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Classic Films
Related: About this forumTCM Schedule for Thursday, May 5, 2022 -- What's On Tonight: Star of the Month Anna May Wong
In the daylight hours, TCM is celebrating Cinco de Mayo by featuring films and shorts about Mexico. Then in prime time, it's the first week of Star of the Month Anna May Wong. Tell us more about her, Raquel!STAR OF THE MONTH: ANNA MAY WONG
By Raquel Stecher
April 15, 2022
Thursdays | 13 Movies
Anna May Wong, the TCM Star of the Month for May, was the first major Chinese-American movie star in Hollywood. With her charisma and delicate beauty, Wong graced the silver screen in a career that spanned over four decades. She became an international celebrity and fashion icon donning her signature bangs, meticulously arched eyebrows and gracing magazine spreads with her impeccable sense of style. Despite her acting chops and star status, Wong faced discrimination and was denied leading roles due to miscegenation laws that prevented her from kissing white actors on screen. Many of these roles, including the part of O-Lan in The Good Earth (1937), went to other actresses made up in yellowface. Wong persisted, striking a balance of fighting against the system and working within it. While she struggled during her lifetime to be taken seriously as a lead actress, her continued legacy as a trailblazer paved the way for better representation for Asian Americans in film.
Born in 1905 in Los Angeles to Chinese-American parents, Anna May Wong was one of seven children. From a young age she knew she wanted to be a movie star. When movie production moved from New York to Hollywood, young Wong was at the heart of it all. She would visit the local nickelodeon to watch movies and then witness them being made in her own neighborhood. At the age of 11, she changed her name from Wong Liu Tsong (which translates to frosted yellow willows) to Anna May Wong. Despite disapproval from her family and her community, Wong pursued acting as a career. She seemed destined for greatness and thoroughly rejected any notion of living a normal life. In a 1925 interview with Pictures and Picturegoer, Wong observed that women didnt do anything but sit around and talk about their husbands and babies, and their housework. I couldnt live such a narrow life.
Wongs acting career began in her teens when she appeared as an extra in films like Alla Nazimovas The Red Lantern (1919) and in uncredited bit parts like in Marshall Neilans Dinty (1920). Her cousin James Wong Howe, who would soon become a renown cinematographer in Hollywood, helped get her noticed by filmmakers. She got her first screen credit in Bits of Life (1921) playing opposite Lon Chaney. Her first leading role quickly followed with The Toll of the Sea (1922), a drama loosely based on the play Madame Butterfly. The role of Lotus Flower was a great part for the 17-year-old Wong as it gave her an opportunity to showcase her acting skills, her natural beauty and her ability to carry a leading role. The Toll of the Sea is notable for being one of the first feature films in Technicolor. It received wide distribution because, unlike other color films of the time, a special projector wasnt required for screenings. Wong was soon was cast in parts in Tod Brownings Drifting (1923) and The Thief of Bagdad (1924) starring Douglas Fairbanks. Now recognized as one of the great films of the silent era, The Thief of Bagdad was a commercial success and put Wong on the map.
It was clear that Anna May Wong had subverted expectations of what a Chinese-American woman should look like and how she should act. Wong found herself in an in-between place where she was too American for the Chinese and too Chinese for Americans. Her more conventional beauty was a draw but also a deterrent for playing certain types of Chinese characters. Wongs exotic appeal and her 5 feet 7 inch frame both delighted and confused Hollywood. She noted in an interview, Im pretty tall for a Chinese girl it always seems to hand a director a shock when he sees me for the first time. They all have the idea I should be about four feet tall.
Early on in her acting career, Wong was typecast as either the evil dragon lady or the demure butterfly. She played a variety of exotic characters in films like The Fortieth Door (1924), The Alaskan (1924), Peter Pan (1924), A Trip to Chinatown (1926) and Mr. Wu (1927). Increasingly frustrated with playing stereotypical roles, Wong created her own production company in 1924 to produce films with better parts for Asian actors. Unfortunately, Anna May Wong Productions shut down within a year after Wongs business partner took advantage of Wong for financial gain.
