Sneha Girap (Editor)

Arvo Ojala

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Arvo Ojala


Role
  
Actor

Arvo Ojala ARVO OJALA WALLPAPERS FREE Wallpapers amp Background images

Born
  
February 21, 1920 (
1920-02-21
)

Occupation
  
Technical advisor, marksman, stuntman

Died
  
People also search for
  
Gene Fowler, Jr., Richard Bartlett, Gordon Douglas, Robert Sparr

Movies
  
Two‑Gun Lady, More Dead Than Alive, The Oregon Trail

On the go show arvo ojala valerie ojala keller


Arvo Ojala (February 21, 1920 in Seattle, Washington – July 1, 2005 in Gresham, Oregon) was a Hollywood technical advisor on the subject of quick-draw with a revolver. He also worked as an actor; his most famous role was that of the unnamed man shot by Marshal Matt Dillon in the opening sequences of the long-running television series Gunsmoke. As a joke on the producers, James Arness and Arvo actually did the opener once with Dillon falling to the ground.

Contents

Arvo Ojala thelegendliveson

Born to Finnish immigrant parents as a young man, Ojala taught himself marksmanship and how to quick-draw a handgun while living on his father's ranch near Yakima, Washington. He said he sharpened his marksmanship skill by shooting the heads off rattlesnakes.

Arvo Ojala 97517926jpgv8CD1F4716D25490

During the early 1950s, Ojala was living in Los Angeles, and working for the Hollywood film studios. "I watched these guys in Westerns," he told a reporter in 1957, "and realized that they were slow on the draw because the cylinder of their guns got stuck in their holsters. I decided the trick was to keep the cylinder free. I began making holsters in my garage. I lined each one with metal so a man could draw without any impediment. Then I began practicing myself. After a year or two I got it down so pat that today I can double draw in one-sixth of a second."

Ojala was "the genuine article" to those he tutored. His speed was clocked and verified a number of times. He could draw, fire, and hit the target in one-sixth of a second, faster than the eye can blink. His technique of cocking "in the holster" as he drew revolutionized the western and was shown in detail both by Henry Fonda in the western film The Tin Star and by John Payne in his series The Restless Gun. At the height of the TV Westerns, Ojala opened a "quick-draw" studio on the 8500 block of the Sunset Strip, next to the famous King's Cellar Liquor Store.

For further proof, Arvo would drop a silver dollar with his gun hand (right) from belt height, then draw and hit the coin before it could fall four inches. This was using "live", or full-power ammunition, not the wax bullets and quarter-loads used today in so-called "fast draw" competitions. In another exhibition, his opponent (using blanks) would face him with his pistol out of the holster and cocked, then nod as he simultaneously fired his revolver, while Arvo would draw and fire before the opponent could get a shot off. He never lost.

In August 1956, Ojala filed a patent application for his low-slung, metal-lined "Quick Draw Holster", and in April 1958, he was granted US Patent 2832519. His holster was publicly described in the New York Times on May 3, 1958. Disputes over similar holsters made by others resulted in a published court case—California Court of Appeals, OJALA v. BOHLIN, 178 Cal.App.2d 292 (1960) Docket No. 23844, February 24, 1960.

Among the TV and film stars that Ojala taught to shoot included James Arness, Robert Culp, James Garner, Kevin Kline, Paul Newman, Hugh O'Brian, Clint Walker, Marilyn Monroe and Thomas F. Wilson. He was a close personal friend to Audie Murphy with Murphy becoming Arvo's children's Godfather. He noted that most actors in westerns had, at best, a nodding acquaintance with handguns, especially the 1873 Colt .45s widely used in television and film because of their reliability. But, a gifted teacher, he said he could teach the necessary skills to anyone in two weeks. He also had speaking roles in many television series and films, to include the 1959 film The Oregon Trail, in which his expertise as a gunhandler, fastdraw artist, and instructor were shown. Usually, it was Arvo's hand that was actually shown in close-up when real speed and spinning skills were needed.

His wife Doris Severson, preceded him in death (1951 - 1978). He is survived by his children Valerie, Jon, Erikk, Inga and Kym.

Filmography

Miscellaneous
1990
Back to the Future Part III (advisor: gunslinger)
1986
Three Amigos! (gun coach)
1985
Silverado (technical gun coach)
1985
Rustlers' Rhapsody (gun coach) / (technical advisor)
1976
Pony Express Rider (gun coach) / (technical advisor) / (technical director)
1971
Zachariah (gun coach)
1969
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (gun coach - uncredited)
1967
The War Wagon (gun coach - uncredited) / (technical director - uncredited)
1959
Gunsmoke (TV Series) (technical director - 1 episode)
- Kitty's Injury (1959) - (technical director)
1958
Bronco (TV Series) (gun coach)
1957
Colt .45 (TV Series) (technical director)
1957
Sugarfoot (TV Series) (technical director)
1957
Tales of Wells Fargo (TV Series) (gun coach)
1956
Flesh and the Spur (technical advisor)
1956
The Burning Hills (gun instructor - uncredited)
1955
Two-Gun Lady (technical advisor)
1955
Cheyenne (TV Series) (technical director)
1955
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV Series) (gun coach)
Actor
1968
Lancer (TV Series) as
Cowhand / Dee
- Cut the Wolf Loose (1969) - Cowhand
- Foley (1968) - Dee
1969
The Outcasts (TV Series) as
First Gunman
- The Long Ride (1969) - First Gunman
1969
More Dead Than Alive as
Mustached Man
1962
Cain's Hundred (TV Series) as
Arvo
- The Swinger (1962) - Arvo (uncredited)
1959
The Oregon Trail as
Ellis
1955
Two-Gun Lady as
Ivers' Henchman
1955
The McConnell Story as
Cadet (uncredited)
1954
Destry as
Townsman (uncredited)
Archive Footage
1999
The Making of 'Silverado' (Video documentary short) as
Self

References

Arvo Ojala Wikipedia


Similar Topics