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One of the many successful Western
television series that emerged in the 1960s was the cleverly scripted
and wonderfully acted 30-minute Cavalry Comedy, F Troop. Its
opening theme song containing the lyrics: "...nobody takes a lickin',
where redskin and paleface both turn chicken..." is a strong
indicator of the kind of outrageous humor that would emanate from the
enchanting episode that followed.
The most dysfunctional troop in the
United States Cavalry - the appropriately named Company F - consisted of
a duo of high-ranking officer-shysters, a bugler with absolutely no
ability to play the brass instrument, a lookout who can't see his hand
in front of his face in the daytime, and even a trooper who speaks and
understands only German. Commanding this ill-begotten group of
misfits, clods and numskulls was a bungling, absent-minded, oblivious,
corny joke-telling captain named Wilton Parmenter, portrayed ingeniously
by the ever-likable and versatile Ken Berry.
Berry's first big break came after an
honorable discharge from the army in 1955, when he hooked up with Bud
Abbott and Lou Costello. Performing as a song-and-dance man live
at the Riviera in Las Vegas, Berry served as the opening act for
the legendary comedy team. Perhaps this experience provided the
inspiration for Berry to also hone in on his comedic skills, which in a
few short years would be useful for the starring role in his own comedy
series, wielding his saber and equipping himself with a
how-to-run-a-fort manual. F Troop premiered on ABC in 1965, and at
a time when our nation was at war in Southeast Asia, Ken Berry was one of
the show's alumnae that got America to smile and laugh again for two
glorious seasons comprised of 65 knee-slapping episodes.
Understanding what depicting the
Parmenter character would require of an
actor........................................................
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