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  • Let me start out by saying that this show had absolutely nothing to do with the life and times of the real Annie Oakley. The real Annie was an honest to God deadly markswoman, but who was born and raised in the Wild West of Ohio. I'm not sure where the television Annie did her exploits in the Hollywood Never Never Land of the Old West, but it was definitely west of the Mississippi. Possibly in Colorado because.....

    Annie was the niece of the sheriff who we never saw. One of the things I remember about this series was that several times the excuse why the sheriff wasn't around was that he was 'delivering a prisoner to Denver'. Hence I assume that's where the Oakleys resided.

    Gail Davis played Annie. I still remember her in those cowgirl outfits in rather juvenile looking pigtails. The fashion may have been some of Dale Evans's castoffs, but it was deliberately so because this wholesome girl in pigtails fooled many an outlaw into not taking her seriously to their regret. Gail Davis was Gene Autry's leading lady in several of his later westerns and he managed her career.

    The sheriff left his deputy, Lofty Craig as played by Brad Johnson. Given the mores of the Fifties, Lofty was always in trouble and every week the law needed the assistance of sharpshooting Annie.

    If Lofty wasn't in trouble it was her brother Tagg. Tagg was played by Jimmy Hawkins who is probably best known as one of the Bailey children from It's A Wonderful Life. Annie was constantly coming to his aid.

    I'm sure a whole generation of feminists saw Annie Oakley as kids and saw a woman could compete in a man's world most successfully. As did the real Annie Oakley in her career.

    One of those kids who saw and liked Annie Oakley was my sister Nancy who's no longer with us as is Gail Davis. And this review is dedicated to a show she was crazy about as a child.
  • This TV series ran from 1954-57, with 82 25min. shows. Star Gail Davis was like the real Annie Oakley in spirit and skills, but the real Miss Oakley didn't inhabit the Wild West, except perhaps in her engagements with Buffalo Bill's Wild West shows. She was a native Ohioan who honed her shooting skills from a very early age, shooting squirrels and rabbits for her sizable family as well as for sale. Her father died when she was 6. Although she wasn't the oldest of the brood, she seemed to have a special knack for bulls eye shooting, even when she was 7 or 8. She was farmed out to several families or institutions in her older childhood, being treated like an orphan, running away at age 15 to seek her fame and fortune.

    Gail Davis' fantasy Annie also seems to have been an orphan, although not explicitly stated. She lived with her younger brother, Tagg, and was usually found in the company of Deputy Sheriff Lofty. She didn't seem to have an official judicial position, despite her constant pursuit of trouble. It's like she was a bounty hunter with no interest in collecting the bounty. She usually brought 'em back alive. In the 4 episodes I've recently seen, neither she nor Lofty killed any badmen, although they sometimes shot the badman's gun out of his hand or otherwise wounded him. Strangely, the sheriff never seemed to be around town, so local crime fighting was the exclusive domain of her and Lofty. Lofty usually did the physical fighting with badmen, while both were expert shots. In this respect, they were rather like the team of the real Annie and her husband, who also managed her career.

    You can find the series on DVD. Also, many are available at You Tube.
  • For the most part - I thought that this vintage TV Western from the mid-1950s was quite an entertaining view all around.

    Of course, I had to be willing to cut this show some slack at times in order to fully appreciate what it had to offer me. But, with that said - I found that my overall enjoyment while watching "Annie Oakley" was not at all reduced to the point of boredom.

    And, what I'd also like to add here is to say that what helped to elevate the amusement-factor of "Annie Oakley" to its above-average status was that its 3 principal characters (Annie, Lofty, and Tagg) were actually quite a pleasant and likable trio who certainly did their best to make the role of fair and honest law-enforcement their top priority.

    Anyway - When it comes to recommending "Annie Oakley" to other like-minded viewers - I certainly don't hesitate at all about voicing my enthusiastic approval.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The highly dense population of the 'Juvenile Cowboys & Indians Shows("Kiddie Westerns") in the infancy of the Commercial Television Industry, no doubt was long in search for Female Heroine(that's the best kind!)to do the lead in a "Bubble Gum" Western Adventure Series.

    We had already had Dale Evans, whom everyone knew to be Mrs Roy Rogers in real life.(Well, "Happy Trails, To You!!") She was already sharing the billing on the Roy Rogers TV Show, as she had and continued to in their starring vehicles at REPUBLIC PICTURES, and their guest shots .

