Life is what happens when you are making other plans~ John Lennon
An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind~Gandhi
The time is always right to do what is right~ Martin Luther King Jr.


Showing posts with label 1940s pop culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1940s pop culture. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2025

442 by Dean Hughes

This book is made for young kids to teenagers. Far below my reading level, as it would be described by teachers. But I love this book. It's so good. After reading this book, I felt interested in learning more about the actual 442, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team

Summary

-After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, all people of Japanese descent are rounded up and sent to "war relocation centers", better known as internment camps because of Executive Order 9066, deeming them "enemy aliens." Yukus "Yuki" Nakahara and Shigeo "Shig" Omura join the US Army with other men to try and prove the Japanese people can be trusted. They get assigned to the famous 442nd Regimental Combat Team, an all Japanese military unit. They both see intense combat, face racial prejudice from other soldiers, the enemies and even people back home. But they also prove, along with the other Japanese soldiers from this unit, that the Japanese people can be trusted

Monday, July 18, 2022

Who Framed Roger Rabbit

I love this movie.

Summary

-A cartoon rabbit's only hope at being proved innocent of murder is a cartoon hating detective, whose brother was murdered by a cartoon







Cast

-Bob Hoskins: Dey. Eddie Valiant

-Christopher Lloyd: Judge Doom

-Joanna Cassidy: Dolores

-Charles Fleischer: Roger the Rabbit/Benny the Cab/Greasy/Psycho (voice)

-Stubby Kaye: Marvin Acme

-Alan Tilvern: R.K. Maroon

-Richard LeParmentier: Lt. Santino

-Lou Hirsch: Baby Herman

Did You Know?

-Because the movie was being made by Touchstone Pictures, who works with Disney and Warner Bros, the biggest stars of Warner Bros, such as Daffy Duck, Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck would be allowed in the film as long as each got equal screen time. That's why they were always seen in pairs. Such as the dueling piano scene between Donald and Daffy and the parachute scene with Mickey and Bugs

-For two weeks after seeing the movie, Bob Hoskin's son would not talk to him. When he finally asked his son why, his son said that he couldn't believe his father would work with cartoon characters and not let him meet them

-The first test audience were mostly 18 and 19 year olds. They hated it and walked out. Robert Zemeckis said he was not changing a thing

-Despite the fact the movie's title is a question, no question mark appears because that is considered bad luck in the film industry

-Bob Hoskins stated that Jessica was not sketched when filming wrapped, and he had no clue what she would look like. Robert Zemeckis told him to picture his ideal sexual fantasy. Hoskins claims the image he had was a lot less risqué than what ended up in the film

-The policy of only letting toons into the Ink & Paint Club as entertainers references the segregation policies of the mid century. One notable club was The Cotton Club in Harlem, New York. It's a predominantly black neighborhood and the staff and performers were black, but the customers allowed in were white

-There were four women Jessica's look and personality were based on. Her "look" was inspired by Vikki Dougan and Lauren Bacall. The "peek a boo" hair was inspired by Veronica Lake. And mostly off of Red, the main female in Tex Avery's Little Red Riding Hood

-In the scene where Benny the Cab is being chased by the Weasels, he drives over a bridge known as the Hyperion Bridge, which crosses a freeway near the old Disney Studio in downtown Hollywood. This was the one used before the new one in Burbank was built and used in 1939

-The tunnel leading to Toontown is a frequently used tunnel in Los Angeles called the Mount Hollywood Tunnel. It was also used in Back to the Future: Pt. II when Marty was trying to escape Biff on his hoverboard

-The ugly toon Eddie mistakes for Jessica is a cartoon character named Lena Hyena. It was based on a same name creation by Basil Wolverton. She was first drawn in 1946 for a contest by Al Capp to show "the world's ugliest woman" to feature in his "Lil Abner" comics

-Mel Blanc, who voices a lot of the classic Looney Tunes characters, died a year after this film's release

