Day Twenty One: Memory
People depict Chief as serious, because of how he was shown in the flashback scene. But maybe he is more or less similar to the Mayor. A silly guy, trying to be positive while the empire he lives in suffers.
But the moment a certain someone comes and says they can save everything and create a better world, especially when the emperor has been nothing short of an arsehole... Well... The Chief would certainly take the only chance to make his empire a better place, right?
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Chief Thunder-Cloud as Tonto, and Lee Powell as The Lone Ranger, from the 12-part Republic serial The Lone Ranger (1938).
Powell was dubbed over as the Lone Ranger by Bill Bletcher, and Earle Graser when crying out "Hi-Yo, Silver!" Bletcher had done extensive voice work in animation, and Graser had been the original radio Lone Ranger.
This was done because part of the plot of the serial is that the villain is trying to figure out which of five characters could really be the Lone Ranger. The studio wanted this to be a mystery to both the bad guy and the audience until the very end, so they didn't want anyone recognizing Powell's voice under the mask.
Republic would revisit the same gimmick in 1943 with The Masked Marvel serial. Not only was the Masked Marvel dubbed while in costume, Republic went one step further when his identity is revealed at the end: the actor playing the Marvel's alter ego was nowhere near the same size or build of the stuntman who played the hero.
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harkness wants to throw you in the potomac so so fraeakingf bad PLEASE
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Im truly am gods saddest man ever
Was it meant to be this way all along
Hope not the pain has kicked in to a higher gear
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Oglala Lakota chiefs (l to r) - Black Bear, Hard Heart, Little Wound, Lone Bear, Black Bird, High Hawk, Jack Red Cloud, Shot in the Eye, Conquering Bear, Last Horse. 1899. Photo by Heyn Photo. Source - National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian
Woman making parfleches. Blackfoot camp. Photo by Walter McClintock. Source - Yale Collection of Western Americana, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Comanche Chief Quanah Parker with a portrait of his mother, Cynthia Ann Parker, and sister, Prairie Flower (Toposannah)
Susie Baggage. Photo by Heyn and Matzen. 1900
Navajo woman at campfire. Black Mesa, Arizona. Photo by Frederick Monsen.
Navajo weaver. Canyon de Chelly, Arizona. Photo by Carl Moon. Source - Huntington Digital Library
Woman in native dress - Tolowa, 1923, by Edward S. Curtis
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