The Daily - The Sunday Read: 'This Tom Hanks Story Will Make You Feel Less Bad'
Episode Date: March 15, 2020A magazine writer for The Times reflects on her experience interviewing Tom Hanks last fall — and on the generosity he showed her in a difficult personal moment. In this time of collective stress, w...e wanted to bring the story to you in audio as a reminder that “contagion is real, but it doesn’t just work for viruses,” our writer said. “It works for kind words and generous thoughts, and acts of selflessness and honesty.”This story was recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publishers like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Hi, it's Taffy Brodesser-Ackner, a feature writer here at The Times.
Michael Barbaro handed me his show today so that I could tell you a little bit about a profile I wrote a few months ago about Tom Hanks.
Okay, go ahead. I'm right here for you.
Thank you.
When I interviewed him, I was not myself.
I was really sad from missing my kids.
I was sick.
And though I tried to be a real professional in this interview,
I fell apart a little bit.
And Tom Hanks comforted me.
It's good to cry. It's good to talk.
I don't know. This is not about me.
I know exactly what you're talking about.
And I realize now that,
now that we know that he and his wife, Rita Wilson,
are in quarantine in Australia with the coronavirus,
I'm thinking a lot about contagion,
but I'm also thinking a lot about him
and other things that are contagious
in our world, like kindness and consideration. There's so much panic and worry out there.
I hope you listen to the story, which will be read to you by Samantha Dez. And I hope
that hearing about my time with Tom will give you some comfort as well.
Here is a list of stories about Tom Hanks I've heard over the last few miserable months, as it appeared that politeness and civility and manners were facing an extinction event in this country.
Once, in 2008, when he was shooting Angels and Demons in Rome by the Pantheon,
a bride and her father couldn't approach the chapel because of the hullabaloo,
so Hank stopped filming to escort them to the altar.
Once, in 2015, he stopped by a table of Girl Scout cookies and bought some boxes,
2015, he stopped by a table of Girl Scout cookies and bought some boxes, donated an additional $20, then offered selfies to passersby as an enticement to buy.
That same year, he found a young woman's student ID in a park and used his charming Twitter feed, which shooting Saving Private Ryan,
Steven Spielberg sent Hanks and other cast members out to do military training in the woods with a former Marine.
After spending time in the rain, they all voted to quit the training,
except for Hanks, who chose to obediently perform the job he was hired for,
and spurred the other men to stick with it as well.
These are the regular nice acts of a person who holds the mantle of every man in our movie star culture.
But lately, they have signified more than simple good deeds.
There's something like the embodiment of a gold standard of menschiness,
which is not just gone from the culture at large,
but now plays like a parody of it.
There's more.
Spielberg once said about him,
if Norman Rockwell were alive today, he would paint a portrait of Tom.
Quick, who was your favorite president? Is it Abraham Lincoln? Well, you'll never believe this, but Tom Hanks is related to him. The maiden name of Lincoln's mother, Nancy, was Hanks.
And yes, it's the same Hanks.
Quick, who is your second favorite president?
If it's Barack Obama, here's what he said about his true-life friend, Hanks,
at the Kennedy Center Honors Reception in 2014.
People have said that Tom is Hollywood's everyman,
that he's this generation's Jimmy Stewart or Gary Cooper,
but he's just Tom Hanks.
And that's enough.
That's more than enough.
Two years later, Obama gave him the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
The day after Hanks' new movie,
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood,
in which he stars as Mr. Rogers,
debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival in September,
he was sitting on a bench in a hallway outside a conference room,
making jokes to a group of publicists, waiting for me ahead of the appointed time.
That does not really ever happen, an actor waiting for me ahead of the appointed time,
versus clearly dreading me two hours past it.
I think a long time ago,
I learned how important it was to show up a little bit early,
Hanks told me.
Be ready to go, you know,
and to respect the whole process.
And I think that you could respect the whole process
even when the other people don't.
So, Tom Hanks is as nice as you think he is,
and exactly what you hope him to be. Which is great, unless you are someone trying to tell
a good story about him, with elements like an arc and narrative tension. Saintly actor playing
Saintly Public Television children's host Mr. Rogers is Saintly is not a great story.
and children's host Mr. Rogers is saintly, is not a great story. But what am I supposed to do?
