Ken Curtis’ Childhood Was More ”Opie” Than ”Festus”

Advertisement

You’d be forgiven for spending time daydreaming about Mayberry. No matter what your lot is in life, you can do with a little idyllic Southern hospitality. Mayberry is one of the great TV settings because of how it draws you in. To live in Mayberry is to be known; the whole town is like a drier version of the bar from Cheers. These folks have known you since you were knee-high to a grasshopper. It’s all very cute.

Ken Curtis, though, wasn’t on The Andy Griffith Show. He was in Gunsmoke and stayed there for over 12 years. As Festus, Curtis filled the shows of previous Dodge City deputy Chester Goode. And although he was a deputy, he was no Barney Fife. Instead, Festus Haggen was scruffy, grumpy, and downright illiterate. But in real life, Ken Curtis the actor had more in common with his Mayberry counterpart than one might imagine.

Ken Curtis’ father was the sheriff of Las Animas, Colorado. In a 1973 interview with The Cincinnati Enquirer, Curtis revealed some fun details that could be straight out of an episode of The Andy Griffith Show.

“People used to get arrested just so they could stay in my Dad’s jail and eat my mother’s cooking,” he said. It’s almost like Otis and Aunt Bee have their roots in Las Animas, not Mt. Pilot.

Advertisement

“The prisoners ate the same as mother cooked for us, so it was mighty good,” said Curtis.

“It was depression time and people weren’t eatin’ too good. My mother was a very plain cook, but a very good cook. I can never remember a morning we didn’t have hot biscuits for breakfast. She got up around 5 AM and cooked on an old wood stove. She served the biscuits with plenty of good fresh butter she churned. We liked four cows and had a little place over at the old livery stable to keep the cows. Breakfast was a really good meal — homemade jam or jelly, fried eggs, bacon, or ham. We always had our big meal at noon and supper at night. I remember my mother was allowed a dollar a day to feed each prisoner. She was a real good manager.”

Although we can’t picture Aunt Bee out milking cows, the rest of the details sound right at home in Mayberry.

So, what do you think the characters in The Andy Griffith Show would’ve made of ol’ Festus, anyhow? Let us know in the comments section below!

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement