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Larry McMurtry's Streets of Laredo is a 1995 American Western television miniseries directed by Joseph Sargent.It is a three-part adaptation of the 1993 novel of the same name by author Larry McMurtry and is the third installment in the Lonesome Dove series serving as a direct sequel to Lonesome Dove (1989), ignoring the events of Return to Lonesome Dove (1993).
Streets of Laredo is a 1993 Western novel by American writer Larry McMurtry. It is the second book published in the Lonesome Dove series , but the fourth and final book chronologically. It was adapted into a television miniseries in 1995.
Larry McMurtry originally planned to create a western screenplay called Streets of Laredo, which would star John Wayne. This plan did not happen, and Larry McMurtry turned the screenplay into a novel. McMurtry took inspiration from Charles Goodnight's 1860 cattle drives, The Log of a Cowboy, and Nelson Story's 1866 drive from Texas to Montana. [1]
The Streets of Laredo, unfinished 1948 western film directed by Ed Wood (completed and released posthumously as Crossroads of Laredo in 1995) Streets of Laredo, a 1949 western starring William Holden "The Streets of Laredo", 1961 short story by Will Henry; Streets of Laredo, a 1995 TV adaptation of the novel, starring James Garner "Streets of ...
Lucky Luke (1992 TV series) M. The Magnificent Seven (TV series) ... Sons of Thunder (TV series) Streets of Laredo (miniseries) W. Walker, Texas Ranger;
McMurtry followed Streets of Laredo with two prequels, which with Laredo were also subsequently made into TV miniseries. Many fans of the Lonesome Dove series and novels do not consider Return to Lonesome Dove nor the follow-up TV series to be canonical because of their divergence from McMurtry's storyline.
Recently, three South Carolina main streets were ranked among the 100 “most picturesque” in the nation by a poll of 3,000 seasoned travelers through Mixbook to determine the most charming main ...
During his recovery, he suffered severe depression. He recovered at the home of his future writing partner Diana Ossana and wrote his novel Streets of Laredo at her kitchen counter. [38] [39] McMurtry married Norma Faye Kesey, the widow of writer Ken Kesey, on April 29, 2011, in a civil ceremony in Archer City. [40]