Claim:   Mel Gibson was the inspiration for the film The Man Without a Face.
Example:   [Collected on the Internet, 2000]


Here is a true story by Paul Harvey. Pass it to anyone who you think would
find it interesting and inspiring. You will be surprised who this young man
turned out to be. (Do not look at the bottom if this letter until you have
read it fully.)


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--

Years ago a hardworking man took his family from New York State to Australia
to take advantage of a work opportunity there. Part of this man's family was
handsome young son who had aspirations of joining the circus as a trapeze
artist or an actor. This young fellow, biding his  time until a circus job or
even one as a stagehand came along, worked at the local shipyards which
bordered on the worst section of town. Walking home from work one evening
this young man was attacked by five thugs who wanted to rob him. Instead of
just giving up his money the young fellow resisted. However they bested him
easily and proceeded to beat him to a pulp. They mashed his face with their
boots, and kicked and beat his body brutally with clubs, leaving him for
dead. When the police happened to find him lying in the road they assumed he
was dead and called for the Morgue Wagon.

On the way to the morgue a policeman heard him gasp for air, and they
immediately took him to the emergency unit at the hospital. When he was
placed on a gurney a nurse remarked to her horror, that his young man no
longer had a face. Each eye socket was smashed, his skull, legs, and arms
fractured, his nose literally hanging from his face, all is teeth were gone,
and his jaw was almost completely torn from his skull. Although his life was
spared he spent over year in the hospital. When he finally left his body may
have healed but his face was disgusting to look at. He was no longer the
handsome youth that everyone admired.

When the young man started to look for work again he was turned down by
everyone just on account of the way he looked. One potential employer
suggested to him that he join the freak show at the circus as The Man Who Had
No Face. And he did this for a while. He was still rejected by everyone and
no one wanted to be seen in his company. He had thoughts of suicide. This
went on for five years.

One day he passed a church and sought some solace there. Entering the church
he encountered a priest who had saw him sobbing while kneeling in a pew. The
priest took pity on him and took him to the rectory where they talked at
length. The priest was impressed with him to such a degree that he said that
he would do everything possible for him that could be done to restore his
dignity and life, if the young man would promise to be the best Catholic he
could be, and trust in God's mercy to free him from his torturous life. The
young man went to Mass and communion every day, and after thanking God for
saving his life, asked God to only give him peace of mind and the grace to be
the best man he could ever be in His eyes.

The priest, through his personal contacts was able to secure the services of
the best plastic surgeon in Australia. They would be no cost to the young
man, as the doctor was the priest's best friend. The doctor too was so
impressed by the young man, whose outlook now on life, even though he had
experienced the worse was filled with good humor and love.

The surgery was a miraculous success. All the best dental work was also done
for him. The young man became everything he promised God he would be. He was
also blessed with a wonderful, beautiful wife, and many children, and success
in an industry which would have been the furthest thing from his mind as a
career if not for the goodness of God and the love of the people who cared
for him. This he acknowledges publicly.

The young man . . .

Mel Gibson.

His life was the inspiration for his production of the movie "The Man Without
A Face." He is to be admired by all of us as a God fearing man, a political
conservative, and an example to all as a true man of courage.



Origins:   This is a piece too inane even for glurgemeister Paul Harvey.
Suffice it to say that someone has taken the framework of Mel Gibson's
biography and built upon it a touching but completely fictitious house of
glurge.

Mel Gibson's father did move his family from New York to Sydney, Australia,
when Mel was 12, but the similarities between this piece and Mel's real life
end there. Young Mel wasn't dreaming of "joining the circus as a trapeze
artist"; he was a Catholic high school student mulling over the possibilities
of becoming a chef or a journalist who ended up enrolling in the University
of New South Wales' National Institute of Dramatic Art. Young Mel had a role
in the low-budget film Summer City while still a student and then appeared in
a number of productions with the State Theatre Company of South Australia
before the lucky break that catapulted him to stardom: being chosen for the
lead role in George Miller's action film Mad Max.

A little bit of truth sneaks into the story at this point. The night before
his Mad Max audition, Gibson reportedly came in a poor second in a barroom
brawl, ending up with a face "like a busted grapefruit." He then had to
audition for the Mad Max role with a bruised, swollen, discolored, and
freshly stitched face -- an appearance that, legend has it, helped win over
producers who wanted someone weathered and rough-looking to take the part.
The beating Gibson received did not, however, leave him with "smashed eye
sockets," fracture his "skull, legs, and arms," result in the loss of "all
his teeth" or a nose that was "hanging from his face" or a "jaw almost
completely torn from his skull." He didn't spend "over a year in the
hospital," nor did five years pass with Mel in agony before "plastic surgery
restored his looks." His face got smashed up a bit, he required a few
stitches to close some open cuts, and a few weeks later he was good as new.

Mel Gibson did direct and star in The Man Without a Face, a 1993 film about a
man who became a recluse after his face was disfigured in an automobile
accident, but the movie was based upon a novel by Isabelle Holland, not Mel
Gibson's life.

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