-When Kathleen Turner voiced the character Jessica Rabbit, she was nine months pregnant

-The exterior shots of Maroon Cartoon Studios were shot at Ren-Mar Studios in Hollywood. It was the former home of Desilu Productions

-Mel Blanc was in his 70s when this film was in production. He was no longer able to do the voices so Joe Alaskey took over for him. He is the only voice actor credited with Looney Tunes voices until his death in 2016. Blanc's co-star June Foray, who voices Lena and Wheezy, died a year after this film was released. It was two months shy of her 100th birthday

-The password (Walt sent me) to the Ink & Paint Club is a nod to Walt Disney

-In the opening cartoon, the bottle of chili sauce that fell had to be re-animated several times as British animators used the UK spelling of "chilli"

-The type of cigar Baby Herman smokes is a "double perfecto" (double meaning size, perfecto meaning the curved taper on both ends). Most real world cigars these days are cylindrical, like the Romeo y Julieta cigars Winston Churchill smoked. Most of the time, cartoon cigars are double perfectos

-Most of the animation was done in England at Richard Williams' studio. Some of the production and the Toontown scenes were done in Los Angeles

-The weasels are seen wearing zoot suits, which were popular in Los Angeles during the 1940s. They were often worn by people in the Hispanic communities and, due to repeated clashes with US servicemen, the Zoot Suit Riots erupted. As a result, zoot suits were associated with the criminal element of the city

-Joanna Cassidy, who plays Dolores, is a natural redhead. She dyed her hair brunette so as not to compete with Jessica Rabbit

-In Eddie Valiant's office, he has a black bird statue, which he puts his hat on. This is a nod to the film The Maltese Falcon, a big detective film

-Charles Grodin, Rowan Atkinson, Mickey Rourke, Jack Nicholson, Joe Pesci, Robert De Niro, Tom Hanks, Chevy Chase, Gene Hackman, Michael Biehn, Ed Harris, Michael Keaton were considered for the role of Eddie Valiant

-The film is supposed to take place in 1947 while the film Who Framed Roger Rabbit is dated forty one years later

-On the Toon Patrol, the weasel known as Smartass, his voice, provided by David Lander, was based on a mix of Jack Nicholson and Mickey Mouse while Charles Fleischer based Greasy's voice on a mix of Peter Lorre and Al Pacino as Tony Montana in Scarface

-The dip that kills the toons is made from turpentine, acetone and benzene, which is used to remove images from cels

-John Cleese showed an interest in playing Judge Doom. But Steven Spielberg and Robert Zemeckis had to refuse him for the role. They thought no one from the Monty Python films would be taken seriously as a villain

-The weasels' names are not mentioned in the movie. They are: Smartass (the leader with the hat), Psycho (in the straight jacket and spiky hair), Stupid (in the striped shirt and propeller beanie hat), Greasy (the one in the green zoot suit with dark looks and Latin accent), Wheezy (the blue smoker)

-This is only one of two other films where a main villain is run over with a steamroller and survives. The other film is A Fish Called Wanda (1988). In the film, Kevin Kline's overly political character is run over by a steam roller and survives

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

The Great Escape (1963)

 This film is like the TV show Hogan's Heroes except this actually happened.

Summary

-Allied prisoners in a German POW camp make plans to escape to freedom










Cast

-Steve McQueen: Virgil Hilts "The Cooler King"

-James Garner: Hendley "The Scrounger"

-Richard Attenborough: Roger Bartlett "Big X"

-James Donald: Ramsey "SBO"

-Charles Bronson: Danny "The Tunnel King"

-Donald Pleasence: "Blythe the Forger"

-James Coburn: Sedgwick "Manufacturer"

-Hannes Messemer: Col. Von Luger "Kommandant"

-David McCallum: Ashley-Pitt "Dispersal"

-Gordon Jackson: MacDonald "Intelligence"

-John Leyton: Willie "The Tunnel King"

-Angus Lennie: Ives "The Mole"

-Nigel Stock: Cavendish "The Surveyor"

-Robert Graf: Werner "The Ferret"

-Jud Taylor: Goff

-Hans Reiser: Herr Kuhn

-Lawrence Montaigne: Haynes "Diversions"

-Robert Desmond: Griffith "Tailor"

Did You Know?

