Trivia Tuesday: How did Damian Lewis transform into Dick Winters?

‘It’s very authentic, dripping in sincerity, there’s nothing sensational about it. It had a docu-drama feel to it which people responded to. –Damian Lewis on Band of Brothers

bandofbrothers

We earlier blogged about how a 29-year old British actor Damian Lewis got cast to play all-American WWII hero Dick Winters as well as the deft and the charisma with which Damian Lewis came to immortalize Dick Winters on small screen. However, we still have a black box between the casting and the shoot: How did Damian Lewis TRANSFORM into Dick Winters?

DLDW

Well… Once he gets the part, the two Hollywood giants Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks leave the room and Tony To, the executive producer, asks: “Hey Damian, how’d you like to go to boot camp in March?”

Ha! The boot camp… It is, in fact, what FILLS the black box I’ve been talking about… The Transformation, quoting Damian himself, from “a rice pudding” to a “celery stalk” 🙂

source: HBO
source: HBO

Here’s Damian Lewis’ short version of Band of Brothers boot camp from an interview with Dish Magazine!

“I looked a little like a rice pudding before,” Lewis says, “and afterwards, like a stick of celery… the love handles went, the flabby arms went.” The actor, who says his knowledge of WWII before BAND OF BROTHERS was “the ten greatest hits,” soon got a taste of what these soldiers went through to prepare for battle. He remembers one day hanging in under the watchful eye of Captain Dale Dye, doing 70 pushups, and then felt his arms go to Jell-O. “I’m watching you, Winters,” Dye bellowed, “You better not give up on me, Winters.” Lewis says it took him as long to get to the requisite 80 pushups as it had taken him to do the first 70. “I felt like I was in ‘Full Metal Jacket,'” he adds ruefully.

And if you are interested, and I know you are, here is the long version of what Damian Lewis goes through to transform into Dick Winters: We have a diary kept by Damian Lewis during the boot camp and later published in Daily Mail in October 2001.

CURRAHEE!

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source: HBO

BOOT CAMP AT LONGMOOR, NEAR PETERSFIELD, HAMPSHIRE, MARCH 23:

DAY 1: ‘You better not give up on me Winters. I’m watching you Winters.’
I’m on my 70th sit-up. I’ve been given a personal trainer to get in shape and
for the moment it seems to be working. But I’m on my way to 80 and my stomach has cramped. Captain Dale ‘no namby-pamby actor s**t’ Dye, a Vietnam veteran, is hulked over me and letting me know who’s in charge. It’s the first morning of a ten-day basic training. It’s 6am, we’ve been on a five-mile run and now we’re being watched doing 45 minutes of physical training. All before breakfast. Captain Dye addresses us only by our character names. We’re not allowed to have mobile phones or contemporary literature. We’re in 1942, whether we like it or not. Already he is instilling in us the feeling that we are special, or will be if we make it. This drive for authenticity is exhilarating. All I know is, the deeper I involve my imagination and give him the ‘heart’ he asks for, the more rewarding all this will be. Tom Hanks made it perfectly clear in a trademark tub-thumping speech to us all that we have a social responsibility to document this period of history as accurately as possible. I think he’s right. I’m the lead role in this show, which is going to be seen by millions of people worldwide and has a budget of £86 million. When I’m Damian Lewis, I’m nervous. When I’m Dick Winters, I can do anything. Now that’s drama therapy.

DAY 2: ‘Who’s Winters? Who’s playin’ him? Is he English?’ There are murmurs in the camp – a lot of the guys don’t know who I am yet. Is this where the trouble starts? I brace myself for a bit of Limey bashing, but incredibly, I seem to have the full respect of all the men resent. People are asking for my opinions and calling me ‘Sir’. Suddenly it’s clear I’m in a 24-hours-a-day, ten-day Method rehearsal. I think to myself, ‘If they want Method. I’ll give them Method,’ and start dishing out a lot more orders.

