Weaving a Cinematic Web: Hidalgo and the Search for
Frank Hopkins
Juti A. Winchester, Ph.D., Curator of Western American
History, Buffalo Bill Museum
People frequently ask me what a curator's job entails. At
the Buffalo Bill Museum, I oversee and develop the Cody-related
collections, I perform research for exhibits and publication,
and I educate the public in various ways about Buffalo Bill.
I spend some of my time thinking about ways to make history
interesting to non-historians. Another aspect of any curator's
job is answering inquiries by researchers. This is the brief
story of a seemingly small research query that assumed epic,
or more appropriately, Hollywood proportions.
Since the earliest days of the movies, people have been making
films about Buffalo Bill. William
F. Cody himself appeared in some of the first silent films
recorded by Edison, and later played himself in Life of
Buffalo Bill (Pawnee Bill Film Company, 1912) and The
Indian Wars (Essanay, 1913). Over the years, at least
thirty-nine movies have featured Cody as a character or as
the main subject, and one more is about to hit the big screen
as this issue goes to press.
Touchstone Pictures' Hidalgo stars Viggo Mortensen
as Buffalo Bill's Wild West cast member and cowboy Frank T.
Hopkins. In the movie scheduled for release in March 2004,
Nate Salsbury sponsors Hopkins and his mustang Hidalgo (played
by "T.J.") in a three thousand mile race across Saudi Arabia
in the early 1890s, pitting the pair against Arabian horses,
hostile and wily foreigners, and an impossible climate. The
movie trailer shows a visually stunning epic starring a personable
little paint horse and his disaffected, sculptured-jawed human
companion who dash through a variety of locations (including
a re-creation of Buffalo Bill's Wild West) and through a multitude
of dangers, finally winning the day with American pluck and
determination. "Based on a true story" the advertising proudly
proclaims. In the case of Hidalgo, though, truth is
an elusive commodity.
For several months beginning in March 2002, Buffalo Bill
Museum curatorial assistant Lynn Johnson Houze and McCracken
reference librarian Mary Robinson answered inquiries from
members of the Hidalgo film research crew. They wanted to
put together the most accurate portrayal of Buffalo Bill possible,
they claimed. What kind of cigar did he smoke? Could the museum
provide a schematic of the Wild West show's layout? How were
the stands constructed? The researchers also asked some very
interesting questions, such as, "was the Wild West segregated
according to race?" Lynn and Mary provided them with information,
and we looked forward to seeing the finished movie with high
hopes that somebody would finally get Buffalo Bill
right.
Late in 2002, we began to receive inquiries regarding Frank
T. Hopkins, the film's main character who was supposed to
have worked for Buffalo Bill's Wild West. Our files and databases
revealed nothing about this man who claimed to have had a
long and publicly lauded career with Cody, and we were somewhat
puzzled. However, information comes to us all the time, so
we were confident that if Hopkins were a legitimate Wild West
cast member, we would eventually turn over the right rock
and find him. Lynn and I could scarcely believe the nature
of the information that finally surfaced, thanks to some unofficial
long-distance volunteers.
While conducting his own research on Hopkins in early 2003,
author and independent journalist CuChullaine O'Reilly contacted
the Buffalo Bill Museum. Members of The Long Riders' Guild,
O'Reilly and his wife Basha maintain a website that records
feats of equestrian endurance, and like the others who previously
inquired, they were looking for independent verification of
several of Hopkins' claims. When we replied that we had nothing
in the William F. Cody Collection that mentioned anyone named
Hopkins, the O'Reillys' hunt began in earnest, and Wyoming
proved to be a fruitful field. In a feat of research endurance,
they uncovered hundreds of pages of material written by Hopkins
himself, including a copy of a manuscript hidden in the Don
Russell Collection at the McCracken Research Library, and
copies of other works, plus letters and photographs, in the
American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming. The
O'Reillys generously shared everything they found with the
Buffalo Bill Museum.
Always interested in what Cody's contemporaries had to say
about him, we studied the articles and found that nothing
Hopkins had written about Buffalo Bill, the Wild West, or
anything connected with them resembled fact. Hopkins claimed
to be a headline act for the Wild West's first and second
European tours, but when we examined historical records such
as ships' manifests, program books, and the extensive newspaper
clipping scrapbooks, we discovered no evidence that anyone
named Frank T. Hopkins had anything to do with Buffalo Bill
or his exhibition. Months of diligent searching by Lynn, two
hardworking interns, and myself revealed no independently
verifiable record of Hopkins, who was supposed to have worked
for Cody for thirty-one years and even have been present at
his death.
As members of the press learned of the O'Reillys' search,
journalists representing magazines, American and foreign newspapers,
television stations, and National Public Radio called the
Buffalo Bill Museum offices with questions about Hopkins.
In April 2003, a History Channel crew came to the Buffalo
Bill Historical Center to film a documentary, "The Search
For Frank Hopkins," which which first aired March 4, 2004.
Every questioner has asked, "is Hidalgo really a true story,
as the filmmakers claim?" Sadly, we have had to inform them
that it is not, at least from the perspective of Hopkins'
non-existent connection with Buffalo Bill and the Wild West.
It's a great story, but it never happened.
The Hopkins search is far from over. With the release of Hidalgo and the History Channel documentary, Buffalo
Bill Museum staff members anticipate an upsurge of interest
in Buffalo Bill, the Wild West, and unfortunately, the movie's
lead character. Sadly, my job as curator will include disappointing
people, at least when they ask for more information about
their new hero Frank T. Hopkins.
Since the cowboy first aimed his gun at the cinema audience
in The Great Train Robbery (Lubin, 1903), movies and
especially Westerns have entertained and fascinated us with
their stories, their landscapes and their characters. Modern
audiences will be interested anew in mustangs, cowboys, and
Buffalo Bill, thanks to the power of Hidalgo's visual
imagery and the acknowledged influence of moving pictures
on the public. But, like they've been telling us for about
a hundred years, you can't believe what you see in the movies.
Resources
Life
of Buffalo Bill
Dates
in U.S. and World History
Events
to Remember
Chronology
of William F. Cody
Buffalo Bill Bibliography |


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