The classic movie John Wayne refused to star in

“This is too dirty”: the classic movie John Wayne refused to star in

Certain stars, especially as they get older, can become increasingly protective of their image, to the point where their entire decision-making process is driven by the persona and mythology they’ve built around themselves. John Wayne was in that category, which led to his turning down a stone-cold classic.

For decades, ‘The Duke’ had reigned supreme as the undisputed granite-hewn icon of the western genre, but he was becoming increasingly known for failing to move with the times. When Clint Eastwood emerged on the scene in Wayne’s preferred sandbox to tell darker, more violent stories, he was less than enthused.

When cinema as a whole began taking more risks, pushing more boundaries, and telling more authentic stories, he absolutely hated it with every fibre of his being. For Wayne, cinema was always supposed to be what it was during his heyday, and he couldn’t wrap his head around the prospect of it becoming something different from the medium that turned him into a household name and enduring legend.

Ironically, then, the film he ended up rejecting on account of his image made flatulent history by featuring the first-ever audible fart, so it’s easy to see why Wayne wasn’t entirely sold on the prospect of boarding Blazing Saddles. Mel Brooks’ timeless comedy thrives on the dynamic between Cleavon Little’s Sheriff Bart and Gene Wilder’s Waco Kid, but the latter was hardly the first choice for the part.

Ben Johnson, Slim Pickens, Dan Dailey, and even Johnny Carson were under consideration before Brooks ultimately settled on Academy Award-winning character actor Gig Young. In a cruel twist of fate, he collapsed on his very first day of shooting from what turned out to be alcohol withdrawal symptoms, understandably ruling him out of playing the trembling Waco Kid.

The most fascinating candidate by far was ‘The Duke’, who even went so far as to read the script after being offered the gig. As Brooks recalled, his reasons for saying no were simple and self-preservatory. “He read it, and he said, ‘I can’t do this. This is too dirty. I’m John Wayne,'” the filmmaker shared, although he did at least say he was going to be “the first one in line to see this movie” when it was released.

Speaking to Philadelphia Metro, Brooks conceded that because Blazing Saddles was “too blue” in Wayne’s estimation, he couldn’t star in something he knew “would disappoint his fans”. The riotous romp is fantastic as it is, thanks in huge part to Wilder’s tour-de-force turn as the Waco Kid, and his signature wild-eyed stylings are so integral to the film that it’s nigh-on impossible to imagine it with Wayne instead.

It would have been a very different movie, sure, but it remains up for debate if it would have turned out any better or worse were ‘The Duke’ to try something he’d never tried before and dive headfirst into a gag-a-minute side-splitter.

Watch the trailer for Blazing Saddles below.

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