Legacy Fades Into the Sunset

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  • It's not easy to find traces of John Wayne in Newport anymore. Some stamping grounds have been renamed or rebuilt.
    By Ashley Powers, Times Staff Writer


    Newport Beach will fete John Wayne, but it can't throw the bash at his house. The bay-front home was ripped down to make room for a larger estate.


    The city has wiped away most of his fingerprints. The tennis club Wayne built: renamed. The affiliated Dukes team: now called the Breakers. The Orange County airport remains the grizzled leading man's namesake — although one county supervisor toyed with rechristening it The O.C. Airport when the television soap outstripped the leading man in hipness.


    As Newport Beach gears up to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Wayne's birth, a classically Southern California conundrum has emerged. Many places where "The Quiet Man" star snoozed and caroused in the seaside town have been sold, revamped, renamed or bulldozed. "His remnants are in Pacific View" — a hillside cemetery — "and that's about it," said Bill Grundy, Newport Beach Historical Society president.


    Beginning Saturday, the city will honor its Oscar-winning adopted son with one of Wayne's few tangible legacies: celluloid. The Newport Beach Film Festival will screen several movies, including "The Searchers" and "True Grit" and trot out family members and co-stars.


    "What could be more fitting?" said James S. Olson, who co-authored the biography "John Wayne: American." "Who needs a monument to go visit? People don't even need to leave their homes to worship Wayne, when he's on cable."


    The approach says plenty about Southern California's sense of history — and its predilection for knocking down even its glitterati's old haunts. In Beverly Hills: the 42-room Pickfair, home to Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, and the home where George and Ira Gershwin penned several classic tunes. In Los Angeles: the Brown Derby, Nickodell and Perino's restaurants, among other hangouts for Hollywood aristocracy.


    Even Wayne's white colonial estate in Encino, where he lived before moving to Newport Beach, couldn't dodge the wrecking ball. "Maybe there's not the same East Coast ethos, you know, 'Washington slept here,' " said Pamela Lee Gray, author of a book about Newport Beach and a onetime architectural historian in Los Angeles County.


    By contrast, residents in Wayne's birthplace of Winterset, Iowa, whose own centennial extravaganza is next month, painstakingly restored the squat home where the cinematic icon was born Marion Morrison on May 26, 1907. Up to 40,000 people — eight times the town's population — stroll through annually, and there are plans for a museum larger than Wayne's Newport Beach home.


    "That was so disappointing when his house was torn down — to lose that to the winds of progress, I just don't know," said Wayne Davis, a John Wayne Birthplace Society board member. Wayne lived in Newport Beach more than a decade, "and there's unfortunately not much to show for it." Wayne died of cancer June 11, 1979.


    Wayne's popularity today could make many a living actor jealous. In Harris polls that ask Americans to name their top leading man, the Duke has notched a top-10 spot for more than a decade. His cowboy-hatted likeness has sold Coors Light, refrigerator magnets, alarm clocks and organic beef jerky — and now anniversary-linked revolvers, ammunition cartridges and beaver-fur hats.


    In Orange County, the relationship between the Duke and his fans was as tight as that of cowboy and horse. "They had an icon there," said Olson, a distinguished professor of history at Sam Houston State University in Texas. "The image he projected harkened back to an era where black and white and good and evil were clear."


    In 1965, Wayne and his family moved to Bayshore Drive after he was diagnosed with lung cancer. To the Duke, Orange County's coastline inspired nostalgia — he had long bodysurfed the Wedge, injuring his shoulder badly enough to lose his USC football scholarship and switch to acting. "Maybe we wouldn't have John Wayne without the surf in Newport Beach," quipped son Ethan Wayne.


    Newport Beach — "the mecca for prosperous political conservatives" — was also a flawless political match for a star fed up with Hollywood liberals, Olson said. In the century-old city, "he became John Wayne the person, not John Wayne the celluloid star," visitors bureau president Gary Sherwin said aboard the Wild Goose, Wayne's 136-foot minesweeper-turned-yacht, reincarnated once again as a charter vessel.


    Newport, a onetime escape for Hollywood luminaries such as Humphrey Bogart, mentions Wayne in its visitors guide and on its tourism website. His cancer foundation is anchored here, as is Wayne Enterprises, the company that licenses the Duke's image and name. The nearby airport bears his name and 9-foot bronzed likeness — though he had signed a petition to block commercial jets because the flight path arced over his home.


    There's little else. Like much of Southern California, Newport Beach has long favored the newly constructed over the aged. Aside from the 46 wood-frame cottages at Crystal Cove, the community has fewer than 20 structures designated as historic, including the Balboa Saloon, McFadden Wharf and the Balboa Inn.


