Hero Complex

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Category: The Lone Ranger

Who was that Masked Man? John Hart, the 'other' Lone Ranger, dead at 91

September 28, 2009 | 12:36 pm

Dennis McLellan writes obituaries for the Los Angeles Times, and last week he had one on an actor with an interesting legacy in television: John Hart wore the familiar mask of the Lone Ranger and rode across the small screen with Jay Silverheels (Tonto) for 54 episodes, but will always be remembered as the other Masked Man. Here's an excerpt. -- Geoff Boucher

John Horn as the Lone Ranger

Most TV fans of a certain age know the answer to the question, "Who played the Lone Ranger?"

Those who say Clayton Moore are correct, at least partially.

There was another actor who played the Masked Man on "The Lone Ranger" television series, temporarily replacing Moore in the title role for 52 episodes beginning in 1952.

John Hart, 91, the handsome and athletic actor who also starred in the 1940s movie serial "Jack Armstrong: The All-American Boy" and the 1950s TV series "Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans," died Sunday at his home in Rosarito Beach, Mexico, said his wife, Beryl.

"He had dementia in his last years," she said Tuesday, "but he was very happy living by the ocean. He used to surf this whole coast in the late '30s and after the war."

A Los Angeles native who launched his Hollywood career as a bit player in Cecil B. DeMille's 1938 film "The Buccaneer," Hart played small roles in a string of films before he was drafted into the Army in 1941.

Relaunching his career after the war, he played the title role in the 1947 Columbia serial "Jack Armstrong: The All-American Boy," which was based on the popular radio show.

Hart already had appeared in a couple of episodes of "The Lone Ranger" as a guest actor when Moore left the series, reportedly over a pay dispute.

"I don't know how many other actors they looked at, but I got the part," Hart said in an interview for the book "The Story of the Lone Ranger" by James Van Hise. "They didn't pay me much, either. It was unbelievable. But being an out-of-work actor, to have a steady job for a while is great."

THERE'S MORE; READ THE REST.

-- Dennis McLellan

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Top photo: John Hart and Jay Silverheels in "The Lone Ranger," from the Boyd Magers collection.

Bottom photo: Johnny Depp. Credit: Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times


Life after 'Harry Potter': What will Hollywood do when the magic is gone?

May 25, 2009 |  9:09 am

The "Harry Potter" juggernaut is starting to wind down. As the franchise moves closer to its finish line, Hollywood executives are scrambling to find the Next Big Thing — a multiple movie property that appeals to youngsters, has an epic sweep and fantastic landscapes that suit modern CGI filmmaking. It also needs to lend itself to those all-important licensing deals. Rachel Abramowitz, who writes about the film industry for the Los Angeles Times (and authored the book "Is That a Gun in Your Pocket: The Truth About Female Power in Hollywood"), has some intriguing insights into the quest to replace the boy wizard of the box office.

Tintin Secret of the Unicorn It was a seminar that top executives at Sony and Paramount couldn't afford to miss. Forty-six of them — including Sony Pictures Chairman Michael Lynton, co-Chairman Amy Pascal, Paramount Film Group President John Lesher and marketing teams from around the globe — crowded around a table recently in one of Sony's conference rooms.

The reason: to hear a presentation on Tintin, the 80-year-old comic strip series by Belgian artist Hergé about a boy reporter and his loyal dog, Snowy. Sony and Paramount are jointly producing "The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn," a 3-D film directed by Steven Spielberg and produced by "Lord of the Rings" director Peter Jackson. The $200-million production is set to be one of the big event movies of 2011 and the first in a planned trilogy.

The Lone Ranger Despite the pedigree of the filmmakers, "Tintin" presents a difficult challenge for both studios: The comic is widely popular abroad but is largely unknown in the U.S.

So during the meeting in Culver City, the studio executives were given a backgrounder by two representatives of the Hergé estate, who touched upon everything Tintin, including the comic strip's history and its cultural significance. At the same time, the executives debated how to prime the U.S. market for "Tintin" and discussed possible release dates.

Sony and Paramount aren't the only Hollywood movie studios that are studying childhood classics and plotting strategy. Others are working on "Yogi Bear," "The Smurfs," "The Lone Ranger" (with Johnny Depp as Tonto) and a live-action adaptation by director M. Night Shyamalan of Nickelodeon's animated series "Avatar: The Last Airbender."

Percy Jackson Lightning Thief Big-screen versions of popular children's books are also being readied, including last century's classic "The Hobbit" by J.R.R. Tolkien and current favorites such as "Goosebumps" by R.L. Stine and Rick Riordan's "Percy Jackson and the Olympians."

The studios want to be ready when a gaping hole opens in the family movie market: In 2011, "Harry Potter," the second-highest-grossing movie franchise in history, will end with its eighth installment, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II." ...

READ THE REST

— Geoff Boucher

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Johnny Depp photo from December 2007. Credit: Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times.

UPDATE: I changed the Tintin book image because the previous image was one we used too often, as a reader pointed out.


Who will Johnny Depp call Kemo Sabe?

September 25, 2008 | 12:11 pm

Johnny Depp

Johnny Depp will play Tonto in a Disney revisitation of the Lone Ranger, but who will be the masked man?

The Hero Complex is officially supporting Viggo Mortensen for the role of mystery man of the Old West because, after seeing "Hidalgo" and the trailer for "Appaloosa," we just think he does the dusty-trail adventure thing with a nice flair.

George Clooney would also give Disney a powerhouse tandem at the top of this hoped-for franchise, as well as some major opportunity for the type of winking humor that gave "Pirates of the Caribbean" its box-office flair. Clooney may be too old, but we still think he has enough silver bullets in his ammo belt. Depp, meanwhile, may be just five years shy of 50 but still approaches his acting career like a kid rummaging through a trunk of dress-up costumes. Not only will the part-Cherokee Depp be wearing the fringed buckskin, he will also be donning the garb of a pirate, a vampire, a gangster and, um, a guy with a funny hat.

The Oscar nominee has a busy schedule, to say the least. On Wednesday at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, Disney gathered the press for a preview of its Lone_2 upcoming major releases and announced that Depp will be back in eyeliner as Jack Sparrow, the rummy scoundrel of "Pirates of the Caribbean," which will have a fourth installment with Jerry Bruckheimer back as producer. The franchise has already pulled in $2.6 billion at the box office. (Bruckheimer will also produce the Lone Ranger movie.)

Other Depp projects coming include a turn as the Mad Hatter in a Tim Burton adaptation of "Alice in Wonderland," which will be a 2010 animated release with a motion-capture approach in the same vein as "Beowulf." It will be Depp's seventh major project with Burton -- and No. 8 will be "Dark Shadows," yet another black-cape affair for the movie-making partnership, this one a remake of the baroque soap opera from the late 1960s and early 1970s about an accursed family in Maine that, we suspect, had a lasting effect on a local youngster named Stephen King.

Depp will also be robbing banks as the gentlemen bandit John Dillinger in Michael Mann's period gangster flick "Public Enemies," due in theaters next year. That film also stars Christian Bale.

-- Geoff Boucher

Johnny Depp photo from December 2007 by Liz O. Baylen/Los Angeles Times

Clayton Moore as the Lone Ranger and Jay Silverheels as Tonto, from the Los Angeles Times archives.



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