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Cimarron (1960 film)

Cimarron is a 1960 American epic Western film based on the Edna Ferber novel Cimarron. The film stars Glenn Ford and Maria Schell and was directed by Anthony Mann and Charles Walters, though Walters is not credited onscreen.[1] Ferber's novel was previously adapted as a film in 1931; that version won three Academy Awards.

Cimarron
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAnthony Mann[a]
Screenplay byArnold Schulman
Based onCimarron
1930 novel
by Edna Ferber
Produced byEdmund Grainger
StarringGlenn Ford
Maria Schell
Anne Baxter
Harry Morgan
CinematographyRobert Surtees
Edited byJohn D. Dunning
Music byFranz Waxman
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • December 1, 1960 (1960-12-01) (premiere)
Running time
147 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$5,421,000[2]
Box office$4,825,000[2]

Cimarron was the first of three epics (along with El Cid and The Fall of the Roman Empire) that Mann directed. Despite high production costs and an experienced cast of western veterans, stage actors and future stars, the film was released with little fanfare.

Plot edit

Sabra Cravat joins her new husband, lawyer Yancey "Cimarron" Cravat, during the Oklahoma land rush of 1889. They encounter Yancey's old friend William "The Kid" Hardy and his buddies Wes Jennings and Hoss Barry. On the trail, Yancey helps Tom and Sarah Wyatt and their eight children, taking them aboard their wagons.

It seems to Sabra that her husband knows everyone in Oklahoma. A small crowd cheers Bob Yountis and his henchman Millis when they attack an Indian family. Yancey joins his friend Sam Pegler, editor of the Oklahoma Wigwam newspaper, in resisting Yountis.

Yountis warns Pegler against using the paper for his crusading as he had done in Texas. Sabra is angry that Yancey risked his life for an Indian but she helps the others, including peddler Sol Levy and printer Jesse Rickey, in righting the Indians' overturned wagon. Sam and his wife Mavis reveal more about Yancey's past as a cowboy, gambler, gunman and lawyer.

When 50,000 settlers race across the prairie to claim land, Tom falls and Sarah claims a dry, worthless patch. Pegler is trampled to death, and Dixie beats Yancey to the land that he wanted, so he asks Jesse to stay to help him run the paper.

In the new town of Osage, which consists of tents and half-built storefronts, Yountis and The Kid terrorize Levy in the street. Yancey tries but fails to persuade the Kid to change. One night, Yountis leads a lynch mob against the Indian family. Yancey arrives too late to stop it, but he kills Yountis and brings Arita and her baby Ruby home. Meanwhile, Sabra gives birth to a boy whom they name Cimarron, Cim for short.

Four years later, Osage is thriving. Tom has built an oil-drilling apparatus but he is a laughingstock. Wes, Hoss and The Kid, wanted outlaws, try to rob a train but are all killed soon after. When Yancey destroys the $1,000 reward check, Sabra is furious because he does not consider their son's security. Yancey leaves to be part of the Cherokee Strip, but Sabra refuses to join him. Years later, he returns and Sabra and Cim forgive him.

Tom finally strikes oil, but Yancey is disgusted to learn that Tom bought the rights to oil found on Indian land. However, Yancey's campaign to win the Indians justice is a huge success, and he is invited to become governor of the Oklahoma Territory. Sabra is disappointed to discover that Cim and Ruby have grown close.

In Washington, D.C., Yancey finds Tom with a group of influential men and learns that the price of his appointment is his integrity. When Yancy tells Sabra that he can't be governor, she sends him away forever.

Cim and Ruby marry without warning and set off for Oregon, though Sabra tells him that he is throwing his life away.

Ten years later, on the occasion of the Oklahoma Wigwam's 25th anniversary, the United States’ entry into World War I is announced. Later, Sabra hears that Yancey has been killed in the war.

