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Edgar Buchanan
Edgar Buchanan
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William Edgar Buchanan II (March 20, 1903 – April 4, 1979) was an American actor with a long career in both film and television. He is most familiar today as Uncle Joe Carson from the Petticoat Junction,[1] Green Acres, and The Beverly Hillbillies television sitcoms of the 1960s.

Key Information

Biography

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Early life

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Edgar Buchanan was born to Rose (Kee) Buchanan and William Edgar Buchanan Sr., DDS in Humansville, Missouri.[2] He moved with his family to Oregon when he was seven.[3][4] His father had a dental practice in Eugene, Oregon, and encouraged his son to follow suit. Buchanan Senior did not approve of his son's acting ambitions and pushed him to pursue dentistry instead.[5] According to authors Arden and Joan Christen, Edgar's father believed "to choose a career in the theater was to settle for a life of mediocrity and uncertainty".[5] Nevertheless, Edgar took courses in theater at the University of Oregon as a pre-med student, and was part of a Portland acting troupe in graduate school. He was also involved in the founding of the Portland Civic Theatre.[5]

In 1928, Edgar earned his DDS degree from North Pacific College School of Dentistry in Portland, Oregon, which later became Oregon Health & Science University School of Dentistry.[6] During his time there, he met his future wife, Mildred "Millie" Spence (1907–1987). They married in 1928 - the same year they both graduated with dental degrees. The couple adopted a son and named him William Edgar "Buck" Buchanan III.[7]

Big changes came in 1939 when the family of three relocated their dental practice from Eugene, Oregon, to Altadena, California. There, Edgar joined the Pasadena Playhouse as an actor.[8] Studio scouts spotted him performing at the playhouse and signed him into a seven-year deal in Hollywood. That same year, he appeared in his first film at age 36, and he left dentistry for good. Meanwhile, his wife, Dr. Millie Buchanan, DDS, took over the dental practice while also supporting her husband's new career as his talent manager.

Edgar was a member of Theta Chi fraternity[9] and a Freemason.[10]

Career

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Buchanan appeared in more than 100 films,[11] including Texas (1941), in which he played a dentist and appeared with William Holden and Glenn Ford and later in Penny Serenade (1941) with Irene Dunne and Cary Grant, Tombstone, the Town Too Tough to Die (1942), The Talk of the Town (1942) with Ronald Colman, Cary Grant and Jean Arthur, The Man from Colorado (1948), Cheaper by the Dozen (1950), Shane (1953), She Couldn't Say No (1954), Ride the High Country (1962) with Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea, McLintock! (1963) with John Wayne, Move Over, Darling (1963) with Doris Day and James Garner, and Benji (1974).[12]

Among the many television series in which he was cast as a guest star were Cimarron City, The Californians, and The Rifleman. Edgar appeared in six episodes of The Rifleman, playing Grandpa Fogerty in "The Long Goodbye" (episode 119) and Doc Burrage in the other five: "The Pet" (episode 15), "The Second Witness" (episode 23), "The Trade" (episode 24), "The Deadly Wait" (episode 26), and "The Angry Man" (episode 31).[13] In addition to several other widely varying roles on the series (running the gamut from sympathetic parts to vicious villains), he portrayed Jed Christianson in the episode "Duel at Sundown" on Maverick with James Garner and Clint Eastwood. He was on Leave It to Beaver (as both "Uncle Billy" and "Captain Jack"), The Twilight Zone, Riverboat (as Wingate Pardee in the 1960 episode, "Duel on the River"), Gunsmoke (in 1962 as the title character "Old Dan" - S7E18), Route 66, Bringing Up Buddy, Bus Stop, and The Lloyd Bridges Show.[12]

Buchanan's roles as a regular cast member in television programs included Red Connors in the syndicated Western Hopalong Cassidy,[14] and J.J. Jackson in the CBS crime drama Cade's County.[15]