DAY 3: The training regime in the mornings is now established. We run in
formation and sing: ‘Mama, Mama, can’t you see, what the Airborne’s done to me?’ Singing together makes the five miles easier. I feel like I’m in a movie already, not preparing for one. Guard duty tonight. Each man is to patrol the perimeter for one hour, in temperatures below zero. It’s too cold to sleep, but I don’t think sleep is valued particularly highly around here.

source: telegraph.co.uk
source: telegraph.co.uk

DAY 6: Promotion today. I’m now Captain Dick Winters. Injuries have started to happen. David Schwimmer [Herbert Sobel] has twisted his knee performing field manoeuvres and has become ‘officer in charge of cigarettes’. Thankfully, Schwimmer is taking his responsibilities seriously. With no booze for ten days, people are smoking furiously. Neal McDonough [Buck Compton] has cut his lip open with the butt of an M1 rifle and has had stitches without anaesthetic. ‘Well Buck wouldn’t have had anaesthetic, ‘ he chimes, grinning widely.

DAY 7: We have a massive simultaneous attack today on a train. With a six-man training team sniping (with blanks) at our 50-man company. I lead the assault. It’s a total disaster. I’m shot so many times I feel like a sieve.I fail to control the men. I get torn apart by Captain Dye, who tells me I’d better get them in order. I’m so immersed by now, believing that I’m in 1942 and that I’m Dick Winters, that I go and hand out the biggest roasting in military history to my men. And what’s more, I expect to be listened to.

source: denofgeek.com
source: denofgeek.com

DAY 8: We move into our week of jump training today. There’s one major
problem. I’m scared of heights. Thankfully, today is spent jumping off chairs on to mattresses, practicing our falls and rolls.

DAY 9: We visit RAF Brize Norton for a day in jumping school. Today I’m going to jump off a 60ft tower screaming from the top of my lungs ‘One thousand, two thousand, three thousand, four thousand. . .’ After this, you’re supposed to open you chute. Looking up, the platform doesn’t seem so high. Looking down, I want to cry. I can’t hold on to anything because I can’t get any grip. My palms are sweating too heavily. A jump trainer edges me out. I look straight ahead at the horizon and leap into the void. I land about five seconds later. I’ve done it. Parachuting becomes addictive. Apparently.

DAY 10: The day of the ‘propblast’, airborne slang for big drink. Boy, do we need alcohol. It’s been ten days of authentic military training and everyone is incredibly proud to have got through it. So we all get drunk and hug each other a lot.”

source: tumblr
source: tumblr

Well-deserved, guys!

Damian Lewis also gets to spend time with real Dick Winters, who basically led his men all the way from the beaches of Normandy to Hitler’s Bavarian headquarters. Damian describes real Winters as “quite a difficult man to get to know, withdrawn, not given to long exuberant anecdotes about the war. A brilliant soldier with an extraordinary gift of leadership, and his men loved him.”

source: People Magazine
source: People Magazine

Damian tells about how he was able to meet and get to know Dick Winters in a preface he wrote in September 2004 for the book Biggest Brother: The Life of Major Dick Winters, The Man Who Led the Band of Brothers by Larry Alexander.

“Dick kept a diary at the war. He wrote letters home. He had several folders of memories. And I had them all for research. But I had never met him. At boot camp I called him for the first time, and through a series of phone calls I set about slowly trying to earn his trust. What emerged as I got to know him was a man not given to late night in bars, reminiscing, not given to romanticizing his past glories. He was a man whose recollections were analytical, pragmatically ordered, not emotional, a man who was much happier answering questions on technical maneuvers or what boot he wore his knife on (the left by the way), than what he felt, as he found himself isolated from his men, staring at a whole company of Germans, on top of that dyke in Holland, for example. “I was always just concentrating on getting the job done, ” would be his typical reply. It dawned on me what a happy coincidence it was that I had felt slightly removed from the “hype” at the beginning of the job, a little detached. For it was precisely his ability to distance himself from any hysteria and to remain calm and lucid in moments of danger that made Dick Winters a natural leader of men. But not only that. Once I had his trust, I found a warmth, a wickedly dry sense of humor and a willingness to listen that is not often found in men of power.”

