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A Star Is Born

Clint Eastwood was born in San Francisco, California in 1930. The nurses quickly took to calling him "Samson" because he was over 11 pounds at birth. The Mayflower-descended family moved around California, settling first in Sacramento, then in Piedmont. The family was comfortable because Eastwood's father was a manufacturing executive and his mother worked as clerical support at IBM.

It's unclear if Eastwood ever graduated high school. Records are sealed, contemporary reports from friends are unclear and Eastwood has never commented on the subject. We do, however, know that he was expelled from school for obscene graffiti and burning an effigy on top of the school. He then transferred to a technical high school, which was his final formal schooling whether he graduated or not.

After leaving high school, Eastwood worked a number of odd jobs, including a stint in the United States Army during the Korean War, though he did not serve in combat. Eastwood survived a plane crash back from a rendezvous with an officer's wife and paddled to shore on a life raft.

Clint Eastwood in Hollywood

After the Army, Eastwood bummed around some more before going to Hollywood and becoming as close to an instant star as exists. Eastwood claimed that he was discovered by an assistant and brought to meet a casting director. While they were not terribly impressed with his acting, they were very impressed by the fact that he was 6'4" tall.

So they sent him to acting class, where they hoped to break him of his wooden movements and habit of talking through his teeth. Despite the fact that these are big "no nos" in the world of acting, they soon became Eastwood's trademark. Eastwood floundered about in small and sometimes uncredited roles before landing the role that would make him famous: playing Rowdy Yates on CBS' Rawhide.

Eastwood was a breakout character, though he disliked the role, believing himself too old to play the character. He directed some of the trailers for the series but was never able to successfully command an entire episode. In 1958, when he started the show, he was paid $750 an episode. When the show was canceled Eastwood was given $119,000 severance pay.

Richard Harrison introduced Sergio Leone to Clint Eastwood after his Rawhide co-star Eric Fleming declined to work with the director. What would result was one of the most fruitful partnerships of Eastwood's career, making the so-called "Dollars Trilogy": A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good The Bad and the Ugly.

The last of these is widely regarded as one of, if not the, greatest film ever made. Eastwood played "The Man With No Name," a more morally ambiguous character than the one that he played on Rawhide. Along with John Ford's The Searchers, it touched off a period of much more thoughtful and serious Western films known as "revisionist Westerns." Eastwood would revisit the character in two of his own films, High Plains Drifter, a gritty, psychedelic take on the character and Pale Rider, a spiritual take on the character. Both Eastwood-directed films put the Man With No Name into the role of the grateful dead.

Eastwood continued to work primarily in the Western idiom for the balance of the 1960s. And while it might be hard to believe now, most people still didn't know who he was, because the genre was on the decline, appealing to a smaller and smaller niche of the general action film genre. This all changed with Hang 'Em High, which catapulted Eastwood to international stardom as the lead in United Artists' biggest opening weekend at the time.

At the dawn of the 1970s, Eastwood starred in his other iconic role, that of Detective Harry Callahan, also known as "Dirty Harry." The eponymous first film was released in 1971 and followed by Magnum Force in 1973, The Enforcer in 1975, Sudden Impact in 1983, and The Dead Pool in 1988, the last of which features Guns 'N' Roses as Jim Carrey's band.

The character allowed Eastwood to explore his conservative political views on camera. While the leftist media tends to portray Harry as some kind of warning against "killer cops," the character is a clear endorsement of law and order in a society gone mad.

Eastwood the Director

While virtually every American knows who Clint Eastwood is today, far fewer know that he directs his own films these days. He debuted in Play Misty For Me, an erotic thriller that remains controversial to this day among critics. While Eastwood spent the balance of the 1970s occasionally directing a film, such as High Plains Drifter, The Outlaw Josey Wales, and The Gauntlet, it was not until the 1980s that he leaped into his roles in earnest.

