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“Government has no wealth, and when a politician promises to give you something for nothing, he must first confiscate that wealth from you—either by direct taxes, or by the cruelly indirect tax of inflation.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“I’m about as political as a Bengal tiger. . . . I have a feeling that a nation is more than just government, laws and rules. It’s an attitude. It’s the people’s outlook. Dean Martin once asked me what I wanted for my baby daughter, and I realize now that my answer was kind of an attitude toward my country. Well, he asked me this on election day and the bars were closed anyway, so he had a lot of time to listen and I told him. . . . I told him that I wanted for my daughter Marisa what most parents want for their children. I wanted to stick around long enough to see that she got a good start and I would like her to know some of the values that we knew as kids, some of the values that an articulate few now are saying are old-fashioned. But most of all I want her to be grateful, as I am grateful for every day of my life that I spend in the United States of America. . . . I don’t care whether she ever memorizes the Gettysburg Address or not, but I want her to understand it, and since very few little girls are asked to defend their country, she will probably never have to raise her hand to that oath, but I want her to respect all who do. I guess that is what I want for my girl. That is what I want for my country, and that’s what I want for the men that you people are going to pick from here to go shape our destinies.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes to us at midnight very clean. It’s perfect when it arrives and puts itself in our hands. It hopes we’ve learned something from yesterday.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“What the hell war isn’t unpopular?”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“I ran over to the students and I was just so angry, I drummed my fists into their goddamn table and I said, “You stupid bastards! You stupid fucking assholes! Blame Johnson if you like. Blame Kennedy. Blame Eisenhower or Truman or fucking goddamn Roosevelt. But don’t you blame that kid. Don’t you dare blame any of those kids. They served! Jesus, the kid lost his arm. I mean what the hell is happening to this country? The first concrete sign of The Green Berets was a December 29, 1965, letter from Wayne to the distinguished director George Stevens. “My company and I want to make a motion picture about the war in”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“Duke was not what you would call a natural actor, but he learned. And when he learned, he mastered one of the hardest things of all - to act natural. And he does it so well that a lot of people still don't know he's acting. - Paul Fix”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“Of all of his hobbies, it was painting that Hank loved the most. He had started with pastels, graduated to oils, and then plunged into demanding watercolors.”
― Hank and Jim: The Fifty-Year Friendship of Henry Fonda and James Stewart
― Hank and Jim: The Fifty-Year Friendship of Henry Fonda and James Stewart
“Betty Furness, George Cukor, and William Haines,”
― Cary Grant: A Brilliant Disguise
― Cary Grant: A Brilliant Disguise
“One wonders if others can fully understand the depth of emotion involved in building a life with a unique man who is essentially a survivor against tremendous odds. Their love is a rare gift, encompassing as it does all the trust, caring and devotion most other men share with a multitude of women in their lives -- mother, child, mistress, etc. When you are fortunate enough to have known this kind of oneness, you are truly blessed.
-- Gloria Romanoff, in a condolence letter to Oona O'Neill Chaplin, February 6, 1978.”
―
-- Gloria Romanoff, in a condolence letter to Oona O'Neill Chaplin, February 6, 1978.”
―
“The crazy-eyed Jack Elam was playing one of the heavies, and won a pair of camera-trained vultures in a poker game with their handler. Elam promptly tried to up the price the vultures were being paid from $100 a day to $250. Waiting in the hot sun for the vultures to be placed on the branch of a tree, Wayne was informed of the sudden hike—a threatened vulture no-show! He promptly strode over to Elam’s trailer and banged on the door. “You get those goddamn birds up in that tree right now or one of their heads is gonna be sticking out of your mouth and the other head out of your asshole.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“On identity politics: “The hyphenated American is ridiculous. But that’s what we have to put up with. I think that any person that’s in the United States is better off here than they would be where they came from.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“I won’t be wronged, I won’t be insulted, I won’t be laid a hand on. I don’t do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.” —THE SHOOTIST”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“Greed has poisoned men’s souls—has barricaded the world with hate—has goose-stepped us into misery and bloodshed.… Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want. Our knowledge has made us cynical; our cleverness hard and unkind. We think too much and feel too little. More than machinery we need humanity. More than cleverness we need kindness and gentleness. Without these qualities”
― Charlie Chaplin vs. America: When Art, Sex, and Politics Collided
― Charlie Chaplin vs. America: When Art, Sex, and Politics Collided
“He didn’t broadcast it, but Archie Leach once worked in Nashville on a bill with four performing seals.”
― Cary Grant: A Brilliant Disguise
― Cary Grant: A Brilliant Disguise
“The wild card was William Fox, a misanthropic lone wolf who, his niece said, “invited enemies. He would boast that if he died, all the executives of his company put together couldn’t run the business.” He was probably right. Allied with no one, fighting everyone, plagued by rampaging paranoia, Fox”
― Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer
― Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer
“In sum, The Green Berets was a reasonable commercial success, but a critical disaster that convinced most of the moviegoing audience under the age of thirty never to see a John Wayne movie.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“When the world was flat on its back, what brought it back? American money and American energy, our humanitarianism and our sense of social responsibility for friend and foe alike.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
“Alone among the great movie stars, Wayne dared to show us the most perilous as well as the most moving of the seven ages of man. As Randy Roberts and James Olson pointed out, “He was so American, so like his country—big, bold, confident, powerful, loud, violent and occasionally overbearing, but simultaneously forgiving, gentle, innocent, and naive. . . . John Wayne was his country’s alter ego.”
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend
― John Wayne: The Life and Legend




