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Other Topics => Entertainment => Topic started by: BoyScoutKevin on June 08, 2016, 03:51:09 PM



Title: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on June 08, 2016, 03:51:09 PM
This s in no way meant to be a slight of any who served with honor in their countries' armed forces, but . . .?! I had to make some restrictions in this list to make it manageable.

1st. The military service had to be sometime within this century or the past century.

2nd. The list is restricted to "artists" (i.e. actors, writers, etc.)

3rd. While there have been "famous" people who joined the military, this list is restricted, for the most part, to those "famous" people who joined the military, before they were famous.

I have wanted to do this for a long time. Thus, I hope everyone finds it as interesting as I have.

Don Adams
comedian
WWII U.S. Marines
saw action on Guadalcanal
Stateside
became a drill sergeant
from whence he learned his clipped cadence of speaking.

To be continued . . .


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on June 26, 2016, 01:58:48 PM
Continuing . . .

Isaac Asimov
writer
post-WWII U.S. Army
Barely escaped taking part in the atomic bomb tests on Bikini Atoll, when he was discharged from the military, just days before the tests began.

Richard "Dick" Bakalyn
actor
Korean War U.S. Air force

Charles Bickford
actor
WWI U.S. Army Corp of Engineers

Humphrey Bogart
actor
WWI U.S. Navy
There are 2 stories on how he got his scarred lip.
1st. He caught his lip on a splinter, when he was 12.
2nd. While in the Navy, he was escorting a man to prison, who took umbrage, where he was going, so he hit Bogie across the mouth, with the manacles, the man was wearing. Bogie then pulled out the .45 he was wearing and shot the man.
"When legends become fact, print the legend."

Richard "Have Gun Will Travel" Boone
actor
WWII U.S. Navy

Neville Brand
actor
WWII U.S. Army
saw action in Europe
recipient of the Silver Star and a Purple Heart
A voracious reader, he once had one of the biggest private libraries in the U.S. O'er 30,000 volumes. Most of which were lost in one of the brushfires that plagued the Malibu Hills.

Charles Bronson
actor
WWII U.S. Army Air Corps
tail gunner
saw action in the skies o'er Europe
flew 25 missions in a B-29.
recipient of a Purple Heart

. . . to be continued.


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 09:04:46 AM
Bela Lugosi
actor
WW1-served in the Hungarian army from 1914-1916

Lugosi's own words-

 “There was a moment I could never forget. We were protecting a forest from the Russians. All of us were cowering beneath huge trees, each man beneath a tree. A young officer incautious, went a little way out of cover and a bullet struck his breast. I forgot the Russians were firing from their line with machine guns. Not a selfless man…I ran to him and gave him first aid. I came back to my tree and found out that it had been blown to the heavens in heavy crushing pieces. I became hysterical. I wept there on the forest floor, like a child…not from fear, not even from relief…from gratitude at how God had paid me back for having that good heart.”

He was badly wounded in 1916 and was given a medal .

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/tumblr_mmuxv9iFzz1rt4qldo1_500_zpse0p42745.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/tumblr_mmuxv9iFzz1rt4qldo1_500_zpse0p42745.jpg.html)



Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 09:19:12 AM
Ed Wood Jr.
director,writer,actor
WWII-In 1942, Wood enlisted in the United States Marine Corps, just months after the Attack on Pearl Harbor. Assigned to the 2nd Defense Battalions, he reached the rank of Corporal before he was discharged. He was involved in the Battle of Tarawa, among others, and during the war, he lost his two front teeth to a Japanese soldier's rifle butt and was shot several times in the leg by a machine gunner. Wood later claimed that he feared being wounded in battle more than he feared being killed because he wore a bra and panties under his uniform.

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/uniform_zpsfvsll1cm.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/uniform_zpsfvsll1cm.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 09:33:58 AM
Jack Kirby
comic book artist & writer
WWII- Kirby was drafted into the U.S. Army on June 7, 1943. After basic training at Camp Stewart, near Savannah, Georgia, he was assigned to Company F of the 11th Infantry Regiment. He landed on Omaha Beach in Normandy on August 23, 1944, two-and-a-half months after D-Day, though Kirby's reminiscences would place his arrival just 10 days after.Kirby recalled that a lieutenant, learning that comics artist Kirby was in his command, made him a scout who would advance into towns and draw reconnaissance maps and pictures, an extremely dangerous duty.

