Laurel and Hardy are looking for a girl named Mary Roberts to tell her of her father's death and deliver her a huge inheritance, including a deed to a gold mine that her father left her. They find Mary at a cabaret in the West. But the owner of the cabaret and his wife --- who are Mary's legal guardians, but do not truly care about her as a person, and in fact are often rude and belittlingly belligerent towards her --- are trying to take over this wealth.
Stan and Ollie are traveling towards Brushwood Gulch; Stan on foot, leading a mule (called Dinah) dragging a travois, on which Ollie lies. As they ford a river, the travois detaches from the mule, leaving Ollie stranded in the water. He starts to wade then completely disappears into a sink hole in the river bottom. They hitch a ride on a stagecoach and attempt to flirt with a woman passenger (Vivien Oakland), not knowing that she is actually the local sheriff's wife. Upon arriving in Brushwood Gulch, she complains to her husband (Stanley Fields), who threatens the pair by coldly informing them that they will be leaving in a hearse if they do not catch the next coach out of town.
At Mickey Finn's saloon, The Avalon Boys are performing on the front porch and Stan and Ollie dance to their music. Inside, they clumsily reveal their supposedly secret mission to Mickey, including the fact that they have never seen Mary before. On Mickey's suggestion, his wife Lola pretends to be Mary and hijacks the deed from the boys, who then sing "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine" with the Avalon Boys. On their way out, Stan and Ollie encounter the real Mary, realize their mistake, and try to retrieve the deed from the couple, resulting in an extended chase and struggle. The Finns prevail and lock the deed in their safe when Lola gets the best of Stan with tickle torture. Ollie is briefly relieved by the arrival of the sheriff only to realize the sheriff is the angry husband who threatened them earlier, and who now forces them to leave town by running for their lives. Crossing the river, Ollie drops into the sink hole again.
Drying Ollie’s clothes that night, the pair resolve to return under the cover of darkness to retrieve Mary’s deed. After a series of mishaps (including the mule being belayed onto a balcony and Stan stretching Ollie's neck three feet as he tries to free him from a trapdoor), they finally manage to break into the saloon, where Stan finds Mary and explains the situation to her; she decides to run away with them. Mickey discovers them, but Ollie manages to grab Mickey's shotgun and force him at gunpoint to give the deed back to them. Mary, Ollie, Stan, and the mule make their getaway, trapping Mickey and Lola inside their own saloon by locking the front gate and entangling Mickey's head in the gate grill. Outside the town, the happy trio decide to head South to Mary's hometown and sing "I Want to Be in Dixie" as they begin their journey. When they ford the river, Ollie falls back into the sink hole.
Cast
Stan Laurel as Stanley
Oliver Hardy as Ollie
Sharon Lynn as Lola Marcel (credited as Sharon Lynne)
James Finlayson as Mickey Finn
Rosina Lawrence as Mary Roberts
Stanley Fields as Sheriff
Vivien Oakland as Sheriff's wife
The Avalon Boys as themselves
Dinah the mule as herself
Uncredited:
Harry Bernard as man eating at bar
Flora Finch as Maw
Mary Gordon as Cook
Jack Hill as Finn's employee
Sam Lufkin as stagecoach baggage handler
Fred Toones as Janitor
May Wallace as Cook
James C. Morton as Bartender
Way Out West is referenced in the 1979 film The Sheriff and the Satellite Kid when the Sheriff (Bud Spencer) ends up replicating Stan Laurel's thumb fire trick featured in the film.
The opening scene of the 2018 biopic Stan & Ollie depicts a shooting of the film, with Laurel and Hardy arriving on the set for one of the dance scenes.
The original BBC version of "Song of Summer", Ken Russell's 1968 biopic of Frederick Delius, begins with Eric Fenby (Christopher Gable) anachronistically playing cinema organ accompaniment to a silent showing of the "Commence to Dancin'" dance episode. It was cut from the 2001 DVD release, as permission could not be obtained to use it.
Directed by James W. Horne
Written by Contributing (uncredited):
Stan Laurel
James W. Horne
Arthur V. Jones
Screenplay by Charley Rogers
Felix Adler
James Parrott
Story by Jack Jevne
Charley Rogers
Produced by Stan Laurel
Hal Roach
Starring Stan Laurel
Oliver Hardy
Cinematography Art Lloyd
Walter Lundin
Edited by Bert Jordan
Music by Marvin Hatley
Production
company
Hal Roach Studios