‘Mccloud’ Star Dennis Weaver Proposed Twice & Wed Wife Of 61 Years On The Same Day

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Dennis Weaver played doctors, anchors, and judges in fifty years of his TV and film career. He played Chester Goode in “Gunsmoke” from 1955 to 1964 and Sam McCloud in the ’70s crime series, “McCloud. His dear friend and fellow co-star actress Valerie Harper, who played his on-screen wife twice, shared why people would always adore him.

“I’ll always think of Dennis in his cowboy boots and hat, whether it was as Chester or McCloud, people loved him,” she said. “You could always count on him. He was steady. He had a wonderful American quality,” Harper added.

Not everyone knew Weaver was a faithful husband who was married to his beautiful wife Geraldine “Gerry” Stowell for 61 years. Here are the details about their fascinating love story that lasted for more than half a century.

HOW WEAVER AND GERRY MET & GOT MARRIED

Weaver revealed in his book that he met Stowell at a Joplin Junior College sock-hop in 1942. She was a figure roller skater and wore one of her skating gears at the dance:

“When she was right smack dab in front of me, Bobby gave Gerry a powerful whirl, and her skirt twirl, exposing the nearest pair of legs I’d ever seen. I got a glimpse of those red tights, and it was all over!”

The “Duel” star further explained that Stowell was the only person he danced with the rest of the evening, adding that that was the beginning of a “grand partnership that has lasted more than fifty years.”

Weaver shared his wife “has truly blessed and enriched my life.” Three years after meeting during a Friday night Joplin High School football game, in the middle of the second quarter, he proposed saying:

“I’d like to know if you’d marry me.”

Stowell said “yes!” right away, but he told her she should hesitate a bit, so he popped the big question again. Again, she said “yes!” instantly.

On October 20, 1945, the happy couple drove to Columbus, Kan, on the same night of the proposal. They were married by a justice of the peace and had their pals, Morris and Louise Cole, as their witnesses.

Interestingly, the bride and groom had no rings and used Weaver’s navy ring instead, and the next day, the newly wedded Stowell paid for real wedding bands.

Moreover, in their junior college yearbook was a picture of the two dancing, and the staff wrote: “The couple that always Weaved across the floor and Stowell the show.”

THROUGH THICK & THIN

Weaver served in the US navy, then, as a beginning actor, he delivered flowers, sold tricycles, women’s hosiery, vacuum cleaners, and worked in a toy shop.

When he was a struggling actor, Stowell was by her husband’s side, who earned $60 a week in 1955. They later had three sons, Rick, Rusty, and Robby.

The couple welcomed their eldest son Rick in 1948, their second child Rusty arrived in 1953, and the youngest member of the family, Robby, was born in 1959.

As their family grew, the “Wildfire” star began looking for better roles to earn more money for his loved ones. Weaver was then offered $300 a week for a role in a new CBS TV show “Gunsmoke.”

By the end of his nine years with the television series, he earned $9000 weekly. The role even won him an Emmy award in the 1958-59 season.

Next came his most significant role to date, playing Sam McCloud in “McCloud,” which he called “the most satisfying role of my career.” The show, which ran from 1970 to 1977, featured the Missouri native as a New Mexico lawman cast on the streets of New York City.

Weaver, also a director, had a comedy/variety show with his spouse, Stowell, and their son Rusty. The Hollywood star’s lengthy career ranged beyond acting.

He also directed several episodes of various television shows, wrote poetry, and had his autobiography, “All the World’s a Stage,” published in 2001.

Notably, his success did not hinder his marriage anyhow and instead made it even stronger as Weaver wrote that over the years, their love, like fine wine, had grown sweeter with time.

The former president of Screen Actors Guild discussed his elopement to the mother of his kids once, saying he would not recommend it for everyone.

“I wouldn’t recommend it for everybody. But it’s been over a half-century, and we’re still hanging out together, and over the years, our love, like fine wine, has grown sweeter with time. These are the most love-filled days of our lives, and we are truly blessed, for that love continues to deepen,” said Weaver.

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THEY WANTED TO SAVE THE WORLD

Aside from their solid bondage romantically, Stowell and Weaver were also activists for protecting the environment and combating world hunger and did their activism work together.

In 1982, the pair and some of their friends founded Love Is Feeding Everyone, which fed more than 100,000 people in Los Angeles weekly.

In 1993, Weaver and his wife founded a non-profit group called Institute of Ecolonomics – a word he coined from combining ecology and economics – to discover solutions to environmental issues.

Since 1990, he and Stowell had lived in an earth ship: an almost 100,000-square-foot, solar-powered home in Ridgway made from 3,000 recycled tires and 300,000 tin and aluminum cans.
As an environmentalist, the producer had a vision. He and his spouse built the split-level house to make a statement, and people did not receive it well, as Weaver revealed:

“People said we were going to live in a garbage house. Now, when they see the finished product, their minds change.”

Weaver spoke at the United Nations and Congress and to college students and school children about tackling pollution and starvation.

“Earthship” was the most visible of his campaigns because of the materials for the house. Jay Leno once stated, “When the garbage man comes, how does he know where the garbage begins, and the house ends?

In response, Weaver said: “If we get into the mindset of saving rather than wasting and utilizing other materials, we can save the Earth.”

THEIR SECRETS TO LONGEVITY IN MARRIAGE

When coming to the secret of their everlasting marriage, Weaver once revealed there were many of them while stating it was not a competition of longevity.

He said the length of the union had little to do with its success and explained that even though people usually applaud a couple for celebrating their fiftieth anniversary, the love in their relationship may have died years earlier.

He noted that by nature of marriage, seeing that a husband and wife live in such proximity, it was by far life’s most critical relationship, and the one that provided a chance to each party to express the purpose of life, which was love to be loved, adding:

“Any marriage that does not have mutual usefulness as its foundation will be difficult.”

Weaver made an example of the word ‘allow,’ saying it had significance in any relationship. “When we truly love someone, we allow them their own thoughts, interests, and space. We give each other room to breathe,” he continued.

The TV legend emphasized that no one person could satisfy all the needs of another and was unrealistic. He said people should not expect such perfection because they would be disappointed:

“Gerry and I developed an understanding of each other, a feeling of compassion and patience that has run quiet and deep. We enjoy our sense of freedom…”

“Be happy with yourself. Be content with who you are…express your love in thought, word, and action. Let your partner and the world know that you are the lover of all lovers,” he added.

WEAVER DIED IN HIS WIFE’S LAP

Career-wise, the father of three continued to act and exercise his activism even after being diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1991.

When cancer returned after being in remission, Weaver was in an ABC Family series called “Wildfire,” which played from 2005 to 2008.

Sadly, he passed away on February 24, 2006, and his wife revealed: “I was alone with Dennis when he died, and he just fell over into my lap, very quickly. He left in a peaceful way.”

According to Stowell, her husband was optimistic about life overall: “There was never anybody with higher spirits than Dennis,” she said of the father of her children who died at age 81.

Since his death, it was up to her to carry on his legacy and dreams for Sunridge. The mom of three was the steward who screened potential buyers of their dream home and estate.

She ensured that realtor Todd Schroedel stated that the land and home remained a legacy to her beloved spouse and his dreams of sustainability for the earth.

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