- The Man Who Never Was
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This article is about a book based on a true story. For the 1966 television series, see The Man Who Never Was (TV series). For the episode of The Sarah Jane Adventures, see The Man Who Never Was (The Sarah Jane Adventures).
The Man Who Never Was is a nonfiction 1953 book by Ewen Montagu and a 1956 Second World War war film, based on the book and dramatising actual events. It is about Operation 'Mincemeat', a 1943 British Intelligence plan to deceive the Axis powers into thinking Operation 'Husky', the Allied invasion of Sicily, would take place elsewhere.
The film was directed by Ronald Neame and starred Clifton Webb as Lt. Cmdr. Ewen Montagu, Gloria Grahame as Lucy Sherwood, Robert Flemyng as Lt. George Acres, Josephine Griffin as Pam, Stephen Boyd as Patrick O'Reilly, Laurence Naismith as Adml. Cross, Geoffrey Keen as Gen. Nye, André Morell as Sir Bernard Spilsbury, Michael Hordern as Gen. Coburn and William Squire as submarine commander Bill Jewell. It was entered into the 1956 Cannes Film Festival.[1] Nigel Balchin's screenplay won the BAFTA for that year.
Contents
Synopsis
Operation 'Mincemeat' involved the acquisition and dressing up of a human cadaver as a "Major William Martin, R.M." (born in Aberbargoed) and putting it into the sea near Huelva, Spain. Attached to the corpse was a brief-case containing fake letters falsely stating that the Allied attack would be against Sardinia and Greece rather than Sicily, the actual point of invasion. When the body was found, the Spanish Intelligence Service passed copies of the papers to the German Intelligence Service which passed them on to their High Command. The ruse was so successful that the Germans still believed that Sardinia and Greece were the intended objectives, weeks after the landings in Sicily had begun.
The screenplay of the film stayed as close to the truth as was convenient, with the remainder being fiction. For example, the Irish spy in the film is complete fabrication. Ewen Montagu declared that he was happy with the fictitious incidents which, although they didn't happen, may have happened. During filming, Montagu has a cameo role, that of an Air-Vice Marshall who has doubts over the feasibility of the proposed plan. It was described as a "surreal" moment when the real Montagu addresses his fictional persona, played by Webb.
The Goon Show
The BBC's popular radio comedy show, The Goon Show, made a send-up of the story of The Man Who Never Was and incorporated most of the regular Goon Show characters. Written by Spike Milligan and Larry Stephens, it was broadcast on March 20, 1956 and remade later and broadcast on February 17, 1958. Coincidentally, Peter Sellers (one of the Goons) provided the voice of Winston Churchill in the film, although the character did not appear in The Goon Show adaptation.
References
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: The Man Who Never Was". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/3650/year/1956.html. Retrieved 2009-02-04.
External links
Films directed by Ronald Neame 1940s Take My Life (1947)1950s Golden Salamander (1950) · The Card (1952) · The Million Pound Note (1954) · The Man Who Never Was (1956) · The Seventh Sin (1957) · Windom's Way (1957) · The Horse's Mouth (1958)1960s Tunes of Glory (1960) · Escape from Zahrain (1962) · I Could Go On Singing (1963) · The Chalk Garden (1964) · Mister Moses (1965) · A Man Could Get Killed (1966) · Gambit (1966) · Prudence and the Pill (1968) · The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969)1970s 1980s Categories:- 1953 books
- 1956 films
- World War II films
- Royal Navy in World War II films
- British films
- War films based on actual events
- Films directed by Ronald Neame
- Films shot in CinemaScope
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