Kirby and his wife corresponded regularly by v-mail, with Roz sending "him a letter a day" while she worked in a lingerie shop and lived with her mother at 2820 Brighton 7th Street in Brooklyn. During the winter of 1944, Kirby suffered severe frostbite on his lower extremities and was taken to a hospital in London, England, for recovery. Doctors considered amputating Kirby's legs, but he eventually recovered from the frostbite. He returned to the United States in January 1945, assigned to Camp Butner in North Carolina, where he spent the last six months of his service as part of the motor pool. Kirby was honorably discharged as a Private First Class on July 20, 1945, having received a Combat Infantryman Badge and a European/African/Middle Eastern Theater ribbon with a bronze battle star.

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/jack_zpsquvbh7b2.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/jack_zpsquvbh7b2.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: indianasmith on July 09, 2016, 09:50:02 AM
LOVED the story about Bela Lugosi!!!  Thanks, RC!  :cheers:


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 10:41:51 AM
LOVED the story about Bela Lugosi!!!  Thanks, RC!  :cheers:

Yer welcome.  :smile:

Forrest J Ackerman
Literary publicist,editor,writer,actor
WWII- Spent three years in the U.S. Army after enlisting on August 15, 1942, where he rose to the rank of staff sergeant, held the position of editor of his base's newspaper, and passed his entire time in service at Fort MacArthur, California.

These were the only pics I could find of FJA in uniform-far left-top and bottom.
(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/tumblr_mmub5e4Iaz1spnykgo1_1280_zps91uu9fji.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/tumblr_mmub5e4Iaz1spnykgo1_1280_zps91uu9fji.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 10:56:35 AM
Christopher Lee
actor
WWII-When World War II broke out, Lee volunteered to fight for the Finnish forces during the Winter War in 1939. He and other British volunteers were kept away from actual fighting, but they were issued winter gear and were posted on guard duty a safe distance from the front lines. After a fortnight, they returned home. Lee returned to work at United States Lines and found his work more satisfying, feeling that he was contributing. In early 1940, he joined Beecham's, at first as an office clerk, then as a switchboard operator. When Beecham's moved out of London, he joined the Home Guard. In the winter, his father fell ill with double pneumonia and died on 12 March 1941. Realising that he had no inclination to follow his father into the Army, Lee decided to join up while he still had some choice of service, and volunteered for the Royal Air Force.

Lee reported to RAF Uxbridge for training and was then posted to the Initial Training Wing at Paignton. After he had passed his exams in Liverpool, the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan meant that he travelled on the Reina del Pacifico to South Africa, then to his posting at Hillside, at Bulawayo in Southern Rhodesia. Training with de Havilland Tiger Moths, Lee was having his penultimate training session before his first solo flight, when he suffered from headaches and blurred vision. The medical officer hesitantly diagnosed a failure of his optic nerve, and he was told he would never be allowed to fly again. Lee was devastated, and the death of a fellow trainee from Summer Fields only made him more despondent. His appeals were fruitless, and he was left with nothing to do. He was moved around to different flying stations, before going to Salisbury in December 1941. He then visited the Mazowe Dam, Marandellas, the Wankie Game Reserve and the ruins of Great Zimbabwe. Thinking he should "do something constructive for my keep", he applied to join RAF Intelligence. His superiors praised his initiative, and he was seconded into the Rhodesian Police Force and was posted as a warder at Salisbury Prison.He was then promoted to leading aircraftman and moved to Durban in South Africa, before travelling to Suez on the Nieuw Amsterdam.

