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  1. Spectre of the Gun: Directed by Vincent McEveety. With William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, Ron Soble. As punishment for ignoring their warning and trespassing on their planet, the Melkot condemn Capt. Kirk and his landing party to the losing side of a surreal recreation of the 1881 historic gunfight at the OK Corral.

  2. mayclaire.arcanegel.com › memoriam › dkelleyDeForest Kelley: 1920-1999

    June 11, 1999 is a date Star Trek fans will never forget. On that date, DeForest Kelley, best known as the cantankerous yet lovable Dr. Leonard H. "Bones" McCoy from the original Star Trek television series and first six Trek movies, passed away at age 79. Around the same day Kelley passed on, I was 16-years-old, finishing the last of my final ...

  3. Mar 8, 2017 · by Mark Boardman | Mar 8, 2017 | True West Blog. DeForest Kelley. Believe it or not, DeForest Kelley almost had one more shot—he did four–at appearing in a Tombstone-related movie or TV episode. He’d played Morgan Earp in 1957’s Gunfight at the OK Corral—and lived, unlike the real Morgan. The sequel, Hour of the Gun, came out in 1967 ...

  4. No Amnesty for Death: Directed by Elliott Lewis. With Gene Barry, R.G. Armstrong, DeForest Kelley, Betty Barry. Bat's riding rescues three men from the gallows - he bears an amnesty for all combatants in the Lincoln County War.

  5. Oct 16, 2011 · De Kelley’s full name was Jackson DeForest Kelley, born in Toccoa, Georgia, on Janurary 20, 1920, to Clara Casey Kelley and the Reverend Ernest D. Kelley, a Baptist minister. Kelley was named for General Stonewall Jackson of Civil War fame (a great deal of Southern boys were named for Civil War heroes), and for Dr. Lee De Forest, an inventor ...

  6. Jun 12, 1999 · June 12, 1999 12 AM PT. TIMES STAFF WRITER. DeForest Kelley, who played the irascible but wise Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy in the “Star Trek” television series and movies, died Friday at the ...

  7. TIL that DeForest Kelley disliked repeating Dr. McCoy's catchphrase "He's dead, Jim", which appears 20 times in the original Star Trek series. It became so famous, however, that he joked that the line would appear on his tombstone. It did appear in the first sentence of Kelley's obituary.

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