4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Four Color 934

COMIC DETAILS

Comic Description: Four Color #934 Universal
Grade: 9.4
Page Quality: OFF-WHITE
Pedigree: File Copy
Certification #: 0910809003
Owner: 4GEMWORKS

SET DETAILS

Winning Set: 4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Date Added: 6/29/2009
Research: See CGC's Census Report for this Comic

Owner's Description

Restless Gun 9/58 (#1) File Copy

Photo Cover: Vint Bonner as played by John Payne
Pencils & Inks: Mel Keefer

This copy is tied with two others for top census among eight graded to date. 01/13. I originally bought this copy graded, as is, from Heritage Auctions.

Table of Contents
1. 1. Vint Bonner
Vint Bonner
2. 2. Outlaw Stage
Restless Gun
3. 3. Vengeance Valley
Restless Gun
4. 4. [no title indexed]
Restless Gun
5. 5. Gun With a Reason
Restless Gun
This copy has the Wrigley Gum: “Have Fun Safely” ad on the back. Other copies may have a “story”.


Some data courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution license. http://www.comics.org/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
http://www.comics.org/issue/14640/

More interesting thoughts about Restless Gun from Wikipedia:

The Restless Gun is a western television series that appeared on NBC between 1957 and 1959, with John Payne in the role of Vint Bonner, a wandering cowboy in the era after the American Civil War. A skilled gunfighter, Bonner is an idealistic person who prefers peaceful resolutions of conflict wherever possible. He is gregarious, intelligent, and public-spirited. The half-hour black-and-white program aired seventy-eight episodes. Jeanne Bates appeared in varying roles with Payne in five episodes of The Restless Gun.[1]
The Restless Gun theme song (officially titled "I Ride With the Wind") begins: "I ride with the wind, my eyes on the sun, and my hand on my restless gun..." The song composer is probably Paul Dunlap, credited as the primary series composer, but could have been contributed to by either of the two other series composers, Dave Kahn and Stanley Wilson, also. Two versions (one a vocal) are currently posted on YouTube, but neither posting lists any composer or performance credits.[2]
Background
Broadcast on March 29, 1957, as an installment of the CBS anthology series The Schlitz Playhouse of Stars, the pilot episode was based on a radio series The Six Shooter, with Payne's character named Britt Ponset.[3] For the television version, however, the name was changed to Vint Bonner. Some episodes were based on the radio programs.[4]
The principal producer of The Restless Gun was David Dortort, thereafter in 1959 the executive producer of NBC's blockbuster western hit Bonanza. Dortort did not create The Restless Gun, nor did he produce the pilot episode, and he rarely contributed original scripts. A critic who considers The Restless Gun only an average program, writes that the series "probably owes its mediocrity more to MCA, the company that 'packaged' the series and produced it through its television arm Revue Productions, than to Dortort."[4]
The Restless Gun ranked in the Top Ten during its first season on the air, ending the year at No. 8, but it was not among the highest rated programs in the second season.[5][6]
Set in Texas, The Restless Gun pilot episode features Andrew Duggan (later of CBS's Lancer), William Hopper (of Perry Mason), Michael Landon (later of Bonanza and Little House on the Prairie) in supporting roles. Hopper plays a former lawman from Laredo in south Texas and long-time friend of Bonner's. Hopper's character is being sought for revenge by Duggan, whom the lawman had sent to prison. In the episode, Bonner speaks of taking a job near Waco.[7]
Most end titles of The Restless Gun episodes read "Based on characters created by Frank Burt," but Burt's name is not mentioned in the pilot episode. Nor is he listed as the "creator."[4]
Payne is the "executive producer" of his series, but a critic calls that designation "vanity."[4] Payne has sometimes been compared to actor Dick Powell, who during that same period hosted and sometimes starred in his own CBS western anthology series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater during the second half of the 1950s.[4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Restless_Gun
 
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