U.S. closes MASH unit that inspired movie, TV show
June 11, 1997
Web posted at: 10:27 a.m. EDT (1427 GMT)
CAMP HUMPHREYS, South Korea (CNN) -- The Mobile Army Surgical
Hospital, the U.S. military unit that inspired the book,
classic movie and long-running television series "M*A*S*H,"
officially disbanded in South Korea Wednesday.
And just like on TV, it was a little zany and a little sad as
a color guard retired the unit's flag during the deactivation
ceremony. The "M*A*S*H" theme song, played by an Army band,
carried across the grassy fields of Camp Humphreys.
"Today you are joining us in making history ... saying
farewell to America's MASH," unit commander Col. Ronald Maul
said at his camp 35 miles south of Seoul.
Maul's 43rd MASH unit was among only four left in the world
that are being phased out to make way for what the military
says is a smaller, faster, more efficient medical group
called the Forward Surgical Team.
Attending the ceremony, and later signing autographs and
cutting the farewell cake, were three actors from the
television series, which ran from 1972 to 1983 and is still
shown in reruns and dozens of languages around the world.
Larry Linville, who played the fraternizing, whining Maj.
Frank Burns, was awed by Wednesday's closing.
"It's an epic event, and I sit here in absolute humility," he
said. "We were like a plastic representation of the real
people -- and these are the real people."
Added "M*A*S*H" writer-producer Larry Gelbart: "Coming back
here has put us all in touch with reality."
(174K/15 sec. AIFF or WAV sound)
Also on hand was David Ogden Stiers, who played the wealthy
and often snotty Maj. Winchester.
Wacky humanity
The show, filmed in Southern California, touched a chord with
civilians and soldiers alike with its portrayal of wacky
humanity in the midst of mayhem.
Though Hollywood named its medical team the 4077th MASH, the
real unit was the 43rd. The unit included 100 soldiers who
staffed two operating rooms and a 36-bed hospital -- often
packing them up in 39 vehicles and moving them closer to the
battlefields to provide lifesaving medical help.
The 43rd unit was formed in 1933 and saw service in Algeria,
India, Burma and Japan before arriving in Korea in 1950. Of
the three MASH units remaining in the world, two in the
states will be deactivated this year and one in Bosnia will
likely continue as long as a U.S. presence remains there.
But not all was sad Wednesday at the closing ceremony. The
stars of the TV show and the real soldiers played out some of
the show's antics, wheeling stretchers across a field in a
bizarre race.
It also had a more serious note, including a visit by some to
the heavily fortified demilitarized zone -- a sobering
reminder that the drama MASH portrayed has yet to end.
"The TV show portrayed exactly what it's like to be in MASH,"
said Sgt. Alex Price. "I've been to war and seen lots
die. Times have changed and the equipment has changed, but
the people are the same."
Correspondent Sohn Jie-Ae
and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
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