The Boy from Oklahoma

The Boy from Oklahoma is a 1954 American western film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Will Rogers Jr., Nancy Olson and Anthony Caruso. It was produced and distributed by the major studio Warner Bros.

Cast

 * Will Rogers Jr. as Sheriff Tom Brewster
 * Nancy Olson as Katie Brannigan
 * Lon Chaney Jr. as Crazy Charlie
 * Anthony Caruso as Mayor Barney Turlock
 * Wallace Ford as Postmaster Wally Higgins
 * Clem Bevans as Pop Pruty, Justice of the Peace
 * Merv Griffin as Steve
 * Louis Jean Heydt as Paul Evans
 * Sheb Wooley as Pete Martin
 * Slim Pickens as Shorty
 * James Griffith as Joe Downey
 * Tyler MacDuff as Billy the Kid
 * Harry Lauter as Jim (uncredited)

Background
The film became the basis for the 1957 Warner Bros. television series Sugarfoot, in which Will Hutchins replaced Rogers as lead character Tom Brewster. The movie features Lon Chaney Jr. and includes one of future TV talk show host Merv Griffin's few theatrical film roles. In the movie version, Rogers as Brewster substitutes facility with a twirling rope, similar to Will Rogers, Sr.'s, for the usual unerring speed and accuracy with firearms typically found in cinematic cowboy heroes.

Three of the original cast members from the movie, Louis Jean Heydt, Sheb Wooley, and Slim Pickens, were transplanted directly into the subsequent TV show's pilot, "Brannigan's Boots", playing their roles from the movie; the first episode of Sugarfoot follows the film's script fairly faithfully. Dennis Hopper succeeded Tyler MacDuff as Billy the Kid in the television version, Merry Anders took over the part of Katie Brannigan from Nancy Olson, and Chubby Johnson replaced Wallace Ford as Wally Higgins for the small screen.

This was the last film made by Curtiz as a contract director at Warner Bros. He had worked exclusively at the studio since 1926.

Reception
Reviewing the DVD release in 2013, Gene Triplett of The Oklahoman called the film an "amiable oater" with a plot that "may sound like potential corn on the cob to some" but turns out to be "unexpectedly well-crafted entertainment".