Is there a more famous Western lawman than Wyatt Earp? Whether you know him as the marshal of Dodge City, a participant in the infamous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, or as a mythic Old West figure who ...
Wyatt Earp, stands in front of the bar at the Alhambra Theater in its early days. Courtesy San Mateo County History Museum. On Oct.18, 1957, two Peninsula teens out on an evening joyride in San Mateo ...
The story of Old West legend Wyatt Earp and his brothers, Virgil and Morgan, lives on in books, movies, and even a 1950s TV series. The focus has always been on their “lawman” escapades in Tombstone, ...
In the bad old days, Wyatt Earp was — depending on whom you asked — a famed lawman or a rascally bandit. Today he’s a brand of coffee and a steak sauce and a slew of Web sites (most prominently ...
Actor Kurt Russell revealed that Val Kilmer bought him an acre of land as they exchanged gifts after wrapping up filming on their iconic western “Tombstone.” Russell, who played American lawman and ...
Yes, the Wyatt Earp, who, for reasons too weird for the normal mind to grasp, has become an American icon, a towering figure of the West and a continuous moneymaker through books, movies and tourist ...
Namwene Mukabwa is a Collider author based in Nairobi, Kenya. He has a penchant for Westerns, classics, historical, and underrated movies and television series. He became hooked on screens at the age ...