The episodes were filmed on a low budget, limiting the film stock to black-and-white. Outdoor action was shot largely at Corriganville Movie Ranch northwest of Los Angeles in Simi Valley, where the production made ample use of the facility's Fort Apache. Additional action sequences were shot on the Iverson Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, Calif., known for its huge sandstone boulders and widely recognized as the most heavily filmed outdoor shooting location in the history of Hollywood. The show's troupe of 12 character actors were often required to play multiple parts in the same episode, sometimes to the point of one actor fighting himself, wearing a cavalry uniform in one shot and an Apache outfit in another. The eponymous dog, Rin Tin Tin IV, lived about away at Duncan's ranch in Riverside, California, receiving visitors who were eager to see the famous dog.
Cast
Lee Aaker - Corporal Rusty "B-Company"
James Brown - Lt. Ripley 'Rip' Masters
Rin Tin Tin IV/Flame, Jr. - Rin Tin Tin
Joe Sawyer - Sgt. Biff O'Hara
Rand Brooks - Corporal Randy Boone
William Forrest - Major Swanson
Hal Hopper - Cpl. Clark
John Hoyt - Colonel Barker
Harry Strang - Sheriff
Dean Fredericks - Komawi
Mildred von Hollen - Mrs. Barrington
George Keymas - Black Billy
Ralph Moody - Silas Gunn
Tom McKee - Capt. Davis
William Fawcett - Captain Longey/Marshal George Higgins
Rin Tin Tinguest stars included veteran western actors Roscoe Ates and Dean Fredericks in six episodes. Others were Ron Hagerthy and Ewing Mitchell, both later semi-regulars on the Sky King series, and Ed Hinton. John M. Pickard, star of the series Boots and Saddles, appeared three times on Rin Tin Tin. Lee Van Cleef and Harry Dean Stanton were other guest stars. Don Devlin appeared in the episodes "The Epidemic" and "The Ming Vase". Rodolfo Hoyos, Jr., was cast as Don Alfonso Garcia in "The Bandit Kingdom". Nan Leslie was cast in three 1956 episodes, "Rin Tin Tin and the Second Chance", "Wagon Train", and "Fort Adventure"; in the last two segments she played Joan Lambert. Robert Fuller, prior to Laramie, appeared as Stan in the 1958 episode "The Epidemic". Harry Cheshire, formerly Judge Ben Wiley on Buffalo Bill, Jr., appeared as Silas Mason in "The Misfit Marshal". Brad Johnson, known as deputy Lofty Craig on the syndicated Western series Annie Oakley, appeared once on Rin Tin Tin in the role of John Quinn in the episode "The Iron Horse". Robert Knapp was cast in the role of Allen in the 1955 episode "The Guilty One". William Fawcett played an elderly fearless marshal fighting the outlaw element in four episodes including the 1955 episode, "Higgins Rides Again". Rico Alaniz appeared twice, as Big Elk in "Rin Tin Tin Meets O'Hara's Mother" and as Don Valdez in "The Invaders"
Broadcast
The show ran for five seasons on ABC on Friday evenings from October 1954 to May 1959. ABC reran the series on late afternoons from September 1959 to September 1961. During its first season, The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin finished at #23 in the Nielsen ratings, making it the second-highest rated series on ABC at the time behind Disneyland. Reruns ran on Saturdays on CBS from September 1962 until September 1964. A new package of reruns was shown in 1976, and continued into the mid-1980s. The original black and white prints were tinted light brown with new opening and closing segments filmed in color in Utah. The show currently airs in syndication on Antenna TV, with remastered episodes produced by Cerulean Digital Color and Animation, with lines redubbed for some scenes using actors other than those from the original series cast, with a different generic theme song.