Santa Clarita Valley History In Pictures
> PEGGY STEWART
Peggy Stewart Co-Stars in "Marshal of Laredo"
Western Leading Lady & Valencia Resident


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Peggy Stewart — Valencia resident and 2002 Walk of Western Stars inductee — stars opposite Wild Bill Elliott (as Red Ryder) in R.G. Springsteen's "Marshal of Laredo" (Republic Pictures 1945).

Also featured is Robert Blake (as Bobby Blake), who accompanied Stewart to her induction ceremony at Melody Ranch in March 2002. And: Alice Fleming, Jack McClendon, Roy Barcroft, Don Costello, Bud Geary, Sarah Padden, Tom London, Tom Chatterton, Wheaton Chambers, George Chesebro and George M. Carleton.

Uncredited cast includes: Melva Anstead, Mary Arden, Lane Bradford, Tommy Coats, Dorothy Granger, Jack Kirk, Rose Marie Morel, Jack O'Shea, Dick Scott and Ken Terrell.

Principal filming was done at Iverson Ranch in Chatsworth.


Growing up in Florida, American actress Peggy Stewart (born Peggy O'Rourke in 1923) naturally gravitated to the water, and distinguished herself as a swimming champ in high school. Her family moved in the mid-1930s to California, where she made the acquaintance of character actor Henry O'Neill. Aware that Paramount Pictures was looking for a new face to play the part of Joel McCrea's and Frances Dee's daughter in "Wells Fargo" (1936), O'Neill recommended Stewart.

The assignment led to numerous other roles for the teenaged actress, who by the end of 1940 was not only established in Hollywood but the wife of actor Don "Red" Barry (Stewart was also the sister-in-law of another actor, Wayne Morris).

At about the time her marriage was breaking up in 1944, Stewart signed with Republic Studios where, starting with "Tucson Raiders" (1944), she became resident leading lady for many of Republic's Western stars. She also appeared in serials at Republic but preferred Westerns because the shooting schedules were shorter and she was able to wear a more varied wardrobe. Leaving Republic in 1948, she freelanced until 1953, frequently starring opposite Lash La Rue. Then she briefly gave up acting to become a casting director at NBC television; she also married again, to actor Buck Young.

As the 1950s progressed, Stewart eased back into acting, but only in roles that would provide a challenge to her. In 1974, she won the Los Angeles Drama Circle award for her stage performance in Picnic. Long retired, Peggy Stewart has in the last two decades become one of the favorite guest speakers on the nostalgia convention and Western film festival circuit.

Stewart lives in Valencia and was inducted into the Newhall Walk of Western Stars in 2002.


LW2930: 9600 dpi jpeg from original photograph purchased 2017 by Leon Worden.
PEGGY STEWART

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Peggy Stewart on SCV In the Movies 2013


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Marshal of Laredo 1945

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