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Rex Allen
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Better-known as the Arizona Cowboy, Rex Allen was the last of Hollywood's singing cowboys. Between 1950 and 1954, Allen starred in 19 movies for Republic studios. The films launched a popular recording career for Allen, as he had several hit singles and albums in the early '50s, before the singing cowboys slowly disappeared from the charts.
Rex Allen Biography: Better-known as the Arizona Cowboy, Rex Allen was the last of Hollywood's singing cowboys. Between 1950 and 1954, Allen starred in 19 movies for Republic studios. The films launched a popular recording career for Allen, as he had several hit singles and albums in the early '50s, before the singing cowboys ...Read full biography
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Rex Allen had a 35- year span of hit records. "Crying in the Chapel" and "Streets of Laredo" are just twoof the many record hits. In 1950, his first film was released called " Arizona Cowboy". Later on, he starredin the television series "Frontier Doctor". The museum uses photographs, clothing, cowboy items and movie posters to tell the story of Rex Allen.
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Rex Allen had a long and distinguished career in TV and movies. Primarily known for his B Western films from Republic, his star rose high in the western radar. Born a few years earlier, his career would have taken a different path.
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Rex Allen's only LP for Disney, 16 Golden Hits: Rex Allen Sings 16 Favorite Songs, was reissued on CD in 1998. Over his career, Rex Allen wrote and recorded many songs, a number of which were featured in his own films. Late in coming to the industry, his film career was relatively short as the popularity of westerns faded by the mid 1950s. He has the distinction of making the last singing western in 1954. As other cowboy stars made the transition to television, Allen tried too, cast as Dr. Bill Baxter for a half-hour weekly series called Frontier Doctor. Allen was gifted with a rich, pleasant voice, ideally suited for narration and was able to find considerable work as a narrator in a variety of films especially for Walt Disney Pictures wildlife films and TV shows.He ... was the voice of the father on Disney's Carousel of Progress , which was presented at the 1964 World's Fair and is now at Walt Disney World. A 1993 renovation replaced Allen with Jean Shepherd as the voice of the father, but Allen was given a cameo as the grandfather in the final scene.
One of the last of the singing cowboys, Rex Allen performed on-stage and in radio (as a headliner on The National Barn Dance) before hitching up with a traveling rodeo. Allen was brought to Republic Studios in 1949 as a potential replacement for Roy Rogers. He appeared in several slick B-Westerns of the early '50s, usually teamed with Slim Pickens, then worked for Republic's TV division as star of the 1958 TV series Frontier Doctor. Filmgoers of the 1960s were more familiar with Rex Allen's voice than with his rugged physique: Allen was the laid-back narrator of such Walt Disney films as "The Legend of Lobo" (1962), "The Incredible Journey" (1963), and Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar (1967). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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