John Wayne
- Byname:
- Duke
- Original name:
- Marion Michael Morrison
- Born:
- May 26, 1907, Winterset, Iowa, U.S.
- Died:
- June 11, 1979, Los Angeles, California (aged 72)
- Awards And Honors:
- Presidential Medal of Freedom
- Academy Award (1970)
- Academy Award (1970): Actor in a Leading Role
- Cecil B. DeMille Award (1966)
- Golden Globe Award (1970): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama
- Golden Globe Award (1953): World Film Favorites
- Notable Works:
- “The Alamo”
- Married To:
- Esperanza Baur (1946–1954)
- Josephine Alicia Saenz (1933–1945)
- Pilar Wayne (married 1954)
- Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
- "Lawless Range" (1935)
- "In Old Oklahoma" (1943)
- "Born to the West" (1937)
- "King of the Pecos" (1936)
- "The Lonely Trail" (1936)
- "Red River Range" (1938)
- "Rio Lobo" (1970)
- "Three Faces West" (1940)
- "Hatari!" (1962)
- "The Fighting Kentuckian" (1949)
- "Pittsburgh" (1942)
- "Allegheny Uprising" (1939)
- "The High and the Mighty" (1954)
- "The Searchers" (1956)
- "The Shootist" (1976)
- "Donovan's Reef" (1963)
- "The New Frontier" (1935)
- "The Spoilers" (1942)
- "Adventure's End" (1937)
- "In Old California" (1942)
- "Flying Tigers" (1942)
- "Tycoon" (1947)
- "New Frontier" (1939)
- "Winds of the Wasteland" (1936)
- "The Star Packer" (1934)
- "The Dawn Rider" (1935)
- "Angel and the Badman" (1947)
- "The Quiet Man" (1952)
- "The Red Skelton Show" (1966)
- "Screen Directors Playhouse" (1955)
- "Big Jim McLain" (1952)
- "Reunion in France" (1942)
- "Blue Steel" (1934)
- "The Greatest Story Ever Told" (1965)
- "Paradise Canyon" (1935)
- "The Hurricane Express" (1932)
- "The Man from Utah" (1934)
- "The Life of Jimmy Dolan" (1933)
- "Texas Cyclone" (1932)
- "Hondo" (1953)
- "Somewhere in Sonora" (1933)
- "I Cover the War!" (1937)
- "The Deceiver" (1931)
- "Laugh-In" (1968–1973)
- "The Horse Soldiers" (1959)
- "The Comancheros" (1961)
- "The Lawless Frontier" (1934)
- "McQ" (1974)
- "Rainbow Valley" (1935)
- "Texas Terror" (1935)
- "Lady and Gent" (1932)
- "The Telegraph Trail" (1933)
- "Seven Sinners" (1940)
- "Three Girls Lost" (1931)
- "The Trail Beyond" (1934)
- "Without Reservations" (1946)
- "The Long Voyage Home" (1940)
- "Arizona" (1931)
- "Westward Ho" (1935)
- "Big Jake" (1971)
- "Baby Face" (1933)
- "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949)
- "The Range Feud" (1931)
- "The Shadow of the Eagle" (1932)
- "3 Godfathers" (1948)
- "Cahill U.S. Marshal" (1973)
- "Red River" (1948)
- "Stagecoach" (1939)
- "The Desert Trail" (1935)
- "Reap the Wild Wind" (1942)
- "Back to Bataan" (1945)
- "Tall in the Saddle" (1944)
- "McLintock!" (1963)
- "Flying Leathernecks" (1951)
- "Rio Grande" (1950)
- "Dakota" (1945)
- "Fort Apache" (1948)
- "Jet Pilot" (1957)
- "How the West Was Won" (1962)
- "Flame of Barbary Coast" (1945)
- "The Undefeated" (1969)
- "Lady for a Night" (1942)
- "'Neath the Arizona Skies" (1934)
- "The Conqueror" (1956)
- "Rooster Cogburn" (1975)
- "Maker of Men" (1931)
- "A Lady Takes a Chance" (1943)
- "Girls Demand Excitement" (1931)
- "The Three Musketeers" (1933)
- "The Green Berets" (1968)
- "Sagebrush Trail" (1933)
- "Dark Command" (1940)
- "Hellfighters" (1968)
- "Circus World" (1964)
- "True Grit" (1969)
- "Conflict" (1936)
- "Overland Stage Raiders" (1938)
- "The Night Riders" (1939)
- "The Wings of Eagles" (1957)
- "Sands of Iwo Jima" (1949)
- "Riders of Destiny" (1933)
- "Alcoa Premiere" (1962)
- "Pals of the Saddle" (1938)
- "The Big Trail" (1930)
- "The Man from Monterey" (1933)
- "Two-Fisted Law" (1932)
- "Brannigan" (1975)
- "Chisum" (1970)