Cast edit

Uncredited

Production edit

In February 1941, MGM bought the remake rights to Cimarron from RKO for $100,000.[3] In 1947, MGM announced an operetta version starring Kathryn Grayson and produced by Arthur Freed,[4] but this did not happen. In February 1958, MGM announced its plans to produce Cimarron as the studio's second film using the MGM Camera 65 process following Raintree Country (1957).[5][6] One month later, Elizabeth Taylor and Rock Hudson were considered to star in the film.[7] Ultimately, Glenn Ford, who previously starred in the Westerns such as 3:10 to Yuma (1957) and The Sheepman (1958), was attached to star.[8]

In October 1959, Arnold Schulman was signed to write the screenplay.[9] For his script, Schulman introduced several characters, including those of journalist Sam Pegler (Robert Keith) and Wes Jennings (Vic Morrow), while removing the Cravats' daughter, Donna and a boy named Isaiah.[1] King Vidor declined an invitation to direct.[10] Anthony Mann was eventually named as director. Known primarily for the critically acclaimed hits The Glenn Miller Story (1954) and Men in War (1957), Mann had previously directed eight Westerns. However, disagreements with producer Edmund Grainger caused Mann to leave the project halfway through filming. Mann had wanted to film entirely on location, but Grainger wanted a majority of scenes instead to be filmed in studio.[11] Director Charles Walters finished the film but received no screen credit.[1]

The climactic scene portraying the Oklahoma Land Rush was shot in Arizona[12] and featured over 1,000 extras, 700 horses and 500 wagons and buggies; these numbers according to writeups on the 1960 released film at AFI.com, imdb.com and tcm.com.[citation needed]

Anne Baxter, who played Dixie Lee, revealed in her autobiography Intermission that Ford and Maria Schell developed an offscreen romance: "During shooting, they'd scrambled together like eggs. I understood she'd even begun divorce proceedings in Germany. It was obviously premature of her." However, by the end of filming, "... he scarcely glanced or spoke in her direction, and she looked as if she were in shock."[13]

Anthony Mann later said "Originally I had a wonderful idea for it [the film], and the Metro executives agreed with me." He said "I wanted to show a huge plain out in the West with nothing on it, and how a group of men and women gathered at a line, and tore out across this plain and set up their stakes as claim for the land. And how a town, a city and finally a metropolis grew, all on this one piece of land. It would have been, I think, a tremendous experience for the world to see. This is how America was built. But the executives panicked. We had a couple of storms - which I shot in anyway - but they thought we’d have floods and so on, so they dragged us in and everything had to be duplicated on the set. The story had to be changed, because we couldn’t do the things we wanted to. So I don’t consider it a film. I just consider it a disaster. " [14]

Mann claims Glenn Ford was meant to die on screen. "There was a huge oil sequence and oil wells were blowing up and he was saving people and being very heroic. Why they ever changed it I’ll never know - this was Mr. Sol Siegel, he did it behind my back, I didn’t ever see it. If I’d screamed they wouldn’t have bothered anyway; so I just let them destroy it at will."[14]

Reception edit

Box office edit

According to MGM records, Cimarron earned $2,325,000 in the U.S. and Canada and $2,500,000 overseas, resulting in an overall loss of $3,618,000.[2]

Critical reaction edit

Harrison's Reports wrote: "The background music is undistinguished. There's enough marquee strength, action, romance, and the 'land rush' scene at the beginning is worth the price of a soft ticket. Color photography is outstanding."[15] Thomas M. Pryor, reviewing for Variety, praised Schell and Ford's performances, and wrote "Although Cimarron is not without flaws—thoughtful examination reveals a pretentiousness of social significance more than valid exposition—the script plays well."[16]

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times felt the film's opening "makes for a dynamic and illustrative sequence on the screen. But once the land rush is over in this almost two-and-one-half-hour-long film—and we have to tell you it is assembled and completed within the first half-hour—the remaining dramatization of Miss Ferber's bursting 'Cimarron' simmers down to a stereotyped and sentimental cinema saga of the taming of the frontier."[17] A review in Time magazine criticized the film's length, writing Cimarron "might more suitably have been called Cimarron-and-on-and-on-and-on. It lasts 2 hours and 27 minutes, and for at least half of that time most spectators will probably be Oklacomatose."[18]

In a letter published in The New York Times, on March 5, 1961, Edna Ferber wrote: "I received from this second picture of my novel not one single penny in payment. I can't even do anything to stop the motion-picture company from using my name in advertising so slanted that it gives the effect of my having written the picture ... I shan't go into the anachronisms in dialogue; the selection of a foreign-born actress...to play the part of an American-born bride; the repetition; the bewildering lack of sequence....I did see Cimarron...four weeks ago. This old gray head turned almost black during those two (or was it three?) hours."[19]

Awards and nominations edit

In 1961, the film was nominated for Best Art Direction (George W. Davis, Addison Hehr, Henry Grace, Hugh Hunt and Otto Siegel) and Best Sound (Franklin Milton).[20][21]

