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War & Peace Quote by Eli Wallach

"I'd come out of the army after five years as a medic. I was a medical administrator and we ran hospitals, and I was a captain in the army at the end, in 1945"

About this Quote

Wallach’s sentence reads like a résumé line, and that’s the point: it’s trying to strip war of myth. No battlefield heroics, no swelling moral lesson, just the bureaucratic spine of a massive institution: medic, administrator, hospitals, captain, 1945. The cadence is almost clerical, as if he’s filing his own past in a cabinet. For an actor who later made a career out of swaggering outlaws and big-screen bravado, the understatement lands as a quiet rebuttal to the kinds of stories America prefers about World War II.

The specific intent feels twofold. First, credibility: Wallach isn’t claiming combat glory, but he’s staking a serious kind of authority - the proximity to bodies, triage, systems, and the logistics that keep people alive. Second, distance: by emphasizing administration and rank, he frames his wartime identity as defined by responsibility rather than adrenaline. That choice is subtextual self-protection, too; medics see consequences, and administrators see scale. Either perspective makes romantic war narratives harder to sustain.

Context matters: 1945 isn’t just a date, it’s a cultural pivot. He’s placing himself at the end of a world-shaking conflict right before his public life begins. The line functions like a hinge between eras - the wartime state and the postwar entertainment machine. It suggests that the man who would later play larger-than-life characters came from a world where the drama was real, routinized, and grimly organized. That tension gives the quote its power: it refuses spectacle while quietly explaining how someone might spend a lifetime understanding it.

Quote Details

TopicMilitary & Soldier
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wallach, Eli. (2026, February 19). I'd come out of the army after five years as a medic. I was a medical administrator and we ran hospitals, and I was a captain in the army at the end, in 1945. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/id-come-out-of-the-army-after-five-years-as-a-45753/

Chicago Style
Wallach, Eli. "I'd come out of the army after five years as a medic. I was a medical administrator and we ran hospitals, and I was a captain in the army at the end, in 1945." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/id-come-out-of-the-army-after-five-years-as-a-45753/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I'd come out of the army after five years as a medic. I was a medical administrator and we ran hospitals, and I was a captain in the army at the end, in 1945." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/id-come-out-of-the-army-after-five-years-as-a-45753/. Accessed 1 Apr. 2026.

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About the Author

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Eli Wallach (born December 7, 1915) is a Actor from USA.

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