Wednesday, September 03, 2025

Alan Ladd and My Writing

It's Alan Ladd's birthday today :-D 

This year, to celebrate, I'm going to share about the ways that Alan Ladd has shaped my writing and my books.


When I write fiction, I see and hear the story in my head like a movie.  I can replay scenes, move the camera angles, rewrite lines, and so on -- I see and hear it all in my imagination, and I write it down from there.  Because I love movies, I tend to use actors and actresses as a kind of jumpstart for my imagination, and often "cast" specific stars in different roles.  Eventually, the characters step a bit away from who I have cast as them and come to life in their own ways, but it's a good way to get a book started, for me.

(If you're ever curious about exactly whom I have cast as different characters in my books, I have Pinterest boards for all my books with character choices, pictures of setting and clothing and objects that I have saved as I research, and so on.)


I fell for Alan Ladd hard back in February of 2016.  At that time, I was working on rewrites for my Sleeping Beauty retelling, The Man on the Buckskin Horse, which had won a contest and was to be published in the anthology Five Magic Spindles.  I didn't actually recast any of the characters as him, since they were all very much themselves by that point, but he did help me out with one scene.

One of the changes the editors had me make after I won the contest was to give my "handsome prince" character, the gunfighter Luke Palmer, a backstory.  And I needed to write a scene where Palmer explains his past to Miss Emma, my "fairy godmother" character.  I banged my head against that scene for the longest time because Palmer Did Not Want To Share His Trauma.  At all.  Not a bit.  And I finally threw my hands up in disgust, booted my usual actor for him out the door, and tried running the scene in my head with Alan Ladd in the character instead.

And the character sat down, got a little quiet, and then reeled off this heartfelt speech about how his experiences as a Civil War surgeon had led to his present job as a gunfighter for hire.  One writing session.  Bam.  Whole scene, perfect and complete.  And, when I reread that book (because, yes, I do reread my books -- I write them because I want to read them!), I see and hear Palmer as his tall, dark self... except for that scene, where he flips into quiet and fair Alan Ladd.


Well, I had such a good time working with an imaginary Alan Ladd in my head while rewriting The Man on the Buckskin Horse, I knew I wanted to write him again.  So, when I was casting my Little Red Riding Hood retelling, Cloaked, I put him in as the woodcutter character, Hauer.  And Hauer absolutely stole my heart.  This is Alan Ladd in his 50s, which he never quite reached in real life, and I loved getting to imagine him a bit older and with a lot of life ahead yet, even if only as a fictional character.  (Hauer would obviously be a bit older than in the photo above, but it captures the Hauerness of Hauer too well to use something else.)

I even dedicated Cloaked to Alan's memory, and a tradition of dedicating my Once Upon a Western books to a Classic Hollywood actor or actress was born.


It's pretty easy to know which character I cast Alan Ladd as in my Twelve Dancing Princesses retelling, Dancing and Doughnuts, if you know his full name is Alan Walbridge Ladd.  I gave Sheriff Gideon Walbridge that last name as a placeholder because I didn't have a name for him initially, and it stuck.  Sheriff Walbridge is Alan in his 40s, wise and starting to mellow, but still sharp and ready for trouble if it comes his way.


I was so giddy when I realized that Hauer could show up again in One Bad Apple, my Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs retelling.  It takes place a decade before Cloaked, and I spent a long time scrutinizing the personal history I have for Hauer to make sure he could be there in Missouri in 1873.  I tried not to tell too many people ahead of time that he was going to show up again in it so he would be a fun surprise for initial readers, and the reactions I got to his return were everything I hoped for.  

Because I love Hauer dearly, I am especially pleased that he got to be the first character to show up in more than one Once Upon a Western book.  The little ties and crossovers will keep coming as the series lengthens, I promise!


Dan McLeod in my Beauty and the Beast retelling My Rock and My Refuge is the kind of friend we all should have.  He's had so many sad things happen in his life, but he never lets them get in the way of being a good friend to those around him.  I love his quiet dignity, his determination to do anything rather than lose another son, and the fact that he is both soft and resilient.  I want to write more characters like that.  

