Born Marion Michael Morrison, Wayne's family moved to Glendale, California, when he was six years old. As a teen, he rose at four in the morning to deliver newspapers, and after school he played football and made deliveries for local stores. When he graduated from high school, he hoped to attend the U.S. Naval Academy. However, after the school rejected him, he accepted a full scholarship to play football at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.
In the summer of 1926, Wayne's football coach found him a
job as an assistant prop man on the set of a movie directed by John Ford. Ford
started to use Wayne as an extra, and he eventually began to trust him with
some larger roles. In 1930, Ford recommended Wayne for Fox's epic Western The
Big Trail. Wayne won the part, but the movie did poorly, and Fox let his
contract lapse. During the next decade, Wayne worked tirelessly in countless
low-budget western films, sharpening his talents and developing a distinct
persona for his cowboy characters. Finally, his old mentor John Ford gave Wayne
his big break, casting him in his brilliant 1939 western, Stagecoach.
Wayne played the role of Ringo Kid, and he imbued the character with the
essential traits that would inform nearly all of his subsequent screen roles: a
tough and clear-eyed honesty, unquestioning valor, and a laconic, almost
plodding manner.
After Stagecoach, Wayne's career took off. Among
the dozens of Westerns he appeared in—many of them directed by Ford-were
memorable classics like Tall in the Saddle (1944), Red River
(1948), Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), Rio
Bravo (1959), and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962). In all
these films, Wayne embodied the simple, and perhaps simplistic, cowboy values
of decency, honesty, and integrity. Besides Westerns, Wayne also acted in war
films. It was a small leap from the valorous cowboy or cavalry soldier to the
brave WWII fighters of films like Sands of Iwo Jima (1949) and Flying
Leathernecks (1951). Deeply conservative in his politics, Wayne also used
his 1968 film, The Green Berets, to express his support of the American
government's war in Vietnam.
By the late 1960s, some Americans had tired of Wayne and
his simplistically masculine and patriotic characters. Increasingly, western
movies were rejecting the simple black-and-white moral codes championed by
Wayne and replacing them with a more complex and tragic view of the American
West. However, Wayne proved more adaptable than many expected. In his
Oscar-winning role in True Grit (1969), he began to escape the narrow
confines of his own good-guy image. His final film, The Shootist (1976),
won over even his most severe critics. Wayne—who was himself battling lung
cancer—played a dying gunfighter whose moral codes and principles no longer fit
in a changing world. Three years later, Wayne died of cancer. To this day,
public polls identify him as one of the most popular actors of all time.
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