Buchanan appeared as Uncle Joe Carson in all 222 episodes of Petticoat Junction, the only actor from the show to do so, as well as in 17 episodes of Green Acres,[15]: 416  and three episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies. On Petticoat Junction, he took over as proprietor of the Shady Rest Hotel following the 1968 death of show star Bea Benaderet, who had played Kate Bradley; Buchanan had starred as second lead since the series' inception. In the 1966 episode "The All-Night Party" and in the 1969 episode "Kathy Jo's First Birthday Party", he appeared with his real-life son, Buck (who had a cameo as a party goer and an ice cream vendor, respectively). Another star from Petticoat Junction and he appeared together in the 1974 movie Benji; the other "star" was Higgins the dog, which portrayed the title character.

Buchanan appeared in multiple episodes of Tales of Wells Fargo, starring Dale Robertson, appearing sporadically from 1957 to 1961. He had the recurring role of a rascally ex-outlaw and occasional dentist named Doc Dawson.[16]

In 1967, Dot Records released "Phantom 309" (Dot #17047), a narration by Buchanan. The 45-rpm single was backed with "Cotton Picker".[17]

A "crossover" episode: Irene Ryan as "Granny" from The Beverly Hillbillies and Edgar Buchanan as "Uncle Joe" on Petticoat Junction (1968)

Death

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Buchanan died from a stroke complicated by pneumonia in Palm Desert, California in 1979.[17] He was interred in the Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles.[18]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1939 My Son Is Guilty Dan, Bartender
1940 Too Many Husbands Detective Adolph McDermott
Three Cheers for the Irish Party Guest Uncredited
Tear Gas Squad Cousin Andy, a Policeman
Escape to Glory Charles Atterbee
The Sea Hawk Ben Rollins Uncredited
When the Daltons Rode Narrator / Old-timer Uncredited
Arizona Judge Bogardus
1941 Penny Serenade Applejack Carney
Her First Beau Elmer Tuttle
The Richest Man in Town Pete Martin
Texas Buford "Doc" Thorpe
You Belong to Me Billings, Groundskeeper
1942 Tombstone, the Town Too Tough to Die Curly Bill Brocious
The Talk of the Town Sam Yates
1943 City Without Men Michael T. Mallory
The Desperadoes Uncle Willie McLeod
Good Luck, Mr. Yates Jonesey Jones
Destroyer Kansas Jackson
1944 Buffalo Bill Sergeant Chips McGraw
Bride by Mistake Jonathan Connors
The Impatient Years Judge
Strange Affair Lieutenant Washburn
1946 The Fighting Guardsman Pepe, bandit-valet
Abilene Town Sheriff 'Bravo' Trimble
The Bandit of Sherwood Forest Friar Tuck
Perilous Holiday George Richards
The Walls Came Tumbling Down Reverend George Bradford
Renegades Kirk Dembrow
If I'm Lucky Darius J. Magonnagle
1947 The Sea of Grass Jeff
Framed Jeff Cunningham
1948 The Swordsman Angus MacArden
The Wreck of the Hesperus George Lockhart
The Black Arrow Lawless
Adventures in Silverado Dr. Henderson, aka The Monk
Best Man Wins Jim Smiley
Coroner Creek Sheriff O'Hea
The Untamed Breed John Rambeau
The Man from Colorado Doc Merroan
1949 The Walking Hills Old Willy
Red Canyon Jonah Johnson
Lust for Gold Wiser
Any Number Can Play Ed
1950 Cheaper by the Dozen Dr. Burton
Cargo to Capetown Sam Bennett
The Big Hangover Uncle Fred Mahoney
Devil's Doorway Zeke Carmody
1951 The Great Missouri Raid Dr. Samuels
Rawhide Sam Todd
Cave of Outlaws Dobbs
Silver City Dutch Surrency
1952 The Big Trees Walter 'Yukon' Burns
Flaming Feather Sergeant O'Rourke
Wild Stallion John Wintergreen
Toughest Man in Arizona Jim Hadlock
She Couldn't Say No Ed Meeker
1953 The War of the Worlds Square Dance Musician Uncredited
It Happens Every Thursday Jake
Shane Fred Lewis
1954 Make Haste to Live Sheriff Lafe
Human Desire Alec Simmons
Dawn at Socorro Sheriff Cauthen
Destry The Honorable Hiram J. Sellers, Mayor
1955 Rage at Dawn Judge
The Silver Star Will "Bill" Dowdy
The Lonesome Trail Dan Wells
Wichita Doc Black
1956 Come Next Spring Mr. Canary
1957 Spoilers of the Forest Tom Duncan
1958 Day of the Bad Man Sam Wyckoff
The Sheepman Milt Masters
1959 King of the Wild Stallions Idaho
It Started with a Kiss Congressman Richard Tappe
Edge of Eternity Sheriff Edwards
Hound-Dog Man Doc Cole
Stump Run Buck Gaskin
1960 Four Fast Guns Dipper
Cimarron Judge Neal Hefner
Chartroose Caboose Woody Watts
1961 Tammy Tell Me True Judge Carver
Devil's Partner Don Lucas
The Comancheros Judge Thaddeus Jackson Breen
1962 Ride the High Country Judge Tolliver
1963 Donovan's Reef Boston Attorney Francis X. O'Brien
A Ticklish Affair Captain Martin
McLintock! Bunny Dull
Move Over, Darling Judge Bryson
1965 The Rounders Vince Moore
The Man from Button Willow Sorry Voice
1966 Gunpoint Bull
1967 Welcome to Hard Times Brown
1969 Angel in My Pocket Axel Gresham
1974 Benji Bill (final film role)

