The Alamo

US (1960): War/Action/Adventure/Drama

John Wayne's directorial debut The Alamo is set in 1836: Wayne plays Col. Davy Crockett, who, together with Colonels Jim Bowie (Richard Widmark) and William Travis (Laurence Harvey) and 184 hardy Americans and Texicans, defends the Alamo mission against the troops of Mexican general Santa Ana. There's a lot of macho byplay before the actual attack, including the famous "letter" scene in which Wayne craftily rouses the patriotic ire of his subordinates. Also appearing are Richard Boone as Sam Houston, and Chill Wills (whose somewhat tasteless Oscar® campaign has since become legendary in the annals of shameless self-promotion) as Beekeeper. Wayne's production crew was compelled to reconstruct the Alamo in Bracketville, Texas, several hundred miles from the actual site. Dimitri Tiomkin's score, including "The Green Leaves of Summer," received generous airplay on the Top-40 radio outlets of America. Rumors persist that Wayne's old pal John Ford directed most of The Alamo; cut to 161 minutes for its general release, the film was restored to its original, 192-minute length in 1992. (Batjac/U-A) (Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide)

 Use this link to view the original theatrical trailer for The Alamo on TCM.com.


· Sound 1960: Gordon E. Sawyer (Samuel Goldwyn Studio Sound Department), Fred Hynes (Todd-AO Sound Department)


· Best Picture 1960: John Wayne - Producer (Batjac, UA)
· Supporting Actor 1960: Chill Wills
· Cinematography (Color) 1960: William H. Clothier
· Film Editing 1960: Stuart Gilmore
· Music Scoring Awards (Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture) 1960: Dimitri Tiomkin
· Music Best Song 1960: "The Green Leaves of Summer" Dimitri Tiomkin - Music, Paul Francis Webster - Lyric

7 nominations, 1 Award