Answers.com

Roy Rogers

 
Who2 Biography: Roy Rogers, Actor / Country Singer
 
Roy Rogers
View Poster

  • Born: 5 November 1911
  • Birthplace: Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Died: 6 July 1998 (heart failure)
  • Best Known As: Star of TV's Roy Rogers Show

Name at birth: Leonard Slye

Roy Rogers was called the "King of the Cowboys" during his long career as a folksy singing hero of movies and TV. He was an original member of the cowboy singing group The Sons of the Pioneers, and in 1937 he signed on with Republic Pictures, replacing their departing star Gene Autry. He starred in more than 80 westerns with titles like The Arizona Kid (1939) and In Old Cheyenne (1941). He often co-starred with cowgirl Dale Evans, whom he married in 1947. Rogers's famous horse was Trigger, a Palomino stallion with flowing white mane who became a favorite with Rogers's fans. In the 1950s Rogers moved into TV with the The Roy Rogers Show. His theme song with Dale Evans was the gentle and cheery "Happy Trails to You."

Rogers was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame twice, as an individual in 1988 and with the Sons of the Pioneers in 1980... His is no relation to the blues guitarist Roy Rogers... It's true: after Trigger's death, the horse was mounted and put on display at the Roy Rogers Museum in Victorville, California. The museum (and Trigger) moved to Branson, Missouri in 2003... Rogers lent his name to the Marriott Corporation for the successful Roy Rogers chain of fast food restaurants; the first outlet opened in 1968.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Artist: Roy Rogers
Top
  • Born: November 05, 1911, Cincinnati, OH
  • Died: July 06, 1998
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Happy Trails: The Roy Rogers Collection 1937-1990," "Country Music Hall of Fame Series," "Roy Rogers & the Sons of The Pioneers"
  • Representative Songs: "Don't Fence Me In," "Happy Trails," "Yellow Rose of Texas"

Biography

When Cincinnati-born Leonard Franklin Slye headed west in the spring of 1931, it was as a would-be musician, working jobs ranging from driving a gravel truck to picking fruit in California's Central Valley. In less than two years, he'd co-founded the greatest Western singing group of all time, the Sons of the Pioneers, and barely four years after that, he'd started a career as a movie star under the new name Roy Rogers. Ultimately he found great fame as a movie and TV cowboy and even founded a very successful chain of restaurants.

He was born in Cincinnati, OH, the son of Andrew and Mattie Womack Slye. The entire household was musical, and by the time he was a teenager, Len could play the guitar and the mandolin. Although he later took on the role of a cowboy before the public, the closest he got to riding the range was working the family farm they had in a small town outside of Cincinnati. By age 19, he'd headed out to California, where chance led him to enter an amateur singing contest on the radio, resulting in an offer to join the Rocky Mountaineers. There he made the acquaintance of Bob Nolan. They developed a harmonious friendship that worked well within the group for several months, until Nolan exited in frustration over their lack of success. His replacement was Tim Spencer, and eventually Slye, Spencer, and another singer named Slumber Nichols quit the Rocky Mountaineers in the spring of 1932 to form a trio of their own, which never quite came off. Slye decided to push on, joining Jack LeFevre & His Texas Outlaws.

In early 1933, he got Spencer and Nolan together to form what was then known as the Pioneer Trio. Their mix of singing and yodeling, coupled with their good spirits, won them a job on radio. Within a few weeks, they were developing a large following of their own on LeFevre's show, with their harmony singing eliciting lots of mail. A fourth member, fiddle player Hugh Farr, was added to firm up their sound early in 1934. The group's name was altered by accident -- on one broadcast the station's announcer introduced them as "The Sons of the Pioneers." The group sold large numbers of records from the very beginning, with the classic Nolan original "Tumbling Tumbleweeds" cut at their very first session. Two more new members, Lloyd Perryman and Hugh Farr's guitarist brother Karl, were added, and by the mid-'30s the sextet was one of the top-selling country acts, performing to sell-out audiences and sought by radio stations and sponsors eager to back them on the air.

