I can’t believe a cowboy’s intense relationship with his hat
filled even one post, and here I am,
appending another. What can I tell you? Blah, blah-blah, blah-blah,
blah-blah.
Some blogatorial backtracking…
Movie and TV show cowboys’ hats almost never fell off their
heads. (I do not know about the actual cowboys’ hats. The cinematic depictions of the West – before
the 60’s, when many cultural beliefs went topsy-turvy– were sanitizingly idealized. For all I
know, real cowboys’ hats fell off all the time, imaginably, since there was a
lot of it around, into manure. My experience is fantasy. I do not recall Tonto ever telling the Lone
Ranger:
TONTO: “Kemo Sabe hat smell like horse shit.”
THE LONE RANGER: “It’s funny.
You never smell it when you’re wearing it.”
There were occasional exceptions to this “not-falling-off” rule,
in which case, no matter how brutalizing the experience, the cowboy’s primary
concern was retrieving his hat. His ear
is half off, it was always,
“Stitches later.
Where’s my hat?”
Then came the, to many, feminizing innovation of…
“The String.”
You inserted two eyelets, one on each side at the juncture
of the brim and the crown, running a string through them attached at the… – What am I, a hat hole expert? – I
don’t know… there was a string under your chin, so if your hat fell off it
would not fly away. It kind of just hung
there behind your back, a comforting relief, knowing no matter what terrible tragedy
befell you, it would not cost you your hat.
Without exception, notwithstanding the mayhem – stampedes, Indian
raids, treacherous windstorms sending giant cacti hurtling across the terrain –
when he rode into the sunset, the cowboy invariably left town wearing the same
hat he had worn riding in. (The same
shirt, often, as well but there’s only so much you can pack into a bedroll.)
Which, at least in one prototypical set of circumstances,
perplexed me. (And I may be the only one
who noticed, but that’s my job: Noticing
things nobody else bothers to care about.)
Setting the Scenario…
The robbers have wounded the grizzled stagecoach driver. The Cowboy Hero rides to the rescue. After shooting a number of the robbers out of
their saddles, the Cowboy Hero subdues to last Bad Guy in a furious fistfight
on the top of the stagecoach, the Hero’s hat flying off during the melee.
The Cowboy Hero grabs the reins, bringing the stagecoach
team to a halt. The stirring background
music subsides. The “Climactic Moment”
is over.
COWBOY HERO: “You okay, Old Timer?”
GRIZZLED STAGECOACH DRIVER: “Why, Pshaw!
I been bit worse by a beaver!
Thanks for helpin’, stranger. You
arrived just in the nick of time.”
C.H: “No thanks are necessary. My reward is that justice has been done.”
G.S.D:
“Y’know, I once got saved by the Lone Ranger.
He said exactly the same thing.”
“It’s the ‘Code of the West’ – Nobody takes anything. Now, are you strong enough to handle the
horses?”
(TAKING THE REINS) “Yer
dern tootin’! We gotta get this gold
shipment to town pronto. They’re
probably worried we’re late.”
“We’re on our way.”
THE DRIVER URGES THE TEAM ONWARD. THE COWBOY HERO INTERVENES.
“Just one quick stop before we go.”
“A stop?”
“We have to go back to get my hat.”
“Your hat?”
“It flew off during the melee. It’s just down the trail a piece. Pick up my hat, and we’re headed for town.”
“Are you loco? We
ain’t goin’ back fer no hat. Folks in
town are waiting on this gold shipment.
And I’m shot in the arm.”
“You said it wasn’t bad.”
“‘Frontier understatement!’”
“Well, does it hurt you or doesn’t it?”
“It hurts more than losing your hat.”
“Look, I remember where it fell off. A coupla minutes out of our way and…”
“Are you ears plugged up with sorghum? We are not going back for your hat.”
“But we have
to. It’s the only hat I’ve got.”
“I’m sure the stage company’ll stand you a new hat as a
‘Thank you’ for…”
“No way around it. We just have to go back for my hat.”
“I ain’t doin’ it!”
I do not know what took place after that. I only know that when they cut back to town, the hero was once again wearing his cowboy hat.
So Earl, your great part 2 had me recalling other Hollywood hat scenes. No doubt the cowboy hat is the most famous of move and tv head wear but there are others.
ReplyDelete- The Mary Tyler Moore Show opening credits where she throws her hat into the air followed by a freeze frame. Love is all around.
- End of Rocky when Adrian sneaks into the ring and hugs Sly and the first thing he says after having the crap beat out of him is "wheres your hat?"
- Exchange from the old radio show The Bickersons. "Where's my hat?" "It's in the fridge." "Where's my lunch?" "It's in your hat!" Remember the Bickersons Earl?
- Goldfinger. Odd Job takes off his hat and flings it over to a statue cutting the head off and scaring the shit out of Bond.
- The Full Monty. Hats are used to cover the privates of the male dancers thereby teasing the audience of women. Freeze frame on the guys removing the hats and tossing them into the crowd.
- Sherlock Holmes hat. No idea what that was, had a front and back bill on it didn't it? Nice thing about that hat is you could never wear it backwards.
And what about sports Earl:
- Gordie Howe hat trick. A goal, an assist and a fight in one period, usually against Jacques Plante.
- Babe Ruth doffing his cap after hitting that called shot against the Cubs in the '32 World Series. Don't say it never happened cause I was there, I saw it. It happened.
- Guys who wore hats because they didn't want us to know they were bald. Ron Howard, Mike Love from the Beach Boys, John Wayne, Bud Abbott, Elton John, Winston Churchill, at least 2 of the Gabor sisters and Bob Kettle.