After "killing time" at RAF Kasfareet near the Great Bitter Lake in the Suez Canal Zone, he resumed intelligence work in the city of Ismaïlia. He was then attached to No. 205 Group RAF before being commissioned as a pilot officer at the end of January 1943, and attached to No. 260 Squadron RAF as an intelligence officer. As the North African Campaign progressed, the squadron "leapfrogged" between Egyptian airstrips, from RAF El Daba to Maaten Bagush and on to Mersa Matruh. They lent air support to the ground forces and bombed strategic targets. Lee, "broadly speaking, was expected to know everything." The Allied advance continued into Libya, through Tobruk and Benghazi to the Marble Arch and then through El Agheila, Khoms and Tripoli, with the squadron averaging five missions a day. As the advance continued into Tunisia, with the Axis forces digging themselves in at the Mareth Line, Lee was almost killed when the squadron's airfield was bombed. After breaking through the Mareth Line, the squadron made their final base in Kairouan. After the Axis surrender in North Africa in May 1943, the squadron moved to Zuwarah in Libya in preparation for the Allied invasion of Sicily. They then moved to Malta, and, after its capture by the British Eighth Army, the Sicilian town of Pachino, before making a permanent base in Agnone Bagni. At the end of July 1943, Lee received his second promotion of the year, this time to flying officer. After the Sicilian campaign was over, Lee came down with malaria for the sixth time in under a year, and was flown to a hospital in Carthage for treatment. When he returned, the squadron was restless, frustrated with a lack of news about the Eastern Front and the Soviet Union in general, and with no mail from home or alcohol. Unrest spread and threatened to turn into mutiny. Lee, by now an expert on Russia, talked them into resuming their duties, which much impressed his commanding officer.


Flying Officer C. F. C. Lee in Vatican City, 1944, soon after the Liberation of Rome
After the Allied invasion of Italy, the squadron was based in Foggia and Termoli during the winter of 1943. Lee was then seconded to the Army during an officer's swap scheme. He spent most of this time with the Gurkhas of the 8th Indian Infantry Division during the Battle of Monte Cassino. While spending some time on leave in Naples, Lee climbed Mount Vesuvius, which erupted three days later. During the final assault on Monte Cassino, the squadron was based in San Angelo, and Lee was nearly killed when one of the planes crashed on takeoff, and he tripped over one of its live bombs. After the battle, the squadron moved to airfields just outside Rome, and Lee visited the city, where he met his mother's cousin, Nicolò Carandini, who had fought in the Italian resistance movement. In November 1944, Lee was promoted to flight lieutenant and left the squadron in Iesi to take up a posting at Air Force HQ. Lee took part in forward planning and liaison, in preparation for a potential assault into the rumoured German Alpine Fortress. After the war ended, Lee was invited to go hunting near Vienna and was then billeted in Pörtschach am Wörthersee. For the final few months of his service, Lee, who spoke fluent French and German, among other languages, was seconded to the Central Registry of War Criminals and Security Suspects. Here, he was tasked with helping to track down Nazi war criminals. Of his time with the organisation, Lee said: "We were given dossiers of what they'd done and told to find them, interrogate them as much as we could and hand them over to the appropriate authority ... We saw these concentration camps. Some had been cleaned up. Some had not."He retired from the RAF in 1946 with the rank of flight lieutenant.

No wonder he was-and IS- SIR Christopher Lee!

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/Christopher_Lee_1944_zpsqivguno8.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/Christopher_Lee_1944_zpsqivguno8.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 11:16:10 AM
Buster Keaton
actor
WWI-
Buster Keaton was assigned to the 40th Division. 159th Infantry. Company C on July 24. 19 18. Buster reported for duty at Camp Kearney. California in July of 1918. The nickname for the 40th Division was The Sunshine Division and it was organized in 1917 from National Guard troops from California and 5 other states. After two weeks of training at Camp Kearney, Buster's division was transferred to Camp Mills on Long Island. New York. This was the final training camp before troops were sent overseas. From Camp Mills, Buster Keaton embarked on a troop ship HMS Otranto to Liverpool. England before being sent to his base camp in France.
After some additional training in England. Buster Keaton arrived in France. The troops would travel for days in overcrowded boxcars which were know as 40-and-8s, but the troops nicknamed them "The devil's gift to transportation." Conditions awaiting a soldier during the 1st World War were very harsh. Food was in short supply and adequate housing for the troops was simply unavailable. Keaton would later recall his own personal experiences: "We slept in circular tents ... our feet in the center and our heads close to the drafts from the great outdoors. This was the beginning of an experience I have never forgotten. During my seven months as a soldier in France, I slept every night but one on the ground or on the floor of mills. barns and stables.

