GASTONIA The name Brad Pitt didn’t mean much to 90-year-old Ray Stewart of Gastonia when he recently got an invitation to meet the superstar in Hollywood. A World War II tank gunner/driver who fought at the Battle of the Bulge, Stewart and three other veterans were asked to come share their experiences with Pitt and other cast members playing a tank crew in the new war movie “Fury.”
On Aug. 18, Stewart and his wife, Dottie, flew to Los Angeles and were met by representatives of Sony Pictures who took the couple to the W Hollywood hotel. “They treated us like royalty,” said Dottie Stewart.
The following day, Ray Stewart and the other veterans met producers and the five actors in a round-table setting at Sony Pictures in Culver City. Actors present included Pitt and co-star Shia LaBeouf. Stewart was favorably impressed.
“Brad Pitt’s a nice guy – all of them were all right,” he said.
The veterans were asked to speak candidly about World War II.
“We got to talking and we started remembering things,” Stewart said. “We fought the war over again right in front of those movie guys. We looked around and saw them sitting there with their mouths open. They seemed sort of flabbergasted.”
Stewart shared some of his story, which began with getting drafted into the Army in 1942 at age 19. Assigned to the famed 2nd Armored “Hell on Wheels” Division, he landed at Omaha Beach in Normandy on June 9, 1944.
From there, he embarked on a 1,000-mile journey that ended in Berlin. Between those two locations, Stewart took part in many battles.
Two of his tanks were destroyed by bazooka fire, mortars or the much-feared 88 mm anti-aircraft, anti-tank guns.
“When you got hit you’d better get your butt out,” Stewart said. “Another round would be coming in three to five seconds.”
At the Battle of the Bulge Stewart’s division fought the German 2nd Panzer Division and captured many soldiers and vehicles.
In trying to capture the Adolf Hitler Bridge across the Rhine River, Stewart’s outfit ran into 33 anti-aircraft guns that knocked out 15 of the unit’s 17 Shermans.
Stewart remembers looking out across a “field of burning tanks.”
And he also remembers five British tanks hit by enemy fire and burning on a ridge.
“Twenty-five people went up in flames right in front of my eyes,” Stewart said. “That was the worst thing I saw.”
Rolling through Europe in a 60-ton Sherman tank, he faced battle “feeling like a cowboy.”
“I was a little cocky,” Stewart said. “I thought I was hot stuff.”
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http://www.entertainmentwise.com/ne...aking-Tank-Driving-Lessons-For-New-Movie-FuryHis wife Angelina Jolie is a trained pilot and now it looks as though Brad Pitt wants a specialty of his own and the actor looks to be doing exactly that with reports claiming that the star is taking tank driving lessons whilst filming his new movie Fury.
The lessons come as part of his role as an American soldier in David Ayer's World War Two drama.
The movie's producers have reportedly organised the lessons - which take place in Wiltshire and Germany - for Brad and some other cast members so that the battle scenes will be as realistic as possible, according to The Sun.
A source told the newspaper: "These boot camps will involve hardcore physical exercise as well as advanced tank driving."