The Duke takes his place in history.
        John Wayne, one of Americas greatest actors and directors of all time. His fame and superstardom led to many problems in his public life. His role as an icon of American individualism and the frontier living has overshadowed his career to such an extent that it is almost impossible for the fans and writers to specialize Wayne the legend from Wayne the actor and Wayne the man.
        Before the start of his movie career he played football at USC under his birthing name, Marion Michael Morrison. He held many behind-the-scene jobs at Fox before miserable in front of the cameras in the late 1920s in a series of small roles. Director John Ford, who befriended the Duke, recommended him for the call for role in Raoul Walshs western epic, The Big Trail. Wayne did not let the stardom go to his head. He spent the rest of the ten making his way through a series of blue bud postulate films whose failing budgets and quick shooting schedules did little to relegate his career.
        In 1939 John Ford gave Wayne an separate break by casting him as the Ringo Kid in Stagecoach. The roll threw Wayne into the binding ranks of the movie stars and finally, in the 1940s, his legend began to take shape. Relieved from soldiers duty due to physical problems, Wayne became the film industrys hard-core soilder, but had that compassionate location.
Movies released during the war, such as fast-flying Tigers (1942), The Fighting Seabees (1944) and Back to Bataan (1945) left Wayne with some pretty bear-sized shoes to fill.
        The movies that he made at the end of the decennary were the ones that established him as an actor of merit.
Howard Hawks emphasized the willful side of Waynes screen persona by giving him the cut off in Red River (1948). He played the part of tom turkey Dunson, a difficult, unlikeable yet compelling character. Two other films directed by John Ford quickly...
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