-In real life, James Hill, the person Donald Pleasence's character Blythe was based on, was a forger. But in real life, Hill didn't go blind and was not shot dead

-The German officer who arrested Von Luger is the same officer who captured RAF pilot Bartlett and turned him over to the Gestapo. The actor who played the German officer also played another German officer in the WWII film Kelly's Heroes

-The real escape occurred at a German POW camp called Stalag Luft III, specifically the north part of the compound. It opened in March 1943. The prisoners in this camp were taken from all over, including other camps. The escape happened on March 24-25, 1944 and April 12, 1944 saw the last executions.

-Out of the 23 POWs who were recaptured and thus spared from death, seventeen of them were returned to camp, four were sent to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and two were sent to Colditz Castle

-For escaping prisoners, there is a superstition stating that if one says "good luck", the mission will fail. It's these words that a German officer utters to Bartlett and MacDonald that get them recaptured. Macdonald broke the rule of never speaking English when he said "Thank you", then realizes the error

-A note at the start of the film mentions that the individual incidents in this film are mostly true, but have been rearranged to the people involved and the timing. One example includes the 76 who escaped, three got away successfully and fifty were murdered as a way of sending a message. But the murders occurred in small groups, not in a large group. At least 14 German officers were executed for their part in these murders

-When the recaptured POWs were shot, Hermann Goring, among other top Nazi leaders, were charged with the murders at the Nuremburg trials

-Roger Bartlett was modelled heavily after Roger Bushell, a British officer involved in the escapes. Like Bartlett, Bushell was executed. The scarring around actor Richard Attenborough's eye is a tribute to Bushell, who had gotten the scar from a competitive skiing accident

-During the motorcycle chase scene, director John Sturges gave permission to Steve McQueen to ride the motorcycle in the disguise of a German Army officer. Through editing, McQueen is chasing himself and he's the one who hits the trip wire

-When Ashley-Pitt, played by actor David McCallum arrives at the meeting between Big X and MacDonald, Big X (Richard Attenborough) makes a comment stating "Didn't they teach you promptness in the IRA?" This suggests that the character had served in the Irish Republican Army. In the real escape, there was an Irishman named Nicolas Tindal and Roger "Big X" was suspicious of his Irish heritage. But he proved his loyalty. Ireland was able to remain neutral during WWII

-In this film and another war film, The Password is Courage, both escape tunnels come up short of the tree line

-Nigel Stock, who plays Cavendish the Surveyor, also plays the role of a surveyor named Cole in The Password is Courage

-Several members of the cast and crew were actual members of the military and even POWs themselves. Director/producer John Sturges and composer Elmer Bernstein served in the US Army Air Forces.

