His whip-sharp sense of humor is what New York Times best-selling author Craig Johnson most remembers about Oneida First Nation actor Graham Greene, who died Monday at the age of 73 after a lengthy illness.Â
Greene, with more than 100 television and film credits to his name, played several roles that were either filmed or set in Wyoming, including Malachi Strand, a major recurring villain on the hit television series, âLongmire,â based on Johnsonâs books.
âHe played a really, really bad character, a really bad guy,â Johnson said. âWhich was kind of against the tide, because heâs just so affable and friendly. So, it was kind of funny they decided to cast him in a role like that, but he was truly frightening in that role. He brought everything to bear and did a great job.â
Johnson had long been a fan of Greeneâs even before the actor was cast in the role of Strand. Because of that, he got a rare opportunity to meet the legendary actor one day on the set of âLongmire.â
Didnât Want To Be A Pest
Johnson only visited the âLongmireâ set every so often and had no idea Greene would be on set that particular day. It was a complete stroke of luck.
âThe actors come in to do their stuff in like a day or two and then theyâre gone,â Johnson said. âAnd then maybe a week or two later, they come in and do a couple more days and theyâre gone again. So, it was kind of amazing I was able to meet him even that one time.â
Lou Diamond Phillips, who had been instrumental in getting Greene cast as Strand on the show, knew Johnson was a big fan of Greeneâs. Phillips plays Sheriff Walt Longmireâs best pal, Henry Standing Bear. When Johnson showed up on set the same day as Greene, Phillips immediately asked Johnson if heâd like to meet him.
At first Johnson declined. The actors were working, and Johnson made it a strict rule not to be a pest when they were doing their jobs.
âThey were just doing the final set prep for Greene to go out and do this scene, so I told Lou, I said, âDonât go bothering him, heâs getting ready to step out and go to work,â Johnson recalled. âBut he was like, âNah, it wonât bother him at all.ââ
Kindred Humor
Before Johnson could object further, Phillips was already leading the way to Greene, dragging Johnson right along with him.Â
Just as Phillips had promised, Greene didnât mind at all.
âHe was just extraordinarily easy-going,â Johnson said. âHe was utterly charming. When Lou introduced me as the creator, he just turned right around, and I mean, he didnât pause for a split second. He looked right at me, looked me up and down, looked me in the eye and said, âYeah, I got a lot of questions for you.ââ
The deadpan joke wasnât lost on Johnson, who immediately got the humor behind Greeneâs line, which clearly skipped past the obvious meaning of âcreator of the show,â right to implying the creator of the universe and all life as we know it.Â
Greene made a little time for some small talk with Johnson after that, before going out to do a scene that took place in the Four Arrows Casino.Â
âHe had actually read some of the books,â Johnson said. âAnd he told me he really enjoyed them. And what he enjoyed most was the humor.â
That made Johnson feel particularly good, given how big a fan he was of Greeneâs own comedic performance in the âRed Green Show,â which Johnson said was just hilarious.
In the show, Greene plays an explosive expert named Edgar âK.B.â Montrose on the show, who is missing fingers and nearly deaf.Â
All of Montroseâs solutions in life involve blowing stuff up.
âYour wife left you? Blow up the stove,â Grahamâs character, Montrose would say. âOtherwise, youâll start cooking for yourself and thatâs dangerous.â
His favorite motto on the show is âKaboom!â uttered while heâs wearing a bright blue and later bright orange jumpsuit along with an explosion-tattered hat.Â
âWhen you think someoneâs really funny and they think that youâre funny, thatâs always so nice to hear,â Johnson said. âGreene just had incredible timing, and I think that led to a lot of the success he had.â
Sheridan, And A Knife
Before Johnson met Greene, heâd already heard a few stories about him, from his friend A Martinez, who plays Jacob Nighthorse, the activist owner of Wyomingâs Four Arrows Casino. Nighthorse is one of the âLongmireâ showâs morally complex characters, a villain with some layers, but also a primary antagonist, often at odds with Sheriff Longmire.
âOne of the first movies (Greene) ever did was actually Powwow Highway with A Martinez,â Johnson said. âAnd he has a great story about how they were filming that movie, which one part of the movie was actually filmed in Sheridan.â
Greene had a limited amount of time for the role. When his flight was delayed, that led to an uncomfortable overnight at the airport and very little sleep.
âHe didnât have any extra time,â Johnson said. âSo, he had to come straight to where they were filming.â
People werenât sure how things were going to go, given the challenging sleep situation, and the fact that the scene itself was particularly challenging, and particularly important to the plot. Greene, who was playing a Vietnam War veteran, saves the main characterâs life in the scene.
âIt was the part in the gymnasium where this guy is like, being really aggressive toward the head guy, Buddy Red Bow, who is played by Martinez,â Johnson said. âAnd Greene actually throws a knife that like, hits the wall right beside the bad guyâs head.â
Greene wasnât fazed by the lack of sleep at all, according to what Martinez told Johnson.
âHe did it in like one take, and was absolutely magnificent,â Johnson said. âThatâs the kind of professional he (had)Â and what he brought to the table with that sense of humor, his timing, and his incredible dramatic ability.Â
Getting Greene for âLongmireâ was an incredible stroke of luck for the television show, Johnson said, because, while he played a villain in the storyline, he was a difference maker in real life on the set.
âHe had a marvelous effect on set,â Johnson said. âAnd with casting directors, producers, directors ⊠thatâs one of the things youâre always looking for. Youâre always looking for somebody whoâs going to be a team player. Someone who can make a relaxed environment. He was just a master at that, an absolute master.â
Working Right Up To The End
Greeneâs sense of humor often got written into the television script of âLongmire,â Johnson said.Â
âRobert Taylor told me that every time theyâd do a scene, he would come up with some sort of malaprop version of âLongmire,ââ Johnson said. âHe would call him lawn mower. He would call him stink finger. He would call him all these different names.â
Taylor played Sheriff Walt Longmire in the television series. The names Greene came up with were so funny, that many of them were kept in the final version.Â
âSo, when you watch the show, he actually calls Walt all these different names like that,â Johnson said. âAnd it just kind of gives you an indication of what Greene was capable of.â
Greene is probably best known for his role as Kicking Bird in Kevin Costnerâs 1990 film, âDances with Wolves,â which earned 12 Academy Award nominations, including Greeneâs nomination as best supporting actor.Â
The film was the first of many blockbusters for Greene, who has more than 100 film credits to his name, including Oscar-nominated film with Tom Hanks, âThe Green Mileâ (1999), âDie Hard with A Vengeanceâ (1995) with Bruce Willis, and more recently, Taylor Sheridanâs â1883,â in which he played the role of Spotted Eagle.
Greene also had roles in films that were either filmed in or set in Wyoming besides âLongmire.â There is Taylor Sheridanâs 2017 movie, âWind River,â for example, in which he plays a tribal police officer on the Wind River Reservation, as well as his role in âThe Last of Us,â a zombie apocalypse movie set in Jackson.
âDances with Wolves,â while filmed mostly in South Dakota, also had a few scenes that were shot in Jackson.
Greene worked right up until the end and still has a couple of films scheduled for release later this year. They are âIce Fallâ and âAfterwards.â
One of the things Greene will be remembered for is how he helped break down barriers for Indigenous actors in Hollywood.
âHe was just an amazing individual,â Johnson said. âNative Americans are always portrayed as the stoic, cigar store Indian, and thatâs just not the native people who I know. They work on about 17 different layers of irony, and if you are not aware of that irony, you get to be the butt of that irony. Greene was just a classic example of that.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.





