of Fame by founding the Sons of the Pioneers. Leonard Slye (Rogers’s given name) was raised on a farm in Duck Run, Ohio. In June 1930 the Slye family visited one of Roy’s sisters in California. The lure of warm weather and the hope of better job prospects led Rogers and his family to move to Los Angeles. Still, the Depression made jobs hard to find. Rogers drove a gravel truck and then worked as a fruit picker in the same central California farm camps John Steinbeck wrote about in The Grapes of Wrath. |
m |
|
Rogers had grown up playing mandolin
and calling square dances. When his sister encouraged him to appear on
a local radio program that featured amateurs, he reluctantly gave it a
try. A few days later he was asked to join a country music band called
the Rocky Mountaineers, as a singer and guitarist. Before long he convinced
them to add another vocalist so they could harmonize together. Bob Nolan
was hired, and when he left the group, Tim Spencer replaced him. Over the
course of the next two years, Rogers sang with a variety of country music
groups, each of which was less successful than the one before. Finally,
late in the summer of 1933, he decided to give it one more try by forming
a group consisting of himself, Bob Nolan, and Tim Spencer. The Pioneer
Trio, as they originally called themselves, worked on their harmonies while
Nolan and Spencer began writing the songs that would become the heart of
their repertoire.
| .. | Los Angeles radio station KFWB hired
the group and a few months later gave them their own program. The Pioneers’
unique harmony and their fine original songs—such as “Cool Water” and “Tumbling
Tumbleweeds”—led to a series of radio transcriptions, a Decca record contact,
and film appearances in westerns, including two with Gene Autry. In October
1937 Rogers heard that Republic Pictures was auditioning for a new singing
cowboy. Although he didn't have an appointment, he managed to get into
the studio and gain an audition. His screen test led to a contact and a
change of name to Roy Rogers.
When Gene Autry walked out on his contract, Rogers was given the starring role in Under Western Stars, which had been scheduled to be Autry’s next film. The tremendous success of Rogers first film |
By 1943 Rogers was the top western star at the box office. He retained this rank until he made the transition into television early in the 1950s. He also maintained a heavy schedule of personal appearances, most of them featuring his beloved horse, Trigger, who received near-equal billing.
In 1944 Dale Evans was cast as Rogers’s
leading lady in The Cowboy and the Señorita. The chemistry between
them was apparent both to audiences and to the studio. Over the next five
years Evans was featured in Rogers’s next nineteen films. A little more
than a year after the death of his first wife, Rogers and Evans married,
on New Year’s Eve 1947. A few years later the couple began their NBC network
television series, which quickly became a favorite with Sunday night family
viewers.
| Roy Rogers's success in films, radio,
television, on records, and in personal appearances was offset by a long
series of tragedies. His first wife, Arlene, the mother of his first three
children, died a week after the birth of their third child, Roy Jr., in
1946. Robin, the only child born to Rodgers and Evans, suffered from Down's
syndrome and died shortly before her second birthday in 1952. Rodgers and
Evans eventually adopted four children from different ethnic and social
backgrounds, only to lose two of them tragically. Debbie, an orphan they
adopted from Korea, died in a church bus accident. Their son Sandy, who
had suffered some brain damage due to physical abuse before being adopted
by Rodgers and Evans, died while serving in the army.
Each of these losses took a tremendous toll on Rogers and Evans, but the couple’s religious faith sustained them. Their positive outlook as they confronted life’s challenges only added to the public's regard for them. Roy Rogers was the only person to be elected twice to the Country Music Halll of Fame: first in 1980 as a member of the original Sons of the Pioneers, |
... |
|
| m | Rogers was a hero to audiences
who saw him in films, at rodeos or state fairs, in television appearances,
or at visits to his museum in Victorville, California. To fans throughout
the world, the King of the Cowboys was one of the most beloved of Americans.
Rogers died on July 6, 1998, sixty years after making his first motion
picture.
—Laurence Zwisohn * Roy Rogers - b. Leonard Franklin Slye, Cincinnati, Ohio, November 5, 1911; d. July 6, 1998. * Elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame 1988 (elected 1980 as member of the Original Sons of the Pioneers) * Adapted from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum’s Encyclopedia of Country Music, published by Oxford University Press. Story researched by Bob Vickers |