
| Birth: |
|
Sep. 14, 1914
Chicago
Illinois, USA |
| Death: |
|
Dec. 28,
1999
Los Angeles
California, USA |
Best remembered for his role of "The Lone Ranger" on the television
series of the same name. He was inducted into the Stuntman's Hall of
Fame in 1982, and received the Western Heritage Award from the
Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1990. He is currently (as of 2004) the only
person to have a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame with both his
name and the character he was known for playing; his star reads
"Clayton Moore, the Lone Ranger." Born Jack Carlton Moore, he grew
up in Chicago and started as a circus acrobat at age 8, appearing as
an aerialist at the 1934 World's Fair.

He then went to New York City, where he worked as a male model, and
entered the film world in 1938 as a bit player and stuntman. In
1940, at the suggestion of producer Eddie Small, he changed his
first name to Clayton, and began appearing in B movies throughout
the 1940s, mostly as a bad guy. His first role as the masked man was
that of Zorro, in the movie "Ghost of Zorro" (1949). To win the part
of the Lone Ranger on the television show, he had to change his
voice to sound like the popular radio star of the Lone Ranger show.

With Jay Silverheels playing the part of Tonto, his faithful Indian
companion, he was the Lone Ranger from the show's debut in 1949,
until 1952, when he was fired in a salary dispute. At the time, he
was television's most popular western star, but he was replaced by
Jack Hart, who lasted only one season. Fans demanded the return of
Clayton Moore and the next year he was rehired at an even larger
salary, continuing in the series until its end in 1957. During his
television unemployed period, he returned to making movies,
including "Radar Men from the Moon" (1952) and "Jungle Drums of
Africa" (1953), to enhance his movie career. He also appeared as The
Lone Ranger in two movies, "The Lone Ranger" (1956), and "The Lone
Ranger and the Lost City of Gold" (1958). After the series ended,
and for the next three decades, Clayton made commercials and
personal appearances as The Lone Ranger, preaching the Ranger's Code
of Good Conduct, which Moore also personally practiced.

In 1975, Warner Brothers Studio wanted to make a new version of The
Lone Ranger movie, and did not want the public to confuse the new
star with Moore. When Moore refused to give up wearing the mask,
they obtained a court order to prohibit his wearing it, and Moore
switched to dark glasses. Public rejection of the new Lone Ranger
movie, combined with public anger over the studio's treatment of
Moore, forced the Studio into granting permission for Moore to wear
the mask again. In an interview, Moore once spoke of his role, "Once
I got the Lone Ranger role, I didn't want any other. I was playing
the good guy. Playing him made me a better person." Moore died of a
heart attack in Los Angeles, California. |