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Lucy Whitmore
Inspired by: Michelle Philpots
Film Appearance: 50 First Dates (2004)
Played by: Drew Barrymore
Fictional Bio:
Imagine being unable to remember anything that has happened to you after a certain point in your life. Due to a rare form of amnesia, this is the life Lucy lives. It means that she lives in the past, and wakes up each day unaware of what has happened in the days, weeks and months since the date her amnesia set in. When evidence shows the passage of time and change, she is understandably shaken to the core. In 50 First Dates, Lucy (played by Drew Barrymore) lives in a small village in Hawaii, where well-meaning friends help to reinforce her illusions day after day. One day she comes across the path of womanising marine veterinarian Henry (Adam Sandler), who promptly falls in love with her, reforms his philandering ways and finds new ways to 'meet' Lucy every day. Flash forward past romantic trials and tribulations, plus some Beach Boys music, and we eventually see them married and sailing the Arctic in a yacht. They now have children and Lucy awakes every single day to watch a cassette tape which brings her up to speed on her new happy life. It's a happy ending, and a bloody weird one.
Real-Life Bio:
Lucy was inspired by Michelle Philpots, who suffers the same kind of amnesia as the result of brain injuries sustained in two road crashes, 5 years apart. Philpots lives in Spalding, Lincolnshire, and her long term memory ends some time in 1994. Every day she wakes up next to a man, Ian, who has to remind her that she's married, often bringing out the wedding pictures as proof. Once convinced, we presume they head down for breakfast and she gets up to speed on what's been going on. Philpots organises her life quite well with a combination of post it notes, sat-nav, and phone calendar notifications, and apparently neither jokes nor TV re-runs get old for her, which is one advantage to her condition.
How similar is the film character to the real one?
Their predicaments are quite similar, but Michelle and Lucy look completely different, live in totally different circumstances, and do very different things with their lives. Michelle works 3 days a week for a charity, where Lucy, apparently, sails around in a yacht studying Arctic wildlife.
Viktor Navorski
Inspired by: Mehran Nasseri
Film Appearance: The Terminal (2004)
Played by: Tom Hanks
Fictional Bio:
Viktor Navorski, travelling to the U.S from Krakozhia (not a real country), finds himself unable to return home after a civil war breaks out and his country breaks down. Unauthorised to enter American soil, and unable to return to a country that no longer exists (at least diplomatically), Viktor is forced to live in the terminal of JFK International Airport. In the process, he has lots of crazy adventures, endears himself to the staff, acts as a romantic matchmaker, gets an (illegal) job as a construction worker and falls in love. Despite attempts by the tyrannical airport overseer to kick him out, Viktor eventually triumphs and is allowed out of the terminal. There follows a magnificent scene where he gets the chance to finally collect the autograph of bebop saxophonist Benny Golson (the reason he came to the US in the first place) in memoriam of his deceased father.
Real-Life Bio:
Viktor was partly based on the life of Mehran Nasseri, an Iranian refugee who lived for 17 years in the departure lounge of Terminal One, Charles de Gaulle Airport in France. Mehran, also known as 'Sir Alfred' to airport workers, arrived there in 1988 after the briefcase that contained his papers was stolen and he was refused entry into the UK. Expelled from Iran for protesting against the Shah, he couldn't go home, and lacking the papers to officially enter France, the only place he was allowed to hang out was the airport. And hang out he did. FOR 17 years. Reading a lot. DreamWorks, who produced The Terminal, actually paid Nasseri for his story. But he doesn’t have a bank account, and apparently can't legally cash the cheques sent to his lawyer.
How similar is the film character to the real one?
Mehran's story was not quite as happy as Viktor's. He finally left the airport in 2006 when hospitalised for an unknown ailment. In March 2007 he was transferred to a homeless shelter in Paris where he apparently lives to this day. He still can't go back to Iran, but is free to travel about France – but doesn’t. His past refusals to leave the airport until medical reasons forced his hand suggest that he may have become institutionalised over those 17 years. Asked what his experience was like when living at Charles De Gaulle, he replied, "Maybe I don't do it like Tom Hanks does it...my day is just like inside a library. Silence."

