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Roger Lawrence Ewing (born January 12, 1942) [1] is an American film and television actor. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] He is perhaps best known for playing Thad Greenwood in the American western television series Gunsmoke .
Character Actress / Actor Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20; Howie (hotel clerk) Howard Culver: Recurring: Recurring: Mr. Jonas Dabbs Greer ...
[8]: 413–414 He replaced deputy marshal Clayton Thaddeus Greenwood, played by Roger Ewing, after Ewing left the show. [8] The character came to Dodge City as a gunsmith, and later became a deputy marshal. He reprised his role in the 1987 television movie Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge, [9] where he played the city's marshal.
Chester and Festus Haggen are Dillon's sidekicks, though others became acting deputies for 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 - to 7 + 1 ⁄ 2-year stints: Quint Asper (Burt Reynolds) (1962–65), Thad Greenwood (Roger Ewing) (1965–67), and Newly O'Brien (Buck Taylor) (1967–75), who served as both back-up deputy and doctor-in-training, having some studies in ...
Blake McIver Ewing/ Waldo No, that isn't Macaulay Culkin -- that's Blake McIver Ewing, who played the snooty anti-hero Waldo. The musically talented youngster created quite the love triangle as he ...
Stone's brother, Joe, was a writer who was the author of scripts for three episodes of Gunsmoke. [5]Stone was a cousin of the character actress Madge Blake. [6]In March 1971, [7] Stone had heart bypass surgery at UAB Hospital in Birmingham, Alabama.
In 1966, Quinn played the female lead as "Cora Ellis", a Quaker who falls in love with Thad (Roger Ewing) in “Quaker Girl” (S12E12) on the TV Western Gunsmoke (credited as Ariane Quinn). Quinn played the title role of Alice Brock in the 1969 film Alice's Restaurant, [2] which the real Alice Brock disowned after its release.
Born in Honolulu, [4] Ewing acted in plays at Punahou School and Honolulu Community Theater, in her teenage years. [5] She is the daughter of William H. Ewing (who was a newspaper editorial consultant), and Marjorie A. Ewing. [6] She worked at a newspaper during the summers of her high-school years, [5] and attended Sarah Lawrence College. [7]