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  1. Cimarron is a 1960 American epic Western film based on the 1930 Edna Ferber novel Cimarron. The film stars Glenn Ford and Maria Schell and was directed by Anthony Mann and Charles Walters, though Walters is not credited onscreen. [1]

  2. Cimarron is a 1931 pre-Code epic Western film starring Richard Dix and Irene Dunne, and directed by Wesley Ruggles. Released by RKO, it won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay (written by Howard Estabrook and based on Edna Ferber 's 1930 novel Cimarron ), and Best Production Design (by Max Rée).

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CimarronCimarron - Wikipedia

    Film and television. Cimarron (1931 film), an Academy Award-winning film starring Richard Dix. Cimarron (1960 film), a western film starring Glenn Ford directed by Anthony Mann. Cimarrón (telenovela), a Venezuelan telenovela.

  4. Cimarron: Directed by Anthony Mann, Charles Walters. With Glenn Ford, Maria Schell, Anne Baxter, Arthur O'Connell. The Oklahoma Land Run of April 1889 sets the stage for an epic saga of a frontier adventurer, his wife and family and their friends.

  5. Cimarron is the leader in innovation for old west firearms reproductions and is proud to have created the new models, making our guns more reliable, higher in quality and historically accurate.

  6. Cimarron, based on the best-selling epic by Giant and Show Boat novelist Edna Ferber, traces the generations-spanning saga of the Oklahoma Land Rush.

  7. Cimarron - watch online: streaming, buy or rent. You can buy "Cimarron" on Amazon Video, Google Play Movies, YouTube, Apple TV as download or rent it on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Google Play Movies, YouTube online.

  8. Maroons (Cimarrones) Maroons (Cimarrónes), African fugitive slaves. Marronage —the flight of enslaved men and women from the harsh discipline, overwork, and malnutrition associated primarily with plantations—was a common occurrence in the Americas and Caribbean from the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries.

  9. a. runaway slave. Los cimarrones regresaron a la plantación durante la noche para liberar a los demás esclavos.The runaway slaves came back to the plantation at night to set the rest of the slaves free. masculine noun.

  10. Origin of cimarron 1. First recorded in 1840–50; from Colonial Spanish (carnero) cimarrón “wild (ram),” Spanish: “wild,” probably equivalent to Old Spanish cimarra “brushwood, thicket,” from cim (a) “peak, summit” (from Latin cȳma “spring shoots of a vegetable,” from Greek; cyme) + -arrón adjective suffix; maroon 2 ...

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