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Show: Band Of Brothers
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Status: Cancelled/ Ended
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Where: HBO
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First Aired: 2001
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Country: United States
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Regular Cast
Damian Lewis (I) .. Maj. Richard D. Winters
Donnie Wahlberg .. 2nd Lt. C. Carwood Lipton
Ron Livingston .. Capt. Lewis Nixon
Matthew Settle .. Capt. Ronald Speirs
Rick Warden (I) .. 1st Lt. Harry Welsh
Frank John Hughes .. S/Sgt. William 'Wild Bill' Guarnere
Scott Grimes .. T/Sgt. Donald Malarkey
Neal McDonough .. 1st Lt. Lynn 'Buck' Compton
Rick Gomez (II) .. Sgt. George Luz
Eion Bailey .. Pvt. David Kenyon Webster
James Madio .. Sgt. Frank Perconte
Kirk Acevedo .. S/Sgt. Joseph Toye
Michael Cudlitz .. Sgt. Denver 'Bull' Randleman
Richard Speight Jr. .. Sgt. Warren 'Skip' Muck
Dexter Fletcher .. S/Sgt. John Martin
Season One
- Currahee (OAD 09/09/01)
Camp Toccoa, Georgia. Summer, 1942. A
diverse group of young American men begin their voluntary training in one of
America's newest military experiments: the paratroops. Their unit, Easy
Company of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, is commanded by the petty,
autocratic Lt. HERBERT SOBEL (David Schwimmer). His job is to turn these eager
civilians into the U.S. Army's most elite soldiers. But Sobel fails to win the
respect of his men, and a rivalry emerges between him and a junior officer,
Lt. DICK WINTERS (Damian Lewis). Winters' best friend, Lt. LEWIS NIXON (Ron
Livingston), becomes an intelligence officer and tells Winters their first
combat assignment will be to invade occupied Europe. Training for this mission
in England, Sobel continues to harass Winters by citing him for failing to
inspect a latrine. When Winters requests a trial by court martial, the
sergeants in the company decide to turn in their stripes rather than lose
Winters and have to follow Sobel into combat. Their Commanding Officer, Col.
ROBERT SINK (Dale Dye), upbraids them for this, but decides to transfer Sobel
out of the company before the upcoming D-day mission. The episode ends as the
company -- Winters included -- board planes headed for Normandy.
- Day of Days (OAD 09/09/01)
Planes carrying thousands of paratroopers cross the English Channel into
French airspace, where German flak causes the pilots to drop them in a less
than safe and organized fashion. Lt. WINTERS lands alone in a field, soon
joined by a Pvt.
JOHN HALL (Andrew Scott) from another company. Having lost his rifle in the
jump, Winters leads the anxious Hall off to find their units, carrying only a
knife. They link up with a few more Easy Company men and ambush a German
horse-drawn supply convoy. In a nearby town, Winters finds Easy's Lt. "BUCK"
COMPTON (Neal McDonough), who tells him 90% of the company is unaccounted for,
including their commander -- which puts Winters in charge. Winters is then
asked to lead an attack on a cluster of German artillery pieces nearby, which
are probably firing onto the seaborne infantry trying to take Utah Beach.
Winters deploys his small group on the entrenched enemy positions and
eventually takes four artillery pieces in succession, disabling them with TNT.
The euphoria is tempered, however, when Winters finds Pvt. Hall dead, killed
by machine gun fire. The mission is successful, but Winters has lost his first
man as acting company commander
- Carentan (OAD 09/16/01)
Two days after D-day, some members of Easy Company are still lost and
alone in Normandy, including Pvt. ALBERT BLITHE (Marc Warren). He finds the
rest of the unit just in time to help them take the town of Carentan, which
Allied armor from Utah and Omaha beaches need in order to link up.
