|
(28 March 1903, Athol, Massachusetts
- 22 March 1986, Borrego Springs, California)
A
graduate of Worcester Academy in 1922, Starrett went on to study at
Dartmouth College. While on the Darmouth 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 one of the people who helped organize the Screen
Actors Guild, and in 1936 signed with Columbia Pictures to become
one of the top ten western stars, starring in 115 movies the
following 16 years.
After playing assorted sheriff and rangers roles, Starrett gained
notoriety 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.
Starrett, who was independently wealthy, ended his acting career at
48 age 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. |