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Clint Eastwood Insulted John Wayne on Live TV — Duke’s Response Made Him REGRET Everything

And that new generation had a face. Clint Eastwood. Eastwood became famous in the 1960s with Sergio Leon’s Dollars Trilogy, A Fistful of Dollars for a Few Dollars More. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. Spaghetti westerns shot in Italy with strange music full of violence. Eastwood’s characters weren’t traditional cowboys.

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Dirty beard, filthy clothes, immoral men who killed for money, not heroes, survivors. In 1971 came Dirty Harry. Eastwood played a cop. But what kind of cop? One who broke rules, beat criminals. The man who said, “Do you feel lucky today?” America loved it because Eastwood was real, dirty, human. But one man didn’t love it.

John Wayne. Wayne was 66 in 50-year career. Over 150 films, America’s Hero, King of Cowboys, but he wasn’t fashionable anymore. Now he was seen as too clean. Now they said not realistic. Wayne resented this because he loved westerns. Classic westerns. Good guys win, bad guys lose. Justice wins. Eastwood’s films were different.

No good guy, no bad guy, just gray. Everyone’s dirty. Everyone’s trying to survive. Wayne had said in an interview, “These new films, these dark westerns, they’re sending the wrong message to America. We’re teaching children there are no heroes. That’s dangerous.” The words reached Eastwood and Eastwood responded.

In another interview, John Wayne is from the old generation. He thinks the world is black and white, but reality isn’t like that. Reality is complex, and my films show reality. The two men didn’t know each other, had never spoken, but the press had made them enemies. Old versus new, classic versus modern, Wayne versus Eastwood. October 19.

The Dick Cavit Show, a famous talk show, live broadcast. The producers had an idea. Let’s invite Wayne and Eastwood to the same show. Let them face off. Talk. The ratings would explode. Wayne’s agent didn’t like the idea. Duke, this is a trap. They’ll make you look old, outdated. But Wayne was proud. I’m not afraid to face anyone, especially that spaghetti eating kid.

Eastwood’s agent also warned. Clint, this man is a legend. Be respectful. Eastwood shrugged. legend maybe, but he’s wrong and I’m going to tell the truth. The show would air Monday night, October 201th, 1973 at 10 p.m. New York, NBC Studios. That afternoon, Wayne arrived at the studio early. He wore a tuxedo, black, elegant, hair sllicked back, face serious.

He sat in the makeup room, looked in the mirror. He was 66, but looked seven. Cancer had aged him. They’d removed his lung in 1964. Now he was living with one lung. Breathing was hard. Speaking was tiring. But Duke never complained. There was a knock. Dick Cavitt entered. Tall, thin, intellectual looking host. Mr. Wayne, welcome.

Thank you for coming here today. Wayne stood up, shook hands. Dick, call me Duke. Everyone does. Okay, Duke. So, I want to talk about the show. You know, Clint Eastwood will also be here. I know. I just, you know, you have some differences, different views on Western films. I hope it’ll be a respectful conversation. Wayne looked at him.

Dick, I’m always respectful, but respect is mutual. If that young man is disrespectful, I’ll respond. Cavitt swallowed. Of course, of course. The door knocked again. An assistant entered. Mr. Cavitt. Mr. Eastwood has arrived. Bring him in. Clint Eastwood walked in. He was 43, tall, 6’4, athletic, jeans, brown suede jacket, brown hair, long, cool, cold, blue eyes.

Wayne looked at him, seeing him for the first time. Young, handsome, confident. Eastwood saw Wayne, hesitated, because this was John Wayne, the real John Wayne, the legend. For a moment, Eastwood felt like a child, admiring, scared. But then he remembered, “No, I’m not a child anymore. I’m Clint Eastwood, and I’m right.

” Wayne stepped forward, extended his hand. “Eastwood, pleased to finally meet you.” Eastwood shook his hand. “Mr. Wayne, it’s an honor. Call me Duke.” “Okay, Duke.” Two men looked at each other. Same height, but bodies very different. Wayne broader but had lost weight. Eastwood younger, stronger. Cavitt intervened. Gentlemen, great.

Now we have 10 minutes until the show. Please get ready. Wayne and Eastwood went to makeup. Didn’t sit next to each other. Waited silently. 10 p.m. Show started. Dick Cavitt on stage. Camera rolled. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Tonight we have a very special show. Two legends, two western icons together for the first time.

Please welcome John Wayne and Clint Eastwood. Applause. Music. Wayne walked on stage. That iconic walk. Slow, heavy, powerful. Eastwood followed. Faster, more athletic. Two men sat next to Cavitt. Wayne on the right. Eastwood on the left. Cavitt in the middle. Cavitt smiled. Gentlemen, thank you for being here. Wayne nodded. Eastwood too.

Duke, let’s start with you. You’ve been making western films for 50 years. What does the Western mean to you? Wayne leaned forward. The Western is America. Simple, straightforward, good and evil, justice and oppression. The Western teaches children, be right, be strong, be brave. Cavitt turned to Eastwood.

Clint, you also make westerns, but very different westerns. What is the Western to you? Eastwood thought. The Western is real, or it should be. The Old West wasn’t romantic. It was dirty, violent, ruthless, and the characters weren’t perfect. They were flawed, trying to survive. Wayne frowned but didn’t say anything. Cavitt continued.

Duke, what do you think of Clint’s films? Spaghetti Westerns, Dirty Harry. Wayne took a deep breath. I watched them. Some of them well-made films. Clint is talented, but he stopped. But what? But the message is wrong. These films show that morality doesn’t matter. Win is win. Kill and survive. That’s a dangerous message.

Eastwood stiffened. Morality doesn’t matter. Did I say that or does reality say that? Wayne turned to him. What do you know about reality? What do you mean? Wayne raised his voice slightly, but enough. I mean, you made films in Italy, in studios, on artificial sets. I worked in real deserts, real mountains, real western towns. I lived this world.

You just imitated. The studio went silent. Cameras zoomed in. Eastwood’s face reened. I imitated Mr. Wayne. I Duke. Duke. I’m just making a more realistic western. Your films, forgive me, but are fantasy. Cowboys don’t always win. They don’t always ride off into the sunset wearing white hats. Wayne smiled. That dangerous smile.

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