The Oklahoman

`Two Grits' marks milestone anniversar­ies for movies

- By Brandy McDonnell Features writer bmcdonnell@oklahoman.com

As The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences prepares for its 92nd Annual Academy Awards on Feb. 9, Oklahomans have the chance to see one of the coveted statuettes up close and personal.

John Wayne's 1970 best actor Oscar currently is displayed at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum as part of the exhibit “Two Grits — A Peek Behind the Eyepatch.” Although he was nominated three times over two decades, the legendary actor won his lone Academy Award for playing the iconic one-eyed lawman Rooster Cogburn in Henry Hathaway's 1969 adaptation of “True Grit.”

“I love `True Grit' because he got his Academy Award for that. And I just loved the story because it was with young girl, and I was about the same age as that girl when he made that movie. So, it was kind of special for me. ... I always loved that story of such a tough young girl and he was an old codger but there was a little softness to him,” said Anita La Cava Swift, Wayne's granddaugh­ter. “He loved that story, and he loved that film. ... It held a very special place in his heart for sure.”

Charles Portis' 1968 novel about an Arkansas teenager named Mattie Ross who ventures into Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) with Marshal Reuben J. “Rooster” Cogburn and Texas Ranger LaBoeuf to hunt down the scoundrel that killed her father has made an indelible impact on American popular culture.

It's the rare book that has been adapted into not one but two Oscar-honored films.

On view through May 10, the exhibit “Two Grits” celebrates the 50th anniversar­y of the 1969 version starring Wayne, Glenn Campbell, Robert Duvall, Dennis Hopper and Kim Darby, as well as the 10th anniversar­y of Joel and Ethan Coen's 2010 adaptation featuring Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon, Josh Brolin, Barry Pepper and Hailee Steinfeld.

“Very much like `The Virginian' by Owen Wister, `True Grit' by Charles Portis is one of those that rises to the top. I've seen some critics compare `True Grit' to `Huckleberr­y Finn' as far as a great American novel,” said Michael Grauer, the National Cowboy Museum's McCasland Chair of Cowboy Culture.

Fictional tale

The exhibition compares the character developmen­t, cinematogr­aphy, screenplay­s, performanc­es and costumes of the “Two Grits.” Along with Wayne's Oscar, it includes his full “True Grit” costume and his personal copy of the script. It also features several other costumes and costume pieces from the two movies, photograph­s from the films and firearms from the story's 1878 setting.

Both movies earned great acclaim: The 1969 adaptation received two Oscar nomination­s, with Wayne winning for best actor, and the 2010 version garnered 10 Academy Award nods, although it didn't win any trophies.

The exhibit includes a reproducti­on of a letter the author penned to the National Park Service in which he affirms that the Western adventure is a work of fiction — and that includes its unlikely eyepatch-wearing hero.

“It's a composite (character). Portis talks about that in the letter, that everyone insists that they knew someone like that. And he said no,” Grauer said. “Charles Portis makes it very clear: He made the story up because he's a writer of fiction.”

Western icon

Along with showcasing the Portis novel and its two cinematic interpreta­tions, “Two Grits” also affirms Wayne's close relationsh­ip with the National Cowboy Museum.

“John Wayne was involved with the National Cowboy Museum beginning with its establishm­ent and then its opening in 1965,” Grauer said. “When he passed in 1979, he left us a collection of items from his estate, which were augmented by family members over the years.”

Smith said her grandfathe­r believed in the museum's importance and legacy.

“He believed in the West and everything it stood for ... and he was a student of history. And all of that history and everything just was part of his nature. It just meant everything to him, so that museum really meant everything to him,” said Smith, who earlier this month traveled to the OKC museum of tour the exhibit and attend a special screening of 1969's “True Grit.”

Although the original cinematic version “True Grit” holds a special place in her heart, Smith said she recommends both films and the novel. The museum is hosting a book club discussion of “True Grit” from 1 to 2:15 p.m. Feb. 9, before the Oscars air that evening, as well as a special April 3 showing of the 2010 movie.

 ?? THE OKLAHOMAN] [DOUG HOKE/ ?? The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum's exhibit “Two Grits — A Peek Behind the Eyepatch,” explores the two different films made from the 1968 novel “True Grit” by Charles Portis.
THE OKLAHOMAN] [DOUG HOKE/ The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum's exhibit “Two Grits — A Peek Behind the Eyepatch,” explores the two different films made from the 1968 novel “True Grit” by Charles Portis.
 ?? HOKE/ THE OKLAHOMAN] [DOUG ?? Gloves and jacket worn by Matt Damon to play LaBoeuf in the 2010 movie “True Grit” are featured in the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum's exhibit.
HOKE/ THE OKLAHOMAN] [DOUG Gloves and jacket worn by Matt Damon to play LaBoeuf in the 2010 movie “True Grit” are featured in the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum's exhibit.

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