  • Author of the book the movie is based on, Paul Brickhill, was a fighter pilot for the Royal Australian Air Force. He was shot down over Tunisia. He was sent to a German POW camp called Stalag Luft III, where he helped organize the escape. He did not participate due to his claustrophobia.
  • Screenwriter James Clavell was a captain in the British Army's Royal Artillery and spent three years in a Japanese POW camp on the island of Java.
  • Wally Floody, one of the technical advisors, was a fighter pilot for the Royal Canadian Air Force, flying Spitfires for the 401 Squadron. He was also shot down and imprisoned at Stalag Luft III. With his experience as a mining engineer, he designed and built three tunnels named "Harry" "Dick" "Tom", earning him the nickname "The Tunnel King".
  • Executive producer Walter Mirisch tried to enlist in the Navy, but was rejected due to a heart murmur. But he moved to California and worked in a factory making bomber planes, so he was still able to do his part for the war.
  • Steve McQueen served in the US Merchant Marines near the end of WWII and later served in the Marine Corps, where he saved the lives of five other marines during an Arctic exercise. He saved them by pulling them out of the tank before it broke through the ice.
  • Charles Bronson served in the US Army Air Forces. He flew 25 missions as an aerial gunner in a B-29 Superfortress and also received a Purple Heart for wounds sustained in battle.
  • James Garner enlisted in the Merchant Marines, but later enlisted in the California National Guard and saw combat as a rifleman in Korea.
  • Richard Attenborough and Donald Pleasence served in the RAF (Royal Air Force). Attenborough served on the RAF Film Production Unit, who filmed the results of RAF bomber command missions from the rear gunner's seat. Pleasance, however, was part of the crew for an Avro Lancaster NE112. It was shot down over Agenville, France. He was captured and imprisoned at Stalag Luft I.
  • James Donald and Nigel Stock served in the British Army. Donald worked in the Royal Army Service Corp before being assigned to Intelligence, where he typed decoded messages. Stock was in the London Irish Rifles and Assam Regiment, which was an infantry regiment of the Indian Army.
  • Several actors also served in the unified armed forces of Nazi-era Germany during WWII. Til Kiwe was a German paratrooper in the German Afrika Korps, but was captured and sent to a POW camp in Colorado. He made several escape attempts.
  • Robert Graf was conscripted into the Wehrmacht and sent to the Eastern front. Wounded in 1944, he was reassigned to war production in Munich.
  • Heinz Weiss and Hannes Messemer served in the German Army.
  • Some of the younger cast members also served in the military. James Coburn was in the Army and served in Korea
  • Lawrence Montaigne served in the Marine Corps
  • William Russell served in the Royal Air Force while David McCallum, Angus Lennie, Tom Adams, John Leyton and Arthur Atkinson were soldiers in the British Army. Atkinson also served in the French Foreign and fought in Angola

-In one scene, James Garner can be seen befriending a German soldier. This would be repeated on the TV show Hogan's Heroes where Sgt. Andrew Carter tells Sgt. Schultz he's looking for a pet mouse

-As Henley and Blythe are flying in the stolen Nazi airplane towards Switzerland, in the background the towers of the famed Neuschwanstein Castle can be seen. It was built by King Ludwig of Bavaria as a retreat. After he died in 1886, it was opened as a tourist destination. It can be seen in other films, such as Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and is also the inspiration for Cinderella's Castle at DisneyWorld in Orlando, Florida.

-Robert Graf, who played Werner, was one of the first cast members to die. He was diagnosed with cancer and passed away at age 42 in February 1966, less than three years after the film came out. It is ironic that one of his lines in the movie revolves around him telling Hendley that he is "not a well man".

-A historical error occurred with the trains. The logo for the trains was of the Deutsche Bundesbahn, the railway of the Federal Republic of Germany. During Nazi-era Germany, it would have been Deutsche Reichsbahn

-Four actors from this movie died in 2014: Angus Lennie, Richard Attenborough, Tom Adams, James Garner

-During filming and production, it was raining heavily. Locals described it as the worst weather seen in 38 years

-The official report about the escape stated 76 prisoners got out. The film only shows three successfully escaping: Sedgwick, Danny, Willie

-In the scenes after Hilts stealing a motorcycle, he is stopped by a German officer, who asks in German "Where are you going?" Since Hilts doesn't speak German, he kicks the officer and rides off

-During the scene where Henley is saying goodbye to Ashley-Pitts on the train, he says "Tally ho". This is a phrase used by RAF pilots when they spotted Germans. Henley was giving him a warning

-The character played by Donald Pleasence was partially based on London-born John Cordwell. He was a Chicago architect and owner of the Red Lion Pub on North Lincoln Ave. He died in 1999 and his stories are told from different points of view on a documentary called Tales from the Red Lion

