

Lash LaRue
Actor · ProducerFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Alfred "Lash" LaRue (June 15, 1917 – May 21, 1996) was a popular western motion picture star of the 1940s and 1950s. He had exceptional skill with the bullwhip and taught Harrison Ford how to use a bullwhip for the Indiana Jones movies. LaRue was one of the first recipients of the Golden Boot Awards in 1983. LaRue was originally screen tested by Warner Bros. but was rejected because he looked too much like Humphrey Bogart, then one of the studio's contract stars . He began acting in films in 1944 (at age 27) as Al LaRue, appearing in two musicals and a serial before being given a role in a Western film that would result in his being cast in a cowboy persona for virtually the rest of his career. He was given the name Lash because of the 18-foot (5.5 m)-long bullwhip he used to help bring down the bad guys. The popularity of his first role as the Cheyenne Kid, a sidekick of singing cowboy hero Eddie Dean, not just brandishing a whip but using it expertly to disarm villains, paved the way for LaRue to be featured in his own series of Western films. After appearing in all three of the Eddie Dean Cinecolor singing Westerns in 1945-46, he starred in quirky B-westerns from 1947 to 1951, at first for Poverty Row studio PRC, then for Eagle-Lion when they took over the studio, and later for producer Ron Ormond. He developed his image as the cowboy hero Lash LaRue, dressed all in black, and inherited from Buster Crabbe a comic sidekick in the form of "Fuzzy Q. Jones" played by Al St. John. LaRue played the Cheyenne Kid sidekick in about 8 films, before he starred in his own film series, playing a character actually named "Marshall Lash LaRue". Those 11 films (from 1948-1951) are the ones that western movie fans refer to as the "Lash LaRue" film series. He was different from the usual cowboy hero of the era: dressed in black, he spoke with a "city tough-guy" accent somewhat like that of Humphrey Bogart, whom he physically resembled. His use of a bullwhip, however, was what set him apart from bigger cowboy stars such as Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. His influence was felt throughout the dying medium of B-westerns; for example, he had an imitator, Whip Wilson, who starred in his own brief series, and even Roy Rogers started picking up and using a bullwhip in some of his Republic Studios Westerns made in the same period. He also made frequent personal appearances at small-town movie theaters that were showing his films during his heyday of 1948-51, a common practice for cowboy stars in those days. However, his skillful displays of stunts with his whip, done live on movie theater stages, also convinced young Western fans that there was at least one cowboy hero who could do in real life the same things he did on screen. He continued working in films and television until he retired in 1990. LaRue died of emphysema in 1996 (age 78) at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California, and was cremated at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. He was survived by his wife, Frances Bramlett LaRue, three sons and three daughters.
More details at TMDB
KNOWN FOR
FILMOGRAPHY
ACTOR41

Lash LaRue: A Man and His Memories
1992
- Roy Rogers, King of the Cowboys
Roy Rogers, King of the Cowboys
1992
Himself (archive footage)

Pair of Aces
1990
Henry

Escape
1989
Gas Station Owner

A Tribute to Houdini
1987
Self

Stagecoach
1986
Lash

The Dark Power
1985
Ranger Girard

Alien Outlaw
1985
Alex Thompson

Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch
1976
(archive footage)

Hard on the Trail
1971
Slade

Lanton Mills
1969
Phantom

Please Don't Touch Me
1963
Dr. Warren

Guns Don't Argue
1957
'Doc' Barker

The Frontier Phantom
1952
Lash La Rue

The Black Lash
1952
U.S. Marshal Lash LaRue

The Thundering Trail
1951
Marshal Lash LaRue

The Vanishing Outpost
1951
Lash LaRue

King of the Bullwhip
1950
Lash LaRue

The Daltons' Women
1950
Lash LaRue

Outlaw Country
1949
Lash La Rue / Frontier Phantom

Son of a Badman
1949
Lash La Rue

Son of Billy the Kid
1949
Jack Garrett

Frontier Revenge
1948
Lash La Rue

Dead Man's Gold
1948
Lash LaRue

Mark of the Lash
1948
Lash LaRue

The Enchanted Valley
1948
Pretty Boy

Law of the Lash
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

Border Feud
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

Cheyenne Takes Over
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

Stage to Mesa City
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

Heartaches
1947
DeLong aka Trigger Malone (as Al LaRue)

Ghost Town Renegades
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

The Fighting Vigilantes
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

Pioneer Justice
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

Return of the Lash
1947
Marshal Cheyenne Davis

The Caravan Trail
1946
Cherokee (as Al La Rue)

Wild West
1946
Stormy Day (as Al LaRue)

The Master Key
1945
Migsy

Song of Old Wyoming
1945
The Cheyenne Kid

Lady on a Train
1945
Circus Club Waiter / Henchman

Christmas Holiday
1944
Man (uncredited)