After appearing in Warner Bros. silent drama Old San Francisco (1927) and the Charlie Chan film The Chinese Parrot (1927), Wong grew weary of Hollywood and traveled to Europe to find more fulfilling work. There she made several British and German films speaking fluently in a variety of languages. For British International Pictures, she starred in what would be her final silent film Piccadilly (1929) where she plays Shosho, a dishwasher turned nightclub dancer. It was the first of five British films which would give her the leading roles she craved. At one point during her time abroad she made an English, French and German version of Hai-Tang (1930), a story of a Chinese cabaret singer who attempts to save her brother from an evil Duke. The film was heavily edited for U.S. release to cut out interracial love scenes. Wong thrived in Europe and was quoted in Picture Play Magazine as saying they were so wonderful to me. You are admired abroad for your accomplishments and loved for yourself. That made me an individual, instead of a symbol of a race
Paramount Studios came calling and offered the international star a lucrative contract. While in Berlin, Wong had met and befriended Marlene Dietrich who had been collaborating with director Josef von Sternberg on several films. As part of her contract agreement, Wong accepted the role of Fu Manchus daughter in Daughter of the Dragon (1931) as long as she was able to make a film with Dietrich and von Sternberg. This arrangement paid off and Wong got a substantial supporting role in Shanghai Express (1932). Wong and Dietrich played a pair of traveling courtesans held captive on a train by a Chinese warlord. Shanghai Express was the highest grossing film of 1932 and was almost banned in China for its depiction of Chinese politics.
Shanghai Express proved to be the highlight of Wongs film career. She fought for better roles at Paramount but was relegated to small parts, albeit non-stereotypical ones. Wong played a murder suspect in the Sherlock Holmes film A Study in Scarlet (1933), an astrologist in When You Were Born (1938) and a surgeon in King of Chinatown (1939). She also continued to work in England and Germany. In 1936, she took a break from filmmaking to travel to her familys ancestral homeland. She filmed footage for the newsreel Anna May Wong visits Shanghai, China (1936).
She scored a win with Daughter of Shanghai (1937), a Paramount drama in which Wong and her childhood friend Philip Ahn, a Korean-American actor, play the two lead Asian roles. In an interview with Hollywood Magazine, Wong said I like my part in this picture better than any Ive had before, not because it gives me better acting opportunities nor because the character has exceptional appeal. Its just because this picture gives the Chinese a breakwe have the sympathetic parts for a change! To me that means a great deal. The part was made specifically for her and was unusual in that it did not exoticize the Asian roles.
It was around this time that Wong faced her greatest career disappointment: losing the role of O-Lan in The Good Earth (1937). According to historian Arthur Dong in his book Hollywood Chinese, Wong made known her desire to play the main character O-Wong was, however, considered for the part of Lotus, a concubine. In memoirs from associate producer Albert Lewin, Wong was finally judged a little disappointing as to looks. Does not seem beautiful enough to make Wangs infatuation convincing and "not as beautiful as she might be. This was a bitter loss for Wong. She made a few more films for Paramount who decided not to renew Wongs contract after Island of Lost Men (1939) ran over budget.
During World War II, Wong advocated for Chinese-Americans with various philanthropic efforts. This included writing a preface for a Chinese cookbook and raising money for the United China Relief Fund. When she did return to film it was to make a couple of propaganda films: Bombs Over Burma (1942) and Lady from Chungking (1942). Both films were produced by Poverty Row studio Producers Releasing Corporation and told stories of Chinese guerrillas fighting back against Japanese and German forces. She took another hiatus from filmmaking before returning to play a small but important role in the B-noir Impact (1949).
Throughout the 1950s, Wong continued to perform on stage, in night clubs, on radio and television. She broke ground by starring in the first television show starring Asian American actors titled The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong. She returned to film with a small part in the Ross Hunter production Portrait in Black (1960) starring Lana Turner and Wongs frequent co-star Anthony Quinn. Hunter had Wong in mind for the role of Madame Liang in Flower Drum Song (1961). However, poor health had plagued Wong and she died of a massive heart attack before filming began.
Wong was robbed of an opportunity to be part of the first major Hollywood film with a predominantly Asian American cast. However, had it not been for her tireless work in Hollywood and abroad, demonstrating that Asian actors could indeed both play Asian roles but also play lead parts as well, progress like this would still be years away.