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1953 Make Room for Daddy Captain Chris Season 1 Episode 8: "The Sea Captain"
1952–1954 Hopalong Cassidy Red Connors 40 episodes
1954 Crown Theatre with Gloria Swanson Uncle Harry Episode: "Uncle Harry"
1953, 1955 Cavalcade of America Horace Greeley
Doc Mathew
4 episodes
1955 Ford Theatre Papa Mumby Season 3 Episode 38: "The Mumbysa"
Screen Directors Playhouse Sub Royal Season 1 Episode 8: "The Bush Roper"
1955-1956 Judge Roy Bean Judge Roy Bean 39 episodes
1956 Strange Stories Episode: "Con Game"
Crossroads Bart Alden Season 2 Episode 10: "The Lamp of Father Cataldo"
1957 The Christophers John Augustus Episode: "Sentence Deferred"
Climax! Spencer /
Constable
Season 3 Episode 25: "Avalanche at Devil's Pass"
Season 3 Episode 42: "Deadly Climate"
1958 The Adventures of Jim Bowie Ringtail Jack Season 2 Episode 23: "Deaf Smith"
The Restless Gun Ethan Greenfield
Sheriff Jeb Barnes
Season 1 Episode 30: "Aunt Emma"
Season 1 Episode 35: "The Gold Star"
Studio One Dan Ferris Season 10 Episode 43: "Birthday Present"
The Gale Storm Show Jasper Stokes Season 3 Episode 4: "Hayride Ahoy"
26 Men Season 2 Episode 4: "Cross and Doublecross"
Cimarron City Shanty Season 1 Episode 7: "Kid on a Calico Horse"
1955–1959 General Electric Theater Buckskin /
Colonel Starbottle /
Preacher Bailey
Parson Meachum /
Doctor /
Timothy Dwight
7 episodes
1958-1959 The Californians Dutch /
Major
Season 1 Episode 33: "The Golden Bride" (1958)
Season 2 Episode 30: "One Ton of Peppercorns" (1959)
1959 Lawman Jess Miller Season 1 Episode 15: "The Captives"
Trackdown Tully Saxon Season 2 Episode 30: "The Trick"
Wanted Dead or Alive Pop Michaels /
Chester Blake
Season 1 Episode 28: "Railroaded"
Season 1 Episode 36: "Amos Carter"
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Pops Season 5 Episode 4: "Coyote Moon"
The Deputy Isbel Season 1 Episode 14: "Man of Peace"
Whirlybirds Burton Season 3 Episode 13: "The Perfect Crime"
1957, 1960 Wagon Train Thaddeus Briscoe /
Ben Mattox
Season 1 Episode 8: "The John Darro Story" (1957)
Season 4 Episode 10: "The Jane Hawkins Story" (1959)
1960 Bronco 'Pop' Ben Owens Season 2 Episode 19: "Winter Kill"
Bat Masterson Cactus Charlie Season 3 Episode 1: "Debt of Honor"
Assignment: Underwater Charlie Noble Season 1 Episode 7: "Charlie Noble's Pearl"
Stagecoach West Lum Jensen Season 1 Episode 7: "Red Sand"
Riverboat Wingate Pardee Season 2 Episode 11: "Duel on the River"
1957–1961 Tales of Wells Fargo Bob Dawson /
Doc Dawson
6 episodes
1958–1961 Maverick Daddy Forge /
Jed Christianson /
Colonel Hamilton /
Sheriff Hadley /
Red Daniels
5 episodes
1959-1961 The Rifleman Doc J. Burrage /
Grandpa Fogarty
6 episodes
1960-1961 Bonanza Hallelujah Hicks
John Henry Hill
Season 2 Episode 11: "The Trail Gang" (1960)
Season 2 Episode 34: "Sam Hill" (1961)
1961 Klondike Sam Perkins Season 1 Episode 13: "The Golden Burro"
National Velvet Grandpa Harwell Season 1 Episode 24: "Grandpa"
