Lester Alvin Burnett<!-- NOTE: "Burnett" with no final "e" is correct as birth name --> (March 18, 1911&nbsp;– February 16, 1967), better known as Smiley Burnette, was an American country music performer and a comedic actor in Western films and on radio and TV, playing sidekick to Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, and other B-movie cowboys. was born in Summum, Illinois, on March 18, 1911, and grew up in Ravenwood, Missouri. He began singing as a child and learned to play a wide variety of instruments by ear, yet never learned to read or write music. In his teens, he worked in vaudeville, and starting in 1929, at the state's first commercial radio station, WDZ-AM in Tuscola, Illinois.

Burnette came by his nickname while creating a character for a WDZ children's program. He was reading Mark Twain's "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" at the time, which included a character named Jim Smiley. He named the radio character Mr. Smiley and soon adopted the moniker as his own, dropping the title. and when Autry left for World War II service, Burnette was elevated to top billing, with Eddie Dew, Sunset Carson, and Bob Livingston alternating as the cowboy lead. Burnette also appeared in nine films with Roy Rogers. Burnette's movie horse, white with a black-ringed left eye, also became famous, first as Black-eyed Nellie, then as Ring-eyed Nellie, and finally as just Ring Eye. was completed but never released; Columbia discontinued its program Westerns one month later. Columbia then reassigned Burnette to the six remaining films in its Gene Autry series, reuniting Burnette with his former partner.

Singer-songwriter

Smiley Burnette wrote more than 400 songs and sang a significant number of them on screen. His Western classic, "Ridin' Down the Canyon (To Watch the Sun Go Down)", was later recorded by Willie Nelson, Riders in the Sky, and Johnnie Lee Wills. Other compositions included "On the Strings of My Lonesome Guitar" (Jimmy Wakely's theme song in the 1940s), "Fetch Me Down My Trusty .45", "Ridin' All Day", and "It's Indian Summer" as well as "The Wind Sings a Cowboy Song," "The Old Covered Wagon," and "Western Lullaby." He also composed musical scores for such films as The Painted Stallion and Waterfront Lady. His songs were recorded by a wide range of singers, including Bing Crosby, Ferlin Husky, and Leon Russell. His performance of "Steamboat Bill" appeared on Billboard's country chart in 1939.

Inventor

Burnette devised and built some of his unusual musical instruments in his home workshop. His "Jassackaphone", for example, which he played in the film The Singing Cowboy, resembled an organ with pipes, levers, and pull mechanisms.

Burnette enjoyed cooking, and in the 1950s, he opened a restaurant chain called The Checkered Shirt, the first of the A-frame drive-ins.

Legacy

thumb|left|Burnett's star on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame.]]

Burnette donated his original hat and shirt to the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in 1962. In 1998, he was inducted into the Western Music Association. On May 5, 2012, he was inducted into the Cowtown Society of Western Music Hall of Fame as a Hero.

Burnette is mentioned in the Statler Brothers' 1973 country music hit "Whatever Happened to Randolph Scott?", a song which mourns the loss of the white hat cowboy heroes of the past.