-Ramsey went by his title of SBO, which means Senior British Officer

-James Coburn's Australian accent was all but non-existent. Filmmakers used other items to emphasize the fact he was Australian. One example includes his entering the workshop. Roger's exasperated with Sedgwick and says "Bluey, where the hell is the air pump?" "Bluey" is a kindly nickname for someone with red hair. Since the term is not widely known with a lot of audiences, the credit of "Louis" appears for Sedgwick

-The escape plan was highly secretive. It was so secretive that the POWs referred to them by code names and Roger Bushell threatened to court marshal anyone who said "tunnel" out loud

-There are six languages either spoken or sung in the film. In the scene where Flight Lieutentant Blythe is teaching the POWs about birds, the species of bird he is teaching them about is the Masked Shrike or Butcher Bird, which is known as "Lanicus Nubicus". A lot Scots dialect is being sung by Ives and MacDonald, who were singing "Wha Hae the 42nd" in the Fourth of July scene just before "Tom" is discovered

-The character Von Luger was based off Friedrich von Lindeiner-Wildau. Similar to von Luger, the real commandant was an Oberst (Colonel), a general staff officer and winner of the "Blue Max" medal. However, there are pictures on the wall of his office showing WWI planes. Von Lindeiner-Wildau earned his Blue Max medals in the East Africa campaigns from 1905-1907 and served as an infantry officer before and during WWI. He retired from the Army in 1919 and only joined the Luftwaffe in 1937 as an invitation from Hermann Goering

-Danny "The Tunnel King" is seen suffering from claustrophobia, only made worse when the tunnel lights go out during the air raid. Paul Brickhill, who wrote the book the movie is based on, was also claustrophobic. He was originally given an early spot in the escape line, but backed out when his condition became known and he started having a panic attack. He was dropped to the bottom of the list and he credits this for saving his life

-The last surviving escapee from the real escape, Dick Churchill, died in 2019 at the age of 99

-The motorcycle that Hilts rides is a radically changed Triumph TR6 Trophy. Bud Ekins, who performed some of the stunts, was a Triumph dealer. This was Steve McQueen's favorite motorcycle brand. The motorcycle with sidecar attached that crashes into the ditch was also a Triumph. These British-made motorcycles were not around in WWII and their appearance is a history error. Especially considering if the Nazis used them, the motorcycles would have been German-made, such as BMW motorcycles because the Nazis had preferred using German-made products

-The Germans confined any enemy pilots in the Luftwaffe prisons, no matter the military they serve. This explains Ashley-Pitt, a Royal Navy pilot in Luft Stalag III

-The nationalities of some of the POWs were changed to emphasize Americans and de-emphasize Commonwealth (Britain) and other Allied military



-Group Captain Ramsey is based on actual Senior British Officer Herbert Massey. Massey was injured when he was shot down and walked with an obvious limp which kept him from partaking in the escape attempt. James McDonald, who plays Ramsey, walks with a walking stick and a limp as a tribute to Massey

-The gold medallion around Steve McQueen's neck was a gift from his wife

-Most of the planes on the airfield that Henley and Blythe go to are American AT-6 Texan trainers painted with a German design. The one they fly, however, is an actual German-made plane, a Bucker Bu 181 "Bestmann"

-The three POWs who successfully escape were Norwegians Per Bergsland and Jens Muller (who escaped to Sweden by taking a train from Sagan to Stettin via Berlin) and Dutchman Bram van der Stok (who travelled across Europe to Spain)

-The scene where the POWs are brewing vodka and the Americans celebrate Independence Day is thought to be based on the British creating an alcohol distillery for Christmas Day celebrations in 1943. Capt. Guy Griffiths was a Royal Marine pilot in Luft Stalag III who produced forged documents for the escape. He also produced a comical illustration of the scene that survived to this day. The illustration shows the basis of a Special Exhibition on "Griff" at the Royal Marines Museum in Southsea, England from Easter 2010

