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Shug Fisher
Fisher circa 1950
Born
George Clinton Fisher Jr.

(1907-09-26)September 26, 1907
DiedMarch 16, 1984(1984-03-16) (aged 76)
Other namesLeroy Fisher
Occupations
  • Actor
  • comedian
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • musician
Years active1931–1981
SpousePeggy Summers (1935-?)

Shug Fisher (born George Clinton Fisher Jr.; September 26, 1907 – March 16, 1984) was an American character actor, singer, musician, and comedian. During his 50-year entertainment career, he performed in many Western films, often as a member of the Sons of the Pioneers in serials and in B movies starring Roy Rogers. Fisher also was cast in supporting roles on a variety of television series, although most frequently on Gunsmoke and The Beverly Hillbillies. His comic trademarks included his ability to stutter at will and his bemused facial expressions.

Childhood and early years

Fisher was born in Grady County, Oklahoma, in Tabler (near Chickasha) into a farming family, the youngest of four children born to a Scots-Irish father and a Choctaw Nation mother. [1] His mother, Emma Harkins Fisher, is listed on the Dawes Rolls as 1/4th Choctaw by blood. [2] [3] He gained the nickname "Shug" (short for sugar) at a young age, which he explained as, "My mama gave it to me 'cause I was such a sweet baby." [4] In 1917, the family moved by covered wagon to Pittsburg County, Oklahoma, near Indianola. [5] Soon thereafter, Fisher was drawn to the mandolin and the fiddle. His father refreshed his own fiddling ability and Fisher learned guitar to back him, and at age 16, he was playing with his father at local square dances. [6] He could not afford a fiddle case and instead protected his instrument with a pillow case tied to the saddle horn.

After watching a comedian with a traveling medicine show in 1924, he decided to pursue a career in entertainment. [1] The following year, Fisher, his father, and a friend drove a Ford Model T to California's San Joaquin Valley, [5] where he worked as a fruit-picker, and a cable and tool dresser in oil fields. [1] He continued to perform, playing fiddle at social events and square dances. In 1927, he was asked to appear on The Fresno Bee's radio station, KMJ, but only for the publicity. He later said, "publicity was fine, but you can’t eat it...My motto was, pay me something, or I don’t play." [5]

Los Angeles calls

In 1931, Tom Murray, who had recently left the Beverly Hill Billies, offered Fisher a spot with his new group, the Hollywood Hillbillies, based in Los Angeles. Fisher learned to play the bass fiddle with the group and claimed he was one of the first to play the instrument in a country band. The Hillbillies appeared on the Hollywood Breakfast Club radio show and were fairly popular around Los Angeles but had little income to show for it. [5]

In late 1933, Fisher and Ken Carson left the group to join several members of the Beverly Hill Billies who had moved to San Francisco. [5] The original group was the brainchild of the general manager of KPMC-AM, who promoted the members as authentic "hillbilly" musicians who he'd "discovered." [7] As part of the ruse, the members always adopted hillbilly names, so Fisher became Aaron Judd and Carson was Kaleb Winbush. [6] After a short time, Fisher returned to Los Angeles, appearing on Stuart Hamblen's Covered Wagon Jubilee program.[ citation needed]

Ohio Valley radio career

In 1935, Fisher took an extended road tour with Roy Faulkner, The Lonesome Cowboy, from XERA-AM in Del Rio, Texas. During an appearance in Council Bluffs, Iowa, Fisher was approached by Hugh Cross to join him, under sponsorship of the Georgie Porgie Breakfast Food Company, as an act for WWVA Jamboree. Fisher agreed and the two went to Wheeling, West Virginia. Under the moniker of Hugh and Shug's Radio Pals, a reflection of their frequent radio appearances, they performed with Mary Ann Vestes and recorded for Decca for four years, enjoying a faithful radio audience. [5]

In 1939, the two moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where they appeared on WLW-AM's Boone County Jamboree and where Fisher met and married Peggy Summers of Bolivar, Missouri. [5] At the station, he also became friends with a young Merle Travis.[ citation needed]

Sons of the Pioneers

When the U.S. entered World War II in 1941, Fisher returned to Los Angeles to work in defense jobs, primarily at Lockheed Aircraft in Burbank. Art Rush, head of the Hollywood Victory Committee, requested his help arranging entertainment for defense workers during the war. [5]

In 1943, Fisher and Ken Carson were invited to join the Sons of the Pioneers after the group's Pat Brady and Lloyd Perryman were drafted into the service.[ citation needed] Replacing Brady as bassist and comedian, Fisher eagerly joined Carson, Tim Spencer, Bob Nolan, and Hugh and Karl Farr late that year, having appreciated the band's music and personally known its members prior to the group's inception. During this tenure, the group appeared in a string of Roy Rogers movies, recorded songs for the John Ford movies Wagon Master in 1949 and Rio Grande in 1950, and performed the theme song for The Searchers in 1956.

