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Jay encounters a Texan transporting a horse who offers Jay a ride to Durango. Inside a cantina, Jay notices one of the thugs who had thrashed him; he follows him into the men's room and cuts his throat. After a day on the road, the Texan delivers the horse to a wealthy man who recognizes Jay from an afternoon at Tibey's estate.
Jodi Thomas is a fifth-generation Texan, whose grandmother was born in Texas in a covered wagon. [1] She grew up in Amarillo, Texas and moved to Lubbock to attend Texas Tech University . [ 2 ] She has a master's degree in Family Studies.
The Texan is a Western television series starring film and television actor Rory Calhoun, which aired on the CBS television network from 1958 to 1960. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Calhoun as Bill Longley ( circa 1960)
The Texan may refer to: The Texan (fictional character), a character in Catch-22; The Texan, starring Rory Calhoun; The Texan, an American film directed by Lynn Reynolds; The Texan, an American film starring Gary Cooper and Fay Wray; The Texan, American western film directed by Clifford S. Smith
Joseph A. Altsheler wrote a trilogy of Texas fiction in his series The Texan Star (1912), The Texan Scouts (1913), and The Texan Triumph (1913). Noteworthy authors of the 1930s include Edward Anderson, whose novel Thieves Like Us (1937) has been filmed twice: [ 1 ] first in 1949 by RKO Radio Pictures as They Live by Night , later in 1974 MGM/UA ...
No Way Out is a 1987 American neo-noir [1] action thriller film directed by Roger Donaldson and starring Kevin Costner, Gene Hackman, Will Patton, and Sean Young. Howard Duff , George Dzundza , Jason Bernard , Fred Thompson , and Iman appear in supporting roles.
The huge procession of characters from book to book ensured that the first few pages of an Edson book always ended up looking alike, with descriptions of a small, insignificant looking Dusty Fog, who suddenly appeared to become a giant when villains he faced down felt the full force of his personality, the tall and Greek-god handsome Mark ...
McNally in No Way Out (1950). He started his stage career using his real name, Horace McNally, and began appearing uncredited in many World War II-era films. In 1948, he changed his stage name to Stephen McNally (taking the name of his then-2-year-old son) [4] and began appearing credited as both movie villains and heroes.