Showing posts with label Forrest Gump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forrest Gump. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Memorial Day, Lt. Dan and Why He's a Grateful American

A Visit with Gary Sinise: Memorial Day, Lt. Dan and Why He's a Grateful American


Military.com
By James Barber
21 May 2019
In many ways, and not only the career. I had done only two or three movies before I did "Forrest Gump." That was certainly a career changer, for sure. It also led to a long, 25-year relationship with the Disabled American Veterans organization because, within weeks of the movie coming out, they invited me to come to their national convention.
Gary Sinise as Vietnam veteran Lt. Dan Taylor in "Forrest Gump" (Paramount)
Gary Sinise spoke with us when he was scheduled to co-host the National Memorial Day Concert in Washington, D.C. He's had to cancel, but the show will go on, airing at 8 p.m. Eastern on May 26 on PBS stations. Mary McCormack will fill in for Gary as co-host with Joe Mantegna.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the National Memorial Day Concert, and Sinise has been involved with the event since 2005. We had a great conversation and decided to share the interview even though he won't be able to attend the event.

Sinise spoke to us about his experiences with the concert, what the role of Lt. Dan Taylor has meant to his career and his life, and his recent memoir "Grateful American."

I brought up his father Robert's own movie career, which he started as editor for the drive-in gore schlockmaster Herschell Gordon Lewis in the early 1960s. Gary enthusiastically displayed his own knowledge of deep cuts from one of the trashiest filmographies of all time. He truly is a renaissance man.
read more here

NATIONAL MEMORIAL DAY CONCERT | Charles Durning | PBS

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Forrest Gump Rerun

I was just watching a rerun of Forrest Gump and reminded of how several things in the Vietnam scenes were based on reality. One of them is the fact that while Tom Hanks was shown receiving the Medal of Honor from President Johnson, it was actually footage of Sammy Davis.




UPDATE

I interviewed Sammy a couple of years ago and he talked about what it was like when he came home. Sammy earned the Medal of Honor and was wounded. He is one of the stories of mistreatment many Vietnam veterans received. In this video as he talks about being beaten, the citation is being read.