- "The Barbarian and the Geisha" (1958)
- "Cast a Giant Shadow" (1966)
- "Randy Rides Alone" (1934)
- "Wake of the Red Witch" (1948)
- "The Shepherd of the Hills" (1941)
- "The Longest Day" (1962)
- "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" (1962)
- "The Sea Chase" (1955)
- "The Fighting Seabees" (1944)
- "Wagon Train" (1960)
- "The Big Stampede" (1932)
- "Blood Alley" (1955)
- "A Man Betrayed" (1941)
- "Rio Bravo" (1959)
- "His Private Secretary" (1933)
- "Ride Him, Cowboy" (1932)
- "The Lawless Nineties" (1936)
- "Island in the Sky" (1953)
- "Trouble Along the Way" (1953)
- "Lady from Louisiana" (1941)
- "The Alamo" (1960)
- "The Sons of Katie Elder" (1965)
- "Santa Fe Stampede" (1938)
- "Sea Spoilers" (1936)
- "Operation Pacific" (1951)
- "El Dorado" (1967)
- "California Straight Ahead!" (1937)
- "The Train Robbers" (1973)
- "Legend of the Lost" (1957)
- "Haunted Gold" (1932)
- "The Oregon Trail" (1936)
- "West of the Divide" (1934)
- "Idol of the Crowds" (1937)
- "North to Alaska" (1960)
- "The Lucky Texan" (1934)
- "Words and Music" (1929)
- "They Were Expendable" (1945)
- "Three Texas Steers" (1939)
- "The War Wagon" (1967)
- "The Cowboys" (1972)
- "Wyoming Outlaw" (1939)
- "In Harm's Way" (1965)
- Movies/Tv Shows (Directed):
- "The Green Berets" (1968)
- "The Alamo" (1960)
John Wayne (born May 26, 1907, Winterset, Iowa, U.S.—died June 11, 1979, Los Angeles, California) was a major American motion-picture actor who embodied the image of the strong, taciturn cowboy or soldier and who in many ways personified the idealized American values of his era.
Marion Morrison was the son of an Iowa pharmacist; he acquired the nickname “Duke” during his youth and billed himself as Duke Morrison for one of his early films. In 1925 he enrolled at the University of Southern California (Los Angeles), where he played football. He worked summers at the Fox Film Corporation as a propman and developed a friendship with director John Ford, who cast him in some small film roles starting in 1928. His first leading role—and his first appearance as “John Wayne”—came in director Raoul Walsh’s The Big Trail (1930). During the next eight years Wayne starred in more than 60 low-budget motion pictures, mostly in roles as cowboys, soldiers, and other rugged men of adventure. He reached genuine star stature when Ford cast him as the Ringo Kid in the classic western Stagecoach (1939). After that film his place in American cinema was established and grew with each successive year. Ford’s The Long Voyage Home (1940), a film based on several Eugene O’Neill one-act plays, featured one of Wayne’s most praised performances from the early years of his stardom and offered further evidence of his commanding screen presence.
Speculation exists as to whether Wayne purposely avoided military service during World War II, but evidence suggests that his attempts to enlist in the Navy were rejected because of his age, an old football injury, and a federal government directive to draft boards to go easy on actors whose talents could be used for building morale. He spent the war years entertaining troops overseas and making films such as the popular action-adventures Flying Tigers (1942), The Fighting Seabees (1944), They Were Expendable (1945), and Back to Bataan (1945), all of which featured Wayne as quintessentially American fighting men who overcome great odds. He also appeared during this period in melodramas such as The Spoilers (1942) and Flame of Barbary Coast (1945). By the end of the war, Wayne was firmly established as one of Hollywood’s top stars.

