| Dale Dye | |
|---|---|
| Born October 8, 1944 | |
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| Place of birth | Cape Girardeau, Missouri |
| Allegiance | United States of America |
| Service/branch | United States Marine Corps |
| Years of service | 1964–1984 |
| Rank | |
| Unit | |
| Battles/wars | Vietnam War |
| Awards | Bronze Star Purple Heart (3) |
| Other work | Actor Radio host |
Dale Adam Dye (born October 8, 1944) is an American actor, presenter, businessman, and retired U.S. Marine Captain who served in combat during the Vietnam War.
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Biography
Early life & Marine service
Dye was born in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, the son of Della Grace (née Koehler) and Dale Adam Dye.[1] He graduated from the Missouri Military Academy as an Officer Cadet. Lacking money for college, he joined the U.S. Marine Corps in January 1964 and was sent to Vietnam. He served in Vietnam as a Marine Correspondent from 1964–1965, and from 1967–1970, surviving 31 major combat operations. During the war he received a Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts for wounds suffered in combat.
He spent thirteen years as an enlisted Marine, rising to the rank of master sergeant. He was chosen to attend Officer Candidate School and was appointed a warrant officer in 1976. He later converted his commission and was made a captain. Dye was well-known in the tight-knit community of the Marine Combat Correspondents in Vietnam. It was fellow Marine correspondent Gustav Hasford who dubbed him "Daddy D.A" (as he was among the oldest of the correspondents) and included him as a character in his first semi-autobiographical Vietnam novel, The Short-Timers, and (even more extensively) in his second, The Phantom Blooper. The movie based on Hasford's first novel, Full Metal Jacket, included the "Daddy D.A" character, (played by Keith Hodiak) though neither the character nor Dye's name is explicitly mentioned in the dialogue.
In his book Dispatches, journalist Michael Herr provides a vivid picture of Dye during the chaos of the Tet Offensive and the Battle of Huế:
"And there was a Marine correspondent, Sergeant Dale Dye, who sat with a tall yellow flower sticking out of his helmet cover, a really outstanding target. He was rolling his eyes around and saying, 'Oh yes, oh yes, Charlie's got his shit together here, this will be bad,' and smiling happily. It was the same smile I saw a week later when a sniper's bullet tore up a wall two inches above his head, odd cause for amusement in anyone but a grunt."
After serving as a captain in the Beirut Peacekeeping Force in 1982–83, he served in a variety of positions and got his B.A. in English from the University of Maryland University College. From 1983–84, Dye worked for the magazine Soldier of Fortune in Central America as he trained troops in guerrilla warfare in the countries of El Salvador and Nicaragua.
Founding Warriors, Inc. & other work
After his retirement in 1984 from the United States Marines, Dye founded Warriors, Inc., a California company that specializes in training actors for realistic military portrayals, for movies of the war genre. In the 1986 movie Platoon, he played Captain Harris and also served as military technical adviser for the movie.
Dye has also appeared in some of the films of which his company has served. He played a role in the movie Casualties of War and also played Colonel Robert F. Sink in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, on which his company also worked, and is now beginning a directing career. He appeared in "Outbreak" portraying Lieutenant Colonel Briggs, a US Army officer. He has a small role in Saving Private Ryan as an aide to General George Catlett Marshall as well as a role playing the Admiral's aide, Captain Garza, in Under Siege. He has another small role in Spy Game as Commander Wiley during the rescue sequence, in Mission Impossible as Frank Barnes of CIA, in JFK as General Y, and in Starship Troopers as a high-ranking officer in the aftermath of the Brain Bug capture. ("What's it thinking, Colonel?")
Additionally, Dye hosts a Sunday evening radio show on KFI AM 640, Los Angeles. Dye has also been involved in the Medal of Honor series of video games as a consultant. He was a character in Medal of Honor: European Assault as well as Medal of Honor: Rising Sun and was featured in two tracks on Hoobastank's CD Every Man for Himself. He has also hosted The History Channel's documentary series The Conquerors. He consulted for Lucas Art 2008 scheduled Fracture video game as well as appearing in a cameo role as Col. Robert Sink (Commander of the 101st Airborne Division's 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment) in the video game Brothers In Arms: Hell's Highway.
Dye is currently working on the HBO companion piece to Band of Brothers, the ten-part mini-series The Pacific, which was shot in Australia with Captain Dye working as a unit director shooting the Marines' major battles in the Pacific including Guadalcanal, Cape Gloucester, Peleliu, Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
Dye was also the technical adviser for the 1994 Oliver Stone movie Natural Born Killers.
Military awards
Dye's military decorations include:
Bronze Star with 'V' for Valor (Vietnam 1968)
Purple Heart (3)
Meritorious Service Medal (Okinawa)
Joint Service Commendation Medal
Navy Commendation Medal (2) with combat 'V' (Vietnam and Beirut)
Air Force Commendation Medal
Navy Achievement Medal with Combat 'V' Device
Combat Action Ribbon (2) (Vietnam and Beirut)
Navy and Marine Corps Presidential Unit Citation (4)
Navy Unit Commendation (2)
Meritorious Unit Commendation (2)
Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal (4)
Marine Corps Expeditionary Medal
National Defense Service Medal
Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal
Vietnam Service Medal (8)
Humanitarian Service Medal
Sea Service Ribbon (4)
Overseas Service Ribbon
RVN Staff Service Medal - 1st Class
RVN Gallantry Cross Unit Citation with Palm
RVN Civil Action Unit Citation
RVN Vietnam Service Medal- Legionnaire, Order of Saint Maurice (Ancient and Honorable Order of Infantrymen)
Further reading
- Herr, Michael (1977). "Chapter 2: Hell Sucks". Dispatches. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 70–85.
See also
References
External links
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