Why Angie Dickinson Still Won’t Watch Rio Bravo” – The Memory She Never Escaped

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Angie Dickinson walked onto the set of Rio Bravo in 1959 and into a moment that would define her public image for the rest of her career — the young actress from North Dakota standing opposite John Wayne and Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson in Howard Hawks’ masterful Western, holding her own with a confidence and a wit and an effortless screen presence that made everyone watching understand immediately that something genuinely special had arrived in Hollywood and was not going anywhere.

The film became a classic, Feathers became one of the most memorable female characters in the history of the genre, and Angie Dickinson became a star — the real kind, the kind whose name above the title meant something and whose face on a poster guaranteed a certain quality of intelligence and magnetism that the audience had learned to trust. She has spoken about Rio Bravo across the decades with the warmth and the pride that a defining role deserves, grateful for what it gave her and clear-eyed about what it meant in the arc of a career that would go on to include Police Woman and a dozen other films and television roles that confirmed the promise Hawks saw in her that year. And yet there is something about watching it that she has never been able to fully do in peace — a memory that the film carries for her that exists entirely apart from the performance and the legacy and the critical appreciation, something personal and private and permanently attached to the experience of making it that the finished film, for all its perfection, cannot separate itself from in her mind. The memory she has never escaped is not the kind that makes her regret the film or the role or the moment that made her — it is the kind that sits quietly inside the joy of it and reminds her, every time the subject comes up, that the most significant things that happen to us on the way to becoming who we are tend to leave marks that the career highlights and the critical retrospectives were never designed to account for.

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