The loss of their Columbia movie contract forced the Hoosier Hot Shots to find employment elsewhere. In 1949 they began touring movie theaters as a headline vaudeville act (
Variety reported that a February 1950 engagement in Seattle, Washington made a "great $11,000" for the week). In 1950 they made a guest appearance in their last motion picture,
Hollywood Varieties, produced by
Robert L. Lippert. In this simulation of a vaudeville revue, they appeared as the closing act -- reprising two songs from their 1946 feature
Singing on the Trail -- and were billed as the film's stars, alongside master of ceremonies
Robert Alda. They also had a late-Saturday-night radio series for the
Mutual Broadcasting System, which aired during 1949 and 1950. In July 1950 they made their television debut headlining a musical variety show, broadcast on KTSL-TV in Los Angeles. Nationwide exposure continued into 1951 with a primetime appearance on NBC-TV's
Four Star Revue and a syndicated series of five
Snader Telescriptions. Then the national momentum slowed, and by 1952 the band took on live engagements in nightclubs and state fairs. They were reunited with their Columbia co-star
Carolina Cotton at the Last Frontier nightclub in
Las Vegas, Nevada. In January 1953 the
Evansville Press of Evansville, Indiana, printed a profile of the group, claiming that Gil Taylor was nicknamed "Sleepy" because of his deadpan, slow-moving ways. It appears that his bandmates picked up on this and playfully called Taylor "Sleepy", to his dismay. Taylor suddenly left the group and would not return for 15 months. He was replaced temporarily by bass player Nate Harrison. Harrison accompanied the band on a tour of 18 state and county fairs in southern California in 1953. Gil Taylor returned to the Hot Shots in April 1954. One year later they joined the cast of a local TV series,
Western Varieties, out of
KTLA-TV in Los Angeles. This prompted their being signed for the country-music show
Ranch Party (1957), a filmed version of the successful
Town Hall Party; the filmed episodes were produced and syndicated by Columbia's TV subsidiary,
Screen Gems. Throughout 1959 the Hoosier Hot Shots were resident entertainers at the upscale
Holiday Hotel in
Reno, Nevada. The Hoosier Hot Shots' career was winding down in the 1960s. Bass player Gil Taylor retired, and his temporary replacement Nate Harrison returned to the group permanently. The Hot Shots continued playing live venues and recording sessions (adding a drummer, Keith Milheim). Their last new album, in stereo, was "Are You Ready, Hezzie?", released by
Dot Records in 1966. Thereafter their records were confined to reissues and compilation albums. The Hoosier Hot Shots played their final engagements in 1979, in Las Vegas and at
Knott's Berry Farm in California. They retired the act when Hezzie Trietsch became too ill to perform; he died of cancer on April 20, 1980. Frank Kettering died on June 9, 1973; his successor Gil Taylor died on July 5, 1981. Ken Trietsch followed on September 17, 1987. Gabe Ward continued to perform solo (as "Mr. Hoosier Hot Shot") after his bandmates had died or retired, until shortly before his own death on January 14, 1992. ==Legacy==