Gale Davis and Gene Autry occupied the same golden corner of American television history for years — the actress whose warmth and quick-draw authenticity made her one of the most beloved figures of the early Western genre, and the singing cowboy whose larger-than-life persona defined an entire era of American popular entertainment — and the professional relationship between them, the films they made together and the television appearances they shared, has always been documented in the comfortable, well-lit language of Hollywood colleagues who worked well together and remembered each other fondly.
What has never been fully documented, and what Gale Davis has spent decades keeping carefully within the private boundaries that a woman of her generation and her particular sense of dignity naturally maintained, is the fuller and more complicated truth about what existed between them beneath the professional surface — a relationship that the people in their immediate orbit understood in fragments and that the public, even the most devoted fans of both, were never meant to fully see. Breaking that silence now, at a point in her life where the reasons for certain carefully maintained discretions feel less pressing than the value of a certain kind of historical honesty, Gale Davis has chosen to speak about the hidden relationship she shared with Gene Autry in the way that only someone who actually lived it can — with the specific, personal detail and the quiet, undefended truth of a woman who has carried something real for a very long time and has decided, finally, that the story deserves to be told completely by the person who knows it best.