Roaming one of my favorite haunts last weekend, The Tom Mix Museum in Dewey, Oklahoma, I came across a gallery of signed photographs from
past Hollywood western movie luminaries – Jimmy Stewart, Walter Brennan, Will
Geer, Roy and Dale, and a host of others. Like old Tom, most of them are dead.
I leaned in closer to look at one. “Best of luck to the Tom Mix Museum – John
Wayne” it was inscribed.
Tom Mix |
“Dang, The Duke,” I said, clearly impressed.
Next to me, my associate Russ Maddock – historian and
photographer extraordinaire – said to me, “You should ask Fawn [Lassiter,
museum Manager and Curator] about John Wayne and Tom Mix.” Russ and I had both
come there that day to sign our respective books for prospective readers.
Here’s what I found out.
Tom Mix and John Wayne didn’t much like each other. Tom,
it’s said, was a bit jealous and feared Wayne would unseat him from his
position in the Hollywood Cowboy limelight at a time when Mix’s role as a film
star had begun to fade, and Wayne’s star was rising. Once when a reporter asked
Tom what he thought of Wayne, he said, “The only Christian words I could use
are ‘no-talent upstart.’”
As for The Duke – a nickname he picked up as a kid – it’s
said his dislike for Tom went back to his (Wayne’s) football playing days at
USC. Supposedly, Tom had told Wayne and several of his teammates that they
should stop by Fox Studios and he’d get them jobs in the movies. When Wayne and
some of the boys showed up a few weeks later, the guards were told Mix said he
never made such an offer, and the bunch were summarily thrown off
the lot. However, Tom did get John a summer job in the studios’ prop
department in exchange for USC football tickets.
John Wayne |
The two men had diametrically opposed styles in their
approach to the western genre of film acting. Mix was sort of a dandy, a
showman avoiding realism for more melodramatic scenes and attractive visuals
like fancy well-tailored outfits and trick-riding on his famous horse(s) Tony.
Tom once said, “From the beginning I decided to make clean pictures. I decided
to give boys and grown-ups good wholesome entertainment, free from suggestion
or anything harmful to growing and fertile-minded youth. I try to convey to the
boys and girls a message of helpfulness. In no picture have I ever smoked,
taken a drink, played cards or gambled.”
Of course, the film genre evolved, thanks in large part to
Wayne. We all knew The Duke as a tough, gritty, no-nonsense guy with maybe some
smoldering anger issues. I believe it would be fair to say, in most of his movies
he was a hard-smoking, hard-drinking kind of guy, and I can also recall a few
card games. I always supposed that ever-present faded red shirt and leather vest he wore got kind of gamey. The world view John Wayne projected from the screen
seemed to be pretty much black and white, and he was somewhat intolerant. He
was short and direct with the spoken word, often confused with women; something that
appealed to his audiences, especially us men. We weren’t always sure how the
Duke’s relationships would play out, but we knew for certain we’d want to be on
his side in the end.
My favorite John Wayne quote is, “Life is hard; it’s harder
if you’re stupid.”
The irony of the whole comparison between these two men is
that Tom Mix lived more of the western-style life in his younger years than did Wayne. Mix
worked as a real cowboy on one of the biggest ranches in Indian Territory, the
Miller Brothers’ 101 Ranch near modern day Ponca City. There he worked cattle
and horses and performed with (an elderly) Bufflao Bill and Pawnee Bill in the
Millers’ Wild West Shows. He was also a bartender and town marshal in the town of Dewey. John
Wayne, on the other hand, grew up in Southern California where he worked in an
ice cream store as a teen and played football at USC, losing his scholarship at
that due to an off-field injury while body-surfing.
But it’s like the fella said, “A man’s gotta do what a man’s
gotta do.”
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2 comments:
"Tom and The Duke" Good write up Phil and thanks for the kind words. After captureing their respective spots as leading men for their times, Duke seemed to be much more the friend and gentlemen. As the list of people and stars the Duke helped along the way is unbelieveable.
Russ
Hi Phil, i ma your newest member, found you via bloggerdise!great post, I have a huge crush on cowboys, always did always will! thak you, will pop by agagin soon, hope to see over at mine soon. best wishes for the season.chelsea
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