I have loved the last name McLeod since I was a kid and first saw the movie El Dorado (1966), in which John Wayne's character has a frenemy named McLeod.  I only heard it pronounced, I didn't see it spelled, and thought it must be spelled McCloud, which seemed to me like the absolute coolest name ever.  I even gave it to a character in a story I was writing at the time.  I was super disappointed to later learn how it is actually spelled... but I still love the way the name sounds, so I used it here for a character with lofty ideals and a high moral character, who lives high in the mountains.  Like a cloud.


If you look at the Pinterest board for A Noble Companion, my Ugly Duckling retelling, you'll see lots of photos of a young Ewan McGregor, and not one of Alan Ladd.  That's because Alan was my original casting for Javier Moncada, the love interest.  I wrote the first couple of drafts with him in mind, but then switched Javier to Ewan McGregor because he was a better physical fit for what the character as I was writing him.  But I still hear all of Javier's dialog in Alan's voice when I reread the book.  I loved finally getting to write him as a younger character!  


And then I went right back to writing him older in my short story "Safekeeping," which is in the anthology Follow the Lonesome Trail.  He just has a bit part, and barely any lines, as the weary Dr. Masterson who drinks too much.  In a way, that's me kind of addressing Alan Ladd's own struggles with alcohol, which is also something a lot of people I know have dealt with.  It's not a big focus of the story, but it's there, and my own headcanon involves Dr. Masterson eventually moving away from town and getting (and staying) sober with the help of his daughter-in-law.  


Those last two books are not part of my Once Upon a Western series, but the book I'm about to start writing is!  It's a retelling of The Steadfast Tin Soldier, it involves a Civil War veteran amputee, and Alan Ladd is once again playing a supporting character in it.  I think his character is in his late twenties, a bit older than the main character, and again something of a mentor, because I just really love writing him that way, I guess!

Beyond that?  Who knows!  Will I one day write a book without Alan Ladd in it?  I mean, yeah, it could happen.  It probably will, one day.  But for now, you can expect to keep seeing characters show up in my books who look, sound, and behave like characters he often played.  Because my imagination isn't tired of him yet :-)

20 comments:

  1. This is too sweet and I love it. 🥰 I've only seen Alan Ladd as Shane (and he's been one of my favorite characters since I was about 6), but YES he definitely inspired a character in a story I have yet to write. 😁

    And I've also had characters who Do Not Want To Share Their Trauma! Especially Sgt Parker from We Gave Our Tomorrows . . . it took me the longest time to figure out why he was so cranky and standoffish, and he got mad at me when I FINALLY (out of the blue) learned his backstory. Lol 😆

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    1. Chronicler, awww, thanks!

      I mean, if you're only going to have seen one Alan Ladd movie, Shane is the one to see. How sweet he's been a favorite character of yours for so long! And I hope you have fun writing that story one day :-D

      Somehow, those reticent and uncooperative characters always weasel their way into my heart and become favorites. Not sure why. Maybe because I spend so much time arguing with them in my head...

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    2. He's one of the few characters I would marry without hesitation. 😊 If I ever do get around to writing it, I'll make sure to let you know. 😉

      Oh goodness, they do that to me too! I think you're right, it's because I have to argue with them; though I also think part of it might be that in a way they're like me . . . 🤭

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    3. Chronicler, I hear you there! Shane is infinitely marriable.

      And lol! That's fun. I think I end up liking the arguers because they are unlike me, as I don't like arguing.

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  2. I feel similarly about my characters--I need an image to inspire them, so I can "see" them in my head and thus see them acting or reacting to different events. Sometimes it's an actor, and sometimes it's a random photograph in a newspaper or a magazine instead. But as soon as I see them, I know! I'm like "OH there you are"

    Super excited for your Steadfast Tin Soldier retelling :D

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    1. Katie, yes! It's a handy writing hack, basically. It just helps so much.

      I'm going to start writing it in October. For real. And I'm getting really excited about that.

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  3. First a belated thanks for hosting westerns week and congratulations on participation in the anthology! I'm not much of a visualizer when I write, but I have definitely also heard Alan Ladd as characters in my writing - also sometimes as an editor, telling me to stop stop writing so much dialogue, because no one wants to talk so much ;) Complete aside, really, but I rewatched El Dorado just very recently and thought McLeod was a great character - for me the name always reminds me of a little town in southern Alberta, Fort Macleod, which, when I passed through as a kid, I thought was just about the greatest western-looking town I'd ever encountered. (Apparently it has some sort of historical preservation designation.) One day I gotta go back there and actually spend some time. Sadly I haven't celebrated AL's birthday with a film yet, but the week isn't over yet!

