13 Rue Madeleine
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1946
- 95 min
- 131 Views
[Man Narrating]
"What is past is prologue."
Yes, here at the National Archives
in Washington D. C...
past is prologue...
for this is the final resting place
of the histories and records...
of tens of thousands
of illustrious Americans.
World War II has come
to a victorious conclusion...
and now new names and new records
are being added to the list...
for the nation and the world are
for the first time learning...
of silent and significant deeds
performed in foreign lands...
by a legion of anonymous men and women...
the Army of Secret Intelligence.
When Washington, recovering from
the staggering blow of Pearl Harbor...
realized how effective had been
the long-established...
espionage machines
of Germany and Japan...
from the White House came orders
that the United States, too...
must have eyes and ears
within enemy countries.
Immediately, the nation commenced...
for the first time in its history...
to recruit a Secret
Intelligence Corps.
As the man best capable of organizing
the secret activities...
of the new United States
Intelligence Corps...
the president chose a Saint Louis
attorney, Charles Stevenson Gibson...
whose background in international
affairs had been gained...
from ten years'special service
in the American Embassy in Berlin.
As director of
Secret Intelligence...
Gibson reported only to the president
and theJoint Chiefs of Staff.
Among the top-level executives
of United States Secret Intelligence...
was a widely traveled scholar
and soldier of fortune...
Robert Emmet Sharkey
of Saint Paul, Minnesota.
Master of five languages and one
of America's foremost athletes...
Bob Sharkey was twice captured
by the Germans in World War I...
and both times escaped
with a brilliant record of
achievement behind enemy lines.
To Washington, in the weeks and months
that followed Pearl Harbor...
had come 76 carefully selected
groups of candidates...
for training and assignment
to secret operations overseas.
At the Union Station
one morning in 1944...
among thejostling thousands,
came the 77th group of candidates...
each unknown to the other.
The Washington headquarters of Secret
Intelligence was under tight security...
its address and telephone unlisted
in any governmental directory.
Few even knew of its existence.
The story of Operation 77
is typical of the activities...
of any of the 76 groups
which preceded it.
Each candidate's qualifications
and background...
had been checked and rechecked
before he was called to Washington.
Every member of O77 had volunteered
without reservation...
for hazardous duty
behind enemy lines.
Among those assigned to O77
were men like Pappy Simpson...
a British intelligence officer
in the First World War...
and, until early 1942,
a professor of English literature...
at Dartmouth College
at Hanover, New Hampshire.
Suzanne de Beaumont,
a French citizen...
had found herself stranded in the
United States when France fell in 1940.
Ofher husband, a captain
of artillery in the French army,
nothing had been heard.
Jeff Lassiter, son of a former
American consul at Bern, Switzerland...
was educated at Geneva
and Oxford.
Lassiter was recruited from the
Officers Training School at U.C.L. A...
partly because ofhis
superior knowledge of French.
Bill O'Connell,
a Rutgers graduate...
Bill O'Connell,
a Rutgers graduate...
had been employed in the Foreign
Department of the Chase National Bank.
He spent two years in the bank's
European branches...
then Hitler went on the march...
and O'Connell returned
to New York.
- Say, do you remember the maiden
name of your grandmother?
- Sure.
She was quite a dame.
I wish mine had been.
[Narrator] Far away from the eyes of
inquisitive, gossipy Washington...
in secluded, country estates
requisitioned by the government...
O77 candidates entered
phase one of training.
Oh, is this bunk taken?
- Not yet.
- You bought a roommate.
I don't know. A guy that can't remember
the maiden name of his grandmother...
- She's got one now.
- [Knocking]
- [Both] Come in.
- Sorry for intruding, gentlemen.
I'm your conducting officer.
The name is Simpson.
- Bill O'Connell.
- Lassiter. Jeff Lassiter.
- Quarters all right?
- Great. Fine.
The library, the lounge, the pool...
all the facilities of the club
are for your convenience.
We'll be here two weeks.
I hope you'll be comfortable.
- Are we going to start training?
- No. This is assessment school.
You'll be given tests
to determine your mental...
and physical qualifications
for training.
To see if we can make the grade,
is that it?
Well, everyone isn't temperamentally
equipped for every job, you know.
We lose a few of you.
If you're thirsty, you'll find plenty
of beer in the icebox all the time.
Just help yourselves. Oh, uh,
supper in the main dining room, 6:30.
Dress optional.
Carry on.
Even a housemother.
Rugged duty.
- This is gonna go all right.
- [Chuckles]
- Play backgammon?
- Yeah.
- Let's have a game after dinner.
- With ya.
- Cigarette?
- Thanks.
- [Chattering]
- [SlowJazz Piano]
This is your group, Bob.
You're in charge.
Three months of indoctrination school,
two weeks of practical exercises...
and they've got to be
in shape to go.
- Is that my assignment?
- That's one of them.
22 potential agents.
Most of them have a foreign background.
All can speak French.
- One of them can speak German.
- Mm-hmm.
You've got to find out
who that is.
All right.
That's not as easy
as it sounds.
- Why?
- Because one of the students in
that group is a German agent.
A German agent?
- You know?
- Yeah.
Man or woman?
When you find out,
let me know.
Mm-hmm. All right.
Ladies and gentlemen...
[Stops]
I've got a couple of things
to say to you before you begin
the next phase of your training.
Your instructors are all
experts in their jobs.
They're going to cram their years
of experience into your heads.
It shouldn't be necessary,
but I'm going to remind you of security.
Everything you learn,
everything you do, is secret.
Even your closest relatives can't know
you're an agent in O77.
Maybe nobody will ever know.
That's not important.
But keeping your mouth shut is.
Now, you're gonna have
a lot to remember...
and a couple of things
to forget.
Now, the average American is
a good sport. Plays by the rules.
But this war is no game, and no
secret agent is a hero or a good sport...
that is, no living agent.
You're going to be taught to kill,
to cheat, to rob, to lie.
Everything you learn is moving you
toward one objective...
just one, that's all...
the success of your mission.
Fair play? That's out.
Years of decency
and honest living?
Forget all about them,
or turn in your suits...
because the enemy can forget...
and has.
Well, work hard. I'll be with you
every inch of the way. All the way.
Working right with you.
Good luck.
Take over, Pappy.
The group will leave
for area "B" this afternoon.
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