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The Billy Hayes Interview

By: Bob Andelman
Narrated by: Bob Andelman, Billy Hayes
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Publisher's Summary

Midnight Express was one of the scariest movies I ever saw. It was probably one of the most horrifying films you ever saw, too. The story of Billy Hayes, an American tourist caught attempting to leave Turkey by plane in 1970 with bags of hashish taped to his stomach, for which he was subsequently jailed for five years - and, with only 42 days left to serve, resentenced to life in prison - was made into a major motion picture starring Brad Davis and written by Oliver Stone. It won numerous Academy Awards and caused the Turkish government to go on the attack around the world against the filmmakers and Hollywood over its incredibly unflattering portrait of the Turkish nation. And it turns out that the Turks were right about one thing – many key aspects of Midnight Express may have been invented by Stone. 

In a new documentary film about his life, Hayes admits the movie got several aspects of his Turkish experience wrong, starting with the fact he was not an innocent, first-time drug smuggler. When he was caught, it was at least his fourth time moving hash out of the country. Hayes apologizes in Midnight Return: The Story of Billy Hayes and Turkey to the Turkish government for the negative portrayal of all Turks created by the original film. It has more than a few surprises for anyone that remembers the original. 

Billy Hayes interview excerpt: "You don’t see any good Turks in the whole Midnight Express film [written by Oliver Stone]. That wasn’t true to my experience or to reality…. And in the film’s escape scene - which is like an afterthought! - he kills a guard, which I did NOT do. Big fact change. That’s not how I escaped prison."

©2017 Bob Andelman (P)2017 Bob Andelman

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