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Happy Birthday To…
Happy Birthday To…

Happy Birthday To…

Gary Cooper (1901)!!! He’s one of my favorite actors. The Internet Movie Database has a list of his movies, which include “High Noon,”  “Distant Drums,”  “The Fountainhead,”  “The Westerner,”  “The Plainsman,”  “Mr. Deeds Goes to Town,”  “Unconquered,”  “Cloak and Dagger,”  “The Pride of the Yankees,”  “Meet John Doe,”  “Sergeant York.” The IMDb says of Cooper (which page also has some good quotes from and “trivia” about Cooper):
“Dad was a true Westerner, and I take after him”, Gary Cooper told people who wanted to know more about his life before Hollywood. Dad was Charles Henry Cooper, who left his native England at 19, became a lawyer and later a Montana State Supreme Court justice. In 1906, when Gary was 5, his dad bought the Seven-Bar-Nine, a 600-acre ranch that had originally been a land grant to the builders of the railroad through that part of Montana. In 1910, Gary’s mother, who had been ill, was advised to take a long sea voyage by her doctor. She went to England and stayed there until the United States entered World War I. Gary and his older brother Arthur stayed with their mother and went to school in England for seven years. Too young to go to war, Gary spent the war years working on his father’s ranch. “Getting up at 5 o’clock in the morning in the dead of winter to feed 450 head of cattle and shoveling manure at 40 below ain’t romantic”, said the man who would take the Western to the top of its genre in High Noon (1952). So well liked was Cooper that he aroused little envy when, in 1939, the U.S. Treasury Department said that he was the nation’s top wage earner. That year he earned $482,819. This tall, silent hero was the American ideal for many people of his generation. Ernest Hemingway who lived his novels before he wrote them, was happy to have Gary Cooper play his protagonists in A Farewell to Arms (1932) and For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943). Copyright © 1990-2009 IMDb.com, Inc.

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