Lewis William Potter (April 15, 1923 – September 5, 1975),[3] known professionally as Bill Potter, was an American country music singer, Western movie actor, and television personality of the late 1940s and early 1950s.
Bill Potter | |
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![]() Potter, c. 1957 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Lewis William Potter |
Also known as | Cactus Bill Cowboy Bill |
Born | (1923-04-23)April 23, 1923 Stratton, Maine, U.S.[1] |
Died | September 5, 1975(1975-09-05) (aged 52) Orange, Texas, U.S. |
Genres | Country |
Occupation(s) | Singer, actor, deputy sheriff |
Instrument(s) | Guitar[2] |
Years active | c. 1948–1957 |
Labels | Starday Records Monogram Pictures |
Potter grew up in Bingham, Maine, and served with the United States Army Air Forces during World War II.[4][3] After being discharged in December 1943,[3] he worked for a shipbuilding company in Orange, Texas.[5] By 1948, he was married to a woman from Dallas and had a son.[6] They later operated a ranch near Orange.[4]
In Texas, Potter was discovered by a talent scout, and appeared in several Western movies by Monogram Pictures in the late 1940s as a singing cowboy.[6][7] Also known as "Cactus Bill" or "Cowboy Bill", Potter went on to appear on early television shows on KFI-TV in Los Angeles and on KPRC-TV in Houston.[8] While living in Houston, he worked as a deputy sheriff in Harris County for approximately three years.[9] In mid-1954, he moved to Corpus Christi, Texas, where he had a children's program on KVDO-TV.[10] He resumed working as a deputy sheriff in December 1955,[9] a role he held through at least December 1956.[11]
In August 1957, Potter was the winning contestant on an episode of Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts, singing a western ballad.[4] Billed as "Hollywood Singing Cowboy Bill Potter", he was featured at several events in Maine the following month.[12][13] From February to May of 1958, KPLC-TV in Lake Charles, Louisiana, broadcast the Bill Potter Show on an intermittent basis.[14][15] At the time of his mother's death in June 1958, Potter was again living in Orange, Texas.[16]
Potter died in September 1975 in Orange, aged 52, "following a lingering illness."[1] He was survived by a son and a daughter.[1] He is interred in Houston National Cemetery.[3]
Potter is known to have appeared in at least 10 movies, each released in 1948 or 1949:[17]
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1948 | Gunning for Justice | Potter |
Courtin' Trouble | Steve Graves | |
Hidden Danger | Henchman Perry | |
1949 | Susanna Pass | Henchman (uncredited) |
Across the Rio Grande | Pete - Henchman (uncredited) | |
West of El Dorado | Guitar Player Phil | |
Brand of Fear | Mac - Gold Shipper | |
Range Justice | Bill (as Bill Porter) | |
Haunted Trails | Deputy (uncredited) | |
Western Renegades | Bob (uncredited) |
Potter is known to have released at least two records, both with Starday Records in 1953.[18][19] Additionally, a promotional record from the Shamrock Record Company in Houston is credited to Cowboy Bill Potter and Dickie Jones and His Texas Longhorns, year unspecified.
Label | No. | A-side | B-Side | Format | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Starday | 110 | "I Lost My Gal" | "Nobody Knows" | Shellac / 10" / 78 rpm | [20] |
Starday | 111 | "Honk Your Horn" | "Cry Not For Me" | Vinyl / 7" / 45 rpm | [21] |
Shamrock | – | "High Sierra Moon" | "I Got A Yearnin'" | Shellac / 10" / 78 rpm | [22] |