During her career Wong was sometimes referred to as the Daughter of the East and the West. She was a bridge between two cultures and by fighting against stereotypes she demonstrated to audiences that Asian American characters were more than the sum of the many yellowface performances they were used to seeing. In the decades after her death, Anna May Wong has been recognized as the trailblazer she was. She has become the subject of several books and many film retrospectives which celebrate her contributions to film and to our appreciation of Asian American talent. In 2022 Wong will be one of five notable women to be featured on the back of the US quarter along with Maya Angelou, Dr. Sally Ride, Wilma Mankiller and Nina Otero-Warren.
By Raquel Stecher
April 15, 2022
Thursdays | 13 Movies
Anna May Wong, the TCM Star of the Month for May, was the first major Chinese-American movie star in Hollywood. With her charisma and delicate beauty, Wong graced the silver screen in a career that spanned over four decades. She became an international celebrity and fashion icon donning her signature bangs, meticulously arched eyebrows and gracing magazine spreads with her impeccable sense of style. Despite her acting chops and star status, Wong faced discrimination and was denied leading roles due to miscegenation laws that prevented her from kissing white actors on screen. Many of these roles, including the part of O-Lan in The Good Earth (1937), went to other actresses made up in yellowface. Wong persisted, striking a balance of fighting against the system and working within it. While she struggled during her lifetime to be taken seriously as a lead actress, her continued legacy as a trailblazer paved the way for better representation for Asian Americans in film.
Born in 1905 in Los Angeles to Chinese-American parents, Anna May Wong was one of seven children. From a young age she knew she wanted to be a movie star. When movie production moved from New York to Hollywood, young Wong was at the heart of it all. She would visit the local nickelodeon to watch movies and then witness them being made in her own neighborhood. At the age of 11, she changed her name from Wong Liu Tsong (which translates to frosted yellow willows) to Anna May Wong. Despite disapproval from her family and her community, Wong pursued acting as a career. She seemed destined for greatness and thoroughly rejected any notion of living a normal life. In a 1925 interview with Pictures and Picturegoer, Wong observed that women didnt do anything but sit around and talk about their husbands and babies, and their housework. I couldnt live such a narrow life.
Wongs acting career began in her teens when she appeared as an extra in films like Alla Nazimovas The Red Lantern (1919) and in uncredited bit parts like in Marshall Neilans Dinty (1920). Her cousin James Wong Howe, who would soon become a renown cinematographer in Hollywood, helped get her noticed by filmmakers. She got her first screen credit in Bits of Life (1921) playing opposite Lon Chaney. Her first leading role quickly followed with The Toll of the Sea (1922), a drama loosely based on the play Madame Butterfly. The role of Lotus Flower was a great part for the 17-year-old Wong as it gave her an opportunity to showcase her acting skills, her natural beauty and her ability to carry a leading role. The Toll of the Sea is notable for being one of the first feature films in Technicolor. It received wide distribution because, unlike other color films of the time, a special projector wasnt required for screenings. Wong was soon was cast in parts in Tod Brownings Drifting (1923) and The Thief of Bagdad (1924) starring Douglas Fairbanks. Now recognized as one of the great films of the silent era, The Thief of Bagdad was a commercial success and put Wong on the map.
It was clear that Anna May Wong had subverted expectations of what a Chinese-American woman should look like and how she should act. Wong found herself in an in-between place where she was too American for the Chinese and too Chinese for Americans. Her more conventional beauty was a draw but also a deterrent for playing certain types of Chinese characters. Wongs exotic appeal and her 5 feet 7 inch frame both delighted and confused Hollywood. She noted in an interview, Im pretty tall for a Chinese girl it always seems to hand a director a shock when he sees me for the first time. They all have the idea I should be about four feet tall.
Early on in her acting career, Wong was typecast as either the evil dragon lady or the demure butterfly. She played a variety of exotic characters in films like The Fortieth Door (1924), The Alaskan (1924), Peter Pan (1924), A Trip to Chinatown (1926) and Mr. Wu (1927). Increasingly frustrated with playing stereotypical roles, Wong created her own production company in 1924 to produce films with better parts for Asian actors. Unfortunately, Anna May Wong Productions shut down within a year after Wongs business partner took advantage of Wong for financial gain.
