By Larry Thornberry on 4.13.04 @ 12:05AM
Coming soon in first class, John Wayne.
In his freshman and sophomore years at the University of
Southern California, John Wayne (yes, that John Wayne)
planned to be a lawyer.
I'll wait here while you think about that one.
Yes, it is chilling to think how close we came to losing the
most popular actor in the history of cinema, and the man who almost
single-handedly defined America during the grandest and gaudiest
chapters of our history.
Imagine, if you can, Sergeant John M. Stryker (Sands of Iwo
Jima) reviewing ground leases. Try to picture Captain Nathan
Brittles (She Wore a Yellow Ribbon) advising some Southern
California Babbitt on tax matters, or one-eyed Rooster Cogburn
writing writs rather than serving them in his vigorous but charming
pre-Miranda style.
But thanks to perhaps the most fortunate shoulder injury in
history, Wayne (still Marion Michael Morrison then) lost a football
scholarship to USC. So the republic lost a lawyer and America
gained a cultural icon and a fierce defender and explicator of its
best values.
Hard to imagine how the Duke would be received today -- nearly
25 years out from the day (June 12, 1979) he lost his long battle
with cancer and went to that big ranch house in the sky. Picture
the scene at the Pearly Gates: "Nice place you got here, Pete. Give
the angels in the back what they want, on me. Don't mind if I smoke
do you, Pilgrim?"
But compared to what's come along lately, I'd say the Gospel
According to the Duke stands up pretty damn well.
THE CHARACTERS WAYNE played were tough, competent, self-reliant,
honest, patriotic, and unapologetically masculine before these
things became culturally passé -- at least in elite circles.
Just not the thing in a republic increasingly populated by what Joe
Epstein (the John Wayne of essayists) calls passive
non-aggressives.
Most of the Duke's movies are morality plays. They feature a
struggle between good and evil -- made as they were back when most
everyone believed there were such things -- and it doesn't take a
Ph.D. in ethics to see which is which.
In the Duke's screen stories men are men, women are women, and
horses are horses -- and with any luck the cowboy kisses the right
one. The bad guys don't get a public defender and aren't allowed to
plead public sodomy down to following too closely. There are no
anger management counselors, and gun control means hitting what you
aim at.
No art and angst, just good, strong stories that entertain and
make sense. Are you beginning to see why the Duke's flicks give
most movie critics and professors the vapors?
In Wayne's movies, America is a great country: flawed as any
country made up of fallen human beings must be, but still great and
worth loving and defending. Characters don't spend much time in
church, but they are respectful of God. There's romance in these
movies, but all the heavy breathing takes place off stage. Such
violence as there is -- always in service of the plot -- is never
overdone or lingered over in slow-mo.
In other words, the Wayne's movies are the very soul of
political incorrectness. Just about every charge in the
post-modernist penal code is somewhere in the Duke's
oeuvre (a word he would never use - I'm not even sure he
knew men could have oeuvres).
THE PROFESSORS AND THE critics may scoff, but most of the American
theater-going public still loves John Wayne. In a 1999 Zogby poll
-- 20 years after the Duke passed on and 23 years after his last
movie, The Shootist -- Americans chose him as their
favorite actor of the 20th Century.
The Citizen's Stamp Advisory Committee has taken notice. The
15-member citizen body that decides who will be honored on
commemorative stamps chose the Duke for the 2004 entry of the
Legends of Hollywood Commemorative series.
The 37-cent stamp bearing a likeness of the Wayne in a cowboy
hat will be available to the public later this summer. It was
unveiled April 3 at the Odyssey Ball, a private fundraising gala
for the John Wayne
Cancer Institute in Santa Monica. Previous Legends of Hollywood
stamps carry the likeness of folks the Duke would likely consider
good company -- Cary Grant, Bogie, Lucille Ball, Audrey Hepburn --
and others he would as soon not have a drink with, like that rebel
without a clue James Dean.
Guys like me, who came up learning at least as much about what
being a man and being an American was about from the Duke's movies
as we did from anywhere else, have always known that he was first
class. We don't need a postal committee and government bureaucrats
to make it official. But we don't mind that they get one right once
in a while.
topics:
Hollywood, Movies, Law, Iran