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Home/People/Mason Alan Dinehart
Mason Alan Dinehart profile photo
Born
Apr 30, 1936
Age 89
Place of Birth
Hollywood, California, USA
Known For
Acting
Gender
Male

Career Highlights

9
Movies
0
TV Shows
Also Known As
Mason Alan Dinehart III
Alan Dinehart
Alan Dinehart III
IMDb Profile

Mason Alan Dinehart

Acting

Biography
Mason Alan Dinehart (born April 30, 1936), also known as Mason Alan Dinehart III, Alan Dinehart III, or Mase Dinehart, is an American business consultant and retired actor best known for his role as a youthful Bat Masterson in thirty-four episodes between 1955 and 1959 of the ABC/Desilu television series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, starring Hugh O'Brian in the title role of the frontier marshal Wyatt Earp. The Hollywood-born Dinehart was the only son of the actor Alan Dinehart and Dinehart's second wife, actress journalist, casting director and songwriter Mozelle Britton.[2] In 1936, he legally changed his name to Mason Alan Dinehart, the same name as his father, so that his younger son from the second marriage could be known as Mason Alan Dinehart III. This name change created confusion because the senior Dinehart's first son from his first marriage was already Alan Dinehart Jr. (1918–1992),[3] the former animation and voice director for Hanna-Barbera.[4] Mason Alan Dinehart has been married four times and has seven surviving children. A son, Scott Dinehart, died in 2010 of an emergency hip operation.[citation needed] He has two children each from his first and second marriages to Evelyn Myers (1954–1958) and Barbara Blakely (1958–1965), respectively. In 1982, he married for the fourth time; he and the former Miranda Gazal have four children. Dinehart played the youthful Bat Masterson who is the understudy of Wyatt Earp in learning the proper techniques of frontier law enforcement. Earp rarely calls him "Bat" but "Mr. Masterson" to teach the young man maturity. In a 1956 episode "Bat Masterson Again," Earp shows young Masterson on the proper use of a pistol. During this time Masterson was elected sheriff of Ford County, Kansas, which includes the county seat of Dodge City. Bill Tilghman had been denied the right to run for sheriff again. Earp as an appointed town marshal works with an elected sheriff, and their differences in jurisdiction do not cause any problems. Bat's brother, Ed Masterson, played by Brad Johnson, formerly the deputy sheriff on the Annie Oakley television series, is shot in an ambush by drunken cowboys, and Masterson settles the score. When Earp finally comes to Tombstone, Arizona Territory, he lacks the working relationship with Sheriff Johnny Behan that he had in Kansas with Bat Masterson. Dinehart's performance of Masterson was so highly regarded that ABC offered him a spinoff series, but he declined, soon left acting, and entered the business field. Dinehart's last appearance on the series is the episode "Dodge Is Civilized" (April 28, 1959), in which he serves notice that he is headed to Tombstone, where he hopes Earp will join him in time. There is never a reunion show, and the Masterson character, now a gambler, is written out of The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. The historical Earp did visit Tombstone to see his friend Masterson, who in time became a figure of western folklore, finishing his long career as a sportswriter in New York City. Masterson's hat inspired the name of the Brown Derby restaurants in Los Angeles. CLR From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Platinum High School poster

Platinum High School

as Bob Treadwell (as Mason Alan Dinehart)
1960
Cast a Long Shadow poster

Cast a Long Shadow

as Dick Calvert (uncredited)
1959
Roadracers poster

Roadracers

as Kit
1959
The Hot Angel poster

The Hot Angel

as Joe Wilson
1958
The Careless Years poster

The Careless Years

as Bob Williams (as Alan Dinehart III)
1957
Apache Drums poster

Apache Drums

as Child (uncredited)
1951
The Happy Years poster

The Happy Years

as Coffee Colored Angel
1950
Easy Living poster

Easy Living

as Urchin (uncredited)
1949
Blondie's Big Deal poster

Blondie's Big Deal

as Rollo (as Alan Dinehart III)
1949