Quick Facts
Intro | American actor, presenter and businessman |
A.K.A. | Dale Adam Dye |
Is | Actor Military officer Soldier Officer Writer Television actor Journalist |
From | United States of America |
Field | Film, TV, Stage & Radio Journalism Literature Military |
Gender | male |
Birth | 8 October 1944, Missouri |
Age | 79 years |
Profiles |
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Biography
Dale Adam Dye, Jr. (born October 8, 1944) is an American actor, technical advisor, radio personality, and writer. Dye is also a retired U.S. Marine Corps officer and decorated Vietnam veteran. His company, Warriors, Inc., is the top technical adviser to Hollywood. Dye has also contributed his expertise and voice to video games.
Early life
Dale Adam Dye, Jr. was born on October 8, 1944, in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, to Dale Adam Dye, Sr. and Della Grace (née Koehler) Dye His father was a liquor salesman in and around St. Louis and took Dale with him as he visited working-class taverns. There he heard war stories from World War II veterans. One particular story about man-to-man fighting told by a Marine who said he had fought in the Pacific Theater arrested Dale's attention. He looked up the Battle of Iwo Jima that night and made up his mind to become a Marine. Dye was educated at St. Joseph's Military Academy in Chicago and the Missouri Military Academy
Military career
Dye had hoped to attend Annapolis, but after failing the entrance exam three times – "my math and science skills were weak, and my English skills were huge" – and having exhausted his family's meager funds getting through military academy, he enlisted in the Marines in January 1964. His unit was among the first to deploy to Vietnam in 1965. Officers in the unit noticed his keen observational skills and literary interest and encouraged him to reclassify as a combat correspondent. He became one of a very few Marine combat correspondents. He sent stories to military publications and to the home town newspapers of fellow Marines. As a correspondent, he saw more battle than many low-ranking infantrymen. Dye developed an immense respect for the grunts who took the brunt of any action.
Dye was wounded during the Tet Offensive in 1968. While recuperating in a rear area, the 2nd Battalion 3rd Marines, the unit he had traveled with, was preparing for Operation Ford. Dye persuaded the battalion commander to let him accompany the battalion as a war correspondent. During the next week, the battalion engaged in a number of fire fights with units of the North Vietnamese Army-NVA (People's Army of Vietnam). On 18 March 1968, Dye replaced an assistant machine gunner who had been killed. The machine gun position was isolated forward of the remainder of the battalion. Although he was wounded, Dye exposed himself to "intense enemy fire" to retrieve ammunition for the machine gun to help hold off NVA soldiers during an all-night firefight. During other engagements, he exposed himself to enemy fire in order to rescue several wounded Marines and a Navy corpsman. As a result of his actions, he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal with Combat "V" for heroism.
"Dye's heart is with the grunts," says Bob Rea, who worked with Dye as a combat correspondent during the worst of Tet. "He feels like he owes something to those people. He is a grunt wannabe." During three tours of duty in South Vietnam, he participated in 31 combat operations. During his 1967 to 1968 and 1969 to 1970 tours of duty, he was attached to two different battalions of the 1st Marine Division. Dye spent a total of 13 years as an enlisted Marine, rising to the rank of Master Sergeant before being appointed a warrant officer in 1976. This led to Dye receiving a commission as an officer, also known as being a "mustang." (An individual who is promoted from enlisted ranks to an officer is known as a mustang.) While he was a captain, he was deployed to Beirut for duty with the Multinational Force in Lebanon in 1982 and 1983. Shortly after his return, the Marine barracks were attacked and 241 Americans died.
Fellow Marine correspondent Gustav Hasford dubbed him "Daddy D.A" (as he was among the oldest of the correspondents) and included him as a character in his first semi-autobiographical Vietnam novel, The Short-Timers, and more extensively in his second, The Phantom Blooper. The movie based on Hasford's first novel, Full Metal Jacket, included the "Daddy D.A" character (played by Keith Hodiak), though neither the character nor Dye's name is explicitly mentioned in the dialogue.
In his book Dispatches, journalist Michael Herr provides a vivid picture of Dye during the chaos of the Tet Offensive and the Battle of Huế:
And there was a Marine correspondent, Sergeant Dale Dye, who sat with a tall yellow flower sticking out of his helmet cover, a really outstanding target. He was rolling his eyes around and saying, 'Oh yes, oh yes, Charlie's got his shit together here, this will be bad," and smiling happily. It was the same smile I saw a week later when a sniper's bullet tore up a wall two inches above his head, odd cause for amusement in anyone but a grunt.
