Livingston grabbed the key role briefly on his own series, hostage negotiator drama Standoff , a show that sadly only lasted a year, and his recent CV is obscure and nebulous at best. The same description applies to Scott Grimes, the Canadian actor whose later episodes performance as the bright and eager mortar man Donald Malarkey packed a significant punch after the Oregon boy lost his best friends during the Battle of the Bulge.
He also has graced the silver screen more than most of his fellow alumnus, with roles in Minority Report , Traitor , Flags of Our Fathers and as the antagonist to Al Pacino in 88 Minutes.
Already touched upon and noticeable in that breakdown is the recurring habit that has seen members of the on-screen company show up in pairs, trios and even quartets, reinforcing the allusion that they became a real life band during their intensive pre-shooting boot camp. It has shown up elsewhere, however. Wahlberg and Lewis both starred as main cast members in Dreamcatcher, though the former only shows up towards the end and the duo share the screen for one climactic scene interestingly and un-brotherly as the opposing forces of the final showdown.
Interestingly, this pair up saw them pitted on rival boats during the ferry bomb sequence, a trauma that like in BOB they manage to survive. There is further irony in the fact that Cobb departs the series under arrest, while in TDK it is Leitch who is a jumpsuit wearing convict. None of the quartet have significant roles one appears for a single episode, one shows up frequently but with barely any dialogue after all, and are fresh faced and hidden under helmets and unglamorous wartime grimaces.
Despite an aforementioned cast making an impression with plenty of face time in front of the camera, the little cogs went on to become part and parcel of the Hollywood machine, by much varying means. Interestingly, none of the four are American. Such a trip would lay bare the astonishing fact that the current toast of Tinseltown not only did star in BoB, he featured in eight of the ten episodes. Hoobler Walter G. Howard Clarence S.
Howell William A. Howell Bruce A. Hudgens Charles A. Hudson W. Hudson Richard H. Hughes, II Richard J. Hughes Richard F. Hughs Warren C. Huntley Charles F. Hussion Sherman M. Irish Eugene E. Ivie Eugene E. Jackson John A. Janovec Robert Jarrett Coburn M. Johnson Edward J. Joint George E. Jones Henry S. Jones Harold Wendell Jones, Sr.
Joseph M. Jordon Vernon Jordan John T. Julian William F. Kiehn Donald L. King Paul M. Kohler John R. Korb George Kramer William N. Kratzer Steven A. Kudla Harold H. Lager Paul E. Leonard Joseph A. Lesniewski Joseph D. Liebgott Quinton E. Lyall John C. Lynch Robert F. MacKay A. Mahmood Thomas Maitland Donald G. Malarkey Albert L. Mampre Robert A. Mann Robert K. Marsh John W. Martin Walter E. Martin Michael V. Massaconi Salve H.
Matheson Robert L. Mathews Jack F. Matthews Leo J. Matz Edward A. Mauser Arthur J. Mauzerall Robert Maxwell John G. Mayer William C. McCauley Earl J. McClung Thomas A. McCreary Robert A. McCutcheon William T. McGonigal, Jr. John McGrath Walter L. McKay James A. McMahon William E. Medved Thomas T. Mellett Joachim Melo Ynes M.
Mendoza Vernon J. Menze Kenneth D. Mercier Elmer T. Meth Max M. Meth William S. Metzler James W. Miller John N. Miller William T. Miller Franklin Milo Elmer T. Minne Alfred B. Montes Donald J. Moone James H. Moore Walter L. Moore Alton M. More Harvey H.
Morehead David E. Morris William E. Morris Stanley F. Motowski Sergio G. Moya Warren H. Muck Elmer L. Murray, Jr. Patrick H. Neil Norman W. Neitzke Henry E. O'Keefe Ernest L. Oats Gordon H. Orth Richard E. Owen Cecil M. Pace Ledlie R. Originally courtesy of Ralph Trapuzzano. Expanded revision courtesy of Joe Muccia. Thomas A. Peacock Alex M. Penkala, Jr.
Edwin E. Pepping Frank J. Perconte Ben M. Perkins Philip P. Perugini Cleveland O. Petty Roy E. Pickel David R. With most of the company scattered throughout the Cotentin Peninsula, many would form ad hoc units with paratroopers from other outfits until they could reorganize with Easy Company.
Winters would be promoted to captain and became the official commander of Easy Company after the death of Meehan had been confirmed. He would lead the unit until Holland, where he would be promoted to executive officer of 2nd Battalion. Norman Dike was assigned to lead Easy Company during the unit's time in Bastogne, but was relieved of command and replaced by 1st Lt.
Ronald Speirs during the Battle for Foy. Speirs would remain in this position for the rest of the war until the unit's deactivation. The company was deactivated and did not participate in any future war. In , it was reactivated, but only as a training unit.
It was a part of the 4th Brigade Combat Team until its deactivation in and transfer into 1st and 2nd brigade, but being housed by 3rd brigade Rakassans on Fort Campbell, KY. Band of Brothers Wiki Explore. Popular pages. Most visited articles 1st Lieutenant Norman S. Dike Jr. Ronald Speirs StSgt. Joseph J. Carwood Lipton. Carwood Lipton T
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