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got hurt and missed five gamesGot to give props to my defensive line coach, Britt Reid, Jones said. Gave us this drill, a simulation drill, where we got to tackle the guy into a standup bag that has a taped on ball to it. So you got to tackle the guy, secure the tackle, and also get the ball out and the other guy got to come and scoop it.Despite a few well done scenes and some good performances by supporting players like Slim Whitaker, Charles King, and Earl Dwire, most of these films were of average quality with production shortcomings that restricted the effectiveness of Tyler\'s performances.[4] By 1936, companies such as Republic Pictures and Paramount Pictures were producing larger budget better quality Western films with impressive exterior locations that overshadowed the type of Poverty Row low budget offerings that brought Tyler to fame.[4]In 1936, Tyler signed a two year contract with Sam Katzman\'s new Victory Pictures for eight Western films, each budgeted at about $6000. The first five of these films were directed by Bob Hill and included Cheyenne Rides Again (1937) with Lucile Brown and The Feud of the Trail (1937) in which Tyler played a dual role. Of lesser quality, the final three included two co starring his wife, Jeanne Martel: Orphan of the Pecos (1937) and Lost Ranch (1937), the latter containing a rare scene in which Tyler lip syncs two songs: Tucson Mary and Home on the Range.[4] Following Brothers of the West (1937), Katzman did not renew Tyler\'s contract with Victory, replacing him with Tim McCoy as the company\'s top Western star.[4]With no starring roles being offered to him, Tyler took a job with the Wallace Brothers Circus in 1938.[4] He returned to Hollywood and appeared in supporting roles and bit parts in several feature films, including John Ford\'s Stagecoach (1939) with John Wayne, Drums Along the Mohawk (1939) with Henry Fonda, Gone With the Wind (1940) with Clark Gable, The Westerner (1940) with Gary Cooper, and John Ford\'s The Grapes of Wrath (1940) also with Henry Fonda.[4] His most unusual role was that of Kharis the mummy in Universal\'s The Mummy\'s Hand (1940), in which he was cast because the studio felt he resembled a younger Boris Karloff well enough to match stock footage of Karloff from The Mummy (1932).Republic Pictures and popular serials[edit]In 1941, Tyler signed a two year contract with Republic Pictures to star in 13 films in the popular The Three Mesquiteers series in the role of Stony Brooke opposite Bob Steele playing Tucson Smith, Rufe Davis playing Lullaby Joslin, and Jimmie Dodd playing Lullaby Joslin.[4] His $150 per week salary during the first year was increased to $200 per week for the second year.[4] These final 13 films in The Three Mesquiteers series (39 through 51) represent some of Tyler\'s best work, and his last leading roles: Outlaws of Cherokee Trail (1941), Gauchos of El Dorado (1941), West of Cimarron (1941), Code of the Outlaw (1942), Raiders of the Range (1942), Westward Ho (1942), The Phantom Plainsmen (1942), Shadows on the Sage (1942), Valley of Hunted Men (1942), Thundering Trails (1943), The Blocked Trail (1943), Santa Fe Scouts (1943), and Riders of the Rio Grande (1943), the last film in the series.[4]During this period, Republic Pictures, which failed to secure the rights to Superman, purchased the rights to another comic book superhero, Captain Marvel.
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