Fisher wrote a number of songs for the Pioneers, including "Out On The Open Range", "Ridin' Down To Santa Fe", later recorded by Merle Travis, and "Forgive And Forget".[ citation needed] In 1946, Fisher and Travis co-wrote "Cincinnati Lou". Fisher also wrote "That's My Paradise", "I'm Not Foolin' Now", "A Million Memories", "Pooey On You, Little Darlin'", a novelty song later recorded by Ken Curtis; "Lonesome Train Blues"; and recorded "Gooseberry Pie" using his fake stuttering as a comedy device.[ citation needed]

Fisher left the group in early 1946 when Brady returned from the war. In 1948, Capitol Transcriptions issued the album, Cowboy Jubilee, by Shug Fisher & his Ranchmen Trio. Fisher rejoined the Pioneers in 1949 when Brady left. The highlight of this era came in 1951 when they appeared at Carnegie Hall, making them the first western band to perform there. [5] They would also be the first to play at lavish nightclubs in Las Vegas [8] and starred on Mutual Radio's Lucky U Ranch program. In 1953, Fisher left to join friend Ken Curtis in television and motion pictures but again returned to the Pioneers in 1955, replacing Deuce Spriggens. He left the Pioneers for the last time in 1959, and welcomed the break to "kinda take it easy, and do a lot of hunting and fishing." [5]

Film and television career

A member of the John Ford Stock Company, Fisher had an extensive career as a character actor in Western B-movies and feature films starting in 1943. Many of his early roles were as a performer with the Sons of the Pioneers in Roy Rogers' singing cowboy movies. He was also the voice of Uncle Pecos, an animated mouse, in the 1953 Tom and Jerry short, Pecos Pest, and is uncredited with the guitar improvisation on the cartoon's version of " Froggie Went A-Courtin".[ citation needed]

Fisher also had many supporting roles during a 27-year television career. From 1955–60, he made regular appearances on ABC-TV’s country music variety show, Ozark Jubilee, as a comedian and singer. Then he joined Curtis’ first-run syndicated TV adventure series, Ripcord between 1962 and 1963 portraying airplane pilot Charlie Kern.[ citation needed] He made 22 appearances on Gunsmoke from 1962 to 1974 in various minor roles, and played Shorty Kellems in 19 episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies from 1969–70. Fisher also appeared repeatedly on Bonanza, The Virginian, Daniel Boone and The Dukes of Hazzard.

Death

Shug Fisher spent his final years living in Studio City, California. He died on March 16, 1984, after a lingering illness, with old friend Ken Curtis by his side in Woodland Hills in Los Angeles. [4] He was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park.[ citation needed]

Filmography

Television credits

References

  1. ^ a b c Sue Matheson, The John Ford Encyclopedia, page 83, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2019
  2. ^ "JEMF Quarterly". John Edwards Memorial Foundation. 10: 55. 1974. Retrieved September 4, 2023.
  3. ^ "Search the Dawes Rolls, 1898–1914". Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved September 4, 2023.
  4. ^ a b McAlester News-Capital, June 30, 2019
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Shug Fisher". Sons of the Pioneers. Retrieved August 10, 2009. [ dead link]
  6. ^ a b Griffis, Ken Hear My Song. "George "Shug" Fisher". bobnolan.com. Retrieved August 22, 2009.
  7. ^ Harkins, Anthony Hillbilly: A Cultural History of an American Icon Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN  978-0195189506
  8. ^ Forsythe, Wayne. "The Sons of the Pioneers." Country Music (April 1975). Retrieved on 8-02-09.

Additional resources

  • Griffis, Ken Hear My Song. "George "Shug" Fisher". www.bobnolan.com. Retrieved August 22, 2009.
  • Harkins, Anthony Hillbilly: A Cultural History of an American Icon Oxford University Press, 2004

External links