During this period, Slye did occasional work as a movie extra and bit player in B-Westerns under the name Dick Weston at Republic Pictures, where the reigning king of Western movies was another singer, Gene Autry, whose records outsold even the Pioneers'. In 1938, Autry entered into a contractual dispute with Republic that resulted in his failure to report for his next movie. Republic, anticipating the dispute, had put out the word -- apparently more as a ploy than a real attempt at replacing their top male star -- that they were looking for a new leading actor for their Westerns. Slye tried sneaking onto the lot with a group of extras and was caught, but a sympathetic director permitted him to take a screen test. He tested extremely well and got the part. At the time, the Pioneers had just signed a contract with Columbia Pictures to appear in and play musical support to Charles Starrett in a series of B-Westerns, and he was forced to leave the group in order to sign his own contract at Republic.

A new name was required and "Roy Rogers" was selected, the "Rogers" coming from Will Rogers and "Roy" coming off of a list. He made his debut in Under Western Stars; not only did it introduce Rogers as a new star, but also his horse, Trigger. A long-term contract followed, and for the next 13 years, he was one of the studio's mainstays, rivaling and later surpassing Autry at the box office. By 1940, Rogers was successful enough to approach Republic with a request for a salary increase. The studio was notoriously reticent on such matters, and he was denied any raise. But in lieu of the request, he extracted a much more valuable concession -- the rights to the name Roy Rogers and all merchandising that went with it. The early '40s saw Rogers turn into a national institution. His Westerns became even more popular and accessible once they were taken out of the "historic" West of the 19th century and moved into the modern West, which allowed for more freedom in plotting and dialogue. With director Joseph Kane helming his movies, Rogers became the undisputed "King of the Cowboys" after Autry joined the U.S. Army Air Force in 1942. By 1944, however, the movies and records represented only a small part of the success that Rogers had achieved. The merchandising of Rogers memorabilia and other items -- not just toys, but cereals and electric ranges -- coupled with a syndicated radio show made him one of the most familiar figures in popular culture throughout the war years.

In 1944, with his first teaming with featured actress Dale Evans, the next major element in his screen success was in place. Their relationship was, at first, purely professional, but their chemistry on screen was undeniable, and Republic was soon pairing them up regularly. With the return of master action director William Witney from service in the war during 1945, Rogers' film career was poised for success for years to come, as Witney toughened up the Rogers movies and elevated their action sequences. All of this success, and the whirlwind of activity surrounding it, was negated by the death of Rogers' wife, Arline, from an embolism following the birth of their son, Roy Jr., on November 3, 1946. Rogers continued making movies and recording, along with his personal appearances and radio broadcast. In the course of their work together in pictures, he and Evans (who had already been designated "The Queen of the West" by Republic's publicity office) became ever closer. Finally, on December 31, 1947, the two were married. They made movies together for the remainder of the 1940s, and when the market for B-Westerns began to disappear with the advent of television, Rogers followed the lead of Western star William ("Hopalong Cassidy") Boyd and devised a television series of his own. The Roy Rogers Show, starring Rogers and Evans and co-starring Roy's Pioneers replacement, Pat Brady, went on the air on NBC in December of 1951, beginning a seven-year network run that introduced his work to yet another generation of fans.

His first solo recordings featured backup by Hugh and Karl Farr and Bob Nolan, and the complete Pioneers supported him in most of his recording sessions for the remainder of 1937 and 1938. Later on, however, Rogers was backed by Spade Cooley & His Buckle-Busters as well as various anonymous studio orchestras, although Karl Farr would turn up on his sessions as well into the 1940s. On record as a solo artist, Rogers was never as successful as the Pioneers or Autry, although he did have one promising early hit in 1938 with "Hi-Yo Silver," which reached number 13 on the charts. Even Rogers' sessions on his own recordings with the Sons of the Pioneers, however, little resembled his earlier work as a member of the Pioneers, for his was now the lead voice. And where Bob Nolan and Tim Spencer (the principal songwriters within the group) never strayed too far from some contact with the reality of the West, Rogers' music quickly took on the aura of more typical Hollywood Western songs, pleasant but not generally profound. His covers of songs such as "Don't Fence Me In" are probably the best remembered versions, thanks to his movies, and as songs like "San Fernando Valley" or "Home in Oklahoma" reveal, he had an extremely appealing tenor voice, not as memorable as Autry's voice but very pleasing to the ear nonetheless. Perhaps the most well-known of all Rogers' songs was one written by Evans and (originally) recorded by them together, "Happy Trails," which became the theme of The Roy Rogers Show. From the 1950s onward, his repertory included country music as well as Western songs and spirituals, the latter often recorded with Evans.

