Despite John Wayne being a huge admirer of Wyatt Earp, he was bizarrely overlooked for the role in Western classicMy Darling Clementine. There have been many, many movie and TV retellings of the Wyatt Earp story. From James Garner’sHour of the Gunto the famousTombstonevsWyatt Earpbox-office rivalryof the 1990s, the lawman’s story has been recounted often.DespiteJohn Wayne fronting 80 Westernsthroughout his career, it’s odd in hindsight that he never got own Wyatt Earp movieoff the ground.

After breaking through with 1939’sStagecoach, Wayne became one of the biggest names in Hollywood. Despite this and his well-known love of Earp, whenever studio projects like 1957’sGunfight at the O.K. Corralmoved into production, he was overlooked. Easily the best film about Earp produced during the apex of Wayne’s stardom wasMy Darling Clementine, helmed by his old pal John Ford. DespiteWayne and Ford having made 14 movies together, he wasn’t approached aboutMy Darling Clementine.

My Darling Clementine (1946) Directed by John Ford

John Wayne Missed His Best Chance To Play Wyatt Earp In My Darling Clementine

This 1946 Western is one of John Ford’s best films

Ford had actually met Earp towards the beginning of his career, with the retired lawman acting as a consultant on various movie productions in the 1920s. In a retrospective conversation withMy Darling Clementine’sleading man Henry Fonda (viaLife in the 1800s),Ford recalled a day when Earp sketched out the shootout at the O.K. Corral and showed him how it played out. This is what sparked Ford’s desire to dramatize the event, but instead of his go-to lead Wayne - who by this time had frontedStagecoachandThey Were Expendablefor the director - he picked Fonda instead.

Of course, Fonda himself was also a name star in the genre, thanks to previously appearing inClint Eastwood’s favorite WesternThe Ox-Bow Incident. Fonda is perfect as the soft-spoken Earp, who conveys more with his expressions than other actors achieve with reams of dialogue. Ford directed many films that are considered masterpieces, fromThe SearcherstoThe Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, butMy Darling Clementinelingers at the top for film critics and admirers of the director’s work.

A black and white photo of John Ford smoking a pipe from the documentary John Ford: The Man Who Invented America

John Wayne was no doubt jealous that he wasn’t the one playing Wyatt Earp when he finally saw the film…

It looks incredible, the characters are well-fleshed out and there’s a poetic, myth-making aspect to it that became a staple of Ford’s work. John Wayne was no doubt jealous he wasn’t the one playing Earp when he finally saw the 1946 Western too. It might be true thatWayne was typecast as a certain kind of macho, swaggering figure, but he would later prove withRed Riveror Ford’sThe Searchersthat he could bring great depthto his performances too.

Kurt Russell and Kevin Costner’s Wyatt Earps both wielding shotguns

It’s Strange John Ford Bypassed John Wayne As Wyatt Earp

My Darling Clementine felt like a perfect reunion for Ford and Wayne

By the timeMy Darling Clementinewas released, Ford and Wayne had worked together on three movies. The Wyatt Earp film was also Ford’s first Western since the success ofStagecoach, so on paper, it felt obvious Wayne would be Ford’s first pick. Instead,it appears the director never even considered Wayne forMy Darling Clementineand that Fonda was always the actor he had in mind.

The One Wyatt Earp Scene That Kevin Costner Did Better Than Kurt Russell’s Tombstone Character

Kurt Russell’s Tombstone might be the better Western, but there’s a key scene that Kevin Costner’s Wyatt Earp pulls off better than its rival.

This could be down to Ford having personally met Wyatt Earp, and gotten a sense of who he was. Fonda’s Earp is a man of few words who only pulls a gun as the very last of resorts, and it’s tough to see Wayne pulling off the same type of internal performance. Regardless,there are reports Wayne felt slighted by Ford that he wasn’t even approached aboutMy Darling Clementine. Given the filmmaker’s fearsome reputation and the fact they worked together again so many times, it’s doubtful Wayne held a grudge over missing out.

My Darling Clementine (1946) Directed by John Ford

John Wayne Was A Huge Wyatt Earp Fan

Wayne literally walked and talked like Wyatt Earp

There are stories that Wayne met the elderly Earp while working as a crew member on various films early in his career, but whether they actually met is up for debate. Some stories even state Wayne became so friendly with the retired lawman he was a pallbearer at Earp’s funeral - this one is verifiably false. What is true is thatWayne based on his entire screen persona on Earp, with a quote attributed to the star (viaAmerican Heroes Channel) explaining the traits he took from him.

Earp was the man who had actually done the things in his life that I was trying to do in a movie. I imitated his walk; I Imitated his talk.

My Darling Clementine Poster

Wayne’s famously slow, deliberate drawl and unique way of walking helped make him a star. Wayne’s son Ethan also confirmed that his father told them that whenever he had to play a sheriff or leader, he “goes in like he’s Wyatt Earp.” In this way,it could be argued Wayne played Wyatt Earp dozens of times throughout his career by imitation, but it’s still strange he never got to play the part. Presumably, a studio would have been happy to bankroll a Wyatt Earp Western that featured Wayne on the poster, but there’s no evidence he pushed to star in one.

John Wayne Would Have Been Miscast In My Darling Clementine

Henry Fonda was the right pick for the 1946 classic

Wayne often played variations on the same character, especially when it came to Westerns. He was a star who wanted to give audiences what they expected; which in his case, meant playing tough-talking, fast-shooting men of action.Wayne was perfectly fine with his own typecasting, although he did branch out to different kinds of parts and genresthroughout his career. That said, Wayne was completely wrong forMy Darling Clementine’stake on Wyatt Earp.

Val Kilmer won acclaim for his performance as Doc Holliday inTombstone, but he also played the titular lawman in the little-seen 2012 WesternWyatt Earp’s Revenge.

There’s a very perceptive quote fromRoger Ebert’s review, where he speculates on the reason Ford snubbed his favorite leading man: “Maybe Ford saw Wayne as the embodiment of the Old West, and the gentler Fonda as one of the new men who would tame the wilderness.” There have been more overtly manly takes on Earp - including Kurt Russell’s version inTombstone- but Fonda’s performance has no concerns about such things.

The film is partly about law and order coming to the Old West, with Fonda’s Earp being the embodimentof this. He wants to resolve things legally and peacefully and only really turns to violence with the shootout at the O.K. Corral. It’s tough to see Wayne being able to pull off what might be seen as a more passive protagonist. Wayne and Fonda had very different tempos as performers and Ford weaponizes his leading man’s talents inMy Darling Clementine.

Had Wayne fronted My Darling Clementine, it might be regarded as a great Western of its era but with a miscast lead, as opposed to an evergreen genre favorite.

Wayne pulled off more understated work later in his career, such as in his final filmThe Shootist. During the peak of his career, it’s hard to see him living up to Ford’s interpretation of Earp. Again, the director had actually known Earp and clearly decided Fonda’s stoicism was the way to approach the role. Had Wayne frontedMy Darling Clementine, it might be regarded as a great Western of its era but with a miscast lead, as opposed to an evergreen genre favorite.

My Darling Clementine

Cast

My Darling Clementine, directed by John Ford, follows Wyatt Earp and his brothers as they seek justice in Tombstone. They confront the Clanton clan after their cattle are stolen and brother is killed. Earp allies with Doc Holliday, setting the stage for a showdown in this classic Western narrative.