During the successful fight for the town, Easy suffers several casualties,
including a minor leg wound to Lt. WINTERS, and a case of "hysterical
blindness" for Blithe. The company moves out to set up a defensive position
and runs into a German counterattack on the way. They engage in a lengthy
firefight, which eventually includes German and then American tanks. Blithe,
after getting advice and encouragement from Lts. HARRY WELSH (Rick Warden),
RONALD SPEIRS (Matthew Settle), and Winters, screws up his courage enough to
stand up in his foxhole and fire his rifle at the enemy, eventually killing a
German. But the next day, on a patrol, Blithe is shot in the neck by a sniper,
a wound he will never recover from. The company returns to England after 36
days in Normandy, but their celebrations are short-lived, as news comes that
they will be moving out again.
- Replacements (OAD 09/23/01)
A group of fresh replacements joins Easy Company in time for a massive
paradrop into German-occupied Holland. The Dutch townspeople of Eindhoven
welcome them as liberators. But when Easy and a cluster of British tanks move
into a nearby town, they are met by a superior German force and must retreat
after suffering many casualties. One of these is Sgt. "BULL" RANDLEMAN
(Michael Cudlitz), who hides out overnight in a barn. A Dutch farmer and his
daughter tend to him, and eventually he has to bayonet and bury a German
soldier who wanders in. Meanwhile, Randleman's friends and the members of the
squad he leads fear him dead, and finally decide to head back into the town to
try to find him. He escapes the barn and meets them on the way, finally
returning to the company and getting a warm welcome. As they move onto another
assignment in Holland, Capt. WINTERS laments having to retreat, and Capt.
NIXON tells him the ambitious allied operation in Holland looks to have
failed.
- Crossroads (OAD 09/30/01)
Capt. WINTERS leads a contingent of Easy Company men on a risky mission
over a Dutch dike that results in a "turkey shoot" of fleeing German soldiers.
Afterwards, Col.SINK promotes him to Battalion Executive Officer, leaving Easy
Co. in the hands of Lt. "MOOSE" HEYLIGER (Stephen McCole). As Winters labors
over a report on the dike mission, Heyliger leads a rescue of some British
soldiers escaping from the besieged town of Arnhem. Winters is dissatisfied by
his new, largely administrative job. He worries about Easy, now one of three
companies he helps command, especially after Heyliger is shot and seriously
wounded by a nervous sentry. After moving back off the line to France, Lt.
NIXON insists that Winters take a break and see Paris. Winters is haunted
there by the memory of a young German solider he killed at close range on the
dike. As he returns to the company at Mourmelon, news comes in of a massive
German counterattack in the Ardennes Forest. Winters helps Easy race there to
hold the line, his men ill-equipped for the cold weather and the battle ahead
- Bastogne (OAD 10/07/01)
Easy Company digs foxholes in the snow around the Belgian town of Bastogne.
They are woefully under-manned and under- supplied to hold the line against
the inevitable German armored attack. Medic EUGENE ROE (Shane Taylor)
scrounges morphine and other much-needed medical supplies to treat the various
ailments and wounds of the men, who are bitterly cold and, in many cases,
stricken with trench foot. His travels take him to a cut-off Aid Station in
the surrounded, besieged town of Bastogne. There he meets a beautiful Belgian
nurse named RENEE LEMAIRE (Lucie Jeanne) ministering to the horrible suffering
of wounded American soldiers. Easy loses two men on an ill-fated patrol but
are congratulated on Christmas Day for holding the line by Col. SINK. He reads
aloud their commanding general's concise, defiant response to a German
surrender demand: "Nuts!" With no sign of relief in sight, the men celebrate a
miserable holiday together in their foxholes. The Germans bomb Bastogne,
hitting the Aid Station and killing Renee, whose body Roe discovers
- The Breaking Point (OAD
10/14/01)
Having held off the German attempts to overrun Bastogne, Easy is now faced
with the task of taking the nearby town of Foy from the enemy. Company First
Sergeant CARWOOD LIPTON (Donnie Wahlberg) tries to hold the company together
as they withstand several fierce artillery bombardments, during which several
Easy veterans are killed and maimed. Sgts. JOE TOYE (Kirk Acevedo) and BILL
GUARNERE (Frank John Hughes) each lose a leg. This precipitates an emotional
breakdown by Lt. COMPTON, who has to leave the line. Morale is further
dampened by the incompetence of their commander, Lt. NORMAN DIKE (Peter
O'Meara). Lipton warns Capt. WINTERS about Dike, but Winters is well aware of
the problem and can do nothing about it. But when Dike freezes up during the
crucial attack on Foy, Winters sends Dog Company's Lt. SPEIRS to relieve him.