    Searching history, we find on Miss Phoebe Ann Mosey(1860-1926), who is known to the World as "Annie Oakley", Circus Sharpshooter and a Star of "BUFFALO BILL's WILD WEST SHOW." Miss Mosey, daughter of Quaker Parents, immigrants from Pennsylvania, was born in Willowdell, Darke County, Ohio.

    She had learned to shoot at a very early age and shoot very well. At one point, she began to appear in various entertainment venues as a sharpshooter. In 1885, she and her Sharpshooter Husband joined up with the above mentioned Buffalo Bill.(Not to be confused with Howdy Doody's Buffalo Bob Smith!) In contrast to the above Biographical Info, we have the fictional "Annie Oakley" of Flying A Productions' TV Series(that's Gene Autry's Company, Schultz!). This Annie(Gail Davis)lives on a Ranch, apparently orphaned, with her little brother, "Tag"(Jimmy Hawkins). We never see any Ranch Hands or anyone else, so we figure that they must raise Weeds and Rocks.

    The Ranch is situated some short distance from "Town", the Clint Eastwood Town, for it has no name. They spend all their time helping out Deputy Sheriff 'Lofty' Craig, or getting into jams that 'Lofty' must labor to get them out. It seems that Deputy Craig is a sort of general purpose male figure here. He is at once Romantic Interest, Guardian Angel, "Big Brother"(pre-Orwellian) and Sterling Beacon of Law and Order in the "Old West" and Paragon of Virtue.

    And, not to hurt your feelings too much, Shultz, I must tell you this hard and simple fact. The real Annie Oakley never lived in the West. She was a native of Ohio, where she lived most of her life. But, then again, one Leonard Slye* was born there too; so we can forgive you after all, Annie. 2007-2014
  • This TV show, probably the first of it's kind, demonstrated that a woman despite heavy obligations and responsibilities (little brother, no parents and a ranch to run), could successfully compete in a man's world. Not only could she successfully compete, but she would come through in a major crisis, save lives, behave with genuine courage, dignity and honor, do it cheerfully with good humor and prove extremely useful to the community while being the paradigm role model to an impressionable younger brother.

    Where the TV show is a fictionalized account bearing no relationship to the real Annie Oakley, their accomplishments were. They both competed not just successfully but surprisingly and consistently, in what was then regarded as a man's world. The real Annie Oakley (Phoebe Ann Oakley Moses or Mozee or Mozey) was the heroine of the day in her travels through the US and Europe in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show out shooting just about anyone. In a time that antibiotics were non-existent, she suffered through tremendous injury and illness nearly dying on a couple of occasions and demonstrated a rare courage of getting out of bed to ensure that the show went on! Previous to that she had been the support of her family, ensuring that food was on the table every night and in later life quietly worked to support charities and women's rights.

    To young girls growing up in the '50's the TV show Annie was the perfect counter balance to the heroics of The Lone Ranger, Hopalong Cassidy, Roy Rogers, and Gene Autrey TV shows. Was it a coincidence she rode a palomino? Doubtful. The writers probably wanted to show as subtly as possible that she could compete with Roy and Dale on her own terms. The genre was the popular wild west-the most successful for many years if the longevity of westerns is a measure. Every week youngsters grew up knowing that America was exemplified by the standards of the Old West, where character was king. Honor, fair play, justice-for-all were the by words on which the TV heroes were modeled. That there was a pistol-packing lady whose character was a match for any of her male counterparts says a good deal about the fabric of the American character and actress Gail Davis made Annie Oakley the cheerful ideal to which all girls aspired. ANNIE OAKLEY was a wonderful TV show!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The 'Annie Oakley' TV show aired from January 1954 through February 1957 with a total of eighty one episodes. I recently viewed about a dozen of the programs, and as a product of early television, the stories aren't very memorable and continuity errors were frequent. Like the show's contemporary, 'The Lone Ranger', it's comical watching today as Annie, portrayed by Gail Davis, miraculously shoots the gun out of an outlaw's hand while chasing at full gallop, or when the members of a dozen man posse pursue the bad guys and the riders three or four deep shoot straight ahead without regard for the men directly in front of them. Sometimes I just shake my head.

