Lethbridge Herald

Film legends a great partnershi­p

Duo created ‘code of masculinit­y’

- Douglass K. Daniel

“Wayne and Ford: The Films, the Friendship, and the Forging of an American Hero” (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday), by Nancy Schoenberg­er

American movies feature a handful of great actordirec­tor partnershi­ps — Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese come to mind, for example, as do Cary Grant and Alfred Hitchcock. Arguably, no collaborat­ion has been more fulfilling for audiences or more influentia­l for narrative filmmakers than John Wayne and John Ford.

Together, Wayne and Ford created the mature Western with “Stagecoach” (1939) and brought it to its peak with “The Searchers” (1956). Each made sturdy Westerns with others and added to their own list with “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” (1962), which carries a famous line tinged with irony that goes to the heart of the genre: “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”

Wayne and Ford’s productive if knotty relationsh­ip is practicall­y a legend in itself. That’s a plus and a minus for Nancy Schoenberg­er’s new book, “Wayne and Ford: The Films, the Friendship, and the Forging of an American Hero.” At just over 200 pages, it serves as a lean and energetic introducti­on to a pair of moviemaker­s who are central to understand­ing American cinema. For those already keen on the topic, Schoenberg­er offers a slightly different point of view about their legacy.

Given the many books about the actor and director, the Wayne-Ford relationsh­ip is easy to recount. Ford was establishe­d in the business by the late 1920s when he became a father figure for Wayne, hired him for some of his first acting jobs, then rescued him from the purgatory of lowbudget production­s in the 1930s, giving him the chance to shine as an actor. In the decades that followed, Wayne delivered time and again for Ford — after “Stagecoach” they made 13 more movies together — and he continued to work for “Pappy” even after Ford’s gifts had gone stale and Wayne had become the most popular star in Hollywood.

A sentimenta­l bully and a binge drinker, Ford never let Wayne forget his shortcomin­gs — in particular his failure to serve in the military in World War Two — and berated him on the set for movie after movie, maybe even more so after Wayne’s studio clout surpassed his own. Wayne showed gratitude and loyalty in ways Ford could not but kept Ford at arm’s length when directing his first movie, “The Alamo” (1960). The dynamic was that of a father who raised his son well but turned jealous of his son’s success and, of course, his youth.

Framing this tale of dysfunctio­nal male love is Schoenberg­er’s insight that Wayne and Ford created a “code of masculinit­y” in their Westerns. “We all know that code,” she writes, “because, for good or for ill, it shaped America’s idea of masculinit­y, what it means to ‘be a man’: to bear adversity in silence, to show courage in the face of fear, to bond with other men, to put honour and country before self — in three words, ‘stoicism,’ ‘courage,’ ‘duty.’”

Too often Schoenberg­er undermines her presentati­on by not double-checking her material. Among other stumbles, she misquotes Wayne’s final line in “True Grit” and his Oscar acceptance speech, calls “Liberty Valance” Ford’s final Western (that would be 1964’s “Cheyenne Autumn”) and describes “The Alamo” as Wayne’s rebuke to Vietnam protests, which came years later.

In her conclusion, Schoenberg­er laments that future generation­s of men won’t conform to the Wayne mould cut by Ford, yet she hardly ponders why they didn’t always fit the mould themselves.

Experts at selling fictional moving images, the actor and director were all too human away from the cameras. Could it be that their code was more theatrical than realistic, merely a fresh coat of folklore applied to Old West history?

Americans do hold dear their myths. In that sense Ford had it right: Print the legend. ___ Douglass K. Daniel is the author of “Anne Bancroft: A Life” (University Press of Kentucky).

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