Rogers continued to record into the 1970s, and he scored a hit in 1972 with "Candy Kisses." He and Dale continued making personal appearances, often in the context of religious broadcasts and gatherings, as well as television broadcasts, into the early '90s. Rogers' main influence was in keeping the image of the singing cowboy alive. Along with Autry, who retired from personal appearances at the end of the 1950s, he was one of the most popular Western stars ever to record and was an influence on an entire generation of country & western singers that followed. In 1988, Rogers was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame, giving him a second spot (the first having come as a member of the Sons of the Pioneers, who had been elected some years earlier). Two years later, the next generation of country musicians, including Emmylou Harris and Randy Travis, participated in a most unusual record, The Roy Rogers Tribute, covering Rogers' best known songs with him, including an all-star rendition of "Happy Trails." Two years later, Rogers, his wife, and eldest son recorded a new album of spiritual songs. Rogers died at his home in Victorville, CA, on July 6, 1998. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
 
Actor: Roy Rogers
Top
  • Born: Nov 05, 1911 in Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Died: Jul 06, 1998 in Apple Valley, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Western
  • Career Highlights: The Dark Command, My Pal Trigger, Don't Fence Me in
  • First Major Screen Credit: Come on Rangers (1938)

Biography

Born Leonard Slye, Rogers moved to California as a migratory fruit picker in 1929. He formed a singing duo with a cousin, later changing his name to Dick Weston and forming a singing group, the Sons of the Pioneers; the group became successful, and appeared on Los Angeles radio and later in films. In 1935 he began appearing in bit roles in Westerns onscreen; by the early '40s Rogers had succeeded Gene Autry as "King of the Cowboys." His success was aided by the fact that Autry went to war and Rogers didn't; he also copied Autry's singing cowboy formula and wore clothes that went one better than Autry's ostentatiously fancy duds. Through the early '50s he starred in dozens of Westerns, often accompanied by his horse, Trigger (billed "the smartest horse in the movies"), and his sidekick, Gabby Hayes; his female lead was often Dale Evans, whom he married in 1947. From 1951-57 he starred in the TV series "The Roy Rogers Show." Meanwhile, he formed a chain of enterprises in the '50s; eventually this combination (a TV production company, Western products distributor/manufacturers, real estate interests, cattle, thoroughbred horses, rodeo shows, and a restaurant chain) was worth over $100 million. ~ All Movie Guide
 
Filmography: Roy Rogers
Top

Cowboys of the Saturday Matinee

Buy this Movie

Alias Jesse James

Buy this Movie

Son of Paleface

Buy this Movie

Heart of the Rockies

Buy this Movie

In Old Amarillo

Buy this Movie

Spoilers of the Plains

Buy this Movie

South of Caliente

Buy this Movie

Twilight in the Sierras

Buy this Movie
Show More Movies

Trail of Robin Hood

Buy this Movie

Trigger, Jr.