Season 1 Episode 30: "Grandpa Returns"
The Barbara Stanwyck Show Judge Franklin Season 1 Episode 36: "A Man's Game"
The Tall Man Archie Keogh Season 2 Episode 7: "The Judas Palm"
The New Bob Cummings Show Episode: "The Oxtail Incident"
Bus Stop Judge Neal Season 1 Episode 9: "The Man from Bootstrap"
The Andy Griffith Show Henry Wheeler Season 2 Episode 9: "Aunt Bee's Brief Encounter"
1958, 1962 Perry Mason Andy Templet /
Judge Edward Daley
Season 2 Episode 11: "The Case of the Perjured Parrot" (1958)
Season 6 Episode 10: "The Case of the Lurid Letter" (1962)
1960–1962 Laramie Calico /
Doc /
Tully Casper /
Cletus McBain
4 episodes
Outlaws Nulty /
Neely
Season 1 Episode 7: "Starfall: Part 1" (1960)
Season 2 Episode 24: "All in a Day's Work" (1962)
Route 66 Jack McConkle /
Magistrate Abe Chumley
Season 1 Episode 10: "The Beryllium Eater" (1960)
Season 3 Episode 2: "Journey to Nineveh" (1962)
1962 The Twilight Zone Doc Bolton Season 3 Episode 23: "The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank"
Thriller Doc O'Connor Season 2 Episode 24: 'Til Death Do Us Part
Alcoa Premiere Crab Holman Season 2 Episode 1: "Flashing Spikes"
Stoney Burke Vernon Dawes Season 1 Episode 2: "Fight Night"
Have Gun – Will Travel Noah Cardiff Season 6 Episode 12: "Man in an Hourglass"
The Wide Country Uncle Walter 'Walt' Guthrie Season 1 Episode 12: "Good Old Uncle Walt"
Dennis the Menace Mr. Meekin Season 4 Episode 13: "Dennis and the Hermit"
1957–1963 Leave It to Beaver Captain Jack /
William 'Uncle Billy' Cleaver
3 episodes
1962-1963 The Lloyd Bridges Show Doc Lawton /
Andrew Jackson Tyree
Season 1 Episode 6: "Just Married" (1962)
Season 1 Episode 28: "The Tyrees of Capitol Hill" (1963)
Gunsmoke Dan Witter /
Dan York
Season 7 Episode 18: "Old Dan" (1962)
Season 8 Episode 34: "Old York" (1963)
Dr. Kildare Steve Devitt /
Judge Manning
Season 1 Episode 16: "The Administrator" (1962)
Season 2 Episode 32: "To Each His Own Prison" (1963)
1965 Luke and the Tenderfoot Luke Herkimer
1968 Something for a Lonely Man Old Man Wolenski TV movie
The Beverly Hillbillies Uncle Joe Carson Season 7 (3 episodes)
1965–1969 Green Acres Uncle Joe Carson 16 episodes (There were many crossovers from Petticoat Junction cast members in the series)
1969 The Over-the-Hill Gang Jason Fitch TV movie
1963–1970 Petticoat Junction Joseph P. "Uncle Joe" Carson 222 episodes
1970 The Name of the Game Felson Season 3 Episode 8: "Little Bear Died Running"
The Mod Squad Hargis Season 3 Episode 8: "Welcome to the Human Race, Levi Frazee!"
The Over-the-Hill Gang Rides Again Jason Fitch TV movie
1971 "The Men From Shiloh" (rebranded name of The Virginian) Teddy Birdwell Season 9 Episode 17: "The Legacy of Spencer Flats"
Yuma Mules McNeil TV movie
1971–1972 Cade's County J.J. Jackson 24 episodes
1972 The Partridge Family Judge McElwreath Season 3 Episode 2: "M is for Many Things"
1973 Love, American Style Judge Brockmerton Season 4 Episode 14 (Segment: Love and the Family Hour)