-The uniforms of the guards at the camp are a mix of Luftwaffe branches. The officers and half of the guards are wearing gold yellow collar patches, marking them as air crew, which includes ground personnel and pilots. Strachwitz, the senior NCO, and other enlisted crew, wear red collar patches, marking them as anti-artillery crew

-The German cast members were cast out of Munich and they had their own experiences with war. Hannes Messemer was captured on the Eastern Front by the Soviet Army, escaped and walked hundreds of miles to the German border. Til Kiwe served time in an American prison camp in Arizona and tried to escape 17 times

-In the scene where Hilts is getting as much wood as possible for the tunnels, he takes the wood boards from under the beds. When Cavendish gets in bed, not realizing too many boards are missing and crashes through the bunks, this is reminiscent of a real event that took place at Luft Stalag III. Trying to scrounge as much wood as possible, Roger Bushell, who Richard Attenborough's character Roger Bartlett is based on, set an example for his bunkmates. He donated boards from his bunk and used a string system to keep the mattresses in place. But when he lay down on them, Roger came crashing through the bunk on top of his bunkmate because the strings gave way

-The medal the Colonel von Luger is wearing around his neck is the Blue Max medal or the Pour le Merite. This was a Prussian military award from WWI and given automatically to pilots who shot down eight planes, but later sixteen. The Nazis replaced it with the Knight's Cross, but it could still be worn by those who had received the award before the takeover of the Third Reich

-Danny says that all he could say in Russian was "I love you". Charles Bronson was highly fluent in Russian and spoke it as his first language since childhood

-Donald Pleasence, who played Blythe the Forger, was an actual military member during WWII. He was an aircrewman in the Royal Air Force whose plane was shot down. He was captured and tortured by the Nazis. He kindly offered advice to director John Sturges, but was told, politely, to keep his "opinions" to himself. Later on, another actor told him that Pleasence had actually served in the military during WWII and was imprisoned in an actual German POW camp. From then on, Sturges asked Pleasance for technical advice and input on how to make everything historically accurate





-Jud Taylor, who played Goff, mentioned that the camp looked so authentic that from outside, you would have thought it was a real German POW camp. One day, he approached a man walking his dog who looked very disturbed and distressed. When asked what was wrong, the man told him he thought that was a real camp again. Taylor told him a movie was being filmed here and that the German POW camp he saw was not real, just a set. The man was greatly relieved to know that

-Charles Bronson, who was the chief tunneller, had brought his own experience and expertise to the set. He worked as a coal miner before turning to acting. He gave director John Sturges advice on how to move the dirt. As a result from working as a coal miner, he developed claustrophobia, just as his character had










-Several of the cast members were actual POWs during WWII. Donald Pleasance (Blythe the Forger) was a POW in the German Luft Stalag I. Hannes Messemer (von Luger) was in a Russian camp. Til Kiwe (Frick) and Hans Reiser (Herr Kuhn) were in an American camp. Pleasance described the set as a very historically accurate representation of a German camp

Donald Pleasence


Hannes Messemer

Hans Reiser

Til Kiwe

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Solitaire (Clara Vine series #5) by Jane Thynne

This is the final book in the series
Summary
-1940 has come. WWII is still raging on. Anti-British propaganda is everywhere. Clara Vine is now facing a new mission. She is summoned to the office of German High Command officer Joseph Goebbels. He sends her on a mission to Paris to spy for the Nazis, unaware she has been spying on them for years and sending this information to British Intelligence. Despite the fact she does not like being told to be a spy for the Nazis, she looks at the Paris trip as a way to escape to her home country of Britain.

