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John Wayne Met A Furious Iwo Jima Veteran On His 1968 Film Set — What He Did Next Changed Everything

March 1968. A World War veteran with a war wound walked onto John Wayne’s film set in Arizona. He was furious. He thought Wayne was a fraud. A man who played soldiers on screen while men like him bled on Iwo. Gima. What he shouted in the next 90 seconds would have ended any other actors day. What John Wayne did next would change both their lives.

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Here is the story. Old Tucson Studios, March 14th, 1968, 11:00 in the morning. The set of Hellfighters. Dust hanging in the bright Arizona sun. 50 crew members moving in every direction. Cameras, lights, cables, wooden Western facades. The film is about oil well firefighters. Wayne plays the boss. He’s 60 years old.

He’s already had cancer. He’s losing weight. He doesn’t talk about it. A man walks through the security gate. He’s 48 years old, lean, weathered, short gray-brown hair. He’s wearing an old olive drab Marine Corps field jacket with corporal stripes faded on the sleeve. Plain white t-shirt under it. Dark wool trousers.

Scuffed brown work boots on both feet. He walks with a heavy limp. His right leg is stiff and slightly turned outward. He leans on a worn wooden walking cane gripped tight in his right hand. The knuckles are white. His face is set. His name is Tom Riley. The security guard, a man in his 50s named Hal, steps forward.

Sir, this is a closed set. Tom doesn’t slow down. I need to see Wayne. Sir, you can’t just I said I need to see Wayne. He pushes past. The guard reaches for his radio. He looks at Tom, the cane, the limp, the Marine Corps jacket. He lowers the radio, says nothing. 50 crew members stop working. They turn. They stare.

Wayne is sitting in his canvas director’s chair beside the camera. He’s holding a tin cup of coffee. He hears the commotion. He stands. He sets the coffee down on the chair. He waits. Tom limps toward him. Step, cane, step, cane. 20 paces. 10 paces. He stops 10 ft from Wayne. He raises his left hand. He points his index finger at Wayne’s chest. You.

Wayne doesn’t move. You play soldiers in your movies. You play Marines. You play heroes. You played a tank commander in They Were Expendable. You played a Marine sergeant in Sands of Iwo Jima. You wear the uniform on screen. You take the salute. You get the medal at the end. Tom’s voice is shaking. Not with fear.

With 20 years of something he has been carrying. And you didn’t serve. The crew goes silent. And cameras idle. The director, Andrew McLaglen, is frozen behind his viewfinder. You stayed home. You made cowboy pictures while my friends died in the Pacific. While I caught shrapnel on Iwo Jima. While Bobby Marshall got shot through the throat at Tarawa.

While Jimmy Russo bled out in a foxhole on Saipan because the corpsman couldn’t reach him in time. Tom’s voice cracks. He doesn’t stop. My friends died. And you played them. You played them while they were still warm in the ground. You took their uniform and you put it on for the cameras and you got paid for it. And every time I see one of your pictures on television, I want to throw the set out the window.

He’s almost shouting now. You’re a fraud, Wayne. You’re a goddamn fraud. And I drove 400 miles from Phoenix to tell you that to your face. Where are you watching from? You drop it in the comments. I want to see how far this story reaches. The set is completely silent. Nobody moves. Nobody breathes. McLaglen, the director, has his hand half raised as if he might call security, but doesn’t quite know how to finish the gesture.

Wayne stands there for a long moment. He doesn’t argue. He doesn’t defend himself. He doesn’t raise his voice. He doesn’t move his face. He looks at Tom, at the cane, at the stiff right leg, at the faded corporal stripes, at the man’s eyes, then he speaks. One word, come. Tom blinks. What? Come with me. Away from the cameras. Wayne turns.

He walks slowly toward a row of production trailers parked under a small grove of mesquite trees 50 yards from the set. He doesn’t look back. He walks the way men walk who trust the person behind them will follow. Tom hesitates. The anger has nowhere to land. He stares at Wayne’s back. Then slowly he starts after him.

Step, cane, step, cane. Wayne reaches a trailer at the end of the row, his personal trailer. He opens the door. He steps inside. He holds the door open for Tom. Tom climbs the two metal steps with his cane. Wayne offers his hand. Tom doesn’t take it. He gets up the steps himself. He goes inside. Wayne closes the door behind them.

The trailer is small. A bunk along one wall, a small wooden writing desk, two chairs, a kitchenette, a coffee pot. Wayne points to a small canvas folding stool. Sit down, Marshall. Marine. Sit down, Marine. Tom sits. He leans his cane against the wall. Wayne pours two cups of coffee. He hands one to Tom.

He sits in the small wooden chair across from him. He sets his own coffee on the desk. He looks at the floor for a long moment, then he speaks quietly. You’re right. Tom blinks. What? You’re right. I didn’t serve. Tom doesn’t respond. He just watches. I tried. In 1942, I tried to enlist. Three times. They turned me down each time.

I had a dislocated shoulder from college football. I had a damaged ear from a stunt accident on a film set. I was 34 years old with three kids. The studio had me classified 4F. They wanted me to keep making pictures. They told me the pictures were doing more for morale than another rifleman in the Pacific would do.

He takes a sip of coffee. He’s still looking at the floor. I let them tell me that. I let them keep me out. I made Flying Tigers and the Fighting Seabees and Back to Bataan while men like you were dying. I wore the uniform on screen and I took the salute. And then I went home to my house in Encino and I slept in a bed. He looks up.

He meets Tom’s eyes. I have lived with that for 26 years. I’m going to live with it for the rest of my life. There is nothing I can do about it. There is no apology I can make that will undo what I didn’t do. And so I’m not going to apologize. Tom is staring at him. The anger is still there, but it’s losing its shape.

Wayne keeps going. His voice gets quieter. What I have tried to do, Marine, is make sure the men who did serve are not forgotten. Every picture I make about a soldier or a Marine, I research it. I talked to the men who were there. I read the after-action reports. I tried to get the uniform right, the weapon right, the way the men talked, the way they moved, the way they died.

I try to honor what happened. I cannot fix what I didn’t do. But I can try to make sure the country remembers what you did. He stops. I’m not asking you to forgive me. I’m not asking you to like my pictures. I’m telling you that you’re right. And I’m telling you that I have spent 26 years trying to find a way to be useful to men like you, even though I can’t be one of you.

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