The Billy The Kid
Outlaw Gang
(BTKOG) is a non-profit New Mexico Historical Society. Its members are not only New Mexico residents, but include anyone
who wants to preserve and promote the history of Billy "the Kid" Bonney,
his era and New Mexico. Its
many members are from all over the U.S.A. and far beyond.
DEAD FAMOUS ~ TV Show
Gail Porter and Chris Fleming
take a spirited road trip through the West
Coast of America looking for the ghostly locations where the legends of stage
and screen reside.
She is a self-confessed skeptic,
he is a "sensitive" able to detect paranormal events beyond the range of the
five senses. Together their mission is to investigate the "Dead Famous"!
What will Gail and Chris
uncover? And will Gail lose her skepticism during some of the show's most
intriguing paranormal experiences?

(Joe Hesseling riding across
the Canning Elk Ranch vega for the English Dead Famous film crew.
Photo taken Jan. 14, 2006 by Mike Allen.)
DEAD FAMOUS visits with the BTKOG
Lincoln County, NM
by Jan Girand
(Editor of the BTKOG Gazette and
www.RoswellWebMagazine.com
)
Kathy
Cheshire, researcher and production secretary for a United Kingdom TV production
company,
recently
contacted members of the Billy the Kid Outlaw Gang. Representing Twofour Broadcast Ltd, she said her company creates the
Dead Famous
series.
She and Doc Sproull of El Paso, Texas, BTKOG's historian, developed a
warm rapport and kept emails flying across the ocean. Doc sent Kathy a quantity
of material--history of Billy and the Lincoln County War, and a current copy of
the BTKOG Outlaw Gazette. Hesselings also sent her a BTKOG T-shirt, which she
promised to wear for a photo to send to the group since she would not be coming
to New Mexico with the film crew.
Kathy said their shows are two-sided. One side is biographical and a commentator focuses strictly on history and is a skeptic to all but facts. The other side is attuned to the paranormal, with a commentator inclined towards the spiritual. Each program deals with an American star or historical figure. Kathy said they are now airing their third series, and their program has begun showing in the United States on both A&E and Biography TV channels. Their production crew visits locations significant to the featured characters to gather ambience and learn whether their spirits still linger there. Many selected people and settings are ones already associated with ghost tales.
The series they
are now working on is based upon the Wild West. They are particularly
interested in Billy the Kid / William Bonney. Kathy said when she and her group tried to
research the subject of Billy on the internet, they kept finding references to BTKOG (thanks to the efforts of the association's webmaster,
Joe Micalizzi),
which led them to contact association members.

Kathy thought a productive idea would be for their UK crew to come to Lincoln County, New Mexico to search for Billy's essence, and to also interview BTKOG members. The members designated Joe Hesseling--the organization's president, himself a genuine cowboy--as the interviewee.
Doc Sproull provided Kathy with snippets of BTK history and suggested additional places to visit and people to see for this film segment.
An example of
information Doc gave Kathy in an email: "In Sophie Poe's book, Buckboard Days,
she tells of moving into the apartment on the second floor of the Lincoln County
Courthouse after she was married in 1883. To quote her (page 209), 'There was
one feature of the new home which I did not enjoy. The back stairway, up and
down which I had to travel many times during the day, was still stained with
blood, a grim reminder of the day, two years before, when Billy the Kid had shot
and killed his guard, James W. Bell.' When Dr. Lee [within the past year]
used Luminal on the boards at the top of those stairs, the blood stains were
clearly visible," wrote Doc to Kathy.
He suggested that the film crew, when they visit Lincoln, ask to see the photo
taken after Luminal was applied to that area of the back stairway of the
courthouse.
Saturday morning,
January 14, RWM editor, Jan, found the film crew-- producer Niall Carmichael,
director and cameraman Bernie Schaffer and soundman James Lloyd--outside the
Ellis Store Bed and Breakfast in Lincoln conducting an interview. It was a gray,
overcast day, uncommon in New Mexico more like the days they were accustomed to
in England. The crew had spent the night--and would spend more nights--at the
Ellis enjoying David and Ginny Vigil's warm hospitality
and Ginny's culinary talents. Later Saturday night, they would conduct a serious
search for the ghost that haunts the Ellis. They hoped that resident ghost would
be a ham and appear for them.
Dead Famous
film crew at the Canning Elk Ranch (The Old Block Ranch) on January 14, 2006:
(left to right) cameraman and director Bernie Schaffer, soundman James Lloyd and producer Niall
Carmichael. Photo by Jan Girand

Doc and Peg Sproull and other BTKOG members had prearranged to meet the crew later that day, at 1 p.m., in Capitan to lead the way to the Canning Elk Ranch where they would meet and interview Joe Hesseling.

Soon the caravan of cars arrived at the ranch. Before driving up the winding road towards the house, Jan told the crew to be prepared to stop and enjoy the sight of magnificent elk, many with huge racks of antlers. They did spot, stop and take photos with zoom lens of a large herd of elk drinking at a stock tank in the distance.
"Why don't any of those elk have antlers?" Jan asked Joe Hesseling in the presence of the crew a few minutes later.
"Cuz those are girls, Jan," drawled Joe.
Now Jan doesn't claim to know much about that kind of wildlife but she recalled Carol, Joe's wife, saying that male elk begin dropping their antlers in late February and grow an entire new set by the next fall. It was now mid-January, not late February, but Jan had heard Carol comment that some of the yearlings had already dropped their antlers.
"Well, where are the boys hanging out, Joe?" asked one of the BTK members, hoping to give the crew an opportunity to photograph them in their full regalia.
"Probably down at
the bar," drawled Joe. No doubt that's what he calls their watering hole.

By mid-afternoon, the heavy cloud-cover lifted and the New Mexico sky turned its
usual turquoise blue. Members of the British crew kept commenting on the
beautiful scenery and wide open spaces, not a cliché here. The winter-dormant
grass was tall and golden and rustled when people walked through it. The BTKOG
members, present to offer Joe moral support, had to exercise care to not walk
during filming because the sensitive sound mikes picked up the noise of the dry
grass.

Old Indian House on the Canning Elk Ranch; photo by Mike Allen
The interview was held near an old ruin on the ranch that Joe called "the Indian house" because it is a picturesque setting. The crew filmed Joe riding his horse across the vega towards the Indian house. Then Joe dismounted and stood beside his horse while Niall asked him questions about what kind of a fellow he thought Billy had been, why Billy had developed such a bad reputation, and what life must have been like for him and other residents of Lincoln in the 1880s.

Joe Hesseling and the British Dead Famous film crew after being "crowned" with BTKOG bill-caps. Pictured crew: Director and cameraman Bernie Schaffer, producer Niall Carmichael and soundman James Lloyd. Photo by Mike Allen

Towards the end of filming the segment, Joe rode his horse away, across the vega, a departing silhouette against the setting sun. The crew was delighted with the results and their visit to Lincoln County, New Mexico. Photo by Mike Allen