"There is always a draft close to the floor of such farm buildings, and I soon developed a cold which imperiled my hearing. Before I was overseas a month, my superiors had to shout orders at me. I had become almost stone deaf due to my being exposed to floor drafts each night. "Late one night, I had a narrow escape while coming back from a card game. A sentry challenged me and I didn't hear his demand for the password or the two warnings he gave me after that. Then he pulled back the breech of his gun, prepared to shoot. My life was saved by my sixth sense which enabled me to hear that gun click and stopped me dead in my tracks. "After bawling me out, the sentry listened to my explanation and got me past a second guard. From that day on-the fear of losing my hearing drove me half crazy permanently." For the rest of Keaton's life he would remain deaf in one ear. Many enlisted men from each company put together their own form of entertainment to entertain the troops and boost morale.

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/WWIBUSTER_zpsmbo7fvsa.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/WWIBUSTER_zpsmbo7fvsa.jpg.html)



Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 11:30:15 AM
Josephine Baker
musician
WWII-a major celebrity in Europe and a symbol of the 1920s Jazz Age. Her scorn for the Nazis’ racism coupled with her gratitude toward France, where she first experienced stardom, led Baker to serve during the war as an operative for the French Resistance. Her performing career enabled her to travel around Europe without attracting suspicion, and she attended numerous parties at embassies, gleaning whatever military and political information she could that might aid the Resistance, often smuggling intelligence secrets on invisible ink on her sheet music. She also used her chateau in southern France to hide Jewish refugees as well as weapons for the cause.
Yeah-she was already pretty famous-but DAM-I'm impressed!

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/josphine_zpsfwp8ckts.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/josphine_zpsfwp8ckts.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on July 09, 2016, 12:47:13 PM
I want to thank RC Merchant for all those stories he posted. If anyone has any more stories, please be sure to post them, as I am sure we will all be glad to read them. Continuing with that . . .

Nigel Bruce
actor
WWI British Army
in one action was shot 11 times
which left him confined to a wheelchair for several weeks.

James M. Cain
writer
WWI U.S. Army
writer for the Army Times

Michael Caine
born Maurice Micklewhite
Korean War British Army

Raymond Chandler
writer
WWI Canadian Army
later the Royal Flying Corp

James Clavell
writer
WWII Royal Artillery
saw action on Java
as a teen, spent 3 years in a Japanese P.O.W. camp before being released

Sean "Bond. James Bond" Connery
actor
Royal Navy

William Conrad
actor
WWII U.S. Army Air Corp
fighter pilot
flew the P-39 Air cobra
once flying it under San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge (California)

To be continued . . .


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 02:14:13 PM
Update!!!
I found this unusual photo of Bela Lugosi during his military duty-check out the Kaiser type 'stache!

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/belaarmy_zpsbl5wd5kx.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/belaarmy_zpsbl5wd5kx.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 02:23:09 PM
Basil Rathbone
actor
WWI- After basic training with the London Scots in early 1916 he received a commission as a lieutenant in the 2/10th Battalion of the King's Liverpool Regiment (Liverpool Scottish), where he served as an intelligence officer and eventually attained the rank of captain. Rathbone's younger brother John was killed in action on 4 June 1918. It was after this that Rathbone convinced his superiors to allow him to scout enemy positions during daylight rather than at night, as was the usual practice to minimize the chance of detection. Rathbone describes it thus in his autobiography "Camouflage suits had been made for us to resemble trees. On our heads were wreaths of freshly plucked foliage, our faces and hands were blackened with burnt cork."  As a result of these highly dangerous daylight raids In September 1918, he was awarded the Military Cross for "conspicuous daring and resource on patrol".

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/basil_zpsitvzoqnr.png) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/basil_zpsitvzoqnr.png.html)



Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: RCMerchant on July 09, 2016, 02:49:00 PM
Claude Rains
actor
WWI-Rains served in the First World War in the London Scottish Regiment. At one time, he was involved in a gas attack that left him nearly blind in one eye for the rest of his life. By the end of the war, he had risen from the rank of Private to that of Captain.