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Edgar Buchanan (March 20, 1903 – April 4, 1979) was an American character actor renowned for his portrayals of gruff, folksy figures in over 100 films and numerous television series, most notably as the lazy schemer Uncle Joe Carson on the sitcom Petticoat Junction from 1963 to 1970. Born William Edgar Buchanan II in , he moved with his family to at age seven and later pursued , earning a Doctor of Dental Surgery degree in 1928 from North Pacific College School of Dentistry alongside his wife, Mildred Spence, with whom he practiced for over a decade, initially in , before briefly continuing in , after their 1939 move. Buchanan transitioned to acting in the late 1930s after performing in local theater, making his film debut in 1939's My Son Is Guilty and quickly becoming a staple in Westerns, where he often played judges, sheriffs, or comic relief characters. He gained prominence in the 1940s through roles in films like Texas (1941) opposite William Holden and Glenn Ford, Penny Serenade (1941) with Cary Grant and Irene Dunne, and The Talk of the Town (1942) alongside Ronald Colman and Jean Arthur. His television career flourished in the 1950s and 1960s, including starring as Judge Roy Bean in the syndicated series Judge Roy Bean (1955–1956), as sidekick Red Connors in the Hopalong Cassidy TV series (1952–1954), and guest spots on shows like The Andy Griffith Show and The Rifleman, before his iconic run as Uncle Joe, a role he reprised in crossover episodes of Green Acres and The Beverly Hillbillies. Later film highlights included Shane (1953) and Sam Peckinpah's Ride the High Country (1962), cementing his legacy as a versatile supporting player in Hollywood's Golden Age. Buchanan's distinctive gravelly voice, craggy features, and knack for blending humor with made him a beloved figure in rural-themed , though health issues led to his retirement in the early 1970s; he died of a complicated by at age 76 in , following brain surgery.

