The Post

Marine-turned-actor forever remembered for ‘that’ role

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R Lee Ermey, actor; b March 24, 1944, Emporia, Kansas, United States; m Nila Ermey; d April 15; aged 74.

RLee Ermey was a Marine turned actor whose performanc­e as the brutal drill sergeant in Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket (1987) became seared on the memories of cinemagoer­s and raw recruits alike.

Ermey had initially been hired as a technical adviser to Kubrick on his antiwar satire, which follows a platoon of US Marines through their training and on to the battle-torn streets of Vietnam. Yet he had his eye on the crucial role of Gunnery Sgt Hartman and submitted his own audition tape: a recording of him berating the British actors hoping to play recruits.

Kubrick later recalled that about half of Sgt Hartman’s dialogue in the film itself – ‘‘specifical­ly the insult stuff’’ – was Ermey’s invention. Relentless, profane and often racially charged, its tone was establishe­d in the character’s opening words: ‘‘I am Gunnery Sergeant Hartman, your senior drill instructor. From now on you will speak only when spoken to, and the first and last words out of your filthy sewers will be ‘Sir’. Do you maggots understand that?’’

Ermey made a point of not going through lines with the actors – among them Matthew Modine and Vincent D’Onofrio – who played the raw recruits, so that the shock on their faces once the cameras rolled could be as authentic as possible. Instead, he practised his delivery in a 50ft-long rehearsal room, with Kubrick’s assistant Leon Vitali acting as drill sergeant to the drill sergeant, pelting him with oranges and tennis balls until he had delivered 20 perfect ‘‘takes’’ in a row.

Critics singled Ermey out for the authentici­ty of his performanc­e and he received a Golden Globe nomination. But he was at pains to point out that dramatic convenienc­e had occasional­ly won out over realism: a drill sergeant would never have hit his recruits across the face, for example, instead limiting himself to a ‘‘little slap in the solar plexus’’. Minor details aside, the film went down well with many in the Marine Corps. ‘‘I got nothing but compliment­s,’’ Ermey recalled. He went on to act in more than 70 other feature films, usually in the role of military man or hard-bitten authority figure.

Ronald Lee Ermey grew up on a farm just outside the city of Edwardsvil­le. His father was a strict disciplina­rian and Ermey recalled that he ‘‘got a beating every day whether I needed it or not’’. The family moved to Washington when he was a teenager and before long he was getting into trouble, joyriding and drinking. A judge eventually gave him the choice between jail or the military. He attended the Marine Corps boot camp in San Diego, was stationed in Vietnam for 14 months and did two tours in Okinawa, Japan, before retiring due to injury. Moving to Manila in the Philippine­s, he began studying drama and fell in with an American casting director who got him a job as a technical adviser and helicopter pilot on Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now (1979).

He also took a part as a drill instructor in The Boys in Company C (1978). His big break came with Full Metal Jacket, when he landed the advisory role by sending Kubrick an eight-page list of all the ‘‘inaccuraci­es’’ in the original novel. His subsequent films included Mississipp­i Burning (1988), Toy Soldiers (1991) and Seven (1995). He reprised the sergeant role in a more light-hearted vein with the Toy Story films (as the voice of the inchhigh plastic Sarge), and in episodes of The Simpsons and Family Guy.

A board member of the National Rifle Associatio­n and a spokesman for the firearms company Glock, he was also part of a competitiv­e rifle-shooting team that included Donald Trump Jr. He is survived by his wife Nila and by their four children.

— The Daily Telegraph

 ??  ?? Ermey featured in more than 70 films.
Ermey featured in more than 70 films.

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