The poster for the original movie. (Image: RKO Radio Pictures)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nA case for an exclusively fatal link to the still-radioactive sand is difficult to prove for the cast and crew, considering how commonplace smoking was prior to the Surgeon General\u2019s famous 1964 report. Wayne, Hayward, Armend\u00e1riz, actress Agnes Moorehead, and director Dick Powell were all reportedly heavy smokers.<\/p>\n
However, Hayward, Armend\u00e1riz, and Powell all died in their 50s — young for cancer — and it wasn\u2019t in their lungs. (It was in Hayward\u2019s brain, Armend\u00e1riz\u2019s kidney, and Powell\u2019s blood.) And Wayne, who lived until age 77, died of stomach cancer.<\/p>\n
And the rate of cancer among the residents of St. George at that time was an undeniable three times the national average. The victims included men who developed prostate cancer in their 30s and young children who developed leukemia.<\/p>\nWayne is taught how to operate a Geiger counter with his two sons during a break in filming on the set of \u201cThe Conqueror.\u201d (Image: The Guardian<\/em>)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nBox Office Poison<\/h2>\n The producers were aware of the possible radiation dangers associated with filming where they did. In fact, one photo from the set shows Wayne being taught to operate a Geiger counter with his two sons.<\/p>\n
And, before his death in 1976, eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes, who produced \u201cThe Conqueror,\u201d reportedly said he felt \u201cguilty as hell\u201d about the decisions he made on the production.<\/p>\n
Those decisions included importing 60 tons of irradiated sand directly from the Utah desert to his RKO Pictures soundstage in Hollywood to shoot the film\u2019s interior scenes.<\/p>\n
In their defense, however, all suspicions were pooed-pooed by all the so-called scientific authorities of the day. The Atomic Energy Commission, especially, assured locals and visitors that the nuclear explosions posed no health dangers at all.<\/p>\n
Even when sheep began mysteriously dying under the fallout trail, they had the audacity to blame it on rancher negligence.<\/p>\n
It was only questions brought up after Wayne\u2019s 1979 death, in a People<\/em> magazine article, that encouraged Utahns to begin investigating the connection between their proximity to the Nevada Test Site and their medical histories.<\/p>\nTireless lobbying by downwinders won over former Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch (R), who spearheaded the 1990 passage of the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act. The $100 million compensation package offered $50,000 each to the families of all residents of Nevada, Utah, and Arizona able to link cancers and other diseases to their fallout exposure.<\/p>\n
The deadline for applying passed only last month. And a bipartisan bill to extend it, sponsored by Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Ben Ray Luj\u00e1n (D-N.M.), passed the Senate with 69 votes in March, but was spiked by Mike Johnson (R-La.), who thought it was too expensive and lacked the required Republican support to pass the House.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
From the time it came out through the 1990s, \u201cThe Conqueror\u201d — starring John Wayne as Genghis Khan — was known as a bad choice for its cast because it was horrible movie that flopped. Since then, it\u2019s become known as a bad choice for a different reason. Of the 220 people who worked on […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":78,"featured_media":324322,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3313,82013,81886],"tags":[91544,87361,91543,82973,91539,82972,91498,91538,91542,91541,91537,91540],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
New Doc Spotlights Cast Who Died of Cancer After Shooting John Wayne Film Downwind of Nevada Test Site - Casino.org<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n