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The Cheyenne Social Club: Comedy Film, James Lee Barrett, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Gene Kelly, Samuel Goldwyn Studio, Rangeland
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| Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles
available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The Cheyenne
Social Club is a 1970 Western comedy film written by James Lee Barrett
and directed and produced by Gene Kelly, and starred James Stewart,
Henry Fonda, and Shirley Jones. It was one of the few off-color ventures
for Stewart, who specifically suggested that his friend Fonda be cast;
one of the two times the two worked together in a film (the other being
in Firecreek in 1968). It was shot at the Bonanza Creek Ranch and Eaves
Movie Ranch outside Santa Fe, New Mexico (exteriors), and the Samuel
Goldwyn Studios in Hollywood, California (interiors). In 1867, John
O'Hanlan and Harley Sullivan are two aging cowboys working on various
open cattle ranges in Texas. O'Hanlan gets a letter from an attorney in
Cheyenne, Wyoming that his disreputable (and now, deceased) brother,
D.J., left him something called The Cheyenne Social Club in his will.
After they make the 1,000 mile (1,600 km) trek to Cheyenne, O'Hanlan and
Sullivan learn that The Cheyenne Social Club is a high-class brothel.
O'Hanlan's new-found status as "a man of property" makes him the most
popular man in town -- until he decides to turn the Social Club into a
respectable boarding house. From there, comedy ensues. |
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