Early Life

Birth and Childhood

William Edgar Buchanan II was born on March 20, 1903, in . He was the son of Dr. William Edgar Buchanan Sr., who worked as a teacher and high school principal before becoming a , and Rose Kee Buchanan. The family's roots in rural shaped Buchanan's early years, with his father's evolving career in dentistry providing a stable yet demanding household environment that emphasized education and professional dedication. Around 1910, at the age of seven, Buchanan relocated with his parents and four sisters to Eugene, Oregon, where his father established a dental practice. This move from the Midwest to the Pacific Northwest introduced the young Buchanan to a new landscape of forests, rivers, and a burgeoning community, fostering family closeness amid the challenges of resettlement. The transition highlighted the family's adaptability, as they integrated into Eugene's local life, with Buchanan's childhood marked by the routines of a professional household influenced by his father's work. Details on Buchanan's specific childhood interests remain sparse in available records, though the family's relocation represented a significant early journey that broadened his exposure beyond Missouri's rural setting. No documented anecdotes point to precocious theatrical leanings during this period, but the stability of his upbringing in Eugene laid the groundwork for later pursuits.

Education

Following his family's relocation to Oregon when he was seven years old, Edgar Buchanan attended local schools in the state, completing his in 1921. Buchanan enrolled at the in Eugene, where he pursued premedical studies while taking courses in drama. These theater classes introduced him to the and fostered an early interest in , complementing his primary focus on . At his father's urging, who was himself a , Buchanan then transferred to North Pacific College School of Dentistry in Portland to specialize in the field. He graduated from North Pacific College in 1928 with a Doctor of Dental Surgery (DDS) degree alongside his future wife, Mildred Spence, the institution later merging into what is now the Oregon Health & Science University School of Dentistry. No specific academic honors or extracurricular leadership roles are documented from his time at either institution, though his dual engagement with medicine and theater laid the groundwork for his future career pivot. Upon earning his DDS, Buchanan obtained his dental license in Oregon and established an initial practice in Eugene, where he worked for several years before expanding his professional scope. This early phase in dentistry reflected the practical career path shaped by his education and family influence.

Career

Dentistry and Transition to Acting

After earning his dentistry degree from the North Pacific College School of Dentistry in , Edgar Buchanan established a joint dental practice with his wife, Mildred, who was also a licensed dentist, in , in the late 1920s. They operated this practice successfully from 1928 to 1937, during which time Buchanan served as chief of oral surgery at Eugene Hospital starting in . The couple's professional partnership allowed them to build a stable life while Buchanan balanced his dental work with emerging interests in theater, including assisting the drama coach at the and participating in local stage performances in the early . In 1939, Buchanan and his family relocated to , where they established a new dental practice closer to Hollywood, providing a financial safety net as he explored opportunities. This move aligned with his lifelong passion for performance, which he had pursued alongside despite his father's preference for the ; Buchanan later reflected, "You know, I was a in ? My father was a and my wife Mildred was a . We got before we even graduated ." While maintaining the practice, he joined the , immersing himself in professional stage work that marked his initial foray into . By late 1939, at the age of 36, Buchanan decided to retire from entirely to commit to full-time, driven by the success of his early roles and a desire to follow his primary after years of balancing both careers. His wife assumed control of the dental practice, ensuring family stability as he transitioned. This pivotal shift led to his first professional acting credit in the 1939 film My Son Is Guilty, following his Pasadena Playhouse performances.

Film Career

Buchanan made his film debut in the 1939 crime drama My Son Is Guilty, directed by William Nigh, in which he portrayed the bartender Dan. This role marked the beginning of his transition from to full-time , as he leveraged his stage experience to secure supporting parts in Hollywood. Over the next few years, he appeared in a variety of genres, but quickly gravitated toward westerns, debuting in the genre with When the Daltons Rode (1940), a production starring . Throughout the , Buchanan became a fixture in B-westerns, delivering over 50 appearances as rugged, no-nonsense sidekicks, ranch owners, or comic foils, often injecting folksy humor into the narratives. Notable examples include (1940), directed by , where he played Judge Bogardus; (1941), a western co-starring and , in which Buchanan depicted a dentist-turned-cowboy; and Tombstone: The Town Too Tough to Die (1942), a film about the Earp brothers, featuring him as Judge Fair. His collaboration with extended to 13 films, beginning with Texas, highlighting his reliability in ensemble casts. temporarily disrupted Hollywood production, but Buchanan maintained a steady output, contributing to morale-boosting westerns and other features amid wartime resource shortages. Beyond westerns, Buchanan earned acclaim in prestige dramas, such as Frank Capra's The Talk of the Town (1942), where he supported leads and as the eccentric farmer Sam. His gravelly voice and craggy features suited gruff yet endearing characters, evolving from bit players to integral supporting roles across approximately 100 films through the 1960s. He worked with esteemed directors like Capra and —the latter in (1963), a comedic adventure starring —cementing his status as a versatile in both low-budget oaters and major studio pictures.

