b 1/14/1924 d 4/30/1989 -- Updated 1/2/2021
Zorro, the perennial masked hero, has been portrayed in film, on TV and on stage by many, such as: Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., Robert Livingston, John Carroll, Reed Hadley, Tyrone Power, Guy Williams, Frank Langella, Alain Delon, George Hamilton, Henry Darrow, Antonio Banderas, Christian Meier, and others in a wide variety of adaptations of the stories of Zorro by Johnston McCulley.
Guy's fans have created many online fansites as well as campaigned for variety of historic markers including a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame to honor their favorite Zorro.
Below are just a few of the Guy Williams/Zorro fan sites.
Guy Williams' Family website
http://zorrofx.com/dads_pg.htm
Guy Williams Web Shrine with links
http://www.guywilliams.net/links.htm
Celebhost.net
http://www.celebhost.net/guywilliams/guy.html
Beth Wilson's Guy Williams on Bonanza
http://website.fabpage.com/zorrothefox/will.html
Bill Cotter's Disney Page
http://www.billcotter.com/zorro/
Disney's Zorro Page
http://www.zorrolegend.com/disneyzorro/disneyzorro.html
Many of Guy Williams fans wonder what happened to him after Disney's TV show Zorro was cancelled.
To learn the answer to that question and much more about Guy Williams' life and career, read Antoinette G. Lane's fine biography, "Guy Williams: Man Behind the Mask" published by Bearmanor.
I interviewed Ms. Lane and posted the interview "An interview with Antoinette G. Lane" in an earlier blog post and a shorter version was featured on Boomer Cafe.
According to Ms. Lane, Guy's early training in fencing and horseback riding as well as his early modeling career made him a perfect candidate to star in Disney's Zorro.
Personally, I have a fond affection for the entire Walt Disney production of his 1950s TV show Zorro.
I learned from Ms. Lane's biography that Disney brought movie-making production techniques and quality to television production. This can be seen in the choreographed sword fights, horseback riding and chase scenes.
Disney also used Mexicans and Native Americans as actors and extras. The stories were set in the early history of California when it was ruled by the Spanish, providing an authentic historical context for the story.