
Reagan's Last Movie
Historian Adam Smith tells the extraordinary story of Ronald Reagan's last movie. Would things have been different if The Killers (1964) had been shown on TV as planned?
He's Trump's idol - the new President took his 2016 slogan 'Make America Great Again' straight from Ronald Reagan's barnstorming 1980 campaign. But like Trump, Reagan had a long past in entertainment - and one that might have scuppered his political career before it really took off. For BBC World News, historian Adam Smith tells the extraordinary story of Reagan's last movie. In The Killers (1964), Reagan played a criminal for the first time, and portrayed California businessmen as corrupt and violent - just months before real California businessmen launched him into national politics. But why did he do it? And what might have happened if The Killers had been shown on TV as planned?
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Credit
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Adam Smith |
Broadcasts
- Sat 9 Sep 201703:30GMTBBC News Channel BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD only
- Sat 9 Sep 201713:30GMTBBC News Channel BBC News UK HD & BBC News UK only
- Sat 9 Sep 201723:30GMTBBC News Channel BBC News UK HD & BBC News UK only
- Sun 10 Sep 201702:30GMTBBC News Channel BBC News UK HD & BBC News UK only
- Sun 10 Sep 201720:30GMTBBC News Channel BBC News UK HD & BBC News UK only