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elevision's  Wyatt  Earp,  as  played  by
                                      actor Hugh O'Brian, is frequently ac-
                                      cused  of  bearing  little  or  no  re-
                               semblance  to  the  real  Wyatt  Earp,  the  cele-
                               brated  gunfighter, town tamer and marshal.
                                 The dissimilarity  is not so  marked as some
                               skeptics say. To be sure, the television Earp's
                               face  is. barren-in notable contrast to the real
                               Earp's  fierce  mustache-and  certain  Vine
                               Street  modifications  have  been  made  in  the
                               Stetson-type hat,  high-button coat and  white
                               shirt  that  were  standard  attire  in  Marshal
                               Earp's day.
                                 But O'Brian  paints  a  fair  picture.  There  is
                               even  some  physical  resemblance  to  the
                               "square-jawed, rail-thin but strong" marshal.
                               The  most  valid  complaint is  that he  does  not
                               play  Earp  heroically  enough.  The  TV  Earp
                               pales before the  exploits of the  stern-visaged
                               lawman.  O'Brian's  problem  is  to  play  down
                               the  part so  modern  audiences will  believe  it.
                               The real Earp was  a  mighty tough  customer,
                               according  to  Stuart  N.  Lake,  who,  after
                               years  of  intensive  research, wrote  the  biog-
                               raphy  on  which  the  ABC  series  is  based.
                               His  favorite  disciplinary  method  was  known
                               as  "buffaloing."  This  meant  that  he  laid  the
                               12-inch  barrel  of  his  Buntline  Special  across
                               the  miscreant's skull  and  hauled  him  off  un-
                               conscious to jail. Being a humane man as well
                               as  a  tough  one,  Earp  seldom  shot  to  kill  if
                               he  could  help it.  In  fact,  he  would  not  shoot
                               at · all  unless  forced.  It  was  not  uncommon
                               for  him  to  buffalo  20  or  30  obstreperous
                               cowboys  in  a  single  Saturday  night.
                                 Buffaloing was not only  painful but insult-
                               ing. It implied that the gun-toter was not for-
                               midable  enough  to  rate  having   continued



                 Hugh O'Brian may be a  tough hombre on TV,


                 but he's no match for  the original marshal


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