Buy this Movie

North of the Great Divide

Buy this Movie

Down Dakota Way

Buy this Movie

The Golden Stallion

Buy this Movie

Bells of Coronado

Buy this Movie

Susanna Pass

Buy this Movie

Eyes of Texas

Buy this Movie

The Far Frontier

Buy this Movie

Grand Canyon Trail

Buy this Movie

Night Time in Nevada

Buy this Movie

Under California Stars

Buy this Movie

Melody Time

Buy this Movie

Apache Rose

Buy this Movie

Bells of San Angelo

Buy this Movie

Springtime in the Sierras

Buy this Movie

My Pal Trigger

Buy this Movie

Roll on Texas Moon

Buy this Movie

Out California Way

Buy this Movie

Sunset in El Dorado

Buy this Movie

Along the Navajo Trail

Buy this Movie

Don't Fence Me in

Buy this Movie

The Cowboy and the Senorita

Buy this Movie

Hollywood Canteen

Buy this Movie

The Yellow Rose of Texas

Buy this Movie

Silver Spurs

Buy this Movie

King of the Cowboys

Buy this Movie

Romance on the Range

Buy this Movie

Sons of the Pioneers

Buy this Movie

Bad Man of Deadwood

Buy this Movie

In Old Cheyenne

Buy this Movie

Jesse James at Bay

Buy this Movie

Robin Hood of the Pecos

Buy this Movie

The Dark Command

Buy this Movie

The Ranger and the Lady

Buy this Movie

Young Bill Hickok

Buy this Movie

Young Buffalo Bill

Buy this Movie

West of the Badlands

Buy this Movie

The Arizona Kid

Buy this Movie

In Old Caliente

Buy this Movie

Southward Ho!

Buy this Movie

Days of Jesse James

Buy this Movie

The Old Barn Dance

Buy this Movie

The Old Corral

Buy this Movie

Rhythm on the Range

Buy this Movie
     
Show Fewer Movies
 

(born Nov. 5, 1911/12, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. — died July 6, 1998, Apple Valley, Calif.) U.S. actor and singer. During his childhood Rogers took up singing, guitar playing, and square-dance calling. He made radio and personal appearances with a succession of groups before helping form the singing group Sons of the Pioneers. He acted in westerns with Gene Autry, whom he replaced as "King of the Cowboys" when Autry went to war. His films include Tumbling Tumbleweeds (1935), Red River Valley (1941), and Yellow Rose of Texas (1944). He acted in several with his wife, Dale Evans, usually riding his famous horse, Trigger. He also starred on radio in The Roy Rogers Show (1944 – 55) as well as on television in a series of the same name (1951 – 57).

For more information on Roy Rogers, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Roy Rogers
Top
Rogers, Roy, 1911–98, American Western film star, b. Cincinnati, Ohio, as Leonard Franklin Slye. The guitar-strumming Rogers succeeded Gene Autry as America's favorite singing cowboy in movies of the mid-1940s. An ex–fruit picker and cowpuncher, he and his brother performed on the radio during the 1930s. Rogers was a founder (1934) of the Sons of the Pioneers, a singing trio that began appearing in movies in 1935. His first starring role came three years later. In 1947, Rogers, by then the “king of the cowboys,” married Dale Evans, 1912–2001, b. Uvalde, Tex., as Frances Octavia Smith. Together, they sang, rode, and acted in dozens of B movies, usually accompanied by their bearded sidekick George “Gabby” Hayes and Roy's palomino horse Trigger. The couple also starred (1951–57) in television's Roy Rogers Show and hosted (1962–63) a variety program. The Roy Rogers–Dale Evans Museum, which displays their memorabilia, is in Branson, Mo.

Bibliography

See R. Rogers and D. Evans, Happy Trails (1979, repr. 1995); biography by R. W. Phillips (1995); D. Rothel, The Roy Rogers Book (1987).

 
Dictionary: Rogers, Roy
Top
(Originally Leonard Slye.) 1912–1998.

American singer and actor who played a singing cowboy in motion-picture Westerns.


 
Quotes By: Roy Rogers
Top

Quotes:

"Until we meet again, may the good Lord take a liking to you."

 
Wikipedia: Roy Rogers
Top
Roy Rogers

Roy Rogers and Dale Evans at the 61st Academy Awards in 1989.
Born Leonard Franklin Slye
November 5, 1911(1911-11-05)
Cincinnati, Ohio
Died July 6, 1998 (aged 86)
Apple Valley, California
Occupation actor, singer
Years active 1935 - 1998
Spouse(s) Grace Arline Wilkins (1936-1946)
Dale Evans (1947-1998)

Roy Rogers (born Leonard Franklin Slye) (November 5, 1911 – July 6, 1998), was a singer and cowboy actor, as well as the namesake of the famous Roy Rogers Restaurants chain. He and his second wife Dale Evans, his golden palomino Trigger, and his German Shepherd Dog, Bullet, were featured in over one hundred movies and The Roy Rogers Show. The show ran on radio for nine years before moving to television from 1951 through 1957. His productions usually featured a sidekick, often either Pat Brady, (who drove a jeep called "Nellybelle") or the crotchety Gabby Hayes. Roy's nickname was "King of the Cowboys". Dale's nickname was "Queen of the West." For many Americans (and non-Americans), he was the embodiment of a cowboy.