Later career
Dye retired from the Marine Corps in 1984 and founded Warriors, Inc. The company specializes in training actors in war films to portray their roles realistically and provides research, planning, staging, and on-set consultation for directors and other film production personnel. His company is the top military consultant to Hollywood. While on active duty, Dye was a combat correspondent and earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Maryland University College. After retiring, Dye became a correspondent for Soldier of Fortune Magazine. He worked for the magazine for one year during which he worked in Central America, providing guerrilla warfare training to troops in El Salvador and Nicaragua while reporting on conflicts in the region.
Dye has written a number of novels, including Run Between The Raindrops (1985, also published as Citadel) and Conduct Unbecoming (1992). In addition he wrote the novelization of the film Platoon. Dye, along with wife Julia and comic book artist Gerry Kissell created one of 2011's critically acclaimed and best-selling graphic novels, Code Word: Geronimo, for publisher IDW Publishing, that tells the story of the Navy SEAL raid on Osama bin Laden's compound.
Dye was determined to improve the realism in how Hollywood depicted battle. He offered his services to a number of directors but was only successful when he pitched to fellow Vietnam veteran Oliver Stone a plan to put actors through a mock boot camp before production of the movie Platoon. Dye put the principal actors—including Charlie Sheen, Willem Dafoe, Johnny Depp and Forest Whitaker—through an immersive 30-day military-style training regimen. He limited how much food and water they could drink and eat and when the actors slept, fired blanks to keep the tired actors awake. Dye also had a small role as Captain Harris. He also wrote the novelization based on Oliver Stone's screenplay. After Platoon's critical success, Dye played a role in another Vietnam War movie, Casualties of War, and also played Colonel Robert Sink in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, on which his company also worked. Dye also worked as a military technical adviser on the HBO companion piece to Band of Brothers, the ten-part mini-series The Pacific, which was shot in Australia.
Dye appeared in Outbreak portraying Lieutenant Colonel Briggs, a U.S. Army officer. He plays Theodore Roosevelt's superior officer, Colonel Leonard Wood, in the TNT miniseries Rough Riders. He has a small role in Saving Private Ryan as an aide to General George Catlett Marshall as well as a role playing the Admiral's aide, Captain Garza, in Under Siege and Under Siege 2: Dark Territory. He had another small role in Spy Game as Commander Wiley during the rescue sequence, in Mission Impossible as Frank Barnes of CIA, in JFK as General Y, and in Starship Troopers as a high-ranking officer in the aftermath of the Brain Bug capture. Dye played himself in Entourage, teaching Vince to scuba dive in preparation for his role in Aquaman. He appeared in the 2011 Tom Hanks film Larry Crowne. He was the technical adviser for the 1994 Oliver Stone movie Natural Born Killers. Dye played Col. Porter in the TNT science fiction series Falling Skies from 2011 to 2013. As of 2015 he was preparing to direct two films, No Better Place to Die, which he wrote, and Citizen Soldiers.
During the Second Gulf War, Dye was hired as a military commentator by radio station KFI AM 640 in Los Angeles and given a two-hour radio show. He hosted The History Channel's documentary series The Conquerors. Dye consulted during development of the Medal of Honor video games series. He was featured in two tracks on Hoobastank's CD Every Man for Himself. Dye voiced Colonel Robert Sink in the Brothers In Arms video game series. Dye had a cameo appearance as New Founding Father Donald Talbott in the 2014 film The Purge: Anarchy.
