Harrison Ford is legendary for his exploits on the silver screen, but one adventure of one of his most iconic characters still hits close to home in Wyoming.
In âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles,â the original Indiana Jones was brought back to recall an exciting adventure from his youth in the wilds of Wyoming, and Ford donned his famous fedora to tell the tale.
âYoung Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Bluesâ is the only time Ford returned as the titular character in âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles,â the series that ran on ABC from 1992 to 1993.
The bulk of the episode takes place in 1920s Chicago, but itâs a story of sacred relics told by Indiana Jones himself in a rustic cabin in the mountains of Wyoming.
Those segments of the episode were set and filmed on Fordâs ranch in Jackson Hole.
A production crew from Lucasfilm, including the legendary George Lucas, flew to Jackson Hole so Ford could make a brief return to the role that made him an action star, and it inadvertently brought Indiana Jones back for future adventures on the big screen.
Mystery Of The Blues
âIndiana Jones and the Mystery of the Bluesâ aired as the fifth episode of Season Two of âThe Young Indiana Jones Chroniclesâ on March 13, 1993.
Fordâs scenes were filmed as the episode's bookends, separate from the main plot. The episode starts in 1950, with a high-speed car chase through the snow on the back roads of Wyoming.
Indy has recovered a sacred peace pipe from some heavily armed ne'er-do-wells, who are shooting at Indyâs truck. He reassures his friend, Greycloud, played by American Indian actor Saginaw Grant, that this is ânot my first timeâ as he manages to elude their pursuers.
After getting caught in a snowstorm, Indy and Greycloud reach the safety of a backcountry cabin. Once inside, Indy pulls a soprano saxophone out of an old chest and reveals that heâs quite adept as a jazz musician.
âHereâs a sacred relic of my past,â he tells Greycloud, before regaling him with the flashback that makes up the bulk of the episode.
The bulk of the episode, narrated by Ford, takes place in Chicago, Illinois, in 1920. Henry âIndianaâ Jones Jr., played by Sean Patrick Flanery, is paying his way through graduate school at the University of Chicago by working as a waiter at Colosimoâs Restaurant.
âBest food, best service, and best jazz in Chicago,â Indy says. âAnd I loved jazz.â
Even by Indiana Jones standards, the story is a little crazy. The partial list of historical figures Indy runs into in this episode alone includes Louis Armstrong, Ernest Hemingway, Eliot Ness, and Al Capone.
The short summary is that Indy finds himself in the middle of a bootlegging murder mystery. Capone and Johnny Torrio successfully execute âBig Jimâ Colosimo, allowing them to take control of the Chicago mafia (which is historically accurate).
Indy, Ness, Hemingway, and Academy Award-winning writer Ben Hecht do some sleuthing to collect evidence and bring down the murderous mobsters (which isnât historically accurate). Thwarted by the endemic corruption in Chicago, Indy and his compatriots âplay the bluesâ as they go their separate ways, making this a formative experience on their paths towards the icons theyâd become.
Why did any of this 1920s Chicago gangland story need to be told in a snow-covered Wyoming cabin? Thatâs where Harrison Ford happened to be, so itâs where Indiana Jones needed to be.

The Biggest Fan
Dan Madsen is the former president and publisher of the official Lucasfilm Fan Club and Star Wars Insider magazines. He wrote and published âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles: On the Set and Behind the Scenes,â a book about the production of the television series, in 1992.
âI started a fan club for âStar Trek,â which came to the attention of Paramount Studios and Gene Roddenberry,â he told Cowboy State Daily. âThat became the official âStar Trekâ Fan Club. After running that for several years, I got a call from George Lucas and his team.â
Madsen traveled to Lucasâs Skywalker Ranch to accept the position of publishing the Lucasfilm Fan Club magazine, highlighting âall things under the sunâ involving the production companyâs creative properties, particularly âIndiana Jonesâ and âStar Wars.â
That magazine was rechristened âStar Wars Insiderâ in 1994. It will mark the end of almost 40 years of continuous publication with its final issue in April 2026.
âAs a result of my time working on the Lucasfilm Fan Club magazine, I was asked to write the book on the making of âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles,â which I did,â he said.
Madsen said âIndiana Jones and the Mystery of the Bluesâ is an obvious standout of the seriesâs 28 episodes. An elderly Indiana Jones had appeared in the series, played by actor George Hall, but this was the first and only time Ford reprised his role.
âIt was the only episode he was asked to do,â Madsen said. âGeorge knew he wanted to get Harrison somewhere in the show as a cameo, and that particular episode happened to be the one that George felt would be the best.â
It was the first time Ford had returned as Indiana Jones since the release of âIndiana Jones and the Last Crusadeâ in 1989. However, getting Ford into the show was an adventure in and of itself.
Indiana Jones And The Shoot Between Shoots
Harrison Ford has been living in Jackson Hole since the 1980s. Because of Fordâs busy schedule, it was easier for Lucas, a small production unit, and all their actors and equipment to come to Wyoming than it was to get Ford to Los Angeles, California.
