Chester becomes engaged more or less accidentally, but he takes to heart his obligation to his betrothed, leaving his job with Mr. Dillon to devote himself to homesteading a barren quarter s... Read allChester becomes engaged more or less accidentally, but he takes to heart his obligation to his betrothed, leaving his job with Mr. Dillon to devote himself to homesteading a barren quarter section.Chester becomes engaged more or less accidentally, but he takes to heart his obligation to his betrothed, leaving his job with Mr. Dillon to devote himself to homesteading a barren quarter section.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Sondra Blake
- Miss Daisy Fair
- (as Sondra Kerr)
Arthur Peterson
- Arny
- (as Arthur Peterson Jr.)
Lovyss Bradley
- Townswoman
- (uncredited)
Rudy Doucette
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
George Ford
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
John George
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Herschel Graham
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Connie Lamont
- Townswoman
- (uncredited)
Mathew McCue
- Joe
- (uncredited)
Fred McDougall
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
Dal McKennon
- Homesteader
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Chester wrecks my nerves
Not a fan of Chester's bumbling courtship and antics in this episode
Funniest Episode of Gunsmoke
While I usually watched episode after episode of bodies dropping like lead weights in this show, this episode took a different turn and caught me by surprise. It kept me laughing pretty much throughout. Chester was tops in performance here.
10AlsExGal
If you are not a fan of Chester's character then YMMV.
But if you are a fan of Dennis Weaver's Chester, then this may just be your favorite episode. The episode is all Chester all of the time.
Chester proposes to a girl he just met, Daisy, and afterwards he is afraid that she may remember the proposal - she never answered - and hold him to it. There are a hilarious ten minutes or so while he ruminates over this, but then Daisy shows up, remembers the proposal, and accepts.
Chester never did waste time feeling sorry for himself, and because Daisy expects to be taken care of, Chester goes right to work to accomplish that. He buys some land that looks like nothing would grow on it with a lean to shack - and I do mean "lean to" quite literally. Everything goes wrong for him, and then Daisy sees the place and has a fit.
One of the most endearing scenes here is a long scene with Chester and Doc Adams. Doc has come out to take a look at the house - Chester is building a new one. When he sees the dire straits that Chester is in, he offers him some food he brought with him - A pot of stew, pies, eggs, and various side dishes. He says that he wants Chester to take it off of his hands because somebody paid their bill in food rather than cash, but you just know Doc bought and paid for that food himself and is making up that story so Chester won't feel like he's taking charity. Doc only makes fun of Chester when he knows it is over nothing, which this mess certainly is not.
How this ended was a bit of a surprise, but it was a great one hour episode that I would strongly recommend.
Chester proposes to a girl he just met, Daisy, and afterwards he is afraid that she may remember the proposal - she never answered - and hold him to it. There are a hilarious ten minutes or so while he ruminates over this, but then Daisy shows up, remembers the proposal, and accepts.
Chester never did waste time feeling sorry for himself, and because Daisy expects to be taken care of, Chester goes right to work to accomplish that. He buys some land that looks like nothing would grow on it with a lean to shack - and I do mean "lean to" quite literally. Everything goes wrong for him, and then Daisy sees the place and has a fit.
One of the most endearing scenes here is a long scene with Chester and Doc Adams. Doc has come out to take a look at the house - Chester is building a new one. When he sees the dire straits that Chester is in, he offers him some food he brought with him - A pot of stew, pies, eggs, and various side dishes. He says that he wants Chester to take it off of his hands because somebody paid their bill in food rather than cash, but you just know Doc bought and paid for that food himself and is making up that story so Chester won't feel like he's taking charity. Doc only makes fun of Chester when he knows it is over nothing, which this mess certainly is not.
How this ended was a bit of a surprise, but it was a great one hour episode that I would strongly recommend.
I feel so BAD forChester
I should add that Dennis Weaver was my neighbor in Ridgway, CO and I helped him choose a cantaloupe at the grocery one day. He didn't know me from Adam but was the sweetest guy. When I saw this Gunsmoke episode I almost cried. When his wife Gerry died I attended the estate sale and bought a few treasures for my home. I will always remember him with love.
... Chester played for a fool...
...what with Paramount having stretched Gunsmoke from a half-hour to a full-hour format starting for Season 7's eisodes airing in1961...writers has the luxury of doing a much fuller development of the principal characters...
...this 8th episode "Chesterland" being a case in point...Chester falls prey to an ambitious young woman, Daisy, who has stopped in Dodge City to do some prospecting for a suitsble husband...and, true to the basic background developed for Dennis Weaver's character, Chester Good...he portrays a kindly, rather naive, and thoroughly gullible fellow...
... this suited the producers and execs at Paramount Television just fine; but the upshot for Dennis Weaver was the real prospect of being permanently typecast as the likeable, yet dimwitted Chester...
...the upshot was that Weaver decided to leave "Gunsmoke" during its 8th season of dhows airing in '63...yet, the ultimate irony was that Weaver's most enduring success beyond Gunsmoke came in his signature series as Deputy Sam McCloud, assigned to a Manhattan precinct... a gig which ran for 8 seasons and earned Weavery two additional Emmy nominations...wel goollie!, , Chester...
...this 8th episode "Chesterland" being a case in point...Chester falls prey to an ambitious young woman, Daisy, who has stopped in Dodge City to do some prospecting for a suitsble husband...and, true to the basic background developed for Dennis Weaver's character, Chester Good...he portrays a kindly, rather naive, and thoroughly gullible fellow...
... this suited the producers and execs at Paramount Television just fine; but the upshot for Dennis Weaver was the real prospect of being permanently typecast as the likeable, yet dimwitted Chester...
...the upshot was that Weaver decided to leave "Gunsmoke" during its 8th season of dhows airing in '63...yet, the ultimate irony was that Weaver's most enduring success beyond Gunsmoke came in his signature series as Deputy Sam McCloud, assigned to a Manhattan precinct... a gig which ran for 8 seasons and earned Weavery two additional Emmy nominations...wel goollie!, , Chester...
Did you know
- TriviaSarah Shelby first of 13 appearances as Ma Smalley.
Details
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
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