Dieppe | |
---|---|
Written by | John Krizanc |
Directed by | John N. Smith |
Starring | Victor Garber John Neville Kenneth Welsh Robert Joy Peter Donat |
Country of origin | Canada |
Production | |
Producer | Bernard Zukerman |
Running time | 180 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | CBC |
Original release | 1993 – 1994 |
Dieppe is a two-part Canadian television miniseries that aired on CBC Television in 1993. It was based on the book Unauthorized Action: Mountbatten and the Dieppe Raid by Brian Loring Villa.
The series chronicled the events that led up to the infamous World War II Dieppe Raid on August 19, 1942, which resulted in 3,367 Canadian soldiers either being captured, wounded or killed.
It was criticized for not being completely accurate, and overdramatizing the events that took place. [1]
Dieppe was nominated for 11 Gemini Awards, winning two including Best Mini-Series.
The series was released on DVD by the CBC in 2002 just before the 60th anniversary of the Dieppe raid. The DVD included behind-the-scenes footage and various interviews and news stories that aired about the show in 1993 and 1994. Also included was a 1962 interview with both Lord Louis Mountbatten and John Hamilton Roberts, in which they discuss the key events of the raid, and the decisions they made surrounding this event. [2]
Louis Francis Albert Victor Nicholas Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, born and known until 1917 as Prince Louis of Battenberg, then named until 1946 Lord Louis Mountbatten, and then named Viscount Mountbatten of Burma until 1947, was a British statesman and military officer. Mountbatten, who was of German descent, was born in England to the prominent Battenberg family and was a maternal uncle of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, and a second cousin of King George VI. He joined the Royal Navy during the First World War and was appointed Supreme Allied Commander, South East Asia Command, in the Second World War. He was later made viceroy of British India, and then first governor-general of the Dominion of India, being the last British person to hold either of these positions.
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Dieppe is a coastal commune in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northern France.
Operation Jubilee or the Dieppe Raid was an Allied amphibious attack on the German-occupied port of Dieppe in northern France, during the Second World War. Over 6,050 infantry, predominantly Canadian, supported by a regiment of tanks, were put ashore from a naval force operating under protection of Royal Air Force (RAF) fighters.
Events from the year 1942 in Canada.
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