There were a couple of memorable fictitious soldiers in M*A*S*H.
One was Private Charles Lamb, a name invented when Radar was trying to save a lamb from becoming the main course in a Greek feast held in honour of the 4077th. He sent the lamb back home to Iowa, and had discharge papers drawn up for Private Charles Lamb to divert suspicion away from what he was doing.
The second was Captain Tuttle, initially invented by Hawkeye and Trapper, who then find that they need to keep the ruse running. After awhile, almost everyone at the 4077th is convinced they have seen or met Tuttle, and eventually Hawkeye kills him off by having Tuttle leap out of a helicopter to tend a wounded soldier, but forget his parachute.
Robert Altman's movie MASH was released in 1970. It is a fictional account of the real MASH 8055 based in Korea. The book's author, Robert Hooker, was one of the MASH surgeons in 1950.
Chauvinistic, from Nicholas Chauvin, a French soldier. Probably fictional though
no it is fictional.
The bar on MASH is Rosie's Bar.
Kathe Leigh Mash's birth name is Kathe Lee Cuthbert.
The first name of the fictional character Smiley created by John Le Carre is George. He is a British intelligence officer in several of Le Carre's novels, including "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy."
No, the 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH) was a fictional unit depicted in the TV series "MAS*H." The show, set during the Korean War, was loosely based on the experiences of real-life MASH units, but there was no specific 4077th MASH in Korea.
The hamster's name was ' Dopey ' .
No.
Maxwell
Ranger
The name of the tent is The Swamp