Eastwood's films have always enjoyed critical acclaim and accolades, but it was not until 1992's Unforgiven that he began to receive awards as well. It was this year that Eastwood was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Director. This is when Eastwood began to be recognized as something other than simply an actor who was getting too big for his britches -- he was a talented director in his own right, whose films look a bit like his acting; terse and wooden but with lots of character.

He was able to win Oscar gold again in 2004 for Billion Dollar Baby, for which he once again received the award for Best Picture and Best Director. He was also nominated for awards for Mystic River, Letters From Iwo Jima, and American Sniper.

Eastwood the Politician

Clint Eastwood is also something of a politician. He was elected mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, but this was a largely ceremonial position coming with a "lavish" $200 a month salary, which Eastwood donated to the local youth center. Some of his accomplishments as mayor were helping to pass a new law making it legal to eat ice cream on the streets, public restrooms at the public beach, and a new annex for the city library. After his stint as mayor, he served on the California State Park and Recreation Commission at the appointment of Democratic California Governor Gray Davis.

He has been a member of both the Republican and Libertarian Parties and has been an independent, as well as voting for political candidates from both sides of the aisle.

Clint Eastwood is still around and kicking, continuing to produce films well into his 90s.

1 posted on 06/15/2022 9:50:15 AM PDT by ammodotcom
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To: ammodotcom

Clint is a legend, no ifs, ands or buts about it.


2 posted on 06/15/2022 9:57:28 AM PDT by No name given (Anonymous is who you’ll know me as. )
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To: ammodotcom
> Dirty Harry is perhaps the most recognizable fictional police officer in American history. <

The gentleman pictured below takes issue with that.


5 posted on 06/15/2022 10:00:52 AM PDT by Leaning Right (The steal is real.)
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To: ammodotcom

One of the best there ever was and will be.


6 posted on 06/15/2022 10:02:27 AM PDT by ReleaseTheHounds ("The problem with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money." M. Thatcher )
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To: ammodotcom
You just shot an unarmed man.

Well, he should have armed himself if he's going to decorate his saloon with my friend.

7 posted on 06/15/2022 10:04:11 AM PDT by seowulf (Civilization begins with order, grows with liberty, and dies with chaos...Will Durant)
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To: ammodotcom

dyin’ ain’t much of a livin’ boy


8 posted on 06/15/2022 10:06:13 AM PDT by lesko
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To: ammodotcom
My favorite Eastwood scene:

Sudden Impact - "Go Ahead Make My Day."

10 posted on 06/15/2022 10:07:53 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (Fauci is a despicable little turd)
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To: ammodotcom

This grudgingly complimentary but otherwise snotty biography mustve come from Wikipedia, where they are still butthurt over Clint’s appearance at the 2008 Republican convention.


13 posted on 06/15/2022 10:13:28 AM PDT by skeeter
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To: ammodotcom

Clint says more with an eye squint than most actors say in an entire film of dialogue.


14 posted on 06/15/2022 10:15:33 AM PDT by Huskrrrr (Alinsky, you magnificent Bastard, I read your book!)
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To: ammodotcom
While virtually every American knows who Clint Eastwood is today, far fewer know that he directs his own films these days.

Seriously? I think you'd have a hard time finding folks who don't know that.

16 posted on 06/15/2022 10:16:00 AM PDT by Bruce Campbells Chin
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To: ammodotcom

What? No “Paint Your Wagon?” 😉
Clint’s singing voice is not too bad.


17 posted on 06/15/2022 10:17:40 AM PDT by madison10
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To: ammodotcom

Have you seen just about every Clint Eastwood movie?

I thought I probably had seen them all, but by pure luck, I was switching channels when a 1959 “Rawhide” episode was starting. It’s called “Incident of the Day of the Dead.” Clint, aka Rowdy Yates, has a solo appearance in what is basically a 50 minute film. It’s set in New Mexico with a strong Spanish and Gringo flavor.