(http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/sis-wwi-2_zpsjlr4arxp.jpg) (http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/sis-wwi-2_zpsjlr4arxp.jpg.html)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: ER on July 20, 2016, 03:07:35 PM
Bela Lugosi
actor
WW1-served in the Hungarian army from 1914-1916

Lugosi's own words-

 “There was a moment I could never forget. We were protecting a forest from the Russians. All of us were cowering beneath huge trees, each man beneath a tree. A young officer incautious, went a little way out of cover and a bullet struck his breast. I forgot the Russians were firing from their line with machine guns. Not a selfless man…I ran to him and gave him first aid. I came back to my tree and found out that it had been blown to the heavens in heavy crushing pieces. I became hysterical. I wept there on the forest floor, like a child…not from fear, not even from relief…from gratitude at how God had paid me back for having that good heart.”

He was badly wounded in 1916 and was given a medal .

([url]http://i1380.photobucket.com/albums/ah192/mydoginky/tumblr_mmuxv9iFzz1rt4qldo1_500_zpse0p42745.jpg[/url]) ([url]http://s1380.photobucket.com/user/mydoginky/media/tumblr_mmuxv9iFzz1rt4qldo1_500_zpse0p42745.jpg.html[/url])




I'd never heard that, RC. Incredible. Wow.


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on July 24, 2016, 02:06:55 PM
Continuing . . .

Donald Crisp
actor
Boer War British army

Roald Dahl
writer
WWII RAF
fighter pilot
When his plane landed in the north African desert, the somewhat rough landing put him in the Royal Navy Hospital in Alexandria (Egypt) for 5 months with severe injuries.
He was also an assistant air attaché in Washington, D.C. with the British Embassy. Where he admits one of his duties was to spy on the American isolationist movement of that time.

Len Deighton
writer
WWII RAF
aerial photographer
Flying in Mosquito fighters and Lancaster bombers

Roy O. Disney
producer
WWI U.S. Navy
He had an younger brother who also wanted to do his part for the war effort, but, being too young to join his older brother in the Navy, young Walter lied about his age and joined the ambulance service. With which he was shipped to Europe just as the Armistice was signed. Even then young Walter was showing signs of being a cartooning genius, decorating his ambulance with cartoon characters.

James "Scotty" Doohan
actor
WWII Canadian army
Rising to officer rank
And one of the few men who can say their life was saved by smoking. Accidentally shot by his own side on D-Day, he would have been killed, but one of the bullets struck a silver cigarette case, a gift from his brother. The case being in his left breast pocket.

Kirk Douglas
actor
WWII U.S. Navy

Adam Driver
U.S. Marines
And who, of course, played Kylo Ren in "Star Wars : Episode VIII - the Force Awakens."

To be continued . . .



Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: alandhopewell on July 25, 2016, 02:25:50 PM
     STAN LEE joined the Army in 1942, and served in the Signal Corps until the end of WWII.

(http://www.popcults.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/Stan-Lee-Army.jpg)

     RAY HARRYHAUSEN was in the Army Special Services branch during WWII; he served under another famous name-Col. Frank Capra; couldn't find a picture.

     JIMI HENDRIX was an Airborne Ranger....

(http://static.messynessychic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/20120625-190822.jpg)

     The SF author JOE HALDEMAN was in the Army in Vietnam, a recipient of the Purple Heart.

(http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1386852511l/21611.jpg)


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on August 08, 2016, 03:13:35 PM
Continuing . . .

Richard Egan
actor
WWII U.S. Army
instructor
rising to officer rank
taught bayonet fighting, judo, and knife fighting

Cy Endfield
director/writer
WWII U.S. Army

R. Lee Ermey
actor
U.S. Marines Vietnam
rising to the rank of staff sergeant. Later received the honorary rank of gunnery sergeant.

