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Michael Strobl

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Years of service
  
1983 - 2007

Battles and wars
  
Movies
  
Taking Chance

Name
  
Michael Strobl


Michael Strobl The SandGram Blog Archive Where do we get such men

Service/branch
  
United States Marine Corps

Awards
  
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Adapted Long Form - Television

Nominations
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series, Movie, or Dramatic Special

Similar People
  
Chance Phelps, Kevin Bacon, Ross Katz, Brad Krevoy, Marcelo Zarvos

Battles/wars
  
Operation Desert Storm

Allegiance
  
United States of America

taking chance lt col michael strobl usmc pbs america at a crossroads 2007


Michael R. Strobl (born c. 1966) is a retired U.S. Marine Corps officer from Stafford, Virginia.

Contents

Michael Strobl Michael Strobl Photos quotTaking Chancequot 2009 Sundance

Michael joined the service when he was 17 years old as told in the movie "Taking Chance".

Michael Strobl www2pictureszimbiocomgi3rdAnnualAcademyTel

After serving in Operation Desert Storm in 1991, Strobl was assigned a desk job at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Quantico, Virginia during Operation Iraqi Freedom. Feeling guilty that Marines he served with in the Gulf War were serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom while he wasn't, Strobl volunteered to escort the remains of a fallen Marine to his home in the United States.

Michael Strobl Michael Strobl Pictures SuperiorPicscom

Michael strobl a soldier s story taking chance


Chance Phelps

Michael Strobl Michael Strobl Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

Strobl escorted home PFC Chance Phelps, a Marine killed in the Iraq War on April 9, 2004 (Good Friday), outside Ar Ramadi, Iraq.

Michael Strobl A Marine39s Journey Home

Strobl was working at a desk job, but volunteered to escort PFC Phelps home. He initially did this because the press release concerning the death of PFC Phelps had listed Clifton, Colorado as his hometown, a town near Strobl's hometown of Grand Junction. But the final destination and resting place of PFC Phelps would be Dubois, Wyoming, Phelps having only lived in Clifton for his senior year of high school.

During the trip, Strobl kept a diary of the experience and his feelings. After he concluded the mission, he wrote an essay entitled "A Marine's Journey Home" from the notes in the diary and shared it with Phelps's father John. The essay appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle on May 2, 2004 (with the approval of John Phelps), and then a longer version (of 5,375 words) appeared in the July issue of Marine Corps Gazette as "Taking Chance".

Strobl's 12-page narrative essay followed his journey with the remains of PFC Phelps from the military mortuary at Dover Air Force Base to Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Billings, Riverton, and Dubois.

Strobl's essay became the subject of an HBO film, Taking Chance, in 2009. He helped write the screenplay, and he was portrayed in the film by Kevin Bacon. Subsequently, he co-won the Writers Guild of America Award in Long Form Adaptation in Television at the Writers Guild of America Awards 2009 and was co-nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries, Movie, or a Dramatic Special, both with Ross Katz.

Strobl received the Vietnam Veterans of America President's Award for Excellence in the Arts at the organization's national convention in Louisville, Kentucky in August 2009.

Michael strobl taking chance


References

Michael Strobl Wikipedia


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