After appearing in Warner Bros. silent drama Old San Francisco (1927) and the Charlie Chan film The Chinese Parrot (1927), Wong grew weary of Hollywood and traveled to Europe to find more fulfilling work. There she made several British and German films speaking fluently in a variety of languages. For British International Pictures, she starred in what would be her final silent film Piccadilly (1929) where she plays Shosho, a dishwasher turned nightclub dancer. It was the first of five British films which would give her the leading roles she craved. At one point during her time abroad she made an English, French and German version of Hai-Tang (1930), a story of a Chinese cabaret singer who attempts to save her brother from an evil Duke. The film was heavily edited for U.S. release to cut out interracial love scenes. Wong thrived in Europe and was quoted in Picture Play Magazine as saying they were so wonderful to me. You are admired abroad for your accomplishments and loved for yourself. That made me an individual, instead of a symbol of a race
Paramount Studios came calling and offered the international star a lucrative contract. While in Berlin, Wong had met and befriended Marlene Dietrich who had been collaborating with director Josef von Sternberg on several films. As part of her contract agreement, Wong accepted the role of Fu Manchus daughter in Daughter of the Dragon (1931) as long as she was able to make a film with Dietrich and von Sternberg. This arrangement paid off and Wong got a substantial supporting role in Shanghai Express (1932). Wong and Dietrich played a pair of traveling courtesans held captive on a train by a Chinese warlord. Shanghai Express was the highest grossing film of 1932 and was almost banned in China for its depiction of Chinese politics.
Shanghai Express proved to be the highlight of Wongs film career. She fought for better roles at Paramount but was relegated to small parts, albeit non-stereotypical ones. Wong played a murder suspect in the Sherlock Holmes film A Study in Scarlet (1933), an astrologist in When You Were Born (1938) and a surgeon in King of Chinatown (1939). She also continued to work in England and Germany. In 1936, she took a break from filmmaking to travel to her familys ancestral homeland. She filmed footage for the newsreel Anna May Wong visits Shanghai, China (1936).
She scored a win with Daughter of Shanghai (1937), a Paramount drama in which Wong and her childhood friend Philip Ahn, a Korean-American actor, play the two lead Asian roles. In an interview with Hollywood Magazine, Wong said I like my part in this picture better than any Ive had before, not because it gives me better acting opportunities nor because the character has exceptional appeal. Its just because this picture gives the Chinese a breakwe have the sympathetic parts for a change! To me that means a great deal. The part was made specifically for her and was unusual in that it did not exoticize the Asian roles.
It was around this time that Wong faced her greatest career disappointment: losing the role of O-Lan in The Good Earth (1937). According to historian Arthur Dong in his book Hollywood Chinese, Wong made known her desire to play the main character O-Wong was, however, considered for the part of Lotus, a concubine. In memoirs from associate producer Albert Lewin, Wong was finally judged a little disappointing as to looks. Does not seem beautiful enough to make Wangs infatuation convincing and "not as beautiful as she might be. This was a bitter loss for Wong. She made a few more films for Paramount who decided not to renew Wongs contract after Island of Lost Men (1939) ran over budget.
During World War II, Wong advocated for Chinese-Americans with various philanthropic efforts. This included writing a preface for a Chinese cookbook and raising money for the United China Relief Fund. When she did return to film it was to make a couple of propaganda films: Bombs Over Burma (1942) and Lady from Chungking (1942). Both films were produced by Poverty Row studio Producers Releasing Corporation and told stories of Chinese guerrillas fighting back against Japanese and German forces. She took another hiatus from filmmaking before returning to play a small but important role in the B-noir Impact (1949).
Throughout the 1950s, Wong continued to perform on stage, in night clubs, on radio and television. She broke ground by starring in the first television show starring Asian American actors titled The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong. She returned to film with a small part in the Ross Hunter production Portrait in Black (1960) starring Lana Turner and Wongs frequent co-star Anthony Quinn. Hunter had Wong in mind for the role of Madame Liang in Flower Drum Song (1961). However, poor health had plagued Wong and she died of a massive heart attack before filming began.
Wong was robbed of an opportunity to be part of the first major Hollywood film with a predominantly Asian American cast. However, had it not been for her tireless work in Hollywood and abroad, demonstrating that Asian actors could indeed both play Asian roles but also play lead parts as well, progress like this would still be years away.
