"The Tomorrow Show" with Tom Snyder is NOT AVAILABLE FOR SALE.
October 15, 1973-January 28, 1982.
This broadcast featured a discussion on Westerns with stars of B films from the 1930's, '40s and 50's who rarely have the opportunity to appear on a talk show.
Appearing are Peggy Stewart, Chill Wills, Don "Red" Barry, and Rod Cameron who discuss the art of riding a horse, movie stunts, barroom fights. Many anecdotes discussed including associations with Tom Mix, Buck Jones, Ken Maynard Guinn Big Boy Williams and John Wayne.
Rod Cameron talks about being a chief, heirs asking restitution for broken treatise, and the recent settlement by our government paying 16 million dollars back to the Seminole indians in Florida.
The subject of singing cowboys and how this genre killed the western to some degree...why western actors of the past are over looked and do not get asked to appear on talk shows. Don Barry really gets fired up expressing a lot of misgivings related to the way he has been treated in the past. States he never wanted to appear as Red Ryder.
All discuss why the western genre seemed less important than conventional movies to the studios.
In a moving segment Chill Wills speaks a soliloquy on the American Flag.
An hour-long talk show hosted by Tom Snyder. Network television's first entry into late-late-night programming on weeknights Monday thru Thursday, usually broadcasting on tape 1 AM to 2 AM. "Tomorrow" was expanded to 90 minutes on September 16, 1980.