Inspired by: Michelle Philpots
Film Appearance: 50 First Dates (2004)
Played by: Drew Barrymore
Fictional Bio:
Imagine being unable to remember anything that has happened to you after a certain point in your life. Due to a rare form of amnesia, this is the life Lucy lives. It means that she lives in the past, and wakes up each day unaware of what has happened in the days, weeks and months since the date her amnesia set in. When evidence shows the passage of time and change, she is understandably shaken to the core. In 50 First Dates, Lucy (played by Drew Barrymore) lives in a small village in Hawaii, where well-meaning friends help to reinforce her illusions day after day. One day she comes across the path of womanising marine veterinarian Henry (Adam Sandler), who promptly falls in love with her, reforms his philandering ways and finds new ways to 'meet' Lucy every day. Flash forward past romantic trials and tribulations, plus some Beach Boys music, and we eventually see them married and sailing the Arctic in a yacht. They now have children and Lucy awakes every single day to watch a cassette tape which brings her up to speed on her new happy life. It's a happy ending, and a bloody weird one.
Real-Life Bio:
Lucy was inspired by Michelle Philpots, who suffers the same kind of amnesia as the result of brain injuries sustained in two road crashes, 5 years apart. Philpots lives in Spalding, Lincolnshire, and her long term memory ends some time in 1994. Every day she wakes up next to a man, Ian, who has to remind her that she's married, often bringing out the wedding pictures as proof. Once convinced, we presume they head down for breakfast and she gets up to speed on what's been going on. Philpots organises her life quite well with a combination of post it notes, sat-nav, and phone calendar notifications, and apparently neither jokes nor TV re-runs get old for her, which is one advantage to her condition.
How similar is the film character to the real one?
Their predicaments are quite similar, but Michelle and Lucy look completely different, live in totally different circumstances, and do very different things with their lives. Michelle works 3 days a week for a charity, where Lucy, apparently, sails around in a yacht studying Arctic wildlife.
Viktor Navorski

Inspired by: Mehran Nasseri
Film Appearance: The Terminal (2004)
Played by: Tom Hanks
Fictional Bio:
Viktor Navorski, travelling to the U.S from Krakozhia (not a real country), finds himself unable to return home after a civil war breaks out and his country breaks down. Unauthorised to enter American soil, and unable to return to a country that no longer exists (at least diplomatically), Viktor is forced to live in the terminal of JFK International Airport. In the process, he has lots of crazy adventures, endears himself to the staff, acts as a romantic matchmaker, gets an (illegal) job as a construction worker and falls in love. Despite attempts by the tyrannical airport overseer to kick him out, Viktor eventually triumphs and is allowed out of the terminal. There follows a magnificent scene where he gets the chance to finally collect the autograph of bebop saxophonist Benny Golson (the reason he came to the US in the first place) in memoriam of his deceased father.
Real-Life Bio:
Viktor was partly based on the life of Mehran Nasseri, an Iranian refugee who lived for 17 years in the departure lounge of Terminal One, Charles de Gaulle Airport in France. Mehran, also known as 'Sir Alfred' to airport workers, arrived there in 1988 after the briefcase that contained his papers was stolen and he was refused entry into the UK. Expelled from Iran for protesting against the Shah, he couldn't go home, and lacking the papers to officially enter France, the only place he was allowed to hang out was the airport. And hang out he did. FOR 17 years. Reading a lot. DreamWorks, who produced The Terminal, actually paid Nasseri for his story. But he doesn’t have a bank account, and apparently can't legally cash the cheques sent to his lawyer.
How similar is the film character to the real one?
Mehran's story was not quite as happy as Viktor's. He finally left the airport in 2006 when hospitalised for an unknown ailment. In March 2007 he was transferred to a homeless shelter in Paris where he apparently lives to this day. He still can't go back to Iran, but is free to travel about France – but doesn’t. His past refusals to leave the airport until medical reasons forced his hand suggest that he may have become institutionalised over those 17 years. Asked what his experience was like when living at Charles De Gaulle, he replied, "Maybe I don't do it like Tom Hanks does it...my day is just like inside a library. Silence."
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