- Charles Starrett
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Charles Starrett Born March 28, 1903
Athol, Massachusetts U.S.Died March 22, 1986 (aged 82)
Borrego Springs, California U.S.Years active 1926-1952 Spouse Mary McKinnon (? - ?) 2 children Charles Starrett (March 28, 1903 - March 22, 1986) was an American actor best known for his starring role in the Durango Kid Columbia Pictures western series. He was born in Athol, Massachusetts.
Contents
Career
A graduate of Worcester Academy in 1922, Starrett went on to study at Dartmouth College. While on the Dartmouth football team, he was hired to play a football extra in the 1926 film The Quarterback. In 1930 he played the romantic lead in Fast and Loose, which also featured Miriam Hopkins, Carole Lombard and Frank Morgan. After that, he was very active for the next two years but his roles were unremarkable. In 1933 he was featured in Our Betters and helped organize the Screen Actors Guild, and in 1936 signed with Columbia Pictures and become one of the top ten western stars, starring in 115 movies the following 16 years.
Durango Kid
After playing assorted sheriff and rangers roles, Starrett gained fame for his role as the Durango Kid. The first film in which he played his famous alter-ego character was known as The Durango Kid, which was released in 1940, but for some reason, Columbia did not see fit to continue with the series at that time. The character was revived in 1944 and lasted through 1952. Dub Taylor, as "Cannonball", worked with Starrett until 1946. At that time, Smiley Burnette, who had been a very popular sidekick to Gene Autry, was brought in to replace Taylor. Burnette, appropriately enough, played a character called Smiley Burnette. The Durango Kid films combined vigorous action sequences – often with speeded up camera work and spectacular stunts performed by Jock Mahoney – and western music. Each film featured a singing group, and many gave free rein to Burnette's singing and playing.
- Films
- The Durango Kid (1940)
- The Return of the Durango Kid (1945)
- Both Barrels Blazing (1945)
- Rustlers of the Badlands (1945)
- Outlaws of the Rockies (1945)
- Blazing the Western Trail (1945)
- Lawless Empire (1945)
- Texas Panhandle (1945)
- Frontier Gunlaw (1946)
- Roaring Rangers (1946)
- Gunning for Vengeance (1946)
- Galloping Thunder (1946)
- Two-Fisted Stranger (1946)
- The Desert Horseman (1946)
- Heading West (1946)
- Landrush (1946)
- Terror Trail (1946)
- The Fighting Frontiersman (1946)
- South of the Chisholm Trail (1947)
- The Lone Hand Texan (1947)
- West of Dodge City (1947)
- Law of the Canyon (1947)
- Prairie Raiders' (1947)
- The Stranger from Ponca City (1947)
- Riders of the Lone Star (1947)
- Buckaroo from Powder River (1947)
- Last Days of Boot Hill (1947)
- Six-Gun Law (1948)
- Phantom Valley (1948)
- West of Sonora (1948)
- Whirlwind Raiders (1948)
- Blazing Across the Pecos (1948)
- Trail to Laredo (1948)
- El Dorado Pass (1948)
- Quick on the Trigger (1948)
- Challenge of the Range (1949)
- Desert Vigilante (1949)
- Laramie (1949)
- The Blazing Trail (1949)
- Bandits of El Dorado (1949)
- Horsemen of the Sierras (1949)
- Renegades of the Sage (1949)
- Trail of the Rustlers (1950)
- Outcasts of Black Mesa (1950)
- Texas Dynamo (1950)
- Streets of Ghost Town (1950)
- Across the Badlands (1950)
- Raiders of Tomahawk Creek (1950)
- Frontier Outpost (1950)
- Lightning Guns (1950)
- Prairie Roundup (1951)
- Ridin' the Outlaw Trail (1951)
- Fort Savage Raiders (1951)
- Snake River Desperadoes (1951)
- Bonanza Town (1951)
- Cyclone Fury (1951)
- The Kid from Amarillo (1951)
- Pecos River (1951)
- Smoky Canyon (1952)
- The Hawk of Wild River (1952)
- Laramie Mountains (1952)
- The Rough, Tough West (1952)
- Junction City (1952)
- The Kid from Broken Gun (1952)
Later years
Starrett, who was independently wealthy, ended his acting career at age 48 when the Durango Kid series ceased production. He once told the Dartmouth alumni magazine that most of his California neighbors thought he was a retired banker.
Starrett died of cancer in Borrego Springs, California in 1986, six days short of his 83rd birthday.
Fact
- Diehard film and video collectors still relish the Durango Kid films, but many are still locked away in Columbia studio vaults these many years later, with only a few recently being aired on The Movie Channel (TMC).
Notes
- In Durango Kid movies, the main character was usually called "Steve" (his last name would change from film to film) but he could change outfits and horses to become the hero behind the black mask. His horses were named "Bullet" (Steve) and "Raider" (Durango).
External links
Categories:- American actors
- Western (genre) film actors
- People from Worcester County, Massachusetts
- Worcester Academy alumni
- 1903 births
- 1986 deaths
- Cancer deaths in California
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