Biden mentions his service in WWII, something a lot of people don't know about him:
Benedetto was drafted into the United States Army in November 1944, during the final stages of World War II.[12][25] He did basic training at Fort Dix and Fort Robinson as part of becoming an infantry rifleman...Processed through the huge Le Havre replacement depot, in January 1945, he was assigned as a replacement infantryman to the 255th Infantry Regiment of the 63rd Infantry Division, a unit filling in for the heavy losses suffered in the Battle of the Bulge.[27] He moved across France and later into Germany.[12] As March 1945 began, he joined the front line of what he would later describe as a "front-row seat in hell".[27]
As the German Army was pushed back to its homeland, Benedetto and his company saw bitter fighting in cold winter conditions, often hunkering down in foxholes as German 88 mm guns fired on them.[28] At the end of March, they crossed the Rhine and entered Germany, engaging in dangerous house-to-house, town-after-town fighting to clean out German soldiers;[28] during the first week of April, they crossed the Kocher River, and by the end of the month reached the Danube.[29] During his time in combat, Benedetto narrowly escaped death several times.[12] The experience made him a pacifist;[12] he would later write, "Anybody who thinks that war is romantic obviously hasn't gone through one,"[27] and later say, "It was a nightmare that's permanent. I just said, 'This is not life. This is not life.'"[30] At the war's conclusion he was involved in the liberation of the Kaufering concentration camp, a subcamp of Dachau, near Landsberg, where some American prisoners of war from the 63rd Division had also been held.[29] He later wrote in his autobiography that "I saw things no human being should ever have to see."[31]
Benedetto stayed in Germany as part of the occupying force but was assigned to an informal Special Services band unit that would entertain nearby American forces.[12] His dining with a black friend from high school—at a time when the Army was still racially segregated—led to his being demoted and reassigned to Graves Registration Service duties.[32] Subsequently, he sang with the 314th Army Special Services Band under the stage name Joe Bari[33] (a name he had started using before the war, chosen after the city and province in Italy, and as a partial anagram of his family origins in Calabria).[34] He played with many musicians who would have post-war careers.[33]
After the war, he struggled to launch his career as a singer. He studied the Bel canto style of singing at The American Theatre Wing, and cut several records under the name Bari, but they failed to sell.
In 1949, Pearl Bailey became aware of his talent, and asked him to open for her. It was the big break he needed:
She had invited Bob Hope to the show. Hope decided to take Benedetto on the road with him and simplified his name to Tony Bennett.[37]
Soon he was signed to Columbia Records, and his career began to take off.
He was not afraid to stand up for his beliefs. He marched in Martin Luther King's civil rights marches, and said Bush's invasion of Iraq was a mistake. When criticized for this, he replied: "There is simply no excuse for terrorism and the murder of the nearly 3,000 innocent victims of the 9/11 attacks on our country. My life experiences, ranging from the Battle of the Bulge to marching with Martin Luther King, made me a life-long humanist and pacifist, and reinforced my belief that violence begets violence and that war is the lowest form of human behavior."[91]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Bennett