Contents

Early life

Roy Rogers on Floodwall Mural painted by Robert Dafford, LaFayette, LA as part of a series of murals at his hometown, Portsmouth, Ohio

The baby who would become famous as Roy Rogers was born to Andrew ("Andy") and Mattie (Womack) Slye in Cincinnati, Ohio, where his family lived in a tenement building on 2nd Street. (Riverfront Stadium was constructed at this location in 1970 and Rogers would later joke that he had been born at second base.) Dissatisfied with his job and city life, Andy Slye and his brother Will built a 12-by-50-foot houseboat from salvage lumber, and, in July 1912, the Slye family floated on the Ohio River towards Portsmouth, Ohio. Desiring a more stable existence in Portsmouth, the Slyes purchased land on which to build a home, but the flood of 1913 allowed them to move the houseboat to their property and continue living in it on dry land.

In 1919 the Slyes purchased a farm about 12 miles north of Portsmouth, at Duck Run, near Lucasville, Ohio. They there built a six-room home. Leonard's father soon realized that the farm alone would provide insufficient income for his family and he took a job at a shoe factory in Portsmouth, living there during the week and returning home on the weekends, bearing gifts for the family following paydays, one of which was a horse on which Leonard learned the basics of horsemanship.

After completing the 8th Grade, Leonard Slye attended high school at McDermott, Ohio. When he was 17 his family returned to Cincinnati, where his father began work at a shoe factory. He soon decided on the necessity to help his family financially, so he quit high school, joined his father at the shoe factory, and began attending night school. After being ridiculed for falling asleep in class, however, he quit school and never returned.

Leonard and his father felt imprisoned by their factory jobs. In 1929, his older sister Mary was living at Lawndale, California with her husband. Father and son decided to quit their shoe factory jobs. The family packed their 1923 Dodge for a visit with Mary and stayed four months before returning to Ohio. Almost immediately, Leonard had the opportunity to travel to California with Mary's father-in-law, and the rest of the family followed in the spring of 1930.

The Slyes rented a small house near Mary. Leonard and his father immediately found employment as truck drivers for a highway construction project. They reported to work one morning, however, to learn their employer had gone bankrupt. The economic hardship of the Great Depression had followed them west, and the Slyes soon found themselves among the economic refugees traveling from job to job picking fruit and living in worker campsites. (He would later read John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath and marvel at its accuracy.) One day Andy Slye heard of a shoe factory hiring in Los Angeles and asked Leonard to join him in applying there for work. Leonard, having seen the joy that his guitar and singing had brought to the destitute around the campfires, hesitantly told his father that he was going to pursue a living in music. With his father's blessing, he and cousin Stanley Slye went to Los Angeles and sought musical engagements as The Slye Brothers.

Leonard married in 1936 to Grace Arline Wilkins. In 1941 the couple adopted a girl, Cheryl Darlene. In 1942, they legally changed their names to Roy and Grace Arline Rogers. The following year, Arline bore a daughter, Linda Lou. A son, Roy Jr. ("Dusty"), followed in 1946, but Arline died of complications from the birth a few days afterward.[1]

Career

Publicity photo of Gabby Hayes and Roy Rogers from the early 1940s. Hayes also had his own children's television program, The Gabby Hayes Show.

Leonard Slye moved to California at 18 to become a singer. After four years of little success, he formed Sons of the Pioneers, a western cowboy music group, in 1934. The group hit it big with songs like "Cool Water" and "Tumbling Tumbleweeds".

From his first film appearance in 1935, he worked steadily in western films, including a large supporting role as a singing cowboy while still billed as "Leonard Slye" in a Gene Autry movie. In 1938 when Autry temporarily walked out on his movie contract, Slye was immediately rechristened "Roy Rogers"[2] and assigned the lead in Under Western Stars. Rogers became a matinee idol and American legend. A competitor for Gene Autry as the nation's favorite singing cowboy was suddenly born. In addition to his own movies, Rogers played a supporting role in the John Wayne classic Dark Command (1940). Rogers became a major box office attraction, and future wife Dale Evans was cast in a movie with him in 1945. Roy's wife, Arline, died the following year.