    But if you're a fan of old time TV Westerns, the show did offer it's standard formula of right winning out over wrong, as the pretty Gail Davis was assisted by kid brother Tagg (Jimmy Hawkins), and nominal love interest, deputy Lofty Craig (Brad Johnson). The romance angle didn't seem to be played up much in the programs I've seen; the only time Annie and Lofty embraced with a kiss was in the second episode titled 'Annie Trusts a Convict', and then they were interrupted by outlaws barging into the sheriff's office. Like Roy Rogers, Annie rode a golden palomino, not quite as large and handsome as Trigger, but still a fine looking animal. Tagg usually rode a Pinto pony, and with the show spanning three seasons, it's kind of remarkable to see how much actor Hawkins grew over the course of the series.

    'Discovered' by veteran cowboy actor and singer Gene Autry, Davis appeared in a number of Autry's 'B' Western stories as different characters, and made her way into this series produced by Autry as a 'Flying A' production. During these early series, it wasn't unusual to see the same character actors show up multiple times. Even watching a limited number of shows, I caught repeat appearances by Harry Lauter, Tom London, Myron Healey, Stanley Andrews and Don C. Harvey. It wasn't unusual either for example, for someone like Lauter to be a bad guy in one show, and a sheriff in another. Viewers back in the day might have been confused by this, but it was pretty much par for the course.

    The opening of the show was classic, and also prone to a continuity problem of sorts. As the narrator extols Annie's exploits for hard ridin', straight shootin', and suspense, we see Annie standing atop the saddle of her galloping horse while shooting at a target consisting of a playing card, the nine of spades. She scores her customary bull's eye, however it doesn't appear that the holder of the card held it in his outstretched hand, but directly in front of him from where he shows the card to the audience. I always get a kick out of that wondering just how good a shot Annie Oakley really was!

    Still, you have to credit the show's developers for creating the only female Western hero to star in her own show. One could counter with Dale Evans, but she was a companion and sidekick to husband Roy Rogers. Annie combined beauty with athletic skill and sharp shooting, and was an instant hit when the show aired in the mid-Fifties. She found herself in all kinds of situations, and wasn't fazed by wearing her holster and guns over a party dress! You can catch that scenario in episode #1.13, 'Hardrock Trail'.
  • youngkaren-2533010 October 2020
    Warning: Spoilers
    Annie oakley played by Gail Davis was the first female gunfighter on television I think the male producers called this series a feminist joke
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Gail Davis played the first feminist character on television most of the lead roles are usually played by men
  • I read that Gene Autry originally did not want her for the part. Unbelievable! I read that the sponsors passed on the first pilot Bullseye, which was as good or better than any other episode. Again, unbelievable! I read that Gene Autry originally did not want her for the part. Unbelievable! I read that the sponsors passed on the first pilot Bullseye, which was as good or better than any other episode. Again, unbelievable!
  • mkuhens31 January 2019
    I love western shows,cheyenne,gunsmoke,tales of Wells Fargo are among my favorites,this is by far one of if not the worst western show I've ever seen. To be honest I never even heard of it until recently when Pluto TV started showing it. Have the best shot in the west who shoots everything but people,even when her younger brother tag is in grave danger. Let's not forget she had a hat around her neck she never wears despite never leaving it anywhere. Always wonder when she will run out of steps,lamps,chandeliers,sticks and other stuff to shoot when bad guys run away. The acting by the deputy sheriff lofty is awful to say the least. One of the worst shows ever created and aired.
  • I never understand why some criticism this action-fun-show, maybe it's NO ZORRO or THE LONE RANGER, but if it helped young girls feel more confident in themselves and it took you away from the worlds problems for 30 minutes or longer, than it did a good job Gail Davis in real life was truely good with a gun n could ride a horse better than most, not her fault those who wrote her lines were no Shakespear. I found it a very enjoyable show one must remember it was made in the 1950's NOT 2020!!.. maybe Lofty could be replaced by a better actor like Lee Van Cleft or Gene Evans or even Phil Harvey! But overall the series is decent and has a good moral lesson after each episode.
  • The kid was annoying but what kid isn't? Its like OMG and he's on here why? The fake fight scenes its like whenever someone was getting ready to fight its like okay fast-forward. Glad the collection i bought had subtitles. The chick was annoying but i hate women & kids. Yeah 35 year old woman, i can't stand either. She was annoying too. I bought the series for a couple of reasons. I thought i'd like Brad Johnson. No. He had the hots for Annie or Gail and it was sickening. Its like okay we know what you're doing. I got it for LQ Jones, Slim Pickens, and gorgeous Angel Eyes Van Cleef and of course so sweet Glenn Strange. Forgot how good he looks in black.