Over the course of the last 33 years, I have met many of the cowboy stars, heroines, villains and great stuntmen that were highlights of the 1930s, 40s and the demise of the B western in 1954, such as ...
When I was a child, my grandmother, Miz Lena, told me, "Honey Baby, life by the inch is a cinch. Life by the yard is hard." Wish I'd listened to her. I could have saved myself some misery. Up until a ...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Alfred "Lash" LaRue (June 15, 1917 – May 21, 1996) was a popular western motion picture star of the 1940s and 1950s. He had exceptional skill with the bullwhip ...
I was a member of the first generation of television viewers, those who remember the arrival of the first black-and-white television in their neighborhood. Television changed my life. I was a TV ...
The ’50s western-movie star Lash Larue was definitely a Louisiana native with connections in Houma. That has become clear from calls and other responses from Bobby Spahr, Allen Guidry, Werlien ...
If you’ve never heard of the Durango Kid or Lash LaRue, you don’t realize how uncool you are. Help is available at the 17th annual Williamsburg Film Festival, where the real movie fans will show up ...
Al “Lash” LaRue,78, a bullwhip-cracking star of low-budget 1940s Westerns whose movie career quickly faded with the onset of the television age, died May 21 in Burbank, Calif. Moviegoers in the years ...
THE OLDER WE GET, the easier it becomes to travel in time — if only in reverse. We can be doing almost anything — working, having a picnic, shopping, watching TV, driving the car — when suddenly and ...
LASH LARUE, the Western movie star who was king of the bullwhip in low-budget films of the 1940s, has died. He was believed to be in his early eighties. He died at Providence St Joseph Medical Center.