Roy and Dale fell in love, and Roy proposed to her during a rodeo at Chicago Stadium. They married on New Year's Eve in 1947 at the Flying L Ranch in Davis, Oklahoma, where a few months earlier they had filmed Home In Oklahoma. Roy and Dale remained married until Roy's death in 1998.

Rogers was an idol for many children through his films and television shows. Most of his postwar films were in Trucolor in an era when almost all other B-movies were black-and-white. Some of his movies would segue into animal adventures, in which Roy's horse Trigger would go off on his own for a while, with the camera following him.

With money from not only Rogers' films but his own public appearances going to Republic Pictures, Rogers brought a clause into a 1940 contract with the studio where he would have the right to his likeness, voice and name for merchandising.[3] There were Roy Rogers action figures, cowboy adventure novels, a comic strip, playsets, a long-lived Dell Comics comic book series (Roy Rogers Comics) written by Gaylord Du Bois, and a variety of marketing successes. Roy Rogers was only second to Walt Disney in the amount of items featuring his name.[4]

The Sons of the Pioneers continued their popularity through the 1950s. Although Rogers was no longer a member, they often appeared as Rogers' backup group in films, radio, and television.

In August 1950, Dale and Roy had a daughter, Robin Elizabeth, who died of complications of Down Syndrome shortly before her second birthday. Evans wrote about losing their daughter in her book Angel Unaware.

Rogers and Evans were also well known as advocates for adoption and as founders and operators of children's charities. They adopted several children. Both were outspoken Christians. In Apple Valley, California, where they made their home, numerous streets and highways as well as civic buildings have been named after them in recognition of their efforts on behalf of homeless and handicapped children. Roy was an active Freemason and a Shriner, and was noted for his support of their charities.

Roy and Dale's famous theme song, which Dale wrote and they sang as a duet to sign off their television show, was "Happy trails to you, Until we meet again..."

In the fall of 1962, the couple co-hosted a comedy-western-variety program, The Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Show, aired on ABC. It was cancelled after three months, losing in the ratings to The Jackie Gleason Show on CBS.

Rogers also owned a Hollywood production company which handled his own series. It also filmed other undertakings, including the 1955-1956 CBS western series Brave Eagle starring Keith Larsen as a young peaceful Cheyenne chief, Kim Winona as Morning Star, his romantic interest, and the Hopi Indian Anthony Numkena as Keena, Brave Eagle's foster son, Keena.

For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Roy Rogers has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1752 Vine Street, a second star at 1733 Vine Street for his contribution to radio, and a third star at 1620 Vine Street for his contribution to the television industry.

Roy and Dale were inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in 1976 and Roy was inducted again as a member of the Sons of the Pioneers in 1995. Roy was also twice elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame, first as a member of The Sons of the Pioneers in 1980 and as a soloist in 1988.

Rogers also owned a Thoroughbred racehorse named Triggairo who won 13 career races including the 1975 El Encino Stakes at Santa Anita Park.[5]

Death

Rogers died of congestive heart failure on July 6, 1998. Rogers was residing in Apple Valley, California at the time of his death. Rogers was buried at Sunset Hills cemetery in Apple Valley.[6]

