Actors visit former airfield where WW2 drama is set

Actor Josh Bolt wearing a black and white shirt and standing in front of military buildingsImage source, Shaun Whitmore/BBC
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Actor Josh Bolt says being at the former airbase is like 'being back at home'

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Actors who played American airmen in a World War Two drama produced by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks have visited the airfield where they were based.

Masters of the Air, external tells the story of the 100th Bomb Group that flew B-17s out of Thorpe Abbotts airfield near Diss in Norfolk.

The group became known as "The Bloody Hundredth" due to heavy losses suffered in bombing raids over Europe between 1943 and 1945.

While not filmed in Norfolk, actors of the drama described visiting the airfield, now a museum, as "uncanny" and "moving".

Image source, Shaun Whitmore/BBC
Image caption,

Actors were given a tour of the museum

"It's weird being here because while we've never actually been here, it's like where we shot [filmed]," said Josh Bolt, who played Lt Winifred "Pappy" Lewis.

"[The acting] was a lot of responsibility because we constantly had to remember that they were real people, and it happened."

Image source, Robert Viglasky/ Apple TV
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Masters of the Air was created by the team behind classic series Band of Brothers

Image source, Shaun Whitmore/BBC
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The 100th Bomb Group Memorial Museum was founded in 1983 by a group of volunteers

According to the 100th Bomb Group Memorial Museum, the group flew its first combat mission on 25 June 1943 and its last on 20 April 1945.

During that time, it lost 732 airmen and 177 aircraft, external.

Throughout World War Two, about 50,000 United States Army Air Force (USAAF) personnel served at 18 bases across Norfolk, external as allies fought to defend Europe against Nazi Germany.

Image source, Shaun Whitmore/BBC
Image caption,

Louis Greatorex says he had to learn how to speak with a Kentucky accent

Actor Louis Greatorex, who played navigator Joseph "Bubbles" Payne in the Apple TV series, described being in Thorpe Abbotts as "quite moving".

"To actually stand where Payne stood is quite a strange feeling," he said.

"It hasn't quite sunk in yet."

Image source, Shaun Whitmore/BBC
Image caption,

Reg Wilson says he was "very pleased" the way Masters of the Air portrayed 100th Bomb Group

The actors were given a presentation and shown around the museum.

Reg Wilson, the museum's chair of trustees, said it was important that the airmen were remembered.

"What we try to do with the museum is not just have a museum of things but a museum of stories.

"We want to tell the stories of those individuals in Masters of the Air but also the other guys that were here."

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