View Full Version : Articles About John Wayne


arthurarnell
February 8th, 2004, 12:07 PM
Hi,

It occurs to me especially reading various articles about John Wayne that many stories accounts etc appear in our different countries which are either so old or limited to the individual book that half the world do not even see them let alone get a chance to read them.

For instance i have copies of book that would never be released in the states and I assume the same vice versa.

Perhaps if everyone agrees if they see an article either new or ancient they might like to share giving the background to the book or magazine.

I thought I'd start it off with

American Movie Classics Magazine dated January 1996

DUKING IT OUT

'Festival Proves That John Wayne's Range extended Beyond the Western'
By Nick Clooney

Let's try the Hollywood word game. I say "Laurel and Hardy", you say "Comedy." I say "Gene Kelly", you say "musical". I say "John Wayne", you say "Western".
Perhaps we should take a closer look at that last one. I 've been thinking about Wayne lately because we're featuring twelve of his movies in a special January I marathon. We hope you join us and celebrate New Years Day with the Duke.

Conventional wisdom has it that Wayne was married to the western, but the facts say otherwise. By my count, Duke made at least 93 films between 1928 and 1976. only 31 of them were westerns. Of the 12 movies we'll be showing, only five are westerns.
Perhaps we arn't doing the Duke justice by only remembering him for his work astride a horse in the desert southwest.
Wayne took off his battered hat and cowboy boots in one notable outing in 1952 to make Big Jim McLain. This thriller about government agents on the trail of a communist spy ring in Hawaii is interesting for historical reasons. The movie was a political statement from a man who worked as hard at politics in his personal klife as he did at roping and riding in his profesionnal one.

Wayne was an active member of an organisation against facisim and Communision called the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals. The group's active members included Walt Disney, actors Robert taylor and adolphe Menjou and columnist Hedda Hopper. A number of other Hollywood luminaries including Clark Gable, lent their names but took no active part in the alliances work. after World War II, that work included spotlighting susppected communists in america. This was the McCarthy era and feelings ran high. Wayne was not one to stand on sidelines. On one occasion, he visited Clark Gable on the set of 'Key to the City' (1950). Duke informed the King that his set included a communist. Gable called in his director, George Sidney, who admitted that there had been accusations, but they proved to be false. Wayne pressed to have the man fired, but Gable refused and that was that. a Duke has clout, but the King is the king.

On the other hand, there are stories of Wayne protecting friends on his crew who had been falsely accused. all of us who went to his movies sensed the one to one humanity about him didn't we? We believed* that if we ment him on the street he would be a regular guy. a straight shooter. Whether we agreed with his politics or not, we liked what we saw on the screen. He was listed among the top-10 box office attractions virtually every year between 1949 and 1972.

I'm sure we all have a favourite Wayne movie that sticks in our memories. the John Wayne phrase that stays with me the ost however, came not from a movie, but from a congressional* hearing.* It was 1977, two years before his death. The subject was aging. specifically, forced retirement. Duke looked steadily at the congressmen and asked, "Which of you is going to step out and put me out to pasture?"

Regards

Arthur

ejgreen77
March 13th, 2008, 07:53 PM
I could have sworn there was a thread somewhere about John Wayne related news articles, but upon searching the board, this thread was the closest I could come up with.

At any rate, here's ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) an interesting article about John Wayne, John Ford, and Monument valley, from the Chicago Tribune.

Lt. Brannigan
March 14th, 2008, 02:20 AM
Here's an interesting John Wayne news piece....

John Wayne, the iconic figure of the American movie western, was tapped by voters Tuesday as Yamhill County's next entertainment director

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chester7777
March 15th, 2008, 12:25 PM
I could have sworn there was a thread somewhere about John Wayne related news articles, but upon searching the board, this thread was the closest I could come up with.
ej,
Thanks for trying to keep things together! Not only is there a thread about JW-related news articles, there is actually a forum for them (which is where I moved this thread).

Thanks for posting the link - that was a great article. I especially liked this quote -

The Duke. Also still around. When you consider an iconic figure like John Wayne, born 100 years ago and gone for 28—well, pilgrim, death is just a technicality.

Lt. B, thanks for your article, too. I appreciated how that town had a mock election to run the vote counting process with newer technology through the paces - and some of the fun things they got to vote for.

Chester :newyear:

Lt. Brannigan
April 10th, 2008, 05:54 PM
I found another article on Duke that you people might find interesting.
John Wayne Film Festival rides into the sunset

Oakhurst festival raises roughly $3,000 for the Sierra Historical Sites Association


[Only registered and activated users can see links]

Elizabeth Gabriel ([Only registered and activated users can see links])

LaDonna Douglas was one of the 120 or so people who showed up Sunday at the MET Cinemas of Oakhurst for the John Wayne Film Festival.

Why?

"Well, oh my God, it's John Wayne," the Oakhurst resident gushed.
She was buying raffle tickets for prizes that included a darn good portrait of the actor. All the other prizes had plastic cups for the ticket stubs. The portrait had a MET popcorn bucket, and by early afternoon it was nearly full.

The festival, a fundraiser for Sierra Historical Sites Association, which oversees Fresno Flats Historic Park, took over one theater at the MET and a chunk of the parking lot out front. Three movies -- "Fort Apache," "Red River" and "Rio Bravo" were shown. In between there were jailings, a John Wayne look-alike contest, chili and cornbread, cobblers with ice cream and drawings for the prizes.

The festival goers sat under tents, enjoying the beautiful day and declared the chili -- prepared by Fresno Flats volunteers -- delicious. Public servant Tom Wheeler, District 5 Madera County Supervisor, served chili and time. He was one of the people thrown in the Fresno Flats portable hoosegow.

Coordinator Carrie Pereira had warned that anyone could swear out a warrant against anyone, who would then be given a fair trial, found guilty and tossed in the clink until bail was paid.
Wheeler was charged with being a silver-tongued devil. They passed the hat for his bail and collected $35.10. He matched that amount.
Rusty Murphy of the Met went behind bars for the essence of butter on his breath. Educator and columnist Bill Atwood wound up in the cooler for being known to wear hats with "funny ears." (He's a member of Yosemite-Oakhurst-Sierra 49ears, a group of Disneyana enthusiasts.)

The winners of the John Wayne portrait were Jim and Vicki Belton of North Fork. Vicki said she has Wayne memorabilia -- including a collectible plate and a movie poster -- in the office at her home, and the oil painting would get the place of honor.
The winner of the look-alike contest (Murphy and Wheeler were among the entrants) was Bruce McNichols, who looked like he's seen his fair share of cowboying. But in the interest of public disclosure, not one of the contestants even came close to the Duke.
Because all the space, time and food and prizes for the festival was donated, Fresno Flats will get all the money. An early tally was somewhere around $3,000.

The audiences for the films appeared to be mostly on the far side of 40, but enthusiastic about seeing Wayne and friends on the big screen for the first time in a long time. At the midafternoon showing of "Red River," sighs were audible as Wayne's character kissed his sweetheart goodbye. Watchers also chuckled at the verbal antics of Walter Brennan as Wayne's crusty old retainer and cheered when Montgomery Clift (who played Wayne's foster son) finally gave Wayne what was coming to him. Two guys who seemed to know what they were talking about figured the herd on screen was not the nearly 10,000 referred to in the script.

Pereira said she was delighted with the way the festival turned out.
"Everyone seemed to have a lot of fun," she said.
She added she is hoping to make a film festival an annual affair.