Actors for `Black Hawk Down' trained at Fort Benning
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Posted 7:34AM on Friday, January 18, 2002
FORT BENNING - Eight years after entering Mogadishu's ``hornet's nest'' to aid Army Rangers and other U.S. Special Operations troops near a downed Black Hawk helicopter, Staff Sgt. Reese Teakell and a handful of other Rangers had a new mission. <br>
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They were assigned to teach a group of actors how to behave like Rangers for their roles in the film ``Black Hawk Down'' about the battle in Somalia. <br>
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About 20 actors, including Ewan McGregor, Josh Hartnett and Jason Isaacs, spent a week last year at Fort Benning under the direction of the Ranger Training Detachment for the 75th Regiment. <br>
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The soldiers were not starstruck. <br>
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``I didn't even know who Ewan McGregor was until Day Three,'' Teakell said. ``He was that Obi-Wan Kenobi guy in the last `Star Wars' movie, right?'' <br>
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Teakell said he and his colleagues knew they were not going to turn the actors into Rangers in a week. <br>
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``Rangers are confident. They have a certain persona. When they make a decision, they make it with authority,'' Teakell said. ``We had to squeeze five to nine years of experience into one week.'' <br>
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The actors assumed the names and ranks of the Rangers they portrayed and were treated like Rangers. They trained as a Ranger platoon, undergoing rigorous physical training through mountains and woods and learning how to fire weapons. <br>
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``A lot of time you see a 'John Wayne' just point and shoot without looking through the sight,'' Teakell said. ``That just doesn't work.'' <br>
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He acknowledged the emotional jolt he felt the first time he heard one of the actors call out the name of Sgt. Dominick Pilla, played by Danny Hoch. Pilla, a friend of Teakell's, died in the battle. <br>
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``The last time I saw someone wearing that name was Oct. 3, 1993,'' Teakell said. <br>
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``Black Hawk Down'' goes into wide release on Friday. When he and other Rangers got a preview last week, the mood was somber and reverent, Teakell said. <br>
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He said Rangers were taken aback by the ``realistic intensity'' of the Battle of Mogadishu. But, he said they chuckled and then tired of the actors' repeated usage of ``hoo-ah'' in the film. <br>
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The term is an affirmative common among regular U.S. Army soldiers. Rangers don't use it, preferring ``roger,'' instead. <br>
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He said it was ``unsettling'' to watch Pilla die again and that it brought back mental pictures he had ``put away in storage for awhile.'' <br>
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Even so, Teakell said he has put Mogadishu behind him. <br>
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``In order to do my job, I had to settle those feelings a long time ago,'' he said. <br>
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Teakell gave the movie a ``thumbs-up'' and said the actors did a good job portraying Rangers. <br>
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``The world knows so little of what and who the Rangers are. That is why it was so important to us to portray to the actors who we really are,'' he said.