Filmography

  • Slightly Static (1935) (uncredited) .... Member of Sons of the Pioneers
  • The Old Homestead (1935) (as Leonard Slye) .... Sons of the Pioneers
  • Way Up Thar (1935) (as Leonard Slye) .... Band Member
  • Gallant Defender (1935) (uncredited) .... Nester (Sons of the Pioneers)
  • The Mysterious Avenger (1936) (as Len Slye) .... Musician Len
  • Song of the Saddle (1936) (uncredited) .... Sons of the Pioneers Guitarist
  • Rhythm on the Range (1936) (uncredited) .... Leonard (Sons of the Pioneers)
  • California Mail (1936) (uncredited) .... Square Dance Caller & Guitarist
  • The Big Show (1936) (uncredited) .... Sons of the Pioneers guitar player
  • The Old Corral (1936) (uncredited) .... Buck O'Keefe
  • The Old Wyoming Trail (1937) (uncredited) .... Guitar player/Singer/Cowhand
  • Wild Horse Rodeo (1937) (as Dick Weston) .... Singer
  • The Old Barn Dance (1938) (as Dick Weston) .... Singer
  • Under Western Stars (1938) .... Roy Rogers
  • Billy the Kid Returns (1938) .... Roy Rogers/Billy the Kid
  • A Feud There Was (1938) (uncredited) .... Egghead/Elmer Singing Voice
  • Come On, Rangers (1938) .... Roy Rogers
  • Shine On, Harvest Moon (1938) .... Roy Rogers
  • Rough Riders' Round-up (1939) .... Roy Rogers
  • Southward Ho (1939) .... Roy
  • Frontier Pony Express (1939) .... Roy Roger
  • In Old Caliente (1939) .... Roy Rogers
  • Wall Street Cowboy (1939) .... Roy Rogers
  • The Arizona Kid (1939) .... Roy Rogers/The Arizona Kid
  • Jeepers Creepers (1939) .... Roy
  • Saga of Death Valley (1939) .... Roy Rogers
  • Days of Jesse James (1939) .... Roy Rogers
  • Dark Command (1940) .... Fletcher 'Fletch' McCloud
  • Young Buffalo Bill (1940) .... Bill Cody
  • The Carson City Kid (1940) .... The Carson City Kid
  • The Ranger and the Lady (1940) .... Texas Ranger Captain Roy Colt
  • Colorado (1940) .... Lieutenant Jerry Burke
  • Young Bill Hickok (1940) .... 'Wild' Bill Hickok
  • The Border Legion (1940) .... Dr. Stephen Kellogg, aka Steve Kells
  • Robin Hood of the Pecos (1941) .... Vance Corbin
  • Arkansas Judge (1941) .... Tom Martel
  • In Old Cheyenne' (1941) .... Steve Blane
  • Sheriff of Tombstone (1941) .... Brett Starr
  • Nevada City (1941) .... Jeff Connors
  • Bad Man of Deadwood (1941) .... Brett Starr aka Bill Brady
  • Jesse James at Bay (1941) .... Jesse James/Clint Burns
  • Red River Valley (1941) .... Roy Rogers
  • Man from Cheyenne (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • South of Santa Fe (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • Sunset on the Desert (1942) .... Roy Rogers & Deputy Bill Sloan
  • Romance on the Range (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • Sons of the Pioneers (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • Sunset Serenade (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • Heart of the Golden West (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • Ridin' Down the Canyon (1942) .... Roy Rogers
  • Idaho (1943) .... Roy Rogers
  • King of the Cowboys (1943) .... Roy Rogers
  • Song of Texas (1943) .... Roy Rogers
  • Silver Spurs (1943) .... Roy Rogers
  • Hands Across the Border (1944) .... Roy Rogers
  • Cowboy and the Senorita (1944) .... Roy Rogers
  • The Yellow Rose of Texas (1944) .... Roy Rogers
  • Song of Nevada (1944) .... Roy Rogers
  • San Fernando Valley (1944) .... Roy Rogers
  • Lights of Old Santa Fe (1944) .... Roy Rogers
  • Hollywood Canteen (1944) .... Roy Rogers and Trigger
  • Utah (1945) .... Roy Rogers
  • Where Do We Go from Here? (1945) (scenes deleted)
  • Bells of Rosarita (1945) .... Roy Rogers
  • The Man from Oklahoma (1945) .... Roy Rogers
  • Along the Navajo Trail (1945) .... Roy Rogers
  • Sunset in El Dorado (1945) .... Roy Rogers
  • Don't Fence Me In (1945) .... Roy Rogers
  • Song of Arizona (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • Rainbow Over Texas (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • My Pal Trigger (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • Under Nevada Skies (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • Roll on Texas Moon (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • Home in Oklahoma (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • Out California Way (1946) .... Roy Rogers
  • Heldorado (1946) .... Nevada State Ranger Roy Rogers
  • Apache Rose (1947) .... Roy Rogers
  • Bells of San Angelo (1947) .... Roy Rogers
  • Springtime in the Sierras (1947) .... Roy Rogers
  • On the Old Spanish Trail (1947) .... Roy Rogers
  • Pecos Bill (1948) .... Roy Rogers
  • The Gay Ranchero (1948) .... Sheriff Roy Rogers
  • Under California Stars(1948) .... Roy Rogers
  • Eyes of Texas (1948) .... U.S. Marshal Roy Rogers
  • Night Time in Nevada (1948) .... Roy Rogers
  • Grand Canyon Trail (1948) .... Roy Rogers
  • The Far Frontier (1948) .... Roy Rogers
  • Susanna Pass (1949) .... Roy Rogers
  • Down Dakota Way (1949) .... Roy Rogers
  • The Golden Stallion (1949) .... Roy Rogers
  • Bells of Coronado (1950) .... Roy Rogers
  • Twilight in the Sierras (1950) .... State Parole Officer Roy Rogers
  • Trigger, Jr. (1950) .... Roy Rogers
  • Sunset in the West (1950) .... Roy Rogers
  • North of the Great Divide (1950) .... Roy Rogers
  • Trail of Robin Hood (1950) .... Roy Rogers
  • Spoilers of the Plains (1951) .... Roy Rogers
  • Heart of the Rockies (1951) .... Roy Rogers
  • In Old Amarillo (1951) .... Roy Rogers
  • South of Caliente (1951) .... Roy Rogers
  • Pals of the Golden West (1951) .... Border Patrolman Roy Rogers
  • Son of Paleface (1952) .... Roy Barton
  • Alias Jesse James (1959) (uncredited) .... Roy Rogers
  • Mackintosh and T.J. (1975) .... Mackintosh