Wayne’s screen image was permanently defined in the many classic films he made with directors Ford and Howard Hawks during the postwar years and into the early 1960s. For Ford, Wayne starred in what has come to be known as the “Cavalry Trilogy”: Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), and Rio Grande (1950), three elegiac films in which Wayne portrays stoic cavalry officers of the Old West. Wayne’s roles in these and other films for Ford offer a somewhat complex representation of the American character in that they exhibit unflagging patriotism but are disillusioned by, and resigned to, the inherent hypocrisies within America. In this manner the Ford-Wayne films both honour and undermine the mythology of the Old West, nowhere more so than in The Searchers (1956), a film considered by some to be the greatest western ever made. Wayne’s character in this film pursues a noble goal (rescuing his kidnapped niece from a renegade Comanche leader), but his obsessive behaviour and blatant bigotry reveal him to be as mad as he is heroic. Ford’s exploration of the dark underbelly of Old West legends culminated in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962), a film that both questions and justifies the “when the truth interferes with the legend, print the legend” philosophy of 19th-century journalists of the American West. In all, the Ford-Wayne films present an Old West rendered obsolete by the very society it helped to create. Wayne also appeared in films for Ford that were not westerns, including standouts such as The Quiet Man (1952) and Donovan’s Reef (1963).
Howard Hawks’s collaborations with Wayne are less iconoclastic than Ford’s, but no less revered. Red River (1948), another candidate for the greatest western of all time, features Wayne as an autocratic, monomaniacal cattle baron at odds with the orphan boy he has reared (portrayed in adulthood by Montgomery Clift in his first screen role) and the modern values he represents. Wayne did not work with Hawks again until Rio Bravo (1959), a film born of Hawks’s and Wayne’s dissatisfaction with the popularity of High Noon (1952), the Gary Cooper western in which citizens of a western community are portrayed as weak-willed and cowardly when their sheriff asks their help in forming a posse. The sheriff portrayed by Wayne in Rio Bravo, conversely, is determined to do his duty with or without help from anyone. Although greeted with lukewarm reviews upon its release, Rio Bravo is now regarded as a classic western. Hawks and Wayne remade essentially the same story twice, in El Dorado (1967) and in Rio Lobo (1970), Hawks’s final film.
Wayne’s standout films for other directors include Sands of Iwo Jima (1949), in which his performance as an uncompromisingly tough Marine sergeant earned an Oscar nomination; Hondo (1953), perhaps the only classic western filmed in 3-D; The Alamo (1960), an epic-length film that Wayne himself directed and in which he starred as Davy Crockett; The Longest Day (1962) and In Harm’s Way (1965), two hugely successful World War II epics; and McLintock! (1963), a slapstick western farce that was his only successful comedy. After a screen career of more than 40 years, Wayne was honoured with an Academy Award for his portrayal of the drunken, cantankerous, but endearing U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn in True Grit (1969), a role he reprised opposite Katharine Hepburn in Rooster Cogburn (1975), a partial remake of the Hepburn–Humphrey Bogart classic The African Queen (1951). Wayne’s final film, The Shootist (1976), in which he portrays an aging gunfighter who is dying of cancer, was praised by many as his best western since Rio Bravo. This role was a poignant screen farewell for an actor who himself would succumb to cancer three years later.
Wayne endured criticism throughout his career from those who questioned his versatility as an actor. His ability to convey quiet tenderness, however, and his capacity for multilayered portrayals of complex characters, as in Red River and The Searchers, was often overlooked. Wayne himself was also the subject of controversy: his outspoken right-wing politics were admired by conservatives but derided by liberals as being naively jingoistic. His politics notwithstanding, he is considered a towering cinematic icon and, to some, the greatest Hollywood star of all time. He was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal and the Presidential Medal of Freedom.