FEATURE image: Louis Gossett, Jr. (1936-2024). “File:Louis Gossett Jr LF.JPG” by Credit to lukeford.net (permission statement at en:User:Tabercil/Luke Ford permission) is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.5.

Louis Gossett, Jr. won that year’s Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in the role of Navy Gunnery Sergeant Emil Foley in the 1982 Paramount Pictures’ summer blockbuster film, An Officer and a Gentleman. Directed by Taylor Hackford and starring Richard Gere and Debra Winger, the story concerns 13 weeks of training of a group of aviation officer candidates led by Sgt. Foley. As officer candidates from all walks of civilian life build their classroom and field skills—including the importance of camaraderie among classmates—graduation will not be reached until candidates’ personal strengths and weaknesses, hopes and desires, both on and off the base are revealed and tested. This is particularly true for officer candidate Zack Mayo (Richard Gere).
From his roles in television’s Watchmen (2019) as Will Reeve/Hooded Justice to dozens of major motion pictures such as The Color Purple (2023) as Ol’ Mister Johnson and An Officer and a Gentleman (1982) as Gunnery Sergeant Emil Foley, Louis Gossett Jr. was a trailblazing acting talent. In this penultimate scene from An Officer and A Gentleman, Sgt. Foley’s graduating recruits are giving thanks to their gunnery. In the scene, when Sgt Foley receives Ensign Mayo’s Navy challenge coin—a civilian officer candidate most profoundly transformed by Sgt. Foley’s training to U.S. Navy flight officer—he puts the coin in a pocket apart from the rest: a coin that symbolizes challenging accomplishment of special purpose.
SOURCES:
https://customchallengecoins.net/the-rich-history-and-meaning-behind-navy-challenge-coins/ – retrieved March 30, 2024.