source: pinterest.com
source: pinterest.com

And, in an interview with The Guardian Damian says he “had exhaustive conversations with the producers about the fact that Richard Winters is still alive… We were adamant that we had to be as true to him as possible, true to the essence of the man.’ But that didn’t mean doing a vocal imitation. ‘He’s Pennsylvania Dutch Mennonite… He would sound Canadian to us. He had a very puritanical upbringing, no drinking, no swearing. Incredible moral rectitude and a sense of what’s right and wrong. And, of course, he has a natural economy with words and emotions.”

And this is exactly how Damian Lewis portrays Dick Winters in Band of Brothers. As The Guardian rightly points out, the most striking in his performance as Dick Winters is “how much he managed to put across by doing so very little. What stuck in the memory from Band of Brothers was not sudden moments of great heroism, but Lewis’s immense stillness in the face of the clatter and incident of war.”

Well done, sir!

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Author: Damianista

Academic, Traveler, Blogger, Runner, Theatre Lover, Wine Snob, Part-time New Yorker, and Walking Damian Lewis Encyclopedia :D Procrastinated about a fan's diary on Damian Lewis for a while and the rest is history!

8 thoughts on “Trivia Tuesday: How did Damian Lewis transform into Dick Winters?”

  1. I am now feeling the need for another BOB re-watch. Damian is enthralling in his own right and his diary is straight to the point. Thunbs up for another blog with great insight on BoB.

    1. Thank you, Bookworm! So true about his diary – We are so lucky to have found it, feels like a treasure and it just feels right that he’s also a writing man!!! My husband will be on a 10 day trip soon and my plan is a BIG BoB re-watch! Oh yes hubbie know my plans, too 🙂

  2. Thank you for this ^^ Damian’s job was amazing and I think it was a two way street for him – he gave his all to the project and learned and grew a ton in return.

    1. Thank so much for reading, Lee! I agree it was his big break into Hollywood in which he gave his 150% percent to the job – no wonder why viewers around the world adore his Major Winters and I am sure it was a HUGE learning experience for a young actor. Lucky him and Lucky US! <3

  3. I am so glad that I was given this information to read. I cannot imagine what he had to go through to bring 1942 back to life. Now I can understand why BOB was done so amazing well.

  4. Yet another wonderful post. I’m so glad all of you are doing this blog about the one actor I for some reason decided to follow and make my favorite actor. I’ve never followed an actor like this before and I used to be an actor myself.

    And I love Band of Brothers so much. It wasn’t exactly what my father did in WWII but it takes me to that time and is so authentic. He was in the Air Force but was not a paratrouper. I can imagine my young father (24?) flying in bombers over Germany and then wandering around Germany right after the war ended. There was a lot of confusion then and they often didn’t know exactly where to go or what to do. But they moved on to each location until they got more information. I always thought of him as shy but he knew how to have fun and enjoyed adventure.

    His war experience is still something of a mystery to me as he never talked about it that much. But it was a huge part of his life, a huge experience. He was a shy young handsome Southern boy leaving home for the first time. I’m glad someone kept my father alive during the war as Dick Winters did many of his fellow soldiers. I know of at least one fellow airman he keeps in touch with. Or that my sister contacts for him. Damian is a great writer.

    Ann
    NYC

    1. Thank you so much, Ann! We are so happy doing this blog and we are even happier if it puts smiles on our readers’ faces! Thank you for reading!

      I have always loved film and theater and actors, but I admit I have never followed any actor like this before, either. I am telling you, this red headed Brit came along in disguise as Brody and turned everything upside down 😀

      Band of Brothers is probably the best, at least one of the best, WWII series ever made. And I am not even a big Spielberg fan. I think his films are very white and black, but he lets BoB go to gray areas which I like the most about the show. They are all heroes in the end, but they are first and foremost human beings.

      Your dad’s story is amazing. You know that it is all real but having someone in your family that lived it all is simply incredible.

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