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    1. VT, you're welcome! Thanks for hanging out with us :-)

      Haha! That's really fun that you get Alan's voice telling you to cut the chatter. As an actor, he did do a lot of quiet stuff with just facial expressions. Mmm, so good.

      McLeod IS a really cool character in El Dorado -- he's such a great foil for John Wayne's character. And the whole "Call it... professional courtesy" line is one I love to quote.

      I've never heard of Fort Macleod, but it sounds so cool!!! I love stumbling on historical spots like that.

      Hope you can pull out an Alan Ladd movie soon. I've gone kind of on a bender and been watching several over the past week -- first Botany Bay, then The Glass Key and Salty O'Rourke, and I'm hoping to rewatch Citizen Kane this week because I haven't seen it in years, and I want to see if I can spot Alan's cameo...

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    2. Good luck on spotting Alan in Citizen Kane, I couldn't! I mean, I could definitely hear him, but I couldn't point to him definitively during the scene...

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    3. VT, I found him! He says his first line directly facing the camera, and pretty close up, too. Maybe you blinked. The rest of the time, he has a pipe in his hand or mouth, and you can see his face when he says his other two lines two, though he is in a crowd. But he isn't hard to find, thanks to the pipe. (And he has his hat tipped back on his head and his hands in his pockets a lot, the regular Alan look.) Hope that helps!

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    4. Oh, yeah! There he is. I think maybe the last time I watched it, I had a fuzzy copy or something. Thanks!

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  4. I loved this deep dive into Alan + your writing!!! So excited to see him in Steadfast (and to meet the rest of the characters too 💜).

    And, man, I'd forgotten how much I love the McLeods. Especially Alex, heehee, but Dan and his wife too!! I need to reread My Rock and My Refuge!

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    1. Glad you enjoyed it, Eva! I just made my Pinterest board for it public, if you are curious about some of the casting...

      And then when I finish Steadfast, I think Alex's book will be my next OUAW book, though I might release something else in between. I'm thinking of alternating OUAW titles with other things.

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  5. I guess Ladd is more of a muse since he inspires so much, lucky you. I would like my own version but sadly, I have no such inspiring person to write about and with.

    Have a lovely day.

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    1. Lissa, he could almost be called a muse, yeah! A muse I can never meet, but the concept is there :-)

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  6. Very interesting to read how Alan Ladd "contributes" to your writing - such a pity I don't have such a wonderful inspiring person for my academic writing... If I ever manage not to be petrified in advance by angst, and try to write the fiction I really want to write, I may also have an imaginary actor / actress in my head... and I wish it could be Alan Ladd. Whose birthday I have forgotten AGAIN. Silly me. But I left a comment to a review of "The Proud Rebel" during this Legends week, so I thought of him and how I fell for him some years back during that (for me very) trying time of the pandemic. I'll certainly watch one or two of his movies to make up for my oversight!

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    1. Andrea, I'm glad you liked reading this! Sometimes I think people will look at me sideways when I try to explain my writing process, because it might start sounding like I am hearing voices or whatever, lol.

      I hope you enjoy whatever Alan Ladd movies you choose to watch, when you get a chance! I didn't actually watch any on his actual birthday this year -- but I watched one the weekend before and one the day after.

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  7. This is so interesting to me because my characters usually materialize as an idea or a personality and only sometimes develop a concrete visual image. Visual imagery is not a strong suit of mine in writing--it's something I've been trying to cultivate!

    I've yet to see Alan Ladd in a movie! This ought to be remedied. And your Steadfast story sounds so neat!

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    1. Ruth, that's definitely interesting too! I'm a very visual person, especially when it comes to learning and creating and problem-solving, so that's probably part of the difference.

      Hmm. I don't know you well, but you might like Alan's movie And Now Tomorrow, or possibly Shane. Or possibly Captain Carey, USA!

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    2. I will keep those titles in mind!

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