During her career Wong was sometimes referred to as the Daughter of the East and the West. She was a bridge between two cultures and by fighting against stereotypes she demonstrated to audiences that Asian American characters were more than the sum of the many yellowface performances they were used to seeing. In the decades after her death, Anna May Wong has been recognized as the trailblazer she was. She has become the subject of several books and many film retrospectives which celebrate her contributions to film and to our appreciation of Asian American talent. In 2022 Wong will be one of five notable women to be featured on the back of the US quarter along with Maya Angelou, Dr. Sally Ride, Wilma Mankiller and Nina Otero-Warren.
Enjoy!
6:00 AM -- The Girl from Mexico (1939)
1h 9m | Comedy | TV-G
An ad man tours Mexico trying to cast a new radio show.
Director: Leslie Goodwins
Cast: Lupe Velez, Donald Woods, Leon Errol
This film led to a series in which Velez played the same character, referred to in the titles of seven sequels as The Mexican Spitfire. When the franchise ended in 1944 and Velez found herself unwed and pregnant with no prospect of marriage, rather than abort the child, she took her own life in an elaborately staged suicide that guaranteed her international news coverage.
7:15 AM -- Serenade (1956)
2h 1m | Romance | TV-G
A rising opera star is torn between his wealthy benefactor and a poor innocent.
Director: Anthony Mann
Cast: Mario Lanza, Joan Fontaine, Sarita Montiel
Warner Brothers bought the screen rights to the book by James M. Cain in February 1944 and over the next 10 years various people were associated with it. At one point Ann Sheridan and Dennis Morgan were set to co-star and later Michael Curtiz was set to direct.
9:30 AM -- Visiting Vera Cruz (1946)
9m | Short | TV-G
This short film looks at the people, customs, and landmarks in Vera Cruz, the main port city of Mexico.
Cast: James A. Fitzpatrick
10:00 AM -- Robin Hood of El Dorado (1936)
1h 26m | Western | TV-PG
A Mexican turns bandit when his wife is murdered.
Director: William A. Wellman
Cast: Warner Baxter, Ann Loring, Bruce Cabot
Based on the book by Walter Noble Burns.
11:30 AM -- The Fugitive (1947)
1h 45m | Drama | TV-PG
A revolutionary priest flees a Central American dictatorship.
Director: John Ford
Cast: Henry Fonda, Pedro Armendariz, J. Carrol Naish
The release of John Ford's first Mexican film caused controversy in Mexico, because the film brought back unwelcome memories of Mexico's dark hours under the anti-clerical rule of Francisco Macro.
1:15 PM -- Motoring in Mexico (1943)
9m | Documentary | TV-G
This short film takes the viewer along the Pacific International Highway in Mexico.
Cast: James A. Fitzpatrick
1:30 PM -- Historic Mexico City (1935)
8m | Documentary | TV-G
This film focuses on the colorful history of Mexico City.
Director: Louis Lewyn
Cast: James A. Fitzpatrick, James A. Fitzpatrick
1:45 PM -- Fiesta (1947)
1h 44m | Musical | TV-PG
A Mexican beauty replaces her toreador brother in the bull ring so he can pursue his musical career.
Director: Richard Thorpe
Cast: Esther Williams, Akim Tamiroff, Ricardo Montalban
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture -- Johnny Green
American film (credited) debut of Ricardo Montalban.
3:45 PM -- The Treasure of Pancho Villa (1955)
1h 36m | Western | TV-PG
An American adventurer competes with the famed Mexican bandit to recover a lost gold shipment.
Director: George Sherman
Cast: Rory Calhoun, Shelley Winters, Gilbert Roland
Pancho Villa was famous during the Revolution and has remained so, holding a fairly mythical reputation in Mexican consciousness, but not officially recognized in Mexico until long after his death. As the "Centaur from the North" he was considered a threat to property and order on both sides of the border, feared, and revered, as a modern Robin Hood. Villa remains a controversial figure in the United States. USA Today reported, "A terrorist in 1916, a tourist attraction in 2011. ... On Jan. 8, 1916, 18 U.S. businessmen were massacred by Villa's men in a train robbery in northern Mexico. It was not the first or last of Villa's atrocities; he personally shot a priest who begged for clemency for his villagers, as well as a woman who blamed him for her husband's death."
