Brett and Bart Maverick (and in later seasons, their English cousin, Beauregarde "Bo" Maverick and for a short time Brent Maverick also appeared) are well dressed gamblers who migrate from town to town always looking for a good game. Poker is their favorite but they've been known to play such odd card games as Three-toed Sloth on occasion.
Last Episode
05x13 One of Our Trains is Missing Aired: Apr. 22, 1962Bart, Doc Holliday, and Modesty Blaine get involved in the mother of all train robberies. [continue reading]
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Season Guides
- Season 5 (1961-1962)
- Season 4 (1960-1961)
- Season 3 (1959-1960)
- Season 2 (1958-1959)
- Season 1 (1957-1958)
Previous Episodes
- 04x02 Hadley'… (Sep. 25, 1960)
- 03x03 The Sheriff… (Sep. 27, 1959)
- 02x10 Shady Deal … (Nov. 23, 1958)
- 01x27 Seed of Dec… (Apr. 13, 1958)
- 01x26 Burial Grou… (Mar. 30, 1958)
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Show's Cast / Crew
Directors
- Leslie H. Martinson (18 episodes)
- Douglas Heyes (13 episodes)
- Arthur Lubin (11 episodes)
Writers
- Douglas Heyes (11 episodes)
- Marion Hargrove (10 episodes)
- Howard Browne (10 episodes)
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Series Fun Facts
- This series featured two different takes on Doc Holliday. In the first season, Gerald Mohr played Holliday as a hard living, ruthless gunslinger. In seasons four and five, Peter Breck played…
[show]This series featured two different takes on Doc Holliday. In the first season, Gerald Mohr played Holliday as a hard living, ruthless gunslinger. In seasons four and five, Peter Breck played Holliday as more of a comedic rogue that was constantly getting Bart in trouble with his various schemes.
[hide] - By adding the Bart Maverick character (and later cousin Beau and brother Brent) this allowed for more episodes of the show to be filmed each season.
- In 1960, James Garner sued the Warner Brothers studio for breach of contract, arising from his suspension during the writers' strike of that year. Warner claimed that there were no scripts…
[show]In 1960, James Garner sued the Warner Brothers studio for breach of contract, arising from his suspension during the writers' strike of that year. Warner claimed that there were no scripts available during the strike, and were, therefore justified in suspending Garner without pay. However, it was learned during court testimony that the studio had secretly obtained approximately 100 television scripts during the strike. Eventually, the Los Angeles Superior Court ruled in favor of Garner, and he was released from his contract with the series.
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