Glenn Ford's performance earned a nomination for a Laurel Award for Top Action Performance, though he did not win.[22]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ During the middle of filming, Mann left the project and was replaced by Charles Walters who was uncredited.[1]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Tatara, Paul. "Cimarron (1960)". Turner Classic Movies. from the original on May 23, 2021. Retrieved December 15, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c Mannix, Eddie (1962). "The Eddie Mannix Ledger". Margaret Herrick Library. OCLC 801258228. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)[page needed]
  3. ^ "Metro Buys 'Cimarron' Rights From RKO for $100,000". The New York Times. February 22, 1941. p. 11.
  4. ^ Brady, Thomas F. (November 24, 1947). "'Cimarron' Remake Listed by Metro". The New York Times. p. 30.
  5. ^ "Metro Remakes 'Cimarron'". Variety. February 26, 1958. p. 20. Retrieved September 28, 2021 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Pryor, Thomas M. (February 20, 1958). "U.S. vs. Al Capone To Be Film Theme". The New York Times. p. 29.
  7. ^ "41 Westerns On Hoof in 1958". Variety. March 5, 1958. p. 4. Retrieved January 4, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ Scheuer, Philip K. (February 17, 1959). "Glenn Ford Value Seen as 'Built' Star: Ava Gardner His Likely Lead; Producer Cites Other Examples". Los Angeles Times. p. C7.
  9. ^ "Schulman Forms Production Unit". The New York Times. October 8, 1959. p. 49.
  10. ^ "Entertainment Films Stage Music: Viertel Film Will Not Star Deborah". Los Angeles Times. September 11, 1959. p. B6.
  11. ^ Bassinger 2007, p. 146.
  12. ^ Rothwell, John H. (January 10, 1960). "Shot on the Old 'Cimarron' Trail". The New York Times. p. X7.
  13. ^ Baxter 1976, p. 196.
  14. ^ a b Wicking, Christopher; Pattinson, Barrie (July–October 1969). "Interviews with Anthony Mann". Screen. Vol. 10. pp. 44–45.
  15. ^ "'Cimarron' with Glenn Ford, Maria Schell, Anne Baxter". Harrison's Reports. December 10, 1960. p. 198. Retrieved January 4, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  16. ^ "Film Reviews: Cimarron". Variety. December 7, 1960. p. 6. Retrieved January 4, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  17. ^ Crowther, Bosley (February 17, 1961). "Screen: New 'Cimarron'". The New York Times. p. 21. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  18. ^ "Cinema: Oklacoma: Cimarron". Time. February 24, 1961. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  19. ^ Ferber, Edna (March 5, 1961). "Readers Appraise the Current Crop of Pictures". The New York Times. p. X7. Retrieved October 26, 2023.
  20. ^ "The 33rd Academy Awards (1961) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
  21. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2009. Archived from the original on August 13, 2009. Retrieved December 24, 2008.
  22. ^ "Glenn Ford". IMDb. Retrieved February 15, 2019.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