Filmography
Film | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Film | Role |
1986 | Platoon | Captain Harris |
Invaders from Mars | Squad Leader | |
1989 | Always | Don |
Born on the Fourth of July | Infantry Col. | |
Casualties of War | Capt. Hill | |
The Favorite | French officer | |
1990 | Kid | Garvey |
Fire Birds | A.K. McNeil | |
The Fourth War | Sgt. Ma. | |
Spontaneous Combustion | General | |
1991 | JFK | Gen. "Y" |
Servants of Twilight | Police officer | |
1992 | Under Siege | Capt. Nick Garza |
1993 | Heaven & Earth | Larry |
Cover Story | Jack | |
1994 | Endangered | |
Guarding Tess | Charles Ivy | |
Natural Born Killers | Dale Wrigley | |
Blue Sky | Col. Mike Anwalt | |
The Puppet Masters | Brande | |
1995 | Outbreak | Lt. Col. Briggs |
Under Siege 2: Dark Territory | Capt. Nick Garza | |
1996 | Sgt. Bilko | First Engineer |
Mission: Impossible | Frank Barnes | |
1997 | Trial and Error | Dr. Stone |
Starship Troopers | General | |
1998 | Saving Private Ryan | War Dept. Colonel |
1999 | A Table for One | Vernon Harpwood |
2000 | Rules of Engagement | Gen. Perry |
2001 | Spy Game | Cdr. Wiley |
2003 | Missing Brendan | Gen. Temekin |
2005 | The Great Raid | Gen. Kreuger |
2007 | Music Within | Capt. Ruzicka |
2010 | Knight and Day | Frank Jenkins |
2011 | Naked Run | Harry |
Larry Crowne | Cox | |
2014 | Planes: Fire & Rescue | Cabbie (voice) |
2014 | The Purge: Anarchy | New Founding Father - Donald Talbott |
2016 | Sniper: Special Ops | Lieutenant Colonel Jackson |
Range 15 | President Mattis | |
Television | ||
Year | Title | Role |
1987 | Billionaire Boys Club | Defense attorney |
1988 | Supercarrier | Capt. Henry K. 'Hank' Madigan |
Tales from the Hollywood Hills: Closed Set | Assistant Director | |
1989 | The Neon Empire | Chief Bates |
1990 | The Court-Martial of Jackie Robinson | Supporting role in TV movie |
1991 | Mission of the Shark: The Saga of the U.S.S. Indianapolis | Maj. Green |
L.A. Law | Guest star on Episode 5.11 Rest in Pieces | |
1992 | Raven | Col. Paul David Mackay |
Dead On: Relentless II | Capt. Rivers | |
1995 | JAG | Sgt. Maj. Hollis |
1996 | Space: Above and Beyond | Maj. Jack Colquitt |
Within the Rock | General Hurst | |
1997 | Rough Riders | Col. Leonard Wood |
1998 | Seven Days | Gen. Cole |
Operation Delta Force 2: Mayday | Capt. Halsey Lang | |
JAG | Col. Bill Cobb | |
1999 | Air America | Capt. Gage |
Rocket Power' | Tice Ryan | |
Mutiny | Supporting role in TV movie | |
2000 | The Others | Capt. Ken Radley |
2001 | Band of Brothers | Col. Robert Sink |
2003 | 44 Minutes: The North Hollywood Shoot-Out | SWAT Lt. |
2005 | Entourage | Dale Dye |
2006 | Las Vegas | Sgt. Burn |
Commander in Chief | Gen. Peter Allyson | |
2007 | The Loop | Ralph Somkin |
Chuck | Gen. Stanfield | |
2010 | Cold Case | Al Wasserlauf |
Entourage | Firearms Instructor / Scuba Instructor | |
2011 – 2013 | Falling Skies | General Porter |
Video Games | ||
Year | Title | Role |
2003 | Medal of Honor: Rising Sun | Sgt. Jack "Gunny" Lauton |
2005 | Battlefield 2: Modern Combat | Lt. Col. Robert "Bob" Scott |
2007 | Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway | Col. Robert Sink |
Military awards
Dye's military decorations and awards include:
![]() ![]() | Bronze Star Medal w/ Combat "V" |
![]() ![]() ![]() | Purple Heart w/ two 5⁄16" Gold Stars |
![]() | Meritorious Service Medal |
![]() | Joint Service Commendation Medal |
![]() ![]() ![]() | Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal w/ Combat "V" and one 5⁄16" Gold Star |
![]() ![]() | Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal w/ Combat "V" |
![]() ![]() | Combat Action Ribbon w/ one 5⁄16" Gold Star |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Navy Presidential Unit Citation w/ three 3⁄16" bronze stars |
![]() ![]() | Navy Unit Commendation w/ one 3⁄16" bronze star |
![]() ![]() | Meritorious Unit Commendation w/ one 3⁄16" bronze star |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal w/ three 3⁄16" bronze stars |
![]() | Marine Corps Expeditionary Medal |
![]() | National Defense Service Medal |
![]() | Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Vietnam Service Medal w/ three 3⁄16" bronze stars |
![]() | Humanitarian Service Medal |
![]() ![]() ![]() | Sea Service Deployment Ribbon w/ two 3⁄16" bronze stars |
![]() | Navy and Marine Corps Overseas Service Ribbon |
![]() | Republic of Vietnam Staff Service Medal (2nd Class) |
![]() | Republic of Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation (Gallantry Cross) w/ Palm |
![]() | Republic of Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation (Civil Actions) w/ Palm |
![]() | Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal w/ 1960- Device |
