Shaikh Ayaz in Mumbai
The cowboy is possibly one of Hollywood's greatest inventions.
The hat-wearing, hard-drinking cowboys, mythified by the American Westerns, were not coy boys; they were men who didn't hanker for respect -- they commanded it.
Expert gunslingers with a cocky attitude to match, they symbolised a time when masculinity was measured in courage. You would never see a cowboy resting on past laurels. They were always at the frontier, answering the call of duty.
As 007 star Daniel Craig readies to play one in Cowboys & Aliens, it's time to doff our hat to the most iconic cowboys in movie history.
John Wayne
Image: A still from True GritOnce a B-movie struggler, the man with the famous walk set a benchmark for cowboy characters in film after film. His lines have tremendously influenced popular culture and must one say, an inspiration to scriptwriters, copywriters and their ilk for years now.
Come on, here's an actor who in that rumbling baritone could get away by referring to James Stewart as 'pilgrim' throughout The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. Only John Wayne who insisted on talking low and slow could have done that. He remains American cinema's most beloved gifts.
Top Cowboy Movies: Stagecoach, The Searchers, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, El Dorado, Red River, Rio Bravo, True Grit and The Shootist.
Gary Cooper
Image: Movie poster of High Noon'The general consensus seems to be that I don't act at all,' remarked the actor, rather humbly.
And he actually never did act -- he was such a natural!
Wayne's screen rival for the title of the cowboy at a time when both were major stars, Gary Cooper used less to say more. He was blessed with an infectious charm, something which made him quite popular amongst the ladies.
Cooper acted in Westerns because he believed they depicted American values. 'You feel real when you act in them, you don't feel actorish,' he observed.
Top Cowboy Movies: The Virginian, High Noon, The Westerner, Garden of Evil and Vera Cruz
Robert Mitchum
Image: A still from Man With The GunIn El Dorado, just watch him, terribly sloshed, swagger into a saloon and the nonchalance with which he handles his gun.
Addressing Joe, who's playing the piano, Mitchum says, 'Wouldn't you like to move away from that piano, Joe?' He turns volatile and bawls, 'Well, then move,' and fires away at the man using the piano as cover.
As a sheriff, who has become a laughing stock of the terrain because of his unapologetic obsession with the bottle, Mitchum shines even in the presence of Wayne.
Top Cowboy Movies: El Dorado, Nevada, Blood on the Moon, West of the Pecos, The Wonderful Country, Man with the Gun, Track of the Cat and Pursued.
Paul Newman
Image: A movie poster of Butch Cassidy and The Sundance KidThere has never been a better looking cowboy and one doubts if there will ever be one. The blue-eyed actor made a lasting impression on the Westerns.
Recognition and awards came late to him but his reputation amongst the people stood him in good stead.
Despite his cockiness in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid Boy, in which he makes the memorable pronouncement, 'Boy, I got vision, and the rest of the world wears bifocals,' Newman, who died in 2008, was modest about his achievements.
He is believed to have imagined his epitaph with these words, 'Here lies Paul Newman, who died a failure because his eyes turned brown.'
Top Cowboy Movies: Hud, Hombre and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
James Stewart
Image: James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich in Destry Rides AgainEver since, he built a repository of great Westerns alongside films as wide-ranging as It's a Wonderful Life, The Shop Around the Corner, The Philadelphia Story and Vertigo, Mr Smith Goes to Town.
Jimmy didn't end up as the stammering 'pilgrim', after all. Instead, he made movies that remain as wonderful as they were during their time.
Top Cowboy Movies: Destry Rides Again, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Broken Arrow, Winchester '73, Bend of the River, The Naked Spur, The Far Country, How the West Was Won, Cheyenne Autumn and Two Rode Together.
Clint Eastwood
Image: A still from Hang 'Em HighEastwood may be defined by the Sergio Leone phase (recalling the James Stewart-Anthony Mann combo) but he is in no way shackled by the poncho. Take away the gun from him and he is still left with the camera.
Top Cowboy Movies: Dollars trilogy, Hang 'Em High, Two Mules for Sister Sara, Joe Kidd, High Plains Drifter, Unforgiven, The Outlaw Josey Wales and Pale Rider.
Henry Fonda
Image: A still from My Darling ClementineHank, as he was fondly nicknamed, is a towering presence in My Darling Clementine although the title role is essayed by Cathy Downs. In Jesse James, Fonda is a farm owner whose life takes a turn when nefarious elements threaten to grab his family's land.
In the later part of his career, Fonda teamed up with Sergio Leone to play a villain in Once Upon a Time in the West.
Top Cowboy Movies: My Darling Clementine, Jesse James, The Return of Frank James, Once Upon a Time in the West, How the West Was Won and The Tin Star.
Gregory Peck
Image: A still from The Big CountryGoing against his image, Gregory put on that hat and left his footprint on the Old West turf. So, yes, the man riding 'cross the desert' that Bob Dylan referred to was Gregory, no less.
Top Cowboy Movies: The Big Country, The Gunfighter, Duel in the Sun, Mackenna's Gold and Billy Two Hats.
Jeff Bridges
Image: A still from True GritWhat marks this rare actor out as Rooster Cogburn in the True Grit remake is his unusual corpulence. He's indeed the only heavyweight, who could have played a role immortalised by Wayne.
The influential American critic Roger Ebert probably summed his performance best, 'We always knew we were looking at John Wayne in the original True Grit (1969). When we see Rooster Cogburn in this version, we're not thinking about Jeff Bridges.'
Bridges, whose father acted in High Noon alongside Gary Cooper, fetched up as a con man in the Bad Company.
Top Cowboy Movies: True Grit, Bad Company, Rancho Deluxe, Heaven's Gate and Wild Bill.
Robert Duvall
Image: A still from Open RangeThe outlaw Lucky Pepper from True Grit, Duvall has contributed immensely to the Westerns. He may be the genre's last known star but this cowboy is no pushover.
Kevin Costner presented him with a fabulous role in the 2003 Western Open Range, in which Duvall plays the cattle rancher who slugs it out with the land sharks.
At 80, Duvall may be old but he's still an old hand at the desolate frontier life. After all, there's an unwritten rule: Don't mess with the old Texans.
Top Cowboy Movies: Open Range, Lonesome Dove, True Grit, Lawman, Joe Kidd and The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid.
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