John Wayne - 22 Classic Movies 6 pk-

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TE406323
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033937044045
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Product Description This John Wayne collection features over 23 hours of on-the-edge-of-your-seat western action. From John Waynes (Ringo Kid) 1939 classic Stagecoach, directed by John Ford, to the 1963 blockbuster McLintock! where Wayne appears with Hollywoods new leading lady Maureen OHara, these 22 classic movies will bring out the Duke in all of you! DVD 1: 1. Stagecoach; 2. West of the Divide; 3. Riders of Destiny; 4. Sagebrush Trail. DVD 2: 5. Neath the Arizona Skies; 6. Blue Steel; 7. The Star Packer; 8. The Trail Beyond. DVD 3: 9. Randy Rides Alone; 10. Lucky Texan; 11. The Man from Utah; 12. Paradise Canyon; DVD 4: 13. Texas Terror; 14. The Desert Trail; 15. Rainbow Valley; 16. Dawn Rider; DVD 5: 17. Lawless Frontier; 18. Winds of the Wastelandl; 19. Hell Town; 20. The Spoilers. DVD 6: 21. McLintock!; 22. Angel and the Badman. (Extra Director Info. - The Spoilers Directed By Ray Enright, Hell Town Directed By Charles Barton, Paradise Canyon Directed By Carl L. Pierson, 'Neath Arizona Skies & Randy Rides Alone Directed By Harry L. Fraser, About the Actor John Wayne - The Duke was born Marion Mitchell Morrison to Clyde and Mary Morrison on May 26, 1907, in Winterset, Iowa. He received his nickname Duke while still a child, because of his love for a dog of that name. In college John worked at the Fox studio lots in Los Angeles, California, as a laborer, prop boy, and extra. While doing so he met director John Ford, who took an interest in him, and would, over the years, have a major impact on his career. In 1928, after working at various odd jobs for some months, The Duke was again employed at the Fox studios, mostly as a laborer but also as an extra and bit player. His efforts generally went unbilled, but he did receive his first screen credit as Duke Morrison. Waynes first real break came in 1929, when through the intervention of Ford he was cast as the lead in a major Fox production, the Western movie The Big Trail. According to some biographers, Fox executives found his name inappropriate and changed it to John Wayne, the last name being taken from the American Revolutionary general Mad Anthony Wayne. The Big Trail was not a success and Fox soon dropped Wayne. During the 1930s he worked at various studios, mostly those on what was known as Poverty Row. Wayne appeared in over fifty feature films and serials, mostly Westerns. He even appeared i