Daily Mirror

PoWs’ silence on Japanese horror camps

MARK RYLANCE Actor

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MARK Rylance plays boat-owning civilian Mr Dawson in the film – one of the hundreds of people approached by Churchill to help rescue the men using the so-called Little Ships.

But while Mark’s ancestors were not at Dunkirk, the 57-year-old is only too aware of the suffering soldiers went through between 1939 and 1945.

Both his grandfathe­rs were prisoners of war in Japan.

Mark has said they never spoke of the full horror they saw. He chooses to instead remember the peaceful days spent in one of his grandfathe­r’s gardens in Kent as a boy.

But the Japanese camps were renowned for being brutal. It is estimated more than a quarter of Western PoWs lost their lives in Japanese captivity, while there were stories of starvation, rampant disease and men being worked to death.

The star, who won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Bridge of Spies, was signed on to star in Steven Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun, which tells the story of a man who became a PoW in such a camp, but he pulled out in favour of a theatre project – where he ended up meeting his wife.

“Steven gave me four hours to choose. I chose the theatre, and I met my wife!” he said. Mark’s great friend, the late actor Jimmy Gardner, pictured left, was also a likely inspiratio­n for Mark when he was researchin­g the Dunkirk role. During the Second World War, Jimmy – who died aged 86 in 2010 – served in the RAF with No 10 Squadron. He was awarded the Distinguis­hed Flying Medal after completing 30 sorties as a rear gunner of a Halifax aircraft.

Mark wrote an obituary in which he said: “The survivor of two shipwrecks and innumerabl­e escapades on land… his life was the stuff of legend.”

 ??  ?? MISSION Rylance on tiller in the film
MISSION Rylance on tiller in the film
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