One of the top television Westerns that originated on radio was “Sky King.” The show enjoyed success of legendary proportions, because it was a “contemporary Western adventure series,” and not mired in the “Old West” motif.
Its main character was Schuyler “Sky” King (Kirby Grant), an affluent cattle rancher and retired U.S. Navy World War II aircraft pilot. The show artfully blended traditional Western ranch life with elements of modern aviation.
Sky
King captured criminals and spies and found lost hikers, with the use of his
airplane, the Songbird, as well as on horseback. His Palamino horse was named Yellow
Fury.
His base of operations was the Flying Crown Ranch, located near the fictional town of Grover, Ariz. Accompanying Sky King on various crime-fighting missions was his teenage niece Penny (Gloria Winters).
“Sky
King” premiered on radio in 1946. The show transitioned to TV in 1951 and lasted until 1959, compiling a combined library
of 72 episodes.
Jeannie Watt, a present-day cattle rancher in southwest Montana, commented: “I particularly remember Penny getting into a boatload of trouble. She was forever getting captured, and that kept me on the edge of my seat, wondering how Sky was going to get her out of this mess.”
What made the program truly unique was its introduction of high-tech wizardry that was especially appealing to young viewers interested in science.
Promotional gadgets were offered to listeners, and then viewers. These items included a “Sky King Secret Signalscope,” a glow-in-the-dark signaling device, whistle and magnifying glass combination, and a “Sky King Spy-Detecto Writer,” which was a decoder (cipher disk), magnifying glass, measuring scale and printing mechanism in a single package.
Veteran journalist Bill Knight wrote: “‘Sky King’ stood out among the numerous Westerns of its time by integrating aviation and high-tech equipment into its narratives, reflecting people’s fascination with technology and espionage that existed during the Cold War era.”
Many pilots, including American astronauts, grew up watching Sky King and named him as an influence. Among those astronauts who possessed authentic “Sky King autographs” were Gus Grissom, Pete Conrad, Alan Shepard and Wally Schirra.
Actor Kirby Grant was born in Butte, Mont. He earned a scholarship to attend the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago and went on to sing professionally as a baritone and perform as a concert violinist. Grant also became a licensed private pilot, but he did not fly the Songbird aircraft in the television filming. He left that up to professional pilots.
Gloria Winters, a native of Los Angeles, began performing as a child actress in Hollywood at age 5. She appeared in a film with Shirley Temple and in an episode with “Our Gang,” also known as “The Little Rascals.”
Early on, a third member of the “Sky King” cast was Ronald Hagerthy of Aberdeen, S.D., who played Clipper, Penny’s older brother. (Hagerthy left the TV show after just 19 episodes, because he was drafted into the U.S. Army in the early 1950s.)
Kirby
Grant died tragically at age 73 on Oct. 30, 1985, in an automobile accident
near Titusville, Fla., while on his way to watch the final successful launch of
the Space Shuttle Challenger at Cape Canaveral.
He had been honored to receive a VIP invitation from NASA personnel to occupy a front-row seat and observe the liftoff. Astronauts had planned to recognize him for his accomplishments to advance American aviation.
Several popular Western-themed television series were introduced by the major networks – ABC, CBS and NBC – in the decades of the 1950s and 1960s.
Meagan Drillinger, a freelance writer based in New York City, said America has a “love affair” with fantasy-driven images of “saloon doors swinging open” to reveal “a spur-spangled stranger” standing there, as tumbleweeds toss along the road behind him.”
























































