From Wikipedia, this is just a list for movies and TV shows that use Sierra No. 3 -- most famously cast as the Hooterville Cannonball in "Petticoat Junction."
Here's the link for the full article:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierra_No._3
Here's the list:
Movie appearances
Lobby card for 1920 Tom Mix movie The Terror shows Sierra No. 3 in the fourth panel.
Gary Cooper, seen here in High Noon, appeared in four movies with Sierra No. 3.
Clint Eastwood, who appeared in two movies and a TV series with Sierra No. 3, wrote a letter supporting fundraising for the renovation of the locomotive.
Sierra No. 3 has appeared in many movies.[2][5][6][7][8][11][12]
According to Railtown 1897, these include the following:
The Terror, 1920, starring Tom Mix
The Virginian, 1929, starring Gary Cooper and Walter Huston. This was the first talkie filmed on location rather than on a studio sound stage.
The Texan, 1930, starring Gary Cooper and Fay Wray
Sierra Passage, 1950, starring Wayne Morris and Lola Albright
Wyoming Mail, 1950, starring Stephen McNally, Howard Da Silva and Ed Begley
High Noon, 1952, starring Gary Cooper, who won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his role. The film won three additional Academy Awards.
The Cimarron Kid, 1952, starring Audie Murphy and James Best
Kansas Pacific, 1953, starring Sterling Hayden and Eve Miller
The Moonlighter, 1953, starring Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray and Ward Bond
Apache, 1954, starring Burt Lancaster, Jean Peters and Charles Bronson
Rage at Dawn, 1955, starring Randolph Scott and Forrest Tucker
The Return of Jack Slade, 1955, starring John Ericson, Neville Brand and Angie Dickinson
Texas Lady, 1955, starring Claudette Colbert and Barry Sullivan
The Big Land, 1957, starring Alan Ladd, Virginia Mayo and Edmund O'Brien
Terror in a Texas Town, 1958, written under another name by blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, and starring Sterling Hayden and Sebastian Cabot
Man of the West, 1958, starring Gary Cooper, Julie London and Lee J. Cobb
Face of a Fugitive, 1959, starring Fred MacMurray, Dorothy Green and James Coburn
The Outrage, 1964, a remake of Rashomon as a western, starring Edward G. Robinson, Paul Newman, Laurence Harvey, Claire Bloom and William Shatner
The Rare Breed, 1966, starring James Stewart, Maureen O'Hara and Brian Keith
The Great Race, 1966, starring Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Natalie Wood
The Perils of Pauline, 1967, starring Pat Boone and Terry-Thomas
Finian's Rainbow, 1968, starring Fred Astaire and Petula Clark
A Man Called Gannon, 1968, starring Tony Franciosa and Michael Sarrazin
The Great Bank Robbery, 1969, starring Zero Mostel and Kim Novak
Joe Hill, 1971, a biopic about the IWW activist Joe Hill, starring Thommy Berggren. The film won the Jury Prize at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival.
The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid, 1972, starring Cliff Robertson and Robert Duvall
Oklahoma Crude, 1973, starring George C. Scott and Faye Dunaway
Nickleodeon, 1976, starring Ryan O'Neal, Burt Reynolds and Tatum O'Neal
Bound for Glory, 1976, a biopic of Woody Guthrie, starring David Carradine and Randy Quaid. This was the first major film to use the Steadicam, and Haskell Wexler won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography for the film, and the film also won another Academy Award.