The Pursuit of Pearls (Clara Vine series #4) by Jane Thynne

This is the fourth book in the series
Summary
-With 1939 starting, the drums of war are still pounding. Clara Vine is still pumping out movies at Ufa Studios, which is now Nazi-run and churning out movies to appeal to the masses. She is still spying on the Nazi elite and passing it to British Intelligence, with out trying to arouse suspicion from those she spies on. She is incredibly shocked to find out that a young woman named Lottie Franke, who was studying under Clara to learn about fashion design, is murdered on the grounds of the Faith and Beauty School, just one of a dozen Bride Schools and other culture-based schools to groom women into the perfect Nazi wives. The press have a field day, claiming this is the act of a mad man, but Clara will investigate to see if it is just that or her death was the result of trying to keep a secret

The Scent of Secrets (Clara Vine series #3) by Jane Thynne

This is book #3. This series is good for those who love WWII-era historical fiction with a touch of romance
 
Summary
-Clara Vine is back. This time she's in Paris, taking a lovely break away from the hustle and bustle of Berlin. She's in Paris, doing research for an upcoming film. She is approached by a member of British Intelligence, who hands her a mission that seems impossible-get close to Eva Braun and learn as much as you can. Clara is horribly confused about how she is even going to get close to Hitler's secretive girlfriend. Eva Braun is Hitler's secret girlfriend, a woman with a fragile mental state and kept almost a virtual prisoner, away from the prying eyes of Berlin. She manages to do it and in the process learns that Eva desperately wants to pursue acting as a career and even introduce her own line of perfume, which she will call The Scent of Secrets.

Woman in the Shadows (Clara Vine series #2) by Jane Thynne

This is the second book in the series
Summary
-1937. Berlin. Actress Clara Vine is on her way to the top. Her success at Ufa Studios is on the rise and in other parts of Berlin, so is Nazism and raging support for the German High Command. She takes on her daily life-acting at Ufa Studios, partying it up and befriending Nazi wives like Magda Goebbels, Annaliese von Ribbontrop, Emmy Sonnemann and of course passing on information to British Intelligence.

-Of course, her focus on this is shattered by the death of someone close to her. Anna Hansen was a dancer in one of Berlin's more notorious dance clubs. Out of the blue she goes from dancing in those clubs to attending one of Hitler's notorious Bride Schools, a series on institutions created to groom women into perfect Nazi wives. When she is found dead on the grounds of the school, the school is only too eager to hush it up. Clara is determined to investigate it while trying to keep one step ahead of the Gestapo, who is also investigating

Black Roses (Clara Vine series #1) by Jane Thynne

This is one of those series of books that seems to take place during WWII. A lot of people, including myself, seem to be interested in that particular era of history. Maybe it's because there are so many intricate events during that time? Who knows! Even when it's historical fiction, it's still great to read about. This particular series, by British author Jane Thynne, centers around a half German, half English actress named Clara Vine who gets involved with the spy game, spying for British intelligence while working at a Nazi-run studio in Berlin, the very heart of Nazi Germany, called Ufa Studios
Summary
-Berlin, 1933. Half German, half English actress Clara Vine has just stepped foot in Berlin, hoping to make it in the movie industry. Her biggest hope is start working at the famed Ufa Studios, known for making stars out of people like Marlene Dietrich. But fate has other plans. By the purest of chances, Clara ends up befriending Magda Goebbels, Annaliese von Ribbentrop and Emmy Sonneman, whose husbands are members of the German High Command. Hitler now has plans to create a master race, a pure white Aryan race and as a result, Clara is approached by Leo Quinn, who asks her to take a chance and spy for Britain, since she is friends now with the wives of the German High Command

Hogan's Heroes (1965)

This show is one of my favorites. It's hilarious. You almost can't believe the Nazis are so stupid on this show, rofl!!! I love the part in the opening credits where the exit for the escape tunnel comes out underneath a German Shepherd's doghouse and the dogs are just looking at them with that adorable, friendly look on their face, rofl!!
Summary
-Inmates from various military forces at a German prisoner of war camp concoct spy and sabotage missions right under the noses of their Nazi minders