Television Career

Buchanan entered television in the early with roles in Western series, marking a shift from his film work to the small screen. He portrayed the comic sidekick Red Connors in the syndicated (1952–1954), appearing in 40 episodes alongside William Boyd as Hoppy. This role established him in dramatic Western formats, where his gruff yet affable demeanor provided contrast to the action-oriented narratives. In 1955, Buchanan took the lead as the titular character in the syndicated Western (1955–1956), playing the eccentric "hanging judge" of , across 39 half-hour episodes. The series drew loosely from the historical figure's life, blending with light drama, and aired in syndication to audiences seeking family-friendly adventure programming. He continued guesting in and Western shows, including a notable appearance as Doc Bolton in episode "The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank" (1962), where he supported the story's supernatural twist involving a seemingly resurrected man. Buchanan's breakthrough came in comedy with his iconic role as Uncle Joe Carson, the lazy but lovable uncle and hotel owner in the sitcom (1963–1970), appearing in all 222 episodes. Created by , the show centered on life at the Shady Rest Hotel in rural , allowing Buchanan to leverage his established rustic persona for humorous, scheming antics that endeared him to viewers. His performance as Uncle Joe extended through crossovers to the : 16 episodes of (1965–1971), where he interacted with the urban-rural clashes of the Douglas family, and several appearances on (1968–1971), reinforcing the character's lazy charm amid the Clampett clan's antics. Over his career, Buchanan amassed more than 70 television credits, with his output peaking in the as he transitioned from rugged Western heroes to comedic rural everyman figures. This evolution mirrored the era's programming trends, adapting his film-honed gravelly voice and folksy mannerisms to episodic TV's demand for repeatable, relatable characters. The rural sitcoms, including , enjoyed strong ratings until CBS's "rural purge" of 1970–1971, when the network canceled them to target younger, urban demographics, ending Buchanan's sitcom run amid broader industry shifts.

Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Edgar Buchanan married Mildred Marguerite Spence, his classmate from , on April 7, 1928, in . The couple, both graduates of North Pacific College's dental program that same year, established a joint dentistry practice initially in , where they partnered professionally as husband and wife dentists. In 1939, Buchanan and Spence relocated their practice and family to , marking a pivotal shift as Buchanan began pursuing acting opportunities at the . Spence supported this career transition by taking over the dental practice and serving as her husband's personal manager behind the scenes. The couple adopted a son, William Edgar "Buck" Buchanan III, born in 1946 in , after facing challenges with . Buck later built a career in radio broadcasting, hosting shows such as "The Fifties at Five" on in during the late and early . During Buchanan's acting years, which involved frequent travel for film and television work, the family provided steady support amid these transitions, with Spence managing household and professional logistics. In their later years, the Buchanans resided in the Palm Springs area, retiring to , where they maintained a close family life until Buchanan's death in 1979; Spence continued living there until her passing in 1987 at age 79 from .

Death

After retiring from acting in 1974 following his final role in the film Benji, Edgar Buchanan resided in Palm Desert, California. In late 1978, Buchanan suffered health issues that led to hospitalization and brain surgery on January 29, 1979, at in , to relieve pressure from spinal fluid on his brain. He subsequently entered a prolonged complicated by a and . Buchanan died on April 4, 1979, at the age of 76. A private funeral service was held, and he was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in , . He was survived by his wife, Mildred, and son, Buck.

