The Arizona Republic

Donald Malarkey, vet portrayed in ‘Band of Brothers’ show, dies at 96

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SALEM, Ore. - Donald Malarkey, a World War II paratroope­r who was awarded the Bronze Star after parachutin­g behind enemy lines at Normandy to destroy German artillery on DDay, has died. He was 96.

Malarkey was one of several members of “Easy Company” to be widely portrayed in the HBO miniseries “Band of Brothers.” He died Sept. 30 in Salem, Oregon, of age-related causes, his sonin-law John Hill said Sunday.

Malarkey fought across France, the Netherland­s and Belgium and was surrounded at Bastogne with Easy Company during the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944.

He was often praised for his actions during the war and was presented with the Legion of Honor Medal — the highest honor awarded by the French government — in 2009.

Malarkey was haunted by memories of combat and the devastatio­n of losing fellow soldiers and friends, his family members said. Still, the release of the “Band of Brothers” miniseries was cathartic for him and helped him come to terms with his emotional scars, Hill said.

Malarkey was born July 30, 1921, in Astoria, Oregon. He was a freshman at the University of Oregon when he was drafted into the Army in 1942 and volunteere­d to become a paratroope­r.

He returned to the University of Oregon after the war, receiving a bachelor’s degree in business in 1948. While a student at the school, he met and fell in love with Irene Moore. The two married in 1948 and had four children — Michael Malarkey, Marianne McNally, Sharon Hill and Martha Serean.

Donald Malarkey met with historian Stephen Ambrose in 1987 and in 1989 traveled with other members of Easy Company to Europe to provide oral histories of their war experience­s. Those recollecti­ons became the basis for “Band of Brothers” and were used in books by Ambrose.

Malarkey also detailed his experience­s in a 2008 autobiogra­phy written with Bob Welch, “Easy Company Soldier.” Malarkey frequently was asked to speak about his experience­s in WWII, and he lectured at West Point and made trips to meet with wounded soldiers.

He remained close to the other surviving members of Easy Company and attended his final Easy Company reunion in Portland, Oregon, in August.

“You could look back and with great pride realize that you had done a very significan­t thing and acted responsibl­y in what amounted to saving the world,” Malarkey told Oregon Public Broadcasti­ng in 2012.

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