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  1. Sep 21, 2023 · Private Leckie, who is played by James Badge Dale in the war series, is based on the real Robert Leckie, the war veteran and historian who wrote Helmet for My Pillow. In the series, the character has a condition that's linked to his time in the perilous Pacific Theater.

  2. Sep 21, 2023 · The Pacific explores a romantic narrative between Robert Leckie and Stella, raising questions about whether Stella was based on a real person. The series follows Leckie's experiences in World War II, including his journey during the Guadalcanal Campaign and the aftermath of the Battle of Peleliu.

    • Senior Staff Writer
  3. Subscribe to HBO: http://itsh.bo/10qIqsjA look at the life of WWII vet Robert Leckie featuring interviews with the high-profile team behind the HBO miniserie...

    • 6 min
    • 995.9K
    • HBO
    • Biography
    • Personality and Traits
    • Trivia

    Early life

    Leckie was born on December 18, 1920 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The day after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Leckie enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. After boot camp at Parris Island (during which he failed miserably at the rifle test) he was assigned to his company at New River. There he got promoted to the rank of Private First Class, which Leckie holds in high regard. At New River, he eventually finds friendship. He first meets Pfc. Bill "Hoosier" Smith, who was a runner for Cap...

    Later Life

    Leckie moved on to become a reporter for the Associated Press, the Buffalo Courier-Express, the New York Journal American, the New York Daily News and The Star-Ledger. According to Vera, in 1951 he was inspired to write a memoir after seeing South Pacific, a musical on Broadway and walking out halfway through. He said "I have to tell the story of how it really was. I have to let people know the war wasn’t a musical." His first and best-selling book, Helmet for My Pillow, a personal war memoir...

    In terms of personality, Leckie is one of the most complicated characters of the series. He was a charming and intelligent person, and he can be a ladies man when he needs to be. However, he, like other marines, has suffered from psychological trauma courtesy of the war, but it doesn't affect him as badly as others like Eugene Sledge. While he was ...

    Leckie seemed to be the main focus of the series until he was wounded in Peleliu, Eugene Sledgeseems to take up his mantle for the rest of the series's run.
    Most of the personalities of Leckie's friends is fleshed out in Leckie's memoirs.
    After he is wounded in Episode 6, he is absent until 4 episodes later.
    Leckie died in 2001, the same year that The Pacific's predecessor, Band of Brotherswas released.
  4. Feb 23, 2010 · Marine Sid Phillips reflects on fellow H-Company machine gunner Robert Leckie. Both men are depicted in the mini-series The Pacific.

    • 3 min
    • 283.8K
    • MarinesOfThePacific
  5. Robert Hugh Leckie (December 18, 1920 – December 24, 2001) was a United States Marine and an author of books about the military history of the United States, Catholic history and culture, sports books, fiction books, autobiographies, and children's books.

  6. Feb 21, 2023 · In 1951, a Marine Corps veteran who had served in World War II’s Pacific Theater walked out of a Broadway theater halfway through the show. The show was the legendary hit “South Pacific,” and the Marine was former Lance Cpl. Robert Leckie.