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The Outcasts (TV series)

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5.1/10
TV

Starring
  
Don Murray Otis Young

First episode date
  
23 September 1968

8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Western

Music by
  
Hugo Montenegro

Final episode date
  
5 May 1969

The Outcasts (TV series) The Outcasts TV series Wikipedia

Created by
  
Ben Brady Leon Tokatyan

Written by
  
Albert Aley Harold Jack Bloom Richard M. Bluel Ben Brady Gerry Day Anthony Lawrence Don Tait Leon Tokatyan

Directed by
  
Robert Butler Marc Daniels Robert Sparr Paul Landres Joseph Lejtes Allen Reisner E.W. Swackhamer

Network
  
American Broadcasting Company

Cast
  
Don Murray, Otis Young, William Bassett

The outcasts my name is jemal


The Outcasts is an American Western genre television series, appearing on ABC in the 1968-69 season. The series stars Don Murray and Otis Young. It is most notable for being the first television Western with an African American co-star.

Contents

The Outcasts (TV series) The Outcasts by Steve Frazee ABC TV Series Vintage 1968 Paperback

Synopsis

The Outcasts (TV series) THE OUTCASTS 22 EPISODES 11 DVD for sale in Providence RI area

"Jemal David and Earl Corey. One black, one white; one ex-Union soldier, one ex-Confederate officer; one ex-slave, one ex-slave owner. Together, they are the Outcasts."

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Those words opened a series telling the story of bounty hunter Earl Corey (Murray) who teams up with newly released slave Jemal David (Young) in the 1860s.

The Outcasts (TV series) OUTCASTS THE opening credits ABC drama series YouTube

Several dynamics ran through the show. For one, the two heroes were not friends - Corey would frequently to call David "Boy" and David would call him "Boss". They were reluctant partners, both very fast and deadly with a gun, who were thrown together by circumstance when Corey walked into town carrying his saddle and needing a job, and David badly needing another gun to watch his back. Each had something the other wanted. And David was a realist, knowing there were places Corey could enter that he, a Black man, could not. There were times when Corey had to ponder whether to side with other Whites or back up his new partner. And David had to learn to trust a man who, a few years before, had held the whip hand - literally - and who once considered slaves as "inventory". But, as they moved through their new situation, a grudging respect came into being. It was not real friendship. "We ride together" Corey said, when asked. But there were hints along the way.

A rich - poor dichotomy was very subtle. Earl Corey had lived on a Virginia plantation, a rich man, who returned after the war to find his plantation untouched, everything just as he left it - but now in the hands of his pro-Union brother whom Corey, and other Southerners, considered a traitor. With the Union army and the carpetbaggers now in charge, Corey found himself with nothing. Jemal David, on the other hand, had been a slave who had never owned anything. Even his name was manufactured from a bottle of hair tonic. But he was now fairly prosperous, at least by his own standards. Earl tended to be tense in this "new" environment, but Jemal took things in stride, having come up, as he said: "a tough road... a long, hard road..." Both men lived only for today.

Reception

The show was criticized for "excessive violence", and was canceled after 26 episodes.

Film

In 1973, several episodes of the series were compiled together as an overseas theatrical release entitled Call Me By My Rightful Name.

References

The Outcasts (TV series) Wikipedia