He sat facing me, cheerful and focused and willing. Maybe this could just be a story that makes you feel better. An hour later, he sat on a panel with the filmmakers and other actors,
all of whom seemed giddy to put a Mr. Rogers movie out into the world,
all of whom seemed giddy to put a Mr. Rogers movie out into the world,
relaying all the stories they'd heard about him.
Tom Junot, who wrote the 1998 article in Esquire that the movie is based on,
would talk about the way his interactions with Fred Rogers changed his life.
You sit there and you listen, and it's hard to believe that those stories are real.
In our first interview there in Toronto, Hank sat back in a chair with his
left ankle pressed against the top of his right patella. He was wearing clear plastic framed
glasses and a beard for shooting News of the World, which is set in the aftermath of the Civil War.
In our interviews, he says, oh dear, and jeez, and for crying out loud. He is a history enthusiast. He is an information
enthusiast. He is an enthusiasm enthusiast. At one point, I can't remember why, he recited the
preamble to the Constitution. In the panels after the premiere, some of the questions seemed to be
based on the notion that Tom Hanks is so wonderful and Mr. Rogers-y that
he just had to show up and read some lines since, hey, they're both essentially the same. Easygoing,
nice men with graying hair. This created as close to a crisis as the people who made this movie will
probably have. It has been 24 years since Tom Hanks won an Oscar, two in a row for Philadelphia and Forrest Gump.
It has been 18 years since he was even nominated, even though he has had an unrelenting leading man career that includes the last three devastating minutes of Captain Phillips.
So while other movies this year opened to PR disasters around the off-screen behavior of their stars or directors or producers,
it was this that the Beautiful Day team felt they had to get in front of.
The notion that Tom Hanks wasn't acting when he was playing Mr. Rogers.
At a panel, a journalist suggested that he's actually playing Tom Hanks, but just slower.
But the slowness of Fred Rogers, the unselfconscious considered
slowness, was hard, Hanks said. It felt ridiculous when he first tried it out.
He studied hours of tapes because sometimes he couldn't imagine that he was supposed to go
this slowly. When you get over that, there is some point where you just go,
When you get over that, there is some point where you just go, Oh, dear Lord, this just has to be slower, and it's not dumber.
It's a combination of procedure and behavior that was singularly Fred Rogers.
It wasn't just about pace, though.
It was about a specificity of cadence and an intention.
When Hanks watched those tapes, he saw that Mr. Rogers was always talking to a
single kid, a single person two feet on the other side of the camera screen. They said,
when you were talking to Fred, you felt as though you were the only person in the world that mattered
to him. Performance aside, it's not hard to see why the director, Marielle Heller, wanted him so badly for the role.
He bears a somewhat passing physical resemblance to Rogers,
which was a good start.
He is most often cast in roles that need what Robert Zemeckis,
who directed Forrest Gump, among other Hanks movies,
calls that classic everyman quality.
Over my reporting, many, many people told me what an everyman he is. But Mr. Rogers
wasn't an everyman. It didn't hurt that whereas Mr. Rogers was the closest thing my generation
had to a living saint, even Mother Teresa got cancelled eventually, Tom Hanks was the closest
thing we had to Mr. Rogers. An uncomplicated-seeming, scandal-free man with a long career
who never had to issue a public statement that included the phrase,
it was a different time.
In other words, having Tom Hanks cast as Mr. Rogers
removes a layer of suspension of disbelief
that is the burden of a movie depicting a real-life person.
Hanks had read the script years before, but while Mr. Rogers is the hero of a movie depicting a real-life person. Hanks had read the script years before,
but while Mr. Rogers is the hero of the story,
he's not necessarily the protagonist of it,
and so it felt like just another midlife crisis movie
about a man dealing with a fraught relationship with his father.
But by the time a revised script got to him,
circumstances had changed.
Back in 2015, Hanks read a story on female directors
in the New York Times Magazine and had decided he wanted to make an effort to work with some of them.
That week, at his granddaughter's birthday party, he met Heller, who had been featured in the story.
He went home and watched her debut The Diary of a Teenage Girl, and told her that he wanted to try to make something
work. A few years later, now attached to Beautiful Day, she sent the script over to him, and here we
are. I think it's an essence thing, Heller told me of Hank's portrayal, which she insisted on that
panel, and to me, was a performance. It's something in the energy, and the essence, and behind the eyes that you
feel the same way looking at him as you feel looking at Mr. Rogers. And that was what was
important to me. I never wanted him to be doing an imitation.