Selected discography

Charted albums

Year Album Chart Positions Label
US Country US
1970 The Country Side of Roy Rogers 40 Capitol
1971 A Man from Duck Run 34
1975 Happy Trails to You 35 20th Century
1991 Tribute 17 113 RCA

Charted singles

Year Single US Country Album
1946 "A Little White Cross on the Hill" 7 Singles only
1947 "My Chickashay Gal" 4
1948 "Blue Shadows on the Trail"
(Roy Rogers and the Sons of the Pioneers)
6
"(There'll Never Be Another) Pecos Bill"
(Roy Rogers and the Sons of the Pioneers)
13
1950 "Stampede" 8
1970 "Money Can't Buy Love" 35 The Country Side of Roy Rogers
1971 "Lovenworth" 12 A Man from Duck Run
"Happy Anniversary" 47
1972 "These Are the Good Old Days" 73 Single only
1974 "Hoppy, Gene and Me" 15 Happy Trails to You
1980 "Ride Concrete Cowboy, Ride"
(Roy Rogers and the Sons of the Pioneers)
80 Smokey & the Bandit II (soundtrack)
1991 "Hold on Partner" (w/ Clint Black) 42 Tribute

Popular songs recorded by Roy Rogers

  • Don't Fence Me In
  • "Hold That Critter Down"
  • "Little White Cross On The Hill"
  • "One More Ride"
  • "Ride Ranger Ride"
  • "That Pioneer Mother Of Mine"
  • "Tumbling Tumbleweeds"
  • "Way Out There" (singing and yodeling)
  • "Why, Oh Why, Did I Ever Leave Wyoming?"
  • "Hold On Partner" (duet with Clint Black)

See also

References

  • Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, with Carlton Stowers, Happy Trails: The story of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, Carmel, New York, Guideposts, 1979, ISBN 0-8499-0086-7.
  • Zwisohn, Laurence. (1998). "Roy Rogers". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 456-457.

External links


Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page, but the references will not show without a <references/> tag; see Help:Cite errors.


 
 
Learn More
King of the Cowboys [Bonus DVD] (2007 Album by Roy Rogers)
Dale Evans (Singer / Actor)
Bells of San Angelo (1947 Western Film)

Is there another roy rogers as a musician? Read answer...
What was the name of Roy Rogers' dog? Read answer...
When did Roy Rogers die? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Who were roy rogers sidekicks?
How tall is Roy Rogers?
How much did Roy Rogers weigh?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

AllPosters.com  Posters. Copyright © 1998-2003 AllPosters.com, Inc. All rights reserved. 
Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Roy Rogers biography from Who2.  Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Roy Rogers" Read more

 

Mentioned in