Daily Dispatch

Into the world of ‘Deep Throat’

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THIRTY-FIVE years ago last week Monday, Richard Nixon’s re-election campaign approved plans to bug Democratic Party offices at the Watergate complex, setting in motion the most notorious political scandal in US history.

Five members of the covert “White House Plumbers” taskforce were arrested six weeks later burglarisi­ng the building in Washington, and FBI agents establishe­d that the break-in stemmed from a sabotage campaign on behalf of Nixon.

Such was the resonance of the “Watergate” affair – which ultimately led to that US president’s downfall – that most significan­t scandals since have been appended with the suffix “gate”.

The ensuing political shockwaves reverberat­ed through the decades, spawning more than a dozen movies including Nixon (1995), Frost/Nixon (2008) and – first and most notably – All the President’s Men (1976).

Currently in post-production, Felt is the first attempt to tell the story uniquely from the viewpoint of FBI agent Mark Felt, unveiled years later as “Deep Throat”, the anonymous source for reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein during their investigat­ion into the scandal.

Starring Liam Neeson in the title role, the movie also features Tony Goldwyn – President Fitzgerald Grant III from ABC’s political show Scandal — as well as Diane Lane ( Trumbo, Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice).

“It’s a really great script, and Liam Neeson is going to be so great in it. It’s got a wonderful cast,” Goldwyn, 56, said.

The project, first announced 11 years ago and finally filmed in May and June, is directed by Peter Landesman, an author and foreign correspond­ent turned filmmaker.

It is being co-produced by Hollywood veteran Ridley Scott, his second collaborat­ion with Landesman following Concussion (2015), which starred Will Smith.

Felt was a longtime deputy to FBI chief J Edgar Hoover and was passed over to take over the bureau when its founding director died in May 1972.

The true identity of Woodward and Bernstein’s source remained an enduring mystery and Washington’s best-kept secret until the special agent – by then in his 90s – unmasked himself to Vanity Fair magazine in 2005.

“I’m the guy they call ‘Deep Throat’,” Felt, who died three years later, famously told family members.

Felt and his second-in-command, Ed Miller, were convicted in 1980 of having “conspired to injure and oppress the citizens of the United States” over Watergate, although both were eventually pardoned by Ronald Reagan.

“After Watergate, they pilloried Felt. It’s just such a weird thing. He was unfairly targeted but ultimately pardoned.

“He was a guy with a long, loyal career. When I read about it, it was a very unfair thing,” Goldwyn said.

The movie, due out next year, will reaffirm Goldwyn’s political chops after five years in Scandal and highprofil­e real-life appearance­s on the campaign trail for Hillary Clinton in last year’s presidenti­al election.

He said his character Fitz would find the chaos of President Donald Trump’s first 50 days – the nationwide protests, the halted travel bans and the persistent stories about links to Russia – “deeply disturbing”.

“I’m horrified by it and I think Fitz would be too.

“I’m a Democrat and Fitz is a Republican but Fitz is about as moderate a Republican as you could ever create,” he said. — AFP

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? DRAMATIC ROLE: Liam Neeson is to star as FBI agent Mark Felt, better known as ‘Deep Throat’, in the US Watergate scandal in upcoming movie ‘Felt’
Picture: GETTY IMAGES DRAMATIC ROLE: Liam Neeson is to star as FBI agent Mark Felt, better known as ‘Deep Throat’, in the US Watergate scandal in upcoming movie ‘Felt’

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