Albuquerque Journal

Character actor R. Lee Ermey dies

Former Marine played foul-mouthed drill instructor in ‘Full Metal Jacket’

- BY HARRISON SMITH

R. Lee Ermey, a character actor who drew on his experience as a Marine Corps drill instructor during the Vietnam War to portray the violent, howling sergeant in filmmaker Stanley Kubrick’s “Full Metal Jacket,” died April 15 at a hospital in Santa Monica, California. He was 74.

The cause was complicati­ons of pneumonia, said his manager, Bill Rogin.

Ermey, an 11-year veteran of the Marines, had more than 100 film and television credits, including as a voice actor in children’s television series and in the “Toy Story” movies, in which he played the plastic soldier Sarge. But he was best known for his gruff and profane roles in Vietnam films, beginning with a drill instructor part in “The Boys in Company C” (1978).

He had initially been hired as a military adviser for the film, but was reportedly cast after director Sidney J. Furie saw him teaching another actor how to play the role of the movie’s foul-mouthed sergeant.

“Jesus,” Ermey says in the film, delivering an expletive-laden speech to his latest batch of “maggots.” “How in the hell do they expect me to train ... Marines when they won’t even send me human ... beings to start with?”

Ermey, who went by “Gunny,” played an even more nightmaris­h instructor in “Full Metal Jacket” (1987), about a platoon of Marine recruits deployed to Vietnam. As with his earlier role, the part was inspired by his service as a drill sergeant at the Marine training center on Parris Island, South Carolina, where he said he and other instructor­s sometimes “raised a hand” to privates who failed to follow orders.

“My main objective was just basically to play the drill instructor the way the drill instructor was — now let the chips fall where they may,” he said in the 2001 documentar­y “Sarge!”

As Gunnery Sgt. Hartman, Ermey took the art of the insult to sadistic extremes, threatenin­g to “gouge out” the eyeballs of slow-moving recruits and then sexually abuse them. Ermey created about half his dialogue for the film, Kubrick said.

“In the course of hiring the Marine recruits, we interviewe­d hundreds of guys,” the director told Rolling Stone in 1987. “We lined them all up and did an improvisat­ion of the first meeting with the drill instructor. They didn’t know what he was going to say, and we could see how they reacted. Lee came up with, I don’t know, 150 pages of insults.”

Among Hartman’s preferred targets was a misfit named Lawrence (Vincent D’Onofrio), a name that Hartman said belonged only to “(gays) and sailors.” The sergeant dubbed him Gomer Pyle, after the simple-minded character in “The Andy Griffith Show.”

“Ermey plays a character in the great tradition of movie drill instructor­s, but with great brio and amazingly creative obscenity,” movie critic Roger Ebert wrote. “All situations in the Marines and in war seem to suggest sexual parallels for him, and one of the film’s best moments has the recruits going to bed with their rifles and reciting a poem of love to them.”

Ermey went on to appear in weapons-focused television series such as “Mail Call,” which reportedly became the History Channel’s highest-rated program when it premiered in 2002, and served as a board member for the National Rifle Associatio­n and a spokesman for Glock.

“I figure I’ve fought the Vietnam War five times,” he told the Associated Press in 1987.

 ?? RANDY DAVEY/THE JACKSONVIL­LE DAILY NEWS ?? Retired Marine Gunnery Sgt. R. Lee Ermey takes a break for a smoke outside New River Air Station’s Staff NCO club in Jacksonvil­le, N.C. in 2006.
RANDY DAVEY/THE JACKSONVIL­LE DAILY NEWS Retired Marine Gunnery Sgt. R. Lee Ermey takes a break for a smoke outside New River Air Station’s Staff NCO club in Jacksonvil­le, N.C. in 2006.

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