The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again, 1979, starring Tim Conway and Don Knotts
The Long Riders, 1980, starring teams of brothers including James Keach and Stacy Keach, David Carradine and Keith Carradine, and Dennis Quaid and Randy Quaid
Pale Rider, 1985, directed by Clint Eastwood, and starring Eastwood and Richard Dysart
Blood Red, 1986, starring Eric Roberts, Giancarlo Giannini, Dennis Hopper and Julia Roberts in her movie debut
Back to the Future Part III, 1990, starring Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd and Mary Steenburgen
Unforgiven, 1992, directed by Clint Eastwood, starring Eastwood and Gene Hackman and winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture, Academy Award for Best Director and two other Academy Awards
Bad Girls, 1994, starring Drew Barrymore, Andie MacDowell, Madeleine Stowe and Mary Stuart Masterson
TV appearances Edit
Sierra No. 3 has also appeared in many television shows.[2][5][6][7][8][11][12] According to Railtown 1897, these include the following:
The Lone Ranger, 1956, starring Clayton Moore and Jay Silverheels.
Tales of Wells Fargo, 1957, starring Dale Robertson and William Demarest
Casey Jones, 1958, starring Alan Hale, Jr..
Rawhide, 1959-1966, starring Clint Eastwood and Eric Fleming.
Overland Trail, 1960, starring William Bendix and Doug McClure.
Lassie, 1961–1962, starring Jon Provost, June Lockhart and Hugh Reilly.
Death Valley Days, 1962–1965, starring Ronald Reagan.
The Raiders, 1963 TV movie, starring Brian Keith and Robert Culp.
Petticoat Junction, 1963–1970, starring Bea Benaderet, Edgar Buchanan and Linda Kaye Henning. Sierra No. 3 pulled the Hooterville Cannonball passenger train.
The Wild Wild West, 1964, starring Robert Conrad and Ross Martin.
The Big Valley, 1964–1966, starring Barbara Stanwyck.
The Legend of Jesse James, 1965–1966, starring Christopher Jones and Allen Case.
Scalplock, 1966 TV movie, starring Dale Robertson and Diana Hyland.
Iron Horse, 1966-1968, starring Dale Robertson & Gary Owens.
Cimarron Strip, 1967, starring Stuart Whitman and Jill Townsend.
Dundee and the Culhane, 1967, starring John Mills.
The Man from U.N.C.L.E., 1967, starring Robert Vaughn and David McCallum.
Ballad of the Iron Horse, 1967 documentary by John H. Secondari.
Gunsmoke, 1971, starring James Arness, Amanda Blake and Milburn Stone.
Bonanza, 1972, starring Lorne Greene and Michael Landon.
The Great Man's Whiskers, 1972 TV movie, starring Dean Jones, Ann Sothern and Dennis Weaver, telling the story of why Abraham Lincoln grew his beard.
Inventing of America, 1975 documentary by James Burke and Raymond Burr.
Little House on the Prairie, 1975–1983, starring Michael Landon, Karen Grassle and Melissa Gilbert.
Law of the Land, 1976 TV movie starring James Davis and Don Johnson.
A Woman Called Moses, a 1978 biopic miniseries about Harriet Tubman, starring Cicely Tyson.
Lacy and the Mississippi Queen, 1978 TV movie, starring Kathleen Lloyd and Debra Feuer.
Kate Bliss and the Ticker Tape Kid, 1978 TV movie, starring Suzanne Pleshette.
The Night Rider, 1979 TV movie, starring David Selby, Pernell Roberts and Kim Cattrall.
The Last Ride of the Dalton Gang, 1979 TV movie, starring Randy Quaid, Cliff Potts and Larry Wilcox
Belle Starr, 1980 TV movie, starring Elizabeth Montgomery and Cliff Potts.
East of Eden, 1980 TV miniseries based on John Steinbeck's novel, starring Bruce Boxleitner, Lloyd Bridges, Warren Oates and Anne Baxter.
Father Murphy, 1981, starring Merlin Olsen, Katherine Cannon and Moses Gunn.
The A-Team, 1984, starring George Peppard and Mr. T.
Bonanza: The Next Generation, 1988 TV movie, starring Michael Landon, Jr. and John Ireland.
The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr., 1993, starring Bruce Campbell.
Doctor Quinn, Medicine Woman, 1993, Season 5 Episode 1 "Runaway Train" reuses footage shot for Brisco County Jr.