On this day in 1979, John Wayne, an iconic American film
actor famous for starring in countless westerns, dies at age 72 after
battling cancer for more than a decade.
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The actor was born Marion Morrison on May 26, 1907, in Winterset,
Iowa, and moved as a child to Glendale,
California.
A football star at Glendale High School, he attended the University of
Southern California on a scholarship but dropped out after two years.
After finding work as a movie studio laborer, Wayne befriended director
John Ford, then a rising talent. His first acting jobs were bit parts in
which he was credited as Duke Morrison, a childhood nickname derived
from the name of his beloved pet dog.
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Wayne's first starring role came in 1930 with
The Big Trail, a
film directed by his college buddy Raoul Walsh. It was during this time
that Marion Morrison became "John Wayne," when director Walsh didn't
think Marion was a good name for an actor playing a tough western hero.
Despite the lead actor's new name, however, the movie flopped.
Throughout the
1930s,
Wayne made dozens of mediocre westerns, sometimes churning out two
movies a week. In them, he played various rough-and-tumble characters
and occasionally appeared as "Singing Sandy," a musical cowpoke a la Roy
Rogers.
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In 1939, Wayne finally had his breakthrough when his old friend John Ford cast him as Ringo Kid in the Oscar-winning
Stagecoach.
Wayne went on to play larger-than-life heroes in dozens of movies and
came to symbolize a type of rugged, strong, straight-shooting American
man. John Ford directed Wayne in some of his best-known films, including
Fort Apache (1948),
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949),
Rio Grande (1950),
The Quiet Man (1952) and
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence (1962).
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Off-screen, Wayne came to be known for his conservative political views. He produced, directed and starred in
The Alamo (1960) and
The Green Berets
(1968), both of which reflected his patriotic, conservative leanings.
In 1969, he won an Oscar for his role as a drunken, one-eyed federal
marshal named Rooster Cogburn in
True Grit. Wayne's last film was
The Shootist
(1976), in which he played a legendary gunslinger dying of cancer. The
role had particular meaning, as the actor was fighting the disease in
real life.
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During four decades of acting, Wayne, with his trademark drawl and
good looks, appeared in over 250 films. He was married three times and
had seven children.
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