The
Hopalong Cassidy film series ended in 1948, due to declining revenues, and their star William Boyd, then 53 years old, was regarded as a film star of the past. However, Boyd thought Hopalong Cassidy might have a future in television, and spent $350,000 to obtain the rights to his old films; In November 1948 Boyd persuaded the Los Angeles
NBC television station to air one Hopalong Cassidy film for a $200 rental fee. This was when almost all TV programs ran only five, 15, or 30 minutes each, like radio shows, so a feature film on TV was a special event. The broadcast was so successful that NBC rented the entire library from Boyd and broadcast the films on its national network. While the feature films were airing on NBC, Boyd wasted no time in assembling a cast and crew to produce new half-hour films for television, again for NBC.
Hopalong Cassidy began airing on June 24, 1949, and was the first network
Western television series, predating
The Lone Ranger by several months. The production schedule was so rushed that his movie co-star
Andy Clyde couldn't rearrange his schedule of film-studio commitments (Clyde did remain with Boyd on radio and for children's records).
Edgar Buchanan was the new TV sidekick, Red Connors (a character from the original stories and a few of the early films). The theme music for the show was written by
Nacio Herb Brown (music) and
L. Wolfe Gilbert (lyrics). ==Reception==