(Interestingly, in his latest, “Cry Macho,” he’s an old former rodeo star. This Rawhide episode also relies on Clint’s talent for bronco busting.)

One of the characters is a “Juarista” named “Tovar.” I have to presume this is short for “Tovarishch” = “communist comrade.” To my thinking, one of the blacklisted Hollywood commies escaped detection, and did his best to drag a Bolshevik plot line into Rawhide in 1959. But let all the Hollywood politics go. This is basically a 50 minute film short starring Clint Eastwood, born 1930, in a pretty cool short film. So, he was 29 in 1959, and still making films today. Full respect.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T6AQwvbllU&t=398s&ab_channel=RxShow

“Incident Of The Day Of The Dead”


18 posted on 06/15/2022 10:19:11 AM PDT by Travis McGee (EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: ammodotcom

Remember him debating the empty chair (Obozo) in 2012?


21 posted on 06/15/2022 10:20:25 AM PDT by BiglyCommentary
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To: ammodotcom

>>He was elected mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, but this was a largely ceremonial position coming with a “lavish” $200 a month salary,

I’m sorry, but this shows a lack of understanding of how local government often works. Much local government has a weak mayor / strong city manager setup. The mayor often votes with the council, sets most of the agenda for meetings, appoints commission and board members to be approved by the council, etc. It is a chairman of the board position, essentially. It is generally not full time.

Meanwhile, the day-day work gets done by a full time professional city manager who serves at the will of the council (and thus those who elected them). He gets fired if a majority of the council doesn’t like his work. He hires and fires department heads, etc. Large city contracts have to be approved by council. This is akin to a CEO of a company.

The local mayor where I’m sitting makes a whopping $1500 a month, this in a well-off Atlanta suburb with a 50k population and a $40 million budget. The city manager is more like $200k.


23 posted on 06/15/2022 10:51:12 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: ammodotcom

I love Eastwood’s Spaghetti Westerns!! Second only to anything with John Wayne in it. No doubt Clint Eastwood is the king of one-liners.


25 posted on 06/15/2022 10:59:40 AM PDT by BobinIL
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To: ammodotcom

One of my all time favorites is ‘Absolute Power’.


28 posted on 06/15/2022 11:21:12 AM PDT by LibertyWoman (America, the Handwriting is on the Wall. )
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To: ammodotcom

I thought Clint also played the occasional next-door neighbor to Allen Young (Wilbur Post) in “Mr. Ed”. I think he played himself.


30 posted on 06/15/2022 11:25:39 AM PDT by T. Rustin Noone (the angels wanna wear my red shoes......)
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To: ammodotcom

I thought Gran Torino won some award?

I really liked Absolute Power as well.


37 posted on 06/15/2022 12:22:49 PM PDT by doorgunner69 (Let's go Brandon)
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To: ammodotcom

No “Coogans Bluff”? One of my favorites.


38 posted on 06/15/2022 12:33:05 PM PDT by HandyDandy (Life is what you make it.)
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To: ammodotcom

I’ve been watching him since he dropped a load of napalm on a TARANTULA (uncredited.)

Only movie I thought had an unbelievable scene in it was SUDDEN IMPACT in which two rednecks, armed with shotguns have kidnapped his girl and are out on a pier.
He grabs his .44 Auto-Mag pistol and goes after them. There he stands. Perfectly backlit and a perfect target for their shotguns.
The two rednecks armed with shotguns just stand there and look at him with their mouths open while he blasts them both.

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_T6QNT39-HnQ/TMnQMG1iU9I/AAAAAAAAA4A/FtVhSh9hZ98/s400/SuddenImpactSilhouttte.jpg


39 posted on 06/15/2022 12:58:06 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (“Both oligarch and tyrant mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms.” – Aristotl)
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To: ammodotcom

Play Misty For Me
Paint Your Wagon


43 posted on 06/15/2022 5:16:22 PM PDT by Jemian (War Eagle! It is great to be an Auburn Tiger.)
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