Cast
-Bob Crane: Col. Hogan
-Werner Klemperer: Col. Klink
-John Banner: Sgt. Schultz
-Richard Dawson: Newkirk
-Robert Clary: LeBeau
-Larry Hovis: Carter
-Ivan Dixon: Kinchloe
-Leon Askin: Gen. Burkhalter
-Sigrid Valdis: Hilda
-Howard Caine: Maj. Hochstetter
-Dave Morick: Corporal Sontag
-John Cedar: Cpl. Langenscheidt
-Leonid Kinskey: Vladamir Minsk

Did You Know?
-Werner Klemperer, Howard Caine, Leon Askin, John Banner, who played German High Command officers Klink, Hochstetter, Burkhalter and Schultz, were in real life Jewish. They all served in the US Armed Forces during WWII. Klemperer was born in Cologne, Germany. Banner and Askin were born in Vienna, Austria. The three of them had emigrated to the US, fleeing the Nazi regime. Werner Klemperer is half Jewish.

Werner Klemperer as Col. Klink
Howard Caine as Major Hochstetter
Leon Askin as General Burkhalter
John Banner as Sgt. Schultz.
I don't know why, but the look on his face is hilarious!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
-Robert Clary, who played French military officer LeBeau, was a survivor of The Holocaust
-Larry Hovis, who played Sgt. Andrew Carter, refused to remove his wedding ring for the show. Because of this, he is almost always seen wearing gloves
-Despite the fact that the show was incredibly popular on air, the show was canceled because it was suggested that the show appealed to older or rural audiences like The Beverly Hillbillies or Green Acres did.
-Richard Dawson, who plays RAF officer Newkirk, was told by then CBS president Mike Dann, to use a Cockney accent rather than his actual Liverpool accent. Dann thought that the Cockney accent would sound more familiar to those in America who watched the show. Then not too long after, The Beatles would become famous and successful in America, with their strong Liverpool accents, thus having Americans more accustomed to hearing it. Dawson then claimed to bring this to the attention of Dann and joked with him about the decision



















-In the opening credits, the car seen leaving the camp is a Mercedes model G4 Parade Car. This car had six wheels, three axels and four wheel drive on the rear wheels. This and other Mercedes models were popular with the elite of the German High Command
-Despite the fact that Klink acts like a coward, he has various military decorations on his uniform, for his combat service in WWI and WWII
-The pilot episode of the show, shot in black and white, featured a Russian character played by actor Leonid Kinskey. He did not continue with the show because he did not feel comfortable being on a show with Nazi characters in a comedic setting
Leonid Kinskey
-As of April 1, 2018, the only cast members from the show that are still alive are Robert Clary (Corporal LeBeau) and Kenneth Washington (Sgt. Baker), who replaced Ivan Dixon
-Corporal LeBeau was nicknamed "Cockroach" because of his short height by Col. Klink and Sgt. Schultz
-John Banner, who plays Sgt. Schultz, died on his 65th birthday in his hometown of Vienna, Austria
-Whenever Hogan wanted to kiss up to Col. Klink, he would often call Col. Klink "The Iron Colonel" or "The Iron Eagle"
-Harold Gould, who played General Von Schlomm, was Jewish in real life. He served with the US Armed Forces during WWII
-Richard Dawson, who plays RAF officer Newkirk, was originally cast to play Hogan. But he felt that with his Liverpool accent it would be unbelievable for audiences in America
 
-While in the US Armed Forces, Leon Askin was a supply sergeant, Werner Klemperer was a technical sergeant and John Banner was a master sergeant. Howard Caine was in the US Navy and his rank is unknown



-When John Banner created the character Sgt. Schultz, he suggested that actors of Jewish descent play the German High Command officers. When asked why, he said "Well, who better to play Nazis than us Jews." He also joked that no matter what he did, he could never get past the rank of Sergeant
-The scar on General Burkhalter's face is from an old duel. But it's not a fake. He actually got the scar from being beaten brutally by the real Nazi SS simply for being Jewish. His birth name is Leo Aschkenasy
-It was the idea of Werner Klemperer to have Col. Klink carry a riding crop and wear a monocle.