5:30 PM -- Juarez (1939)
2h 12m | Epic | TV-G
True story of a revolutionary leader who causes the downfall of Emperor Maximilian of Mexico.
Director: William Dieterle
Cast: Bette Davis, Paul Muni, Brian Aherne
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role -- Brian Aherne
Because the film shows many of Maximilian's generals to be Mexican, many viewers attribute it to typical Hollywood historical distortions. It is, however, indeed accurate. It's a little-known fact that, although Maximilian was eventually overthrown and executed by Mexican revolutionaries, there were actually more Mexicans fighting on Maximilian's side than against him. This was due in large part to the Catholic Church's strong support of the French occupation of Mexico and its "encouraging" Mexican Catholics to fight against the revolutionary forces by joining Maximilian's army, which they did in large numbers.
7:45 PM -- Glimpses of Mexico (1943)
9m | Documentary | TV-G
This short film takes the viewer to the country of Mexico.
Cast: James A. Fitzpatrick
WHAT'S ON TONIGHT: PRIMETIME THEME -- STAR OF THE MONTH ANNA MAY WONG
8:00 PM -- The Toll of the Sea (1922)
1h 15m | Silent | TV-PG
An American sailor marries then deserts the Chinese beauty who had saved his life.
Director: Chester M. Franklin
Cast: Anna May Wong, Kenneth Harlan, Beatrice Bentley
The seventh color feature, the second Technicolor feature, the first color feature made in Hollywood, and the first color feature anywhere that did not require a special projector to be shown.
9:15 PM -- Yellowface: Asian Whitewashing and Racism in Hollywood (2019)
No Description available
Director: Clara Kuperberg,Julia Kuperberg
Cast: Dan Akira, Joseph McBride, Tamlyn Tomita
Made in France, in English.
10:30 PM -- Mr. Wu (1927)
1h 30m | Silent | TV-PG
A Chinese patriarch goes mad when his daughter falls for an Englishman.
Director: William Nigh
Cast: Lon Chaney, Louise Dresser, Renée Adorée
For the hundred-year-old look, Lon Chaney built up his cheekbones and lips with cotton and collodion. Into his nostrils were inserted the ends of cigar holders and the long fingernails were constructed from strips of painted film stock. He used fish skin to fashion an Oriental cast to his eyes and grey crepe hair was used for the mustache and goatee. The make-up procedures took from four to six hours to apply.
12:15 AM -- Old San Francisco (1927)
1h 28m | Romance | TV-G
In this silent film, an Asian villain menaces a family of aristocratic Spanish settlers.
Director: Alan Crosland
Cast: Dolores Costello, Warner Oland, Charles Emmett Mack
The original credits include a music score, conductor, and orchestra. The Vitaphone Symphony Orchestra played the first-run performance live in New York, but subsequent showings provided a Vitaphone musical accompaniment, and the credit was also in printed programs distributed to the audience.
2:00 AM -- The Verdict (1982)
2h 2m | Drama | TV-14
An alcoholic lawyer struggles to redeem himself by pursuing a high-stakes malpractice case.
Director: Sidney Lumet
Cast: Paul Newman, Charlotte Rampling, James Mason
Nominee for Oscars for Best Actor in a Leading Role -- Paul Newman, Best Actor in a Supporting Role -- James Mason, Best Director -- Sidney Lumet, Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium -- David Mamet, and Best Picture
As this legal drama features a woman in a permanent vegetative state, the picture was made and released hot on the heels of the 1970s Karen Ann Quinlan legal case, which was fresh in the minds of the public consciousness and had recently been the subject of the 1977 tele-movie In the Matter of Karen Ann Quinlan (1977).
4:15 AM -- Hombre (1966)
1h 51m | Western | TV-PG
A white man raised by Apaches is the only hope for stagecoach passengers stranded by a bandit attack.
Director: Martin Ritt
Cast: Paul Newman, Fredric March, Richard Boone
The photo in the closing credits of the film was taken in 1886 by Camillus Fly, the famous Tombstone (AZ) photographer. The white boy in the photo is Jimmy (Santiago) McKinn, captured by the Apaches in 1885. Like the Paul Newman character in the film, McKinn was totally assimilated in the tribe and was rescued against his will when Geronimo surrendered in 1886. He died in December 1941.
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