Speirs successfully leads the taking of the town, and Lipton is happy that
Easy finally has a true combat leader again
- The Patrol (OAD 10/21/01)
With the war perhaps winding down, Easy Company is trucked into an
Alsacian town near the German border. Still on the front line, the men get to
sleep in houses, just across a small river from German forces doing the same
thing. They are asked to send a patrol across the river to take some Germans
prisoner, an assignment no one wants to be picked from. Except Lt. HANK JONES
(Colin Hanks), fresh in from West Point and eager for combat experience. He's
put in charge of 2nd platoon, alongside Sgt. DON MALARKEY (Scott Grimes),
still broken up about losing so many friends at Bastogne. When Malarkey is
picked to lead the patrol, Jones asks to go in his place, and Capt. WINTERS
okays it. Also getting the call is Pvt. DAVID WEBSTER (Eion Bailey), our
narrator, returning to the company after having missed all of Bastogne for a
relatively minor wound. He finds it's not so easy to gain the acceptance of
his old buddies. In the end, the patrol is successful in retrieving two
prisoners, but Easy loses a man killed. Weighing this, Winters disobeys an
order to send a second patrol the next night.
- Why We Fight (OAD 10/28/01)
Easy Company finally enters Germany, where they find no resistance, and
begin kicking residents out of their homes for the night so they can sleep.
They find the "enemy" to be industrious and not much different from them, and
the veterans enjoy a chance to relax and even "fraternize" with the locals.
Maj. WINTERS is concerned about his friend Capt. NIXON, who returns from a
disastrous combat jump with another unit, cynical about the war and drinking
heavily. After getting news that President Roosevelt has died, Easy heads out
to another German town, from which Winters sends a small patrol into a forest.
The patrol finds an abandoned concentration camp, with hundreds of emaciated
and still imprisoned inmates, mostly Jewish -- a surprise to Winters and
everyone else. They start to feed and release them, but then are ordered to
herd them back into the camp so that their recovery can be monitored. As they
supervise the cleanup of the camp and its many corpses by the disgusted local
citizenry - - who disavow prior knowledge of its existence -- they get the
news that Hitler has killed himself.
- Points (OAD 11/04/01)
Easy Company enters the empty Bavarian town of Berchtesgaden, once home to
all the chiefs of the Third Reich. They celebrate the German army's surrender
in Hitler's mountaintop "Eagle's Nest," then proceed to scenic Austria. There,
they learn that the Division will be redeployed to the Pacific Theatre, minus
any men who have earned enough "points" to go home. Few of them have. As they
await official orders to leave Europe, Maj. WINTERS applies for a transfer to
a unit that is moving out immediately but is denied the request. Meanwhile,
the violence continues in Austria, including an execution of a suspected labor
camp commandant, and the critical wounding of Sgt. CHUCK GRANT (Nolan Hemmings)
by a drunken trooper from another company. Capt. SPEIRS, dealing with all of
this, decides to stay on as company commander despite having enough points to
go home. But Winters will not make a career of the army: he accepts Capt.
NIXON's offer of a job with his family's company. As Winters gives news of the
Japanese surrender to the company on a baseball field in Austria, we learn
what happened to each of the men after the war.