February 16, 2007

HIS FORTY YEARS WAR:

Forgotten History: How Hollywood Once Produced a President (Paul Kengor, 2/16/07, Political Mavens)

Beginning in 1937, Reagan made 53 films. By the late 1940s, however, the offers slowed considerably. He started replacing pictures with political activism and union work as president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG).

It was during this time that Reagan's political interests went global. The liberal Democrat spoke forcefully against Nazism. But the times were changing. Now, he judged, America faced a new enemy: Soviet communism. And therein, Reagan's first public confrontation with the USSR has been missed by historians:

Reagan spoke on behalf of the "DPs," the Displaced Persons. A daily headline in 1947, the DPs were initially survivors of World War II fascism, mainly from Germany, Italy, and Austria, and were primarily persecuted Jews. Once the war ended, the designated list of DPs widened to 1.5 million individuals escaping Soviet-occupied Eastern Europe.

The DPs were held in camps, at large cost to the United States. Soviet officials outrageously claimed that the United States was holding the DPs as a source of slave labor -- a charge dismissed by Eleanor Roosevelt, who was intimately involved in the issue, as "utterly untrue." Moscow insisted the DPs be forcibly transported to areas under Soviet control. Secretary of State George Marshall adamantly rejected the demand.

A bill was introduced by Congressman William Stratton (R-IL) to permit entry of 400,000 DPs into the United States-a lifeboat. Yet, the legislation faced stiff opposition, which Reagan resisted. "There are some people who would rather bury the Stratton bill ... and thus bury the DPs in a mass grave," protested Reagan. "They would be burying Protestants, Catholics, and Jews alike."

On May 7, 1947, Reagan released a SAG statement urging passage of the Stratton bill. It was his first campaign against the Kremlin. [...]

What is forgotten, however, is that on several occasions Reagan fought the Cold War during GE Theatre episodes. For example, at the close of a February 3, 1957 broadcast, he put in a word for Hungarian refugees, fresh off a merciless Soviet invasion. "Ladies and gentlemen, about 160,000 Hungarian refugees have reached safety in Austria," reported Reagan to his huge audience. "More are expected. These people need food, clothes, medicine, and shelter." He told his fellow Americans to send donations to the Red Cross or church or synagogue of their choice.

There were other GE Theatre occasions where Reagan assumed political roles. Special to him was a two-part broadcast titled, "My Dark Days," aired on March 18 and 25, 1962. Based on a true story, Reagan starred as the husband of a housewife who got involved with a communist front group and became an informant.

He later complained to a friend of the difficulties he faced getting the show produced: "I had to fight right down to the wire to make the communists villains." The problem, explained Reagan, was that the producing staff believed that communist infiltration was a fantasy "dreamed up" by "right-wingers."



Posted by Orrin Judd at February 16, 2007 8:23 AM
Comments

Somewhere out there is a story of how he fought the commies as head of SAG.

Posted by: Sandy P at February 16, 2007 10:29 AM

Somewhere out there is a story of how he fought the commies as head of SAG.

Posted by: Sandy P at February 16, 2007 10:31 AM
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