    "It seems they tear down everything after 20 years to build something bigger or change it so you don't recognize it," said Elaine McGrew, who tends bar at an old Wayne watering hole, Class of '47.


    At Lido Yacht Anchorage, Wayne's slip was renumbered, from 55 to 204. The Wild Goose's upper deck has been so retooled that its former captain, Bert Minshall, said, "I cringe every time I see the boat go down the harbor."


    The tennis club on Jamboree Road that Wayne opened in the 1970s was rechristened the Palisades Tennis Club two decades later. Instead of paying to use Wayne's name, the new proprietor preferred to spruce up the club's courts.


    At the overhauled Balboa Bay Club, little mirrors the place where Wayne doled out twenties to the hamburger guy and introduced himself to the owner's Texas relatives by saying, "Hi, I'm John Wayne." Duke's Place, the public lounge graced with his nickname and photos, opened only this millennium.


    Farther along Coast Highway, the Arches restaurant, whose steaks Wayne relished, has preserved the actor's favorite dining room booths, Nos. 9 and 10. But when the restaurant's lease expires this summer, the dinner house is moving — another Duke hangout dispatched. And the new clubs coming in "probably wouldn't let him in — they're too trendy," said owner Dan Marcheano.


    Wayne's Newport home stood until 2002. The couple razing it invited a horseback-riding Wayne impersonator to its farewell soiree. Hank Wiessner, whose company runs boat tours in Newport Harbor, said the owners asked that the home be deleted from the tour, since it no longer resembled where the quintessential movie cowboy waved howdy to passing boats.


    "I wish it was still there," Wiessner said. "All we can say is, 'That's where it was.' "

  • Pretty much sums up our sense of history huh?!

    Tbone



    "I have tried to live my life so that my family would love me and my friends respect me. The others can do whatever the hell they please."

  • I spoke on the phone to the article's writer, Ashley, for about 20 minutes. She was really hung up about how Californians seem bound and determined to tear stuff down and to build new.


    Of course, John Wayne's BIRTHPLACE home is still around and lovingly preserved as it was in 1907 here in Winterset!


    Wayne Davis (who lives in a house built in 1869)
    Birthplace of John Wayne
    http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org

  • Seems strange that they dont cherish history. Poor old Elvis has a Disney land type house in Tupelo which is no way close to the real location and poor Casey Jones would never find his house as they shipped it 50 miles away!!!


    Mike

  • Hipocracy, that's what I call it. Newport is looking to cash in on Duke's 100th birthday and they more or less seem to have wiped him off the map there. Kinda makes ya made. I was in shock a while back when I heard about the new owners tearing down his house to build a bigger and better house. That's like tearing down Montecello because it's out of date. I remember hearing about them wanting to rename John Wayne Airport the O.C. Airport after the TV show. I was bewildered. Duke will still be an icon long after the show is long forgotten. Duke may be slid to the side for progress sake elsewhere, but he will always be upfront and remembered here at dukewayne.com., thanks to Kevin and this great gang of fans!

    Long Live The Duke!

    Mark

    "I couldn't go to sleep at night if the director didn't call 'cut'. "

  • I say we revolt... grab the muskets and canons and lets do an old fashioned 60's sit-in on the property. Why not move the house somewhere... where it could be maintained and maybe have tours. I surprised the family didn't think of that as another way to make money.


    I guess it a way that makes WInterset even more precious... especially since it will never go away.

  • I looked around and didn't see this anywhere. It was in today's Chicato Tribune.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/…0307apr23,1,4214947.story

    NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. -- Newport Beach will fete John Wayne, but it can't throw the bash at his house. The bayfront home was ripped down to make room for a larger estate.


    The city has wiped away most of his other fingerprints. The tennis club Wayne built: renamed; the affiliated Dukes team is now called the Breakers. The Orange County airport remains the grizzled leading man's namesake -- although one county supervisor toyed with renaming it The O.C. Airport when the television soap outstripped the leading man in hipness.


    As Newport Beach gears up to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Wayne's birth, a classically Southern California conundrum has emerged. Many places where "The Quiet Man" star snoozed and caroused in the seaside town have been sold, revamped, renamed or bulldozed.


    "His remnants are in Pacific View" -- a hillside cemetery -- "and that's about it," said Bill Grundy, president of the Newport Beach Historical Society.



    The city is honoring its Oscar-winning adopted son with one of Wayne's few tangible legacies: celluloid. The Newport Beach Film Festival, which began last week, will screen several movies, including "The Searchers" and "True Grit," and trot out family members and co-stars.


    "What could be more fitting?" said James Olson, who co-authored the biography "John Wayne: American." "Who needs a monument to go visit? People don't even need to leave their homes to worship Wayne, when he's on cable."