cimarron, 1960, film, cimarron, 1960, american, epic, western, film, based, edna, ferber, novel, cimarron, film, stars, glenn, ford, maria, schell, directed, anthony, mann, charles, walters, though, walters, credited, onscreen, ferber, novel, previously, adapt. Cimarron is a 1960 American epic Western film based on the Edna Ferber novel Cimarron The film stars Glenn Ford and Maria Schell and was directed by Anthony Mann and Charles Walters though Walters is not credited onscreen 1 Ferber s novel was previously adapted as a film in 1931 that version won three Academy Awards CimarronTheatrical release posterDirected byAnthony Mann a Screenplay byArnold SchulmanBased onCimarron1930 novelby Edna FerberProduced byEdmund GraingerStarringGlenn FordMaria SchellAnne BaxterHarry MorganCinematographyRobert SurteesEdited byJohn D DunningMusic byFranz WaxmanDistributed byMetro Goldwyn MayerRelease dateDecember 1 1960 1960 12 01 premiere Running time147 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 5 421 000 2 Box office 4 825 000 2 Cimarron was the first of three epics along with El Cid and The Fall of the Roman Empire that Mann directed Despite high production costs and an experienced cast of western veterans stage actors and future stars the film was released with little fanfare Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical reaction 5 Awards and nominations 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Bibliography 8 External linksPlot editSabra Cravat joins her new husband lawyer Yancey Cimarron Cravat during the Oklahoma land rush of 1889 They encounter Yancey s old friend William The Kid Hardy and his buddies Wes Jennings and Hoss Barry On the trail Yancey helps Tom and Sarah Wyatt and their eight children taking them aboard their wagons It seems to Sabra that her husband knows everyone in Oklahoma A small crowd cheers Bob Yountis and his henchman Millis when they attack an Indian family Yancey joins his friend Sam Pegler editor of the Oklahoma Wigwam newspaper in resisting Yountis Yountis warns Pegler against using the paper for his crusading as he had done in Texas Sabra is angry that Yancey risked his life for an Indian but she helps the others including peddler Sol Levy and printer Jesse Rickey in righting the Indians overturned wagon Sam and his wife Mavis reveal more about Yancey s past as a cowboy gambler gunman and lawyer When 50 000 settlers race across the prairie to claim land Tom falls and Sarah claims a dry worthless patch Pegler is trampled to death and Dixie beats Yancey to the land that he wanted so he asks Jesse to stay to help him run the paper In the new town of Osage which consists of tents and half built storefronts Yountis and The Kid terrorize Levy in the street Yancey tries but fails to persuade the Kid to change One night Yountis leads a lynch mob against the Indian family Yancey arrives too late to stop it but he kills Yountis and brings Arita and her baby Ruby home Meanwhile Sabra gives birth to a boy whom they name Cimarron Cim for short Four years later Osage is thriving Tom has built an oil drilling apparatus but he is a laughingstock Wes Hoss and The Kid wanted outlaws try to rob a train but are all killed soon after When Yancey destroys the 1 000 reward check Sabra is furious because he does not consider their son s security Yancey leaves to be part of the Cherokee Strip but Sabra refuses to join him Years later he returns and Sabra and Cim forgive him Tom finally strikes oil but Yancey is disgusted to learn that Tom bought the rights to oil found on Indian land However Yancey s campaign to win the Indians justice is a huge success and he is invited to become governor of the Oklahoma Territory Sabra is disappointed to discover that Cim and Ruby have grown close In Washington D C Yancey finds Tom with a group of influential men and learns that the price of his appointment is his integrity When Yancy tells Sabra that he can t be governor she sends him away forever Cim and Ruby marry without warning and set off for Oregon though Sabra tells him that he is throwing his life away Ten years later on the occasion of the Oklahoma Wigwam s 25th anniversary the United States entry into World War I is announced Later Sabra hears that Yancey has been killed in the war Cast editGlenn Ford as Yancey Cravat Maria Schell as Sabra Cravat Anne Baxter as Dixie Lee Arthur O Connell as Tom Wyatt Russ Tamblyn as William Hardy The Cherokee Kid Mercedes McCambridge as Sarah Wyatt Vic Morrow as Wes Jennings Robert Keith as Sam Pegler Charles McGraw as Bob Yountis Aline MacMahon as Mavis Pegler Harry Morgan as Jesse Rickey Credited as Henry Harry Morgan David Opatoshu as Sol Levy Edgar Buchanan as Judge Neal Hefner Lili Darvas as Felicia Venable Mary Wickes as Mrs Neal Hefner Royal Dano as Ike Howes L Q Jones as Millis George Brenlin as Hoss Barry Vladimir Sokoloff as Jacob Krubeckoff Eugene Jackson as Isaiah Uncredited Andy Albin as Water Man Rayford Barnes as Cavalry Sergeant Who Breaks Up Fight Herman Belmonte as Dancer At Ball Mary Benoit as