Stage to Tucson (1951)

Stage to Tucson (1950) posterRod Cameron is Grif Holbrook. He helped create the Butterfield stage line connecting St. Louis to California, now he’s being called upon to save it.

Seems someone has been stealing Butterfield stages and smuggling them back East to Atlanta. The trouble is occurring in the area between Apache Pass and Tucson.

The owners of the stageline think it’s an attempt to break down the Union’s lines of communication, with the Civil War about to be declared.

Holbrook arrives in Tucson with the job of finding out who’s behind the mischief. He forms an uneasy alliance with co-worker Barney Broderick (Wayne Morris) — uneasy because both have their eyes on a pretty young bookkeeper named Kay Buckley (Kate Crocker).

They soon discover the bandits stealing stages are using an armored stagecoach to do so, and they almost immediately suspect Jim Maroon, owner of a competing freight line.

But he can’t be stealing stages on his own, and suspecting him is different from proving he’s the guilty party.

Review:

A film that benefits greatly from the love triangle between the charactes played by Cameron, Morris and Buckley. Cameron and Morris bristle every time the topic comes up.

And one of the film’s highlights is the fight that follows their first meeting. Morris, you see, has caught Cameron kissing his girl; Buckley desperately tries to stop the brawl that follows.

Eventually, a fourth party enters the picture — saloon owner Annie Benson (Sally Eilers). She was once Holbrook’s girl, but she abandoned him with narry a word; he never got the note that explained why.

Ah, but there’s silliness too. Barney Broderick wears flowers in his cowboy hat, and they help tip off Holbrook to his whereabouts at a key point in the film. And a henchman named Gus just knows Maroon’s escape is going to go badly because he’s driving a wagon without Billy, his pet dog, by his side. Maroon shot the dog when it attacked him.

Neither of our female leads were household names for Western fans. Buckley made just seven films; Eilers had been acting since 1929. She was married four times, including to Western star Hoot Gibson and producer Harry Joe Brown in his pre-Randolph Scott Western production days.

Rod Cameron as Grif Holbrook in Stage to Tucson (1950)Directed by:
Ralph Murphy

Cast:
Rod Cameron … Grif Holbrook
Wayne Morris … Barney Broderick
Kay Buckley … Kate Crocker
Sally Eilers … Annie Benson
Carl Benton Reid … Dr. Banteen
Roy Roberts … Jim Maroon
John Pickard … Sam Granger
Reed Howes … Eddie
James Kirkwood … Sheriff Pete Deuce
James Griffith … Abraham Lincoln
Douglas Fowley … Ira Prentiss
Harry Bellaver … Gus Heyden

Runtime: 81 min.

Memorable lines:

Griff Holbrook: “I’ve seen all the wagons and dust, fightin and floods — to say nothing of Apache — that I ever want to see. I’m quitting whiile I’m still ahead.”
John Butterfield: “Man, you’ve got more good years ahead of you.”
Holbrook: “And I’m saving them for Griff Holbrook. I’m going to California, buy a ranch and sit in the sun for the rest of my life. I might even get a red-headed wife if I’m lucky.”

Kate Crocker, after Holbrook tries, but doesn’t have the heart to fire Kate and offers her a book-keeping job in Tucson instead. “I sure do appreciate Mr. Butterfield giving me this job. I just hope he won’t be too surprised when he finds out you hired me. ”
Holbrook, after Kate kisses him on the cheek: “Now there’s my idea of a spunky woman.”

Sally Eilers as Annie Benson, Rob Cameron as Grif Holbrook, Wayne Morris as Barney Broderick and Kay Buckley as Kate Crocker in Stage to Tucson (1950)Kate Crocker, trying to break up a fight between Griff Holbrook and Barney Broderick that started when Barney saw Griff kissing Kate: “Kill each other over a silly thing like a woman!”

Grif Holbrook: “I was born with one foot in the north and one foot in the south. That don’t mean I can’t tell a rattlesnake, whichever side he’s on.”

Grif Holbrook: “Barney my boy, I’ve got some news for you. Two years from today, I’m marrying Kate Crocker.”
Barney Broderick: “Did you say marrying? Or adopting?”

Townsman: “I’m not doing any more drilling til my wife decides what side I’m on.”

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