Maj. Bambi: Meet The Marine Who Was Disney's Famous Fawn July 31, 2015
  Donnie Dunagan is a hard-nosed Marine, a highly decorated veteran of  the Vietnam War who served for a quarter-century before retiring as a  major. First drafted in the '50s and subsequently promoted 13 times in  21 years — a Corps record at the time, he recalls — Dunagan found the  Marines a perfect fit. That is, so long as he could keep a secret.
     A dark reminder of the past Dunagan left behind still lurked unspoken: He was Bambi.
     As a kid, Dunagan did a brief stint as a child actor, and he was tapped by Walt Disney to be the voice of the lead in the 1942 Bambi, the now-classic animated film about a young deer learning about life in the forest. And not one of his fellow Marines knew.
     "No  chance!" Dunagan, now 80, tells his wife, Dana, on a recent visit with  StoryCorps in San Angelo, Texas. "I never said a word to anybody about  Bambi, even to you. When we first met I never said a word about it. Most  of the image in people's minds of Bambi was a little frail deer, not  doing very well, sliding around on the ice on his belly."
 
  
  Now, imagine the man who was once Bambi as a commander in a Marine  Corps boot camp, responsible for hundreds of recruits. Dunagan didn't  want his recruits drawing any connections, mocking him or calling him  "Maj. Bambi." So, he kept his mouth shut.
     Of course, it got out  eventually. Decades later, a Marine whom Dunagan had worked for several  times, twice in combat, called him into his office in the early morning  about a month before the two of them retired.
     "I go in his  office and he says, 'Dunagan! I want you to audit the auditors,' "  Dunagan recalls. Swamped with other duties, Dunagan respectfully asked  him: "General, when do you think I'm going to have time to do that?"
     And, finally, the nightmare he'd harbored for years came true.
     "He  looked at me, pulled his glasses down like some kind of college  professor. There's a big, red, top-secret folder that he got out of some  safe somewhere that had my name on it. He pats this folder, looks me in  the eye and says, 'You will audit the auditors. Won't you, Maj. Bambi?'  "
  When Dana asks him how his life is different from the way he might  have imagined, Dunagan points out that all the wounds he suffered in  service, all the honors he's earned along the way, still haven't changed  a thing.
     "I have some holes in my body that God didn't put  there. I got shot through my left knee. Got an award or two for saving  lives over time," he says. "But I think I could have been appointed as  the aide-de camp in the White House, it wouldn't make any difference —  it's Bambi that's so dear to people."
     No matter how he tried to escape it, that voice from his past always found him.
     "But  I love it now — when people realize, 'This old jerk, he's still alive  and was Bambi.' And I wouldn't take anything for it, not a darn thing  for it."
 
   Newspaper clippings of young Donnie Dunagan from the early '40s.  npr.org |