SHORTLISTED FOR THE $60,000 HILARY WESTON WRITERS
TRUST PRIZE FOR NONFICTION "What the hell kind of great
escape is this? No one escapes!"--L.B. Mayer, on the
1963 film He had fifty-seven seconds of screen time in
the most lavish POW film Hollywood ever produced. He was
blond. A Gestapo agent. Sauntering down the aisles of a
speeding train, he speaks in terse German to Richard
Attenborough, Gordon Jackson, David McCallum. The film
is "The Great Escape" (by John Sturges, starring Steve
McQueen); the actor, though uncredited, is Michael
Paryla. He was part Jewish. Shortly after filming he
died. In "This Great Escape," Andrew Steinmetz tenderly
reconstructs the life of a man seen by millions yet
recognized by no one, whose history--from childhood
flight from Nazism to suspicious death twenty years
later--intersects bitterly, ironically, and often
movingly with the plot of Sturges's great war film.
Splicing together documentary materials with
correspondence, diary entries, and Steinmetz's own
travel journal, "This Great Escape" does more than
reconstruct the making of a cinema classic: it is a
poignant and moving testament to the complexity of human
experience, a portrait of a family for whom acting was a
matter of survival, and proof that our most anonymous,
uncredited, and undocumented moments can brush against
the zeitgeist of world history.
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