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KUED Rides
the Outlaw Trail
Film Documentary Presents New Information in Butch Cassidy Story
What really
happened to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid?
KUED producer
John Howe journeys from Utah and Wyoming to Argentina and Bolivia to uncover
the real story of the West's most famous outlaw
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Photo
of Butch Cassidy: Credit http://historytogo
utah. gov/ mythcassidy.html. |
Butch
Cassidy and the Outlaw Trail, premiering on
KUED-Channel 7, June 18 at
9 p.m., reveals important new information about the life of Butch
and Sundance on their Argentina ranch and in South America. The documentary
film sheds new light on one of the greatest mysteries of the American
West made famous in the Paul Newman-Robert Redford movie, Butch Cassidy
and The Sundance Kid. Narrated by motion picture actor Hal Holbrook,
this one-hour documentary film follows the outlaw's life from his youth
in Circleville, Utah to the shootout in a remote Bolivian village that
still has some wondering: did he die in South America, or did he return
to the United States?
The film
draws on the expertise of the nation’s foremost scholars and writers,
as well as relatives of these historical figures.
Butch
Cassidy and the Outlaw Trail captures the sprawling, breathtaking
landscape of the region and outlaw hideouts including Brown’s Park,
Robbers' Roost, and Hole in the Wall. KUED rides the Outlaw Trail through
Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Colorado, South Dakota, and New Mexico to bring
viewers to key locations.
"Hopefully,
this film advances the story significantly beyond anything that has been
previously produced," says John Howe, producer of Butch Cassidy
and the Outlaw Trail. "The film features locations, letters,
and some of the rarest photographs of the outlaws in the world that have
seldom, if ever, been seen on television."
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Butch
Cassidy's home in Circleville, Utah
(Credit: http://www.so-utah.com/no89/butch/homepage.html). |
Butch Cassidy
[nee Robert LeRoy Parker] was born to a Utah Mormon family in 1866. According
to his sister, Lula, he grew up with loving parents in a happy home lined
by poplar trees in Circleville, Utah. His nickname "Butch" probably
came from working as a butcher in Rock Springs, Wyoming years later. His
first major robbery was a Telluride, Colorado bank heist in 1889.
Butch had the reputation of never hurting anyone. He would sometimes "go
straight" after robberies. Some speculate he could have been "lying
low" to plan his next robbery. Loyal to fellow outlaws, he appears
to have been a likeable man and accomplished cowboy.
"The way he handled those poor cattle over that long and dusty trail
of 200 miles was a revelation," wrote rancher William French. French
hired Butch under an assumed name in Alma, New Mexico. "He never
dropped a hoof, and there was no tail to his herd when he arrived at the
road."
Although legend assumes that Butch rode with what came to be called "The
Wild Bunch," no one knows for sure who was likely at each of those
robberies. The adventures of "The Wild Bunch" would become some
of the most famous in American history. The gang developed a trademark
escape pattern by switching to fresh relay horses in Pony Express fashion
to make their getaways. Their train robberies became dramatic and dangerous
with the use of dynamite.
Butch posed with Sundance and three other outlaws for the famous "Fort
Worth Five" photograph during a visit to the Texas red light district
called Hell’s Half Acre. The mysterious and elusive Etta Place,
whose real name is likely Ethel, entered the outlaws’ lives at about
this time. Although little is known about her, she became the Sundance
Kid’s love interest.
As lawmen heated up their pursuit of the gang, Butch, Sundance, and Etta
escaped to South America where they operated a ranch that still stands
in the foothills of the Andes Mountains. After Butch and Sundance were
wrongfully accused of robbing an Argentine bank, they left their Argentina
ranch for Chile and then Bolivia. Etta Place disappeared without a trace
into history. "The Butch Cassidy story ends in mystery, but what
happened to Etta Place is as great a mystery," says Howe. "No
one knows for certain what happened to her."
A payroll robbery in Bolivia led to a series of events that may have precipitated
a deadly shootout. The outcome of that shootout has been disputed by some
historians, writers, and family descendants. Did Butch and Sundance die
in a wind-swept village high in the Bolivian Andes? Or, did Butch survive
and return to the United States? Watch the documentary and decide for
yourself.
"Butch Cassidy and the Outlaw Trail remains one
of the greatest mysteries of the American West," says Howe. "It’s
a story that refuses to die."
http://www.kued.org
U-News
& Views © 2003 - An online publication
by the University of Utah Alumni Association
Questions? Concerns? Contact Linda Marion, editor
(7-7837; lmarion@alumni.utah.edu)
or Sara Nosanchuk, managing editor
(1-3709; snosanchuk@alumni.utah.edu) |