A week after our first interview, a member of Hanks' team would call to plan our second interview,
and she would casually bring up
that he was actually acting as Mr. Rogers, and that yes, he was nice, but he was very much more
than that, and please, maybe I should not tell another story in which Tom Hanks is simply depicted
as nice. And then she told me a story about a time she was with him en route to the airport
and was feeling a little nauseous in the car. She was trying to make sure he didn't notice, but he did, and he changed seats with her
so that she could sit the way she needed to in order to feel better. I then told her the story
of the time I interviewed an actor in a hotel lobby where I was so sick that a member of the
hotel staff came over and asked if I needed painkillers or a doctor,
and the actor not only hadn't noticed, but continued to not notice even after this happened.
What she was saying was that playing any role successfully takes talent and work.
What she was also saying is that being nice is a choice.
In Can You Say Hero?, the magazine article that A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood is based on, the writer Tom Junot follows Fred Rogers as he interacts with children
and commits acts of kindness and empathy that are simple yet totally astounding.
But the protagonist of Beautiful Day is not named Tom Junot. He's named Lloyd Vogel. In the movie, Lloyd, Matthew Rhys,
is an Esquire writer with a bad reputation
whose broken relationships with his father and his new son
have led to anger and despair.
His editor assigns him a short piece on Mr. Rogers
that changes his life.
The movie veers into science fiction
when it features a female editor-in-chief
and a 90s-era Esquire staff filled with people of color.
In the last part of the article, Junot prays with Fred Rogers at Rogers' behest,
and he writes that his
heart felt like a spike, and then, in that room, it opened and felt like an umbrella.
That just being around him was enough to make him see the world differently,
and then, to be loved by him,
was enough to make him a completely different kind of journalist,
and a completely different kind of person.
But neither the movie nor the magazine article
tell the real backstory of the meeting.
Junot, who is a friend of mine,
profiled Fred Rogers after
writing a story in 1997 in which he, in effect, outed Kevin Spacey, who only recently revealed
that he is gay after a Me Too scandal. The story briefly made Junot something of a pariah in
Hollywood and flung him into soul-searching about the kind of writer he wanted to be.
Hollywood and flung him into soul-searching about the kind of writer he wanted to be.
He'd had a ruthlessness to him, he told me in Toronto. He didn't want to be ruthless anymore.
It was then that he met Mr. Rogers, who prayed for him and his family every day,
and who kept a file on Junot, which the screenwriters Micah Fitzerman Blue and Noah Harpster found in Rogers' archives in Pittsburgh.
In that file, he laid out four pillars of journalism that he hoped Junot would stick to.
1. Journalists are human beings, not stenographers.
Human beings, not automatons.
2. Point out injustice when you have to.
3. Point out injustice when you have to. Three, point out beauty when you can.
Four, be aware of celebrating the wonders of creation.
It's been a long time since a magazine article about a celebrity could sell tickets to a movie,
but Hanks doesn't mind doing interviews.
I hate doing disingenuous press,
the stuff that you have to essentially perform through the whole damn thing.
Though he can now smell the ones that are just trying to get something incendiary into a headline.
Ones where the writer says, tell me about that divorce.
In 1985, he and his first wife, Samantha Luz,
the mother of his son Colin and his daughter Elizabeth, split.
Hanks then married Rita Wilson, who was his co-star in Volunteers.
They've been married since 1988 and have two sons together, Chester and Truman.
There has not been much drama in this marriage department.
So he'll say, what?
We got divorced.
What happens next confuses him more.
Then they'll say, why won't this guy let me really get to know him?
It's because we're going to be spending altogether about two hours of my 63 years on planet Earth getting to know each other.
I committed something akin to this line of atrocity when I asked him if he had a dark side.
He said,
yes, and finally, finally, I'll get to tell it to the New York Times.
In our interviews, he doesn't evade any questions, but he doesn't spill either. He doesn't appear to have a need to be known by his public, but he also doesn't have the same strains of contempt
for journalists that I've
seen from other movie stars. Maybe that's because he's never been truly screwed by one, but just as
likely it's because he believes in the truth. The best articles I've ever read that have come out
have been an accurate reflection of the time I spent with that journalist, he said. That night in my hotel room, I watched the Kennedy
Center Honors from 2014. There's a moment when the a cappella group Pentatonix sings That Thing You
Do, the title track from the movie Hanks directed and starred in about a boy band that is filled
