Like
the windswept West Texas Ranch he now calls home, Buck Taylor’s
life and career begins at the end of a long and winding dirt road...
The
Real West is tough country where cattle and horses form the backbone
of the families that fight on to preserve their heritage and way of
life.
Born the son of a famous Hollywood
actor, Buck grew up on movie sets, watching his father, celebrated actor
Dub Taylor, appear with such movie greats as John Wayne, Tex Ritter
and Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys. He initially took a different
path, studying art at the University of Southern California, and, in
1960, trying out for the U. S. Olympic Gymnastic Team with the sponsorship
of the cowboy actor Big Boy Williams.
But the acting profession came calling.
It was deeply rooted in the young man, who, after all, had actor Chill
Wills help him take his first steps as a baby. Buck began his acting
career in the fifties working in television. He appeared in everything
from the Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet and My
Favorite Martian to the classic period westerns, including
Have Gun Will Travel with Richard Boone, The
Rebel with Nick Adams and Bonanza. He is best
remembered for his eight-year run as Newly on Gunsmoke, which ended
in 1975. Buck appeared in other popular shows including Wagon
Train, The Virginian, Dallas,
and Walker, Texas Ranger.
In 1963 his movie career began with
an appearance in Johnny Shiloh. Since his start,
Buck has worked nonstop for more than forty years with roles in such
films as Tombstone and in 2004, The Alamo
and Grand Champion.
Preserving and celebrating the heritage
of the American West is the driving force behind Buck’s career
as a watercolor artist. On movie locations he found himself sketching
and painting during breaks in filming. He started in earnest at the
1993 National Finals Rodeo selling paintings and in less than a decade
became internationally famous for his depiction of western scenes and
figures. These paintings are sold through his website, private art shows
and festivals, and at exclusive galleries. His private commissions can
be found in the Loomis Fargo headquarters, DeLucca Liquor headquarters,
Franklin Mint, John Wayne Enterprises, the American Quarter Horse Museum,
the National Ranching Heritage Museum as well as in the hands of private
collectors, including Sam Elliott, James Arness, Roy Clark, Val Kilmer,
Roger Staubach, and Powers Boothe. He is also the official artist for
several rodeos and state fairs.
Buck’s art is an invitation
to explore America’s western past. The cowboys, Native Americans,
horses and homesteaders he creates are at once authentic and captivating.
Their faces and figures tell stories of the adventure, nobility, hardship
and sacrifice that characterized the claiming of the American frontier.
His paintings reflect a deep reverence and profound appreciation for
the contributions of the hard working men and women who first survived
and later prospered amidst landscapes both unforgiving and unforgettable.
In his work, drovers push longhorns up dusty trails; braves pursue buffalo
herds across vast prairies and horses race toward distant horizons.
Such memorable images pay moving tribute to one of the most colorful
and fascinating eras in our nation’s history. Buck once described
his West Texas ranch as his “church” and his artwork as
his attempt to honor his creator for the blessing He has bestowed upon
his children, his wife Goldie, and the land.
His spirit and artistic philosophies
came together on camera in 2003, when Buck assumed the starring role
as “Harry Dodds” a modern day rancher trying to hold on
to his family and ranch in the feature film Truce, released in the spring
of 2005. Playing a tough, gruff cattleman, with fellow actors Barry
Tubbs, Brad Johnson, and George Kennedy, Buck dominates the film with
his natural grace and charm.
With an artistic career spanning
fifty years both on canvas and on the screen, Buck has garnered substantial
acclaim. Recently Buck was inducted into the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame
and received the "Spirit of Texas Award.” In 2000, he was
memorialized on the streets of Dodge City, “The Trail of Fame.”
He has also received the “Golden Boot” award along side
Ted Turner and the “Spirit of the West” award with Jack
Palance and Roy Rogers. Additionally, Buck is recognized on “The
Walk of Stars” in California with his great friends Sam Elliott
and Katharine Ross and his star appears on the streets of Kanab, Utah
on “Little Hollywood.” Buck is in good company, with his
star placed between Ronald Reagan and Tom Mix. In 1981, Buck was inducted
as a trustee in the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum for
his role as Newly on Gunsmoke.
Buck has lent his name and financial
support to numerous charities including the John Wayne Cancer Foundation,
the Walt Garrison MS Foundation, the FFA Scholarship Fund, the Screen
Actors Retirement Home, the Ben Johnson Children’s Hospital and
the Frontier Texas Museum.
The future? More acting. More painting.
And more starring roles. The Fiftieth Anniversary of the landmark Gunsmoke
television series was held in 2005, as was the reunion of cast and crew
of the cult classic Tombstone, in which Buck played
Turkey Creek Jack Johnson.
The recognition of his many talents
is overdue and well deserved. But to an actor like Buck, it is just
another stop in his long journey to the end of that winding dirt road
where the real West and the real Buck Taylor begin.