Legacy

Notable Roles

One of Edgar Buchanan's most enduring and defining roles was Uncle Joe Carson in the sitcom (1963–1970), where he portrayed the lazy, scheming proprietor of the Shady Rest Hotel in the fictional town of . Buchanan's Uncle Joe was a master of , perpetually dodging chores and concocting absurd get-rich-quick schemes, all delivered through his signature gravelly voice and rumpled, folksy demeanor that endeared him to audiences as the quintessential . This character not only anchored the show's humor but also cemented Buchanan's image as the of the bumbling, small-town , appearing in all 222 episodes of the series and extending the role into crossover appearances on and . In the syndicated Western television series (1952–1954), Buchanan played Red Connors, the loyal and ranch hand to the titular hero, bringing a blend of and steadfast reliability to the adventures. As Red, Buchanan evolved the character across the 52-episode run, often providing wry commentary and physical humor amid the action, which contributed significantly to the series' appeal in the B-Western genre and helped sustain the franchise's popularity into the television era. His portrayal highlighted a rugged yet humorous companion, drawing on Buchanan's natural and expressive facial tics to humanize the role. Buchanan starred as the titular Judge Roy Bean in the 1955–1956 syndicated Western series Judge Roy Bean, reimagining the real-life "Law West of the Pecos" as a quirky, self-appointed who dispensed frontier law with a mix of eccentricity, wit, and underlying fairness in the rough town of . Over 39 episodes, Buchanan infused the role with a gravelly authority tempered by humorous asides, portraying Bean as a colorful figure who used his more for than strict , blending historical inspiration with lighthearted to appeal to family audiences. This performance showcased Buchanan's ability to balance gravitas and levity, making the judge a memorable symbol of unconventional . Among his standout film roles, Buchanan provided notable villainy with comic undertones as Curly Bill Brocius in Tombstone: The Town Too Tough to Die (1942), where his chubby-faced antagonist added sly rusticity to the legend, relishing the outlaw's manipulative schemes amid the gunfight drama. Similarly, in the comedy-drama The Talk of the Town (1942), he delivered as Sam Yates, the hapless defense lawyer navigating a wrongful accusation case with bungled enthusiasm and folksy quips, enhancing the film's blend of suspense and humor alongside stars and . These performances exemplified Buchanan's versatility in supporting roles, often stealing scenes through his everyman charm. Buchanan's acting style was defined by his distinctive gravelly drawl, expressive chubby features, and innate appeal, which allowed him to embody rustic, scheming characters with authentic warmth and humor across genres. Frequently cast as lazy schemers or loyal sidekicks, his portrayals evoked the sly, down-home wisdom of rural America, much like fellow Western , with whom he shared a similar knack for infusing folksy archetypes with memorable, scene-stealing energy. This approach made Buchanan a go-to performer for and moral anchors in both films and television.

Cultural Impact

Buchanan's portrayal of Uncle Joe Carson in the sitcom (1963–1970) significantly contributed to the popularization of rural comedy in television. As the lazy yet endearing handyman at the Shady Rest Hotel, his gravelly voice, warm smile, and impeccable comedic timing helped define the era's lighthearted depictions of small-town life, endearing the character to millions of viewers who appreciated its blend of humor and folksy authenticity. Unlike the more caricatured rural portrayals in shows like , emphasized relatable, everyday community interactions, a distinction Buchanan himself highlighted in period interviews, noting the series' grounding in realistic "hometown" dynamics rather than broad stereotypes. This approach helped sustain the appeal of rural-themed programming during its peak, positioning Buchanan as a key figure in the genre's mainstream success. The show's cancellation in 1970 amid CBS's "rural purge"—a network shift away from country-flavored series to attract urban demographics—marked the end of an era, yet Petticoat Junction achieved lasting syndication longevity, continuing to broadcast on channels like MeTV into the 2020s and preserving Buchanan's influence on nostalgic family entertainment.

References

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