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JEN: Do you think that the Stephen Ambrose book, Band of
Brothers, is a fair and accurate portrayal of what it was like in E Company?
LIPTON: It's a very accurate portrayal of E Company and the men
in E Company. Yes.
JEN: What do you think is the biggest misconception about war?
LIPTON: The biggest misconception might be that men getting wounded
has a pronounced effect on those who are still alive. Soldiers have a job to do and when some
are killed and some are wounded, you can't let that bother you. You don't let that bother you.
You go on to get the job done that you're there to do. Most civilians feel that the wounds
or the people getting killed have a profound effect on the other men but it doesn't have that
effect.
JEN: Do you think that the general public tends to glamourize war?
LIPTON: I think that probably they do. Combat is something that you
can't imagine, can only experience it. Before you experience combat, you can't know what it's
like and you don't even know what effect it will have on you. You don't know how you will react
to combat, but in combat situations funny things happen. Soldiers remember those funny things.
When we get together, we talk about those funny things. The public does glamourize combat
more than it should be glamourized. Combat is dead serious as far as the actual fighting is
concerned. Funny things do happen on the periphary though.
JEN: How do you think that being in E Company changed you?
LIPTON: When I went into the army, I was...I call myself a loner. I
accomplished things on my own. I felt that I...I was quite confident that I could accomplish
many things, but I did it on my own. In the army I saw Captain Winters, Captain Speirs and the
other officers were able to motivate a group of men and inspire a group of men, get those men
to work together as a team and accomplish much more than the men could do individually. I was
very impressed by their ability to organize men and motivate those men so I taught myself to do
it in the army and I've done it all my life after that. Instead of trying to accomplish things
on my own, I've organized groups of people to accomplish it. I've done that the rest of my
life since the army. That's the biggest change, I think, that the army had on me.
JEN: Do you think that the HBO special is a fair and accurate
portrayal of what it was like in E Company?
LIPTON: Oh yeah. It's about as accurate as you can get in pulling a
group of people together in front of cameras. In combat, of course, there isn't much standing
up and moving around. If you wanna show combat the way it really is, you'd have to have a
camera on each person because men are acting individually. In trying to portray that in combat,
you have to show more than one man. So you have to have more moving around than takes place
in actual combat, but the spirit of combat is what they captured perfectly in "Band of
Brothers."
JEN: Do you think they portrayed you correctly?
LIPTON: I think so. Donnie Wahlberg portrayed me and Donnie and I
talked several times a week on the telephone. He was in England and I was here. We talked
several times a week and some of the conversations would go on for almost an hour. What Donnie
was always trying to do was get inside my thoughts, into my feelings about the various things
that took place and that they were filming. He would tell me what they intended to film the
next day or the next several days. Donnie worked very hard. He was very dedicated on doing
the part correctly and so we did all that talking with each other to enable him to do that.
JEN: Do you feel that he was the right actor to portray you?
LIPTON: I can't think of another that would be better than Donnie.
He has become a close friend over these months. I really like Donnie. I can't think of another.
I've looked at the others, the other actors portraying the other E Company men and Donnie was
the right one for me.
JEN: What was it about him [Donnie] that made him the right person
to portray you?
LIPTON: I think he has somewhat the appearance I had. Not that I
have now, but the appearance I had back then. His general attitude. His dedication to the part
just as I was dedicated to the army. His general reactions, actions and reactions to the
different situations were a lot like my own.
JEN: So they did a good casting job?
LIPTON: Not just with me, but the actors for the other men. Those
actors were right for those men. Those various actors would not have been right for me, but
they were right for the others. I thought that was a wonderful casting job.
JEN: Is there anything you felt that the book and/or miniseries got
wrong?
LIPTON: The book of course we didn't allow anything to be wrong in
the book. Ambrose didn't write that alone. He corresponded regularly with us. We
corresponded with each other. We got together in meetings. So we were very careful, all of us,
to make sure the book portrayed things accurately. The miniseries got some small things wrong
that I would have changed but nothing glaringly wrong.
JEN: What would you have changed?
LIPTON: After we had taken the town of Foy outside Bastogne...in the
series they had the men get together in a group and sing. We could not do that in combat. If
we got together in a group like that, the Germans would have sent artillery shells at us. That
was an example of something I would have changed. It was not of major significance.
JEN: I was told another problem you had with the series is that they
used the "F"-word too much.
LIPTON: You know you're right on that. Not only the "F"-word, but
other profanities. We just didn't talk that way. That came later, I guess, in the Vietnam War.
In World War II we didn't talk that way. But it was in the Ambrose book as well. I can
remember in a certain place there, he says that these young men away from home, quite
independent used a lot of profanity (Band of Brothers p. 18), but he was wrong in that.
We didn't catch that and we didn't talk to him about leaving that out of the book because it
wasn't true. We didn't talk that way.
JEN: Did it surprise you when you learned that they wanted to make
the book into a miniseries?
LIPTON: Well it surprised me and pleased me. I knew that E Company
was an outstanding company. There were many outstanding combat companies in World War II. It
so happened that the book was written about E Company. So when it was decided and we heard
that HBO would make a miniseries on it, of course we were quite pleased and I would say
surprised.
JEN: If you could go back, would you participate in E Company
again?
LIPTON: Without a doubt. Great group of guys.
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