Mrs Lancey Barry Bernard as Butler Jimmie Booth as Wagon Driver Danny Borzage as Townsman Chet Brandenburg as Townsman Janet Brandt as Madam Rhoda Paul Bryar as Mr Self Politician Robert Carson as Senator Rollins John L Cason as Suggs William Challee as The Barber Mickie Chouteau as Ruby Red Feather Fred Coby as Oil Worker Gene Coogan as Butler Townsman Jack Daly as Wyatt s Man John Damler as Foreman Richard Davies as Mr Hodges George DeNormand as Townsman At Celebration James Dime as Townsman Phyllis Douglas as Sadie Ted Eccles as Cimarron Cravat Age 2 LaRue Farlow as Dancer Franklyn Farnum as Townsman At Schoolhouse George Ford as Townsman At Celebration Coleman Francis as Mr Geer Ben Gary as Reporter James Halferty as Cimarron Cravat Age 10 Sam Harris as Ball Guest Lars Hensen as Dancer At Ball Clegg Hoyt as Great Gotch Irene James as Townswoman Colin Kenny as Townsman At Schoolhouse Paul Kruger as Party Guest Jimmy Lewis as Hefner Boy Dawn Little Sky as Arita Red Feather Eddie Little Sky as Ben Red Feather Buzz Martin as Cimarron Cravat as Young Man Kermit Maynard as Setter Mathew McCue as Townsman J Edward McKinley as Beck Walter Merrill as Reporter Jack Perry as Townsman John Pickard as Ned Cavalry Captain Ralph Reed as Bellboy William Remick as Reporter Gene Roth as Connors Jack Scroggy as Walter Charles Seel as Charles Bernard Sell as Townsman At Celebration Jack Stoney as Man At Lynching Harry Tenbrook as Sooner At Camp Fight Arthur Tovey as Dancer At Ball Ivan Triesault as Lewis Venable Sabra s Father Charles Watts as Lou Brothers Politician Helen Westcott as Miss Kuye Schoolteacher Robert Williams as Oil Worker Jeane Wood as Clubwoman Wilson Wood as Reporter Jorie Wyler as Theresa JumpProduction editIn February 1941 MGM bought the remake rights to Cimarron from RKO for 100 000 3 In 1947 MGM announced an operetta version starring Kathryn Grayson and produced by Arthur Freed 4 but this did not happen In February 1958 MGM announced its plans to produce Cimarron as the studio s second film using the MGM Camera 65 process following Raintree Country 1957 5 6 One month later Elizabeth Taylor and Rock Hudson were considered to star in the film 7 Ultimately Glenn Ford who previously starred in the Westerns such as 3 10 to Yuma 1957 and The Sheepman 1958 was attached to star 8 In October 1959 Arnold Schulman was signed to write the screenplay 9 For his script Schulman introduced several characters including those of journalist Sam Pegler Robert Keith and Wes Jennings Vic Morrow while removing the Cravats daughter Donna and a boy named Isaiah 1 King Vidor declined an invitation to direct 10 Anthony Mann was eventually named as director Known primarily for the critically acclaimed hits The Glenn Miller Story 1954 and Men in War 1957 Mann had previously directed eight Westerns However disagreements with producer Edmund Grainger caused Mann to leave the project halfway through filming Mann had wanted to film entirely on location but Grainger wanted a majority of scenes instead to be filmed in studio 11 Director Charles Walters finished the film but received no screen credit 1 The climactic scene portraying the Oklahoma Land Rush was shot in Arizona 12 and featured over 1 000 extras 700 horses and 500 wagons and buggies these numbers according to writeups on the 1960 released film at AFI com imdb com and tcm com citation needed Anne Baxter who played Dixie Lee revealed in her autobiography Intermission that Ford and Maria Schell developed an offscreen romance During shooting they d scrambled together like eggs I understood she d even begun divorce proceedings in Germany It was obviously premature of her However by the end of filming he scarcely glanced or spoke in her direction and she looked as if she were in shock 13 Anthony Mann later said Originally I had a wonderful idea for it the film and the Metro executives agreed with me He said I wanted to show a huge plain out in the West with nothing on it and how a group of men and women gathered at a line and tore out across this plain and set up their stakes as claim for the land And how a town a city and finally a metropolis grew all on this one piece of land It would have been I think a tremendous experience for the world to see This is how America was built But the executives panicked We had a couple of storms which I shot in anyway but they thought we d have floods and so on so they dragged us in and everything had to be duplicated on the set The story had to be changed because we couldn t do the things we wanted to So I don t consider it a film I just consider it a disaster 14 Mann claims Glenn Ford was meant to die on screen There was a huge oil sequence and oil wells were blowing up and he was saving people and being very heroic Why they ever changed it I ll never know this was Mr Sol Siegel he did it behind my back I didn t ever see it If I d screamed they wouldn t have bothered anyway so I just let them destroy it at will 14 Reception editBox office edit According to MGM records Cimarron earned 2 325 000 in the U S