    The approach says plenty about Southern California's sense of history. Even Wayne's white colonial estate in Los Angeles, where he lived before moving to Newport Beach, could not dodge the wrecking ball. "Maybe there's not the same East Coast ethos, you know, 'Washington slept here,'
    " said Pamela Lee Gray, author of a book about Newport Beach and a one-time architectural historian in Los Angeles County.


    By contrast, residents in Wayne's birthplace of Winterset, Iowa, whose centennial extravaganza is next month, painstakingly restored the squat home where he was born Marion Morrison on May 26, 1907. As many as 40,000 people -- eight times the town's population -- stroll through annually, and there are plans for a museum larger than Wayne's Newport Beach home.


    "That was so disappointing when his house was torn down -- to lose that to the winds of progress, I just don't know," said Wayne Davis, a John Wayne Birthplace Society board member. He lived in Newport Beach more than a decade, "and there's unfortunately not much to show for it."


    Wayne's popularity today could make many a living actor jealous. In Harris polls that ask Americans to name their top leading man, the Duke has notched a Top 10 spot for more than a decade.


    In Newport Beach, the relationship between the Duke and his fans was as tight as that of cowboy and horse. "They had an icon there," said Olson, a professor of history at Sam Houston State University in Texas. "The image he projected hearkened back to an era where black and white and good and evil were clear."

    In 1965, Wayne and his family moved to Newport Beach after he was diagnosed with lung cancer. To the Duke, Orange County's coastline inspired nostalgia -- he had long bodysurfed the Wedge, injuring his shoulder badly enough to lose his University of Southern California football scholarship and switched to acting.


    Newport Beach -- "the mecca for prosperous political conservatives" -- was also a flawless political match for a star fed up with Hollywood liberals, Olson said. In the century-old city, "he became John Wayne the person, not John Wayne the celluloid star," visitors bureau President Gary Sherwin said aboard the Wild Goose, Wayne's 136-foot minesweeper-turned-yacht, reincarnated as a charter vessel.


    Wayne's Newport home stood until 2002, about 23 years after his death. The couple razing it invited a horseback-riding Wayne impersonator to its farewell soiree.


    Hank Wiessner, whose company runs boat tours in Newport Harbor, said the owners asked that the home be deleted from the tour because it no longer resembles where the quintessential movie cowboy waved howdy to passing boats.


    "I wish it was still there," Wiessner said. "All we can say is, 'That's where it was."

  • His remnants are in Pacific View and that about sums it up. Well they're getting rid of everything else so that statement pretty much sums it up.:angry: Pretty soon, there won't be anything left but his movies. At least Winterset is keeping his home intact.

    Stay thirsty my friends.

  • I wouldn't agree that his "legacy" is fading. Hell, he's still one of the most popular movie stars, 27 years after his death, as evidenced by the millions of his DVDs sold. And his memory will probably outlast most of us posting on this board. Nope, I think old Duke will be around for quite awhile.

    De gustibus non est disputandum

  • I wouldn't agree that his "legacy" is fading. Hell, he's still one of the most popular movie stars, 27 years after his death, as evidenced by the millions of his DVDs sold. And his memory will probably outlast most of us posting on this board. Nope, I think old Duke will be around for quite awhile.


    Nearly 30 years after his death he's still number 3 on the most popular actor list and I'm sorry, but with the competition he's up against, I can see no reason why he won't be no. 1 next year.

    Stay thirsty my friends.

  • No one respects history anymore... historical societies are having a hard time find money and the people to back restoration. In most cases it too expensive. Where I come from we have a house even old than the Duke's old house... Laura Ingalls Wilder's old homestead in DeSmet, South Dakota. It's been preserved as I imagine The Duke's house is. You can walk through it and see some of the old furniture they had back then. The problem with most people is we have become a disposable society. We buy things cheap so when it breaks we just toss it away and buy new. Buying this cheaply made crap from China instead of employing Americans, paying a little more for quality and making things here that would last longer.

  • No one respects history anymore... historical societies are having a hard time find money and the people to back restoration. In most cases it too expensive. Where I come from we have a house even old than the Duke's old house... Laura Ingalls Wilder's old homestead in DeSmet, South Dakota. It's been preserved as I imagine The Duke's house is. You can walk through it and see some of the old furniture they had back then. The problem with most people is we have become a disposable society. We buy things cheap so when it breaks we just toss it away and buy new. Buying this cheaply made crap from China instead of employing Americans, paying a little more for quality and making things here that would last longer.


    Dakota, I couldn't agree with you more.... you have summed up my thoughts perfectly. I forgot to mention that when I was a wee (I like to say wee :beer:) little lad of about 9 I visited his birthplace and got an cavalry revolver! That thing was awesome. Sadly though I wasn't a die hard Duke fan back then....