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On November 9, 1960, she was cast as the lead guest star in "The Cathy Eckhart Story" on Wagon Train, with husband-and-wife actors John Larch and Vivi Janiss as Ben and Sarah Harness. Oliver was cast in the 1960 episode of The Deputy as the long-lost daughter of star Henry Fonda 's late girl friend, and appeared in Dick Powell's Zane Grey ...
Wagon Train is an American Western television series that aired for ... "The Maggie Hamilton Story" (1960), "The Cathy Eckhart Story" (1960) and "The Lily Legend ...
On November 9, 1960, Larch and Janiss appeared as Ben and Sarah Harness in the episode "The Cathy Eckhart Story" of Wagon Train, with Susan Oliver in the starring role. Later, on December 19, 1968, the couple appeared again together in the 10th episode "Yesterday Died and Tomorrow Won't Be Born" of Jack Lord 's CBS crime drama Hawaii Five-O .
(L-R) Robert Horton and Ward Bond 1962 cast. Top: John McIntire, Terry Wilson. Bottom: Scott Miller, Frank McGrath. Robert Fuller Wagon Train is an American Western television series that was produced by Revue Studios. The series was inspired by the 1950 John Ford film Wagon Master. It ran for eight seasons, with the first episode airing in the United States on September 18, 1957 (1957-09-18 ...
'The Girl on the Train' departs from the narrative tracks laid down by the original in countless, mostly subtle, ways.
Wagon Train as Whitey (1960) in "The Cathy Eckhart Story" The Rifleman as Bruce (1960) in "Six Years and a Day" Bat Masterson as Jeremy French (1960) and in a recurring role as Wyatt Earp (1959-1961) Rawhide (1961) as Owens in S2:E8, "Incident of the Haunted Hills" Rawhide (1962) as Frank Louden in S5:E6, "Incident of the Four Horsemen"
The department then funds grant programs to train workers to fill those holes. Once those programs are in place, the department evaluates their effectiveness using administrative data gathered by ...
John Larch was born Harold Aronin [1] to Jewish parents in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1914. [2] Nicknamed "Harry" in childhood, Larch was the younger of two children of Mitchell Aronin and Rose (née Larch) Aronin, both of whom immigrated to the United States from Russian-occupied areas of Poland prior to 1908.