and Canada and 2 500 000 overseas resulting in an overall loss of 3 618 000 2 Critical reaction edit Harrison s Reports wrote The background music is undistinguished There s enough marquee strength action romance and the land rush scene at the beginning is worth the price of a soft ticket Color photography is outstanding 15 Thomas M Pryor reviewing for Variety praised Schell and Ford s performances and wrote Although Cimarron is not without flaws thoughtful examination reveals a pretentiousness of social significance more than valid exposition the script plays well 16 Bosley Crowther of The New York Times felt the film s opening makes for a dynamic and illustrative sequence on the screen But once the land rush is over in this almost two and one half hour long film and we have to tell you it is assembled and completed within the first half hour the remaining dramatization of Miss Ferber s bursting Cimarron simmers down to a stereotyped and sentimental cinema saga of the taming of the frontier 17 A review in Time magazine criticized the film s length writing Cimarron might more suitably have been called Cimarron and on and on and on It lasts 2 hours and 27 minutes and for at least half of that time most spectators will probably be Oklacomatose 18 In a letter published in The New York Times on March 5 1961 Edna Ferber wrote I received from this second picture of my novel not one single penny in payment I can t even do anything to stop the motion picture company from using my name in advertising so slanted that it gives the effect of my having written the picture I shan t go into the anachronisms in dialogue the selection of a foreign born actress to play the part of an American born bride the repetition the bewildering lack of sequence I did see Cimarron four weeks ago This old gray head turned almost black during those two or was it three hours 19 Awards and nominations editIn 1961 the film was nominated for Best Art Direction George W Davis Addison Hehr Henry Grace Hugh Hunt and Otto Siegel and Best Sound Franklin Milton 20 21 Glenn Ford s performance earned a nomination for a Laurel Award for Top Action Performance though he did not win 22 See also editList of American films of 1960References editFootnotes edit During the middle of filming Mann left the project and was replaced by Charles Walters who was uncredited 1 Citations edit a b c d Tatara Paul Cimarron 1960 Turner Classic Movies Archived from the original on May 23 2021 Retrieved December 15 2019 a b c Mannix Eddie 1962 The Eddie Mannix Ledger Margaret Herrick Library OCLC 801258228 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help page needed Metro Buys Cimarron Rights From RKO for 100 000 The New York Times February 22 1941 p 11 Brady Thomas F November 24 1947 Cimarron Remake Listed by Metro The New York Times p 30 Metro Remakes Cimarron Variety February 26 1958 p 20 Retrieved September 28 2021 via Internet Archive Pryor Thomas M February 20 1958 U S vs Al Capone To Be Film Theme The New York Times p 29 41 Westerns On Hoof in 1958 Variety March 5 1958 p 4 Retrieved January 4 2022 via Internet Archive Scheuer Philip K February 17 1959 Glenn Ford Value Seen as Built Star Ava Gardner His Likely Lead Producer Cites Other Examples Los Angeles Times p C7 Schulman Forms Production Unit The New York Times October 8 1959 p 49 Entertainment Films Stage Music Viertel Film Will Not Star Deborah Los Angeles Times September 11 1959 p B6 Bassinger 2007 p 146 Rothwell John H January 10 1960 Shot on the Old Cimarron Trail The New York Times p X7 Baxter 1976 p 196 a b Wicking Christopher Pattinson Barrie July October 1969 Interviews with Anthony Mann Screen Vol 10 pp 44 45 Cimarron with Glenn Ford Maria Schell Anne Baxter Harrison s Reports December 10 1960 p 198 Retrieved January 4 2022 via Internet Archive Film Reviews Cimarron Variety December 7 1960 p 6 Retrieved January 4 2022 via Internet Archive Crowther Bosley February 17 1961 Screen New Cimarron The New York Times p 21 Retrieved January 4 2022 Cinema Oklacoma Cimarron Time February 24 1961 Retrieved January 4 2022 Ferber Edna March 5 1961 Readers Appraise the Current Crop of Pictures The New York Times p X7 Retrieved October 26 2023 The 33rd Academy Awards 1961 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved August 22 2011 Cimarron Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2009 Archived from the original on August 13 2009 Retrieved December 24 2008 Glenn Ford IMDb Retrieved February 15 2019 Bibliography edit Bassinger Jeanne 2007 Anthony Mann Wesleyan University Press ISBN 978 0 819 56845 8 Baxter Anne 1976 Intermission A True Story G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 978 0 399 11577 6 External links editCimarron at IMDb nbsp Cimarron at AllMovie Cimarron at the TCM Movie Database Cimarron at the American Film Institute Catalog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cimarron 1960 film amp oldid 1211662979, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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