Ian Fleming
writer
WWII British naval intelligence
rising to the rank of Commander
graduate of Sandhurst Military Academy

Glenn Ford
actor
WWII U.S. Marines
small roles in films between 1937 and 1943. Only became famous in 1946 and thereafter, after being discharged from the military.

James Garner
born James Scott Baumgarner
Korean War Merchant Marine
twice wounded. Twice recipient of the Purple Heart.

George "The Littlest Cowboy" Gobel
comedian
WWII U.S. Army Air Corp
flight instructor
served stateside in Oklahoma

To be continued . . .


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: Chainsawmidget on August 08, 2016, 06:43:09 PM
    STAN LEE joined the Army in 1942, and served in the Signal Corps until the end of WWII.

([url]http://www.popcults.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/Stan-Lee-Army.jpg[/url])

I'd like to elaborate on Stan Lee. 

“I enlisted because I couldn’t stand the idea of my being home while other guys my age were fighting. ...  I felt I had to join the army, be a hero like Eroll Flynn or John Wayne,” said Lee in his autobiography. 

Instead of being a hero, he got transferred to the Signal Corps, and spent his military career making training films, training comics, and posters that warned troops about VD. 

Also ...

“It wasn’t till I was discharged three years later that I learned, when I read my discharge certificate, that the army, in its infinite wisdom, had actually classified me not as a highly trained, combat ready signal corps specialist—but as a playwright! Not quite the macho image I had longed for, but I learned to live with it. I also learned that there were only eight other men in the U.S. Army with that particular military occupational specialty classification besides me.” 



Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on August 18, 2016, 02:39:35 PM
Continuing . . .

Stewart Granger
actor
born James LeBlanc Stewart
WWII British army
no credited roles before the war except for "So This Is London." Of course, may credited roles after the war and his discharge from the military.

Dashiell Hammett
writer
WWI U.S. Army Ambulance Corp.

Sterling Hayden
actor/writer
WWII OSS
gunrunner
ran guns to Tito's partisans in Yugoslavia.
recipient of the Silver Star
2 film roles before the war in '41, for which he did not receive a credit.

Jack Higgins
writer
born Harry Patterson
Household Cavalry
and a expert marksman


George Kennedy
actor/writer
WWII and thereafter U.S. Army
rising to officer rank in Armed Forces Radio and Television
twice recipient of the Bronze Star
Probably the only actor in Hollywood to play the man who was his commanding officer during the war. Portrayed General George S. Patton in "Brass Target."

Jack Lemmon
Naval ROTC while attending Harvard
thereafter rising to the rank of Ensign in the U.S. Navy

Burt Lancaster
actor
WWII U.S. Army

To be continued . . .






Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on August 25, 2016, 02:57:04 PM
Continuing . . .

C. S. Lewis
writer
WWI British Army

Alistair Maclean
writer
WWII Royal Navy
saw action in the Med, the North Atlantic, and the Pacific

Norman Mailer
writer/actor
WWII U.S. Army
served in the Philippines

Frederic March
actor
WWI U.S. Army
rising to the rank of Lieutenant in the artillery

Herbert Marshall
actor
WWI British Army
lost a leg during the war, which gave him his distinctive walk

Walter Matthau
actor
WWII U.S. Army Air Corp.
radio cryptographer
served in Europe
rising to the rank of Sergeant
recipient of 6 Battle Stars

Lee Marvin
actor
WWII U.S. Marines
sniper
saw action on Saipan
recipient of the Purple Heart after being shot in the buttocks

To be continued . . .


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: Trevor on August 31, 2016, 08:16:46 AM
then to his posting at Hillside, at Bulawayo in Southern Rhodesia.

I was born there.  :thumbup: :teddyr:


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on September 06, 2016, 02:45:33 PM
Continuing . . .

Dennis McKiernan
writer
Korean War U.S. Air Force
served stateside

Victor McLaglen
actor
At 14, lied about his age to join the Life Guards, so he could fight in the Boer War, but . . .?! He got no nearer to South Africa than Windsor Castle in England. When he was soon released from the military into his father's care, because of his age.
Later he served with the Irish Fusiliers in the Middle East during WWI, rising to office rank, and serving as Provost Marshal in Baghdad (Iraq.)
4 of his 7 brothers were also actors, and his son was a film director. That's keeping it in the family.