Selected filmography

  • In Old Santa Fe (1934) as Lester Burnette (uncredited)
  • The Marines Are Coming (1934) as Sailor Delivering Flowers to Bill (uncredited)
  • Mystery Mountain (1934, Serial) as Lake Teamster [Ch. 6-7] (uncredited)
  • Arizona Bad Man (1935) as Credits Singer (uncredited)
  • The Phantom Empire (1935, Serial) as Oscar
  • Lightning Triggers (1935) as Singer Over Opening Credits (uncredited)
  • The Adventures of Rex and Rinty (1935, Serial) as Jensen
  • Tumbling Tumbleweeds (1935) as Smiley
  • Harmony Lane (1935) as Singer (uncredited)
  • Waterfront Lady (1935) as Musician
  • Melody Trail (1935) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Sagebrush Troubadour (1935) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Singing Vagabond (1935) as Frog Millhouse
  • Hitch Hike Lady (1935) as Singer (uncredited)
  • The Cheyenne Tornado (1935) as Singer Over Credits (uncredited)
  • Red River Valley (1936) as Frog
  • Doughnuts and Society (1936) as Mover #2
  • Comin' Round the Mountain (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Singing Cowboy (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • Hearts in Bondage (1936) as Rammer (uncredited)
  • Undersea Kingdom (1936) as Briny Deep
  • The Border Patrolman (1936) as Chuck Owens
  • Guns and Guitars (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • Oh, Susanna! (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • Ride, Ranger, Ride (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Big Show (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Old Corral (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • A Man Betrayed (1936) as Hillbilly
  • Larceny on the Air (1937) as Jimmy
  • Dick Tracy (1937, Serial) as Mike McGurk
  • Round-Up Time in Texas (1937) as Frog Millhouse
  • Git Along Little Dogies (1937) as Frog Millhouse
  • Rootin' Tootin' Rhythm (1937) as Frog Milhouse
  • Yodelin' Kid from Pine Ridge (1937) as Colonel Frog Millhouse
  • Meet the Boyfriend (1937) as Band Leader
  • Public Cowboy No. 1 (1937) as Frog Millhouse
  • Boots and Saddles (1937) as Frog Millhouse
  • Springtime in the Rockies (1937) as Frog Millhouse
  • Manhattan Merry-Go-Round (1937) as Frog - Accordion Player
  • The Old Barn Dance (1936) as Frog Millhouse
  • Hollywood Stadium Mystery (1938) as himself
  • Under Western Stars (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • Gold Mine in the Sky (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Man from Music Mountain (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • Billy the Kid Returns (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • Prairie Moon (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • Rhythm of the Saddle (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • Western Jamboree (1938) as Frog Millhouse
  • Home on the Prairie (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • Mexicali Rose (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • Blue Montana Skies (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • Mountain Rhythm (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • Colorado Sunset (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • In Old Monterey (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • Rovin' Tumbleweeds (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • South of the Border (1939) as Frog Millhouse
  • Rancho Grande (1940) as Frog Millhouse
  • Gaucho Serenade (1940) as Frog Millhouse
  • Carolina Moon (1940) as Frog Millhouse
  • Ride, Tenderfoot, Ride (1940) as Frog Millhouse
  • Ridin' on a Rainbow (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • Back in the Saddle (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • The Singing Hill (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • Sunset in Wyoming (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • Under Fiesta Stars (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • Down Mexico Way (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • Sierra Sue (1941) as Frog Millhouse
  • Cowboy Serenade (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Heart of the Rio Grande (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Home in Wyomin (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Stardust on the Sage (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Call of the Canyon (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Bells of Capistrano (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Heart of the Golden West (1942) as Frog Millhouse
  • Idaho (1943) as Frog Millhouse
  • King of the Cowboys (1943) as Frog Millhouse
  • Silver Spurs (1943) as Frog Millhouse
  • Beyond the Last Frontier (1943) as Frog Millhouse
  • Raiders of Sunset Pass (1943) as Frog Millhouse
  • Pride of the Plains (1944) as Frog Millhouse
  • Beneath Western Skies (1944) as Sheriff Frog Millhouse
  • The Laramie Trail (1944) as Frog Millhouse
  • Call of the Rockies (1944) as Frog Millhouse
  • Bordertown Trail (1944) as Frog Millhouse
  • Code of the Prairie (1944) as Frog Millhouse
  • Firebrands of Arizona (1944) as Frog Millhouse / Beefsteak Discoe
  • Roaring Rangers (1946) as himself
  • Gunning for Vengeance (1946) as himself
  • Galloping Thunder (1946) as himself
  • Two-Fisted Stranger (1946) as Deputy
  • The Desert Horseman (1946) as himself
  • Heading West (1946) as himself
  • Landrush (1946) as himself
  • Terror Trail (1946) as himself
  • The Fighting Frontiersman (1946) as himself
  • South of the Chisholm Trail (1947) as himself
  • The Lone Hand Texan (1947) as himself
  • West of Dodge City (1947) as himself, editor
  • Law of the Canyon (1947) as himself
  • Prairie Raiders (1947) as himself
  • The Stranger from Ponca City (1947) as himself
  • Riders of the Lone Star (1947) as himself
  • Buckaroo from Powder River (1947) as himself
  • Last Days of Boot Hill (1947) as Deputy
  • Six-Gun Law (1948) as himself
  • Phantom Valley (1948) as himself
  • West of Sonora (1948) as himself
  • Whirlwind Raiders (1948) as himself
  • Blazing Across the Pecos (1948) as Marshall
  • Trail to Laredo (1948) as himself
  • El Dorado Pass (1948) as himself
  • Quick on the Trigger (1948) as himself
  • Challenge of the Range (1949) as himself
  • Desert Vigilante (1949) as himself
  • Laramie (1949) as himself
  • The Blazing Trail (1949) as Marshall
  • South of Death Valley (1949) as himself
  • Bandits of El Dorado (1949) as Sheriff
  • Horsemen of the Sierras (1949) as himself
  • Renegades of the Sage (1949) as himself
  • Trail of the Rustlers (1950) as himself
  • Outcast of Black Mesa (1950) as himself
  • Texas Dynamo (1950) as himself
  • Streets of Ghost Town (1950) as himself
  • Across the Badlands (1950) as himself
  • Raiders of Tomahawk Creek (1950) as himself
  • Frontier Outpost (1950) as himself
  • Lightning Guns (1950) as himself
  • Prairie Roundup (1951) as himself
  • Ridin' the Outlaw Trail (1951) as himself
  • Fort Savage Raiders (1951) as himself
  • Whirlwind (1951) as himself
  • Snake River Desperadoes (1951) as himself
  • Bonanza Town (1951) as himself
  • Cyclone Fury (1951) as himself
  • The Kid from Amarillo (1951) as himself
  • Pecos River (1951) as himself
  • Smoky Canyon (1952) as himself
  • The Hawk of Wild River (1952) as himself
  • Laramie Mountains (1952) as Sergeant Smiley Burnette
  • The Rough, Tough West (1952) as Fire Chief
  • Junction City (1952) as himself
  • The Kid from Broken Gun (1952) as himself
  • Winning of the West (1953) as himself
  • On Top of Old Smoky (1953) as himself
  • Goldtown Ghost Riders (1953) as himself
  • Pack Train (1953) as himself
  • Saginaw Trail (1953) as himself
  • Last of the Pony Riders (1953) as himself

References

Further reading

  • Billings, Jim "Comes Long Way From Dwarf Role," (January 20, 1957), Springfield News & Leader
  • <!-- Note: "Interprises" is correct -->
  • Smiley Burnette's official Web site
  • Smiley Burnette in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame
  • Smiley Burnette in the Western Music Association
  • Smiley Burnette tribute Web site
  • Smiley Burnette biography
  • Obituary at Obituaries Today