âIt was the only way they could make it work,â Madsen said. âFord was filming âThe Fugitiveâ at the time, so they had to find a spot close to him.â
The two-day shoot was a reunion of many key players in the Indiana Jones franchise.
The director credited for the episode is Carl Schultz, but Fordâs scenes were directed by Frank Marshall, a major producer involved in the Indiana Jones, Jurassic Park, and Back to the Future franchises, as well as many other projects by Lucas and Steven Spielberg.
Lucas, one of the writers of the episodeâs story and a producer of âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles,â came along, too.
According to Madsen, the shoot was done entirely on Fordâs 800-acre ranch in Jackson Hole, where he lives with his wife, Calista Flockhart, to this day. Everything was staged and shot on Dec. 19 and 20, 1992, during a gap in Fordâs filming schedule for the 1993 film, âThe Fugitive.â
That explains Indyâs beard and mustache. The usually clean-shaven or stubble-covered archaeologist couldnât shave because the beard of Dr. Richard Kimble, Fordâs character in âThe Fugitive,â is a crucial plot point in the film.
Being the professionals they were, Ford, Lucas, and the production team easily got everything they needed, including a high-speed car chase with two vintage vehicles, during the two-day shoot. Lucas later said he appreciated Fordâs willingness to return to the role.
âHarrison did us a favor, and it was a little fun weekend,â he said.
Madsen said Fordâs reason for wanting to make time for a cameo in âThe Young Indiana Jones Chroniclesâ was his enjoyment of the role and his personal relationship with Lucas. Ford got his big break as Han Solo in 1977âs âStar Wars,â and cemented himself as one of Hollywoodâs biggest stars with 1981âs âRaiders of the Lost Ark,â his first foray as Indiana Jones.
âGeorge pretty much helped make his career,â Madsen said. âAnytime that George would ask Harrison if heâd like to do something, Harrison would do it. He owed a lot to George, and George was a dear friend.â

I Dislike These Guys
The ending of âIndiana Jones and the Mystery of the Bluesâ is pretty tame by the standards of Indiana Jones.
As the story and snowstorm come to a close, Indy and Greycloud are interrupted by the ne'er-do-wells they were running from at the beginning, who take the sacred peace pipe at gunpoint.
âThe pipe, please, gentlemen, and you can go back to your weenie roast,â their leader says.
Indy lands a few punches and even disarms the cackling leader, attempting to shoot him with his own pistol. Unfortunately, the top thug âdoesnât like loaded weapons,â and all Indy gets for his heroic effort to shoot an unloaded gun is a backhanded slap.
Indy doesnât need firearms or his iconic whip to stop the villains. Instead, he blows a low note on his soprano saxophone, triggering a small avalanche of snow that crushes the thugs.
With the peace pipe recovered, Indy and Greycloud leave the cabin to a few bars of "The Raiders March,â the iconic Indiana Jones theme composed by John Williams. Incidentally, this is also the only episode of the series to use any of Williamsâs music.
âThings canât always be the way you want them to be,â Indy says. âBut sometimes, they are.â
Relic Of The Past
For a series with plots all over the globe, Wyoming is actually one of the adventures that hit closest to home for Indiana Jones.
The flashback that opens âIndiana Jones and the Last Crusade,â which briefly shows Indyâs childhood home, is set in Moab, Utah. The actual home featured in the film is in Antonito, Colorado, which is open to overnight guests as the Indiana Jones Bed and Breakfast.
The episode also fits into the expansive continuity of the Indiana Jones franchise.
Lucas was always mindful of maintaining a steady continuity for his creative projects. Fordâs bookending segments fall neatly into the character's timeline from the end of âIndiana Jones and the Last Crusadeâ to the elderly version depicted in the series and all subsequent appearances.
âWe didnât know what happened between the time we saw the young and old Indiana Jones in the series,â Madsen said. âThis episode connected the movies with the series and gave fans some clarity on what happened to the character, and it still holds up.â
Foundation For The Future
In its own way, âIndiana Jones and the Mystery of the Bluesâ gave Indiana Jones a future on the silver screen. Madsen said the two-day Wyoming shoot gave Lucas and Ford a chance to catch up, reminding them how much they enjoyed the franchise and working together.
âI think thereâs some truth to saying we wouldnât have gotten the future Indiana Jones movies without this episode,â he said. âHarrison and George had some time to sit and talk about what they wanted to do during this shoot.â
Harrison Ford would return as Indiana Jones in 2008âs âIndiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skullâ and 2023âs âIndiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.â Lucas got a story credit for the former but wasnât involved with the latter, which was produced after he sold Lucasfilm to The Walt Disney Company.
As the ultimate authority on âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles,â Madsen considers âIndiana Jones and the Mystery of the Bluesâ one of the best episodes of âThe Young Indiana Jones Chronicles.â It has everything one would want from an Indiana Jones adventure, including the genuine article.
âIf you were to pick the five best episodes, that one would certainly be added to the list,â he said. âIt has a lot of action and adventure, and itâs a good episode outside of the Harrison Ford cameo. Thereâs no question. Itâs one of the best.â
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.