Patrick McNee
actor
WWII Royal Navy
his 1st credited appearance as an actor was on British TV in 1946,
and another unsung extra in 1948's "Hamlet."

Steve McQueen
actor
U.S. Marines

Toshiro Mifune
WWII Japanese Air Force
aerial photographer

Ray Milland
actor
born Reginald Alfred John Truscott Jones
Household Cavalry
At a time when one had to prove that one had to have an independent source of income to join.

Joe Moore
TV newscaster
Vietnam U.S. Army
journalist
Probably one of the most recognized TV personalities in Hawaii
Served 2 tours of duty with the 25th Infantry
His roommate while in Vietnam was Pat Sajak

Kenneth More
actor
WWII Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve
Rising to the rank of Lieutenant
Served on the light cruiser HMS Aurora and the aircraft carrier HMS Victorious
While he had bit parts in films, before the war, he did not become famous as an actor to after the war

To be continued . . .









Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on September 12, 2016, 04:48:59 PM
Continuing . . .

Audie Murphy
actor
WWII U.S. Army
most decorated American combat soldier in WWII Europe

Bob Newhart
comedian
Korean War U.S. Army
served stateside

Patrick O'Neal
actor
WWII U.S. Army Corp
later directed training films for the Signal Corps

Erich Maria Remarque
writer
WWI German Army
For 22 years, till his death, he was married to Hollywood legend Paulette Goddard

Don Rickles
comedian
WWII U.S. Navy
rising to the rank of seaman
served on the USS Cyrene motorboat tender (AGP-13)
the only ship in the history of the US Navy with that name

Dale Roberts
actor
WWII U.S. Army
saw action in North Africa and Europe
served in the tank corps and combat engineers
twice wounded

Cliff Robertson
WWII U.S. Merchant Marine
as a teenager, reported missing and presumed dead. Only to turn up alive some time later

To be continued . . .



Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on October 03, 2016, 04:37:15 PM
Continuing . . .

Gene Roddenberry
writer/producer
WWII U.S. Army Air Corps
Europe
bomber pilot
a man of many crashes.
1943 his bomber crashed on take-off. 2 dead
1947 while on board a civilian airliner it crashed in the Syrian desert. 14 dead
wrote the song "I Wanna Go Home."
twice appeared in uncredited roles on "Star Trek : the Original Series."

Ken Russell
director/actor
as a teen served as a cadet in the British Merchant Navy at the end of WWII.
later served in the RAF.
which is why Hugh Grant is seen wearing a RAF uniform in the director's "Lair of the White Worm."

Barry Sadler
writer/actor
Vietnam Green Berets

Antoine de Saint-Exupery
writer
French cavalry after WWI
later transferred to the French air force
lost when his plane was shot down over the Med during WWII.
ironically, the German pilot who shot him down was a big fan of the writer, having read everything the writer had written. And the German pilot said, if he had known who was flying the plane he shot down, he'd never have fired on the plane.

Pat Sajak
TV game show host
Vietnam Armed Forces Radio DJ
And whose roommate at the time was Joe Moore, who later became a noted TV newscaster in Hawaii.

George C. Scott
actor
WWII U.S. Marines
joined toward the end of the war and served 4 years.

Rod Serling
writer/TV show host
WWII U.S. Army
paratrooper
Philippines
rising to the rank of corporal.
recipient of a Purple Heart.
retroactively received the Bronze Star.

To be continued . . .


Title: Re: Before They Were Famous
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on October 13, 2016, 05:18:39 PM
Continuing . . .

Oliver Stone
director/writer
Vietnam 1st Cavalry
recipient of the Bronze Star and a Purple Heart

J. R. R. Tolkien
writer
WWI British army
saw action at Somme
once met screen star Ava Gardner. And neither knew who the other one was.

Tom Tryon
actor/writer
WWII U.S. Navy

Clint "Cheyenne" Walker
actor
WWII Merchant Marine

Herman Wouk
writer
WWII U.S. Navy
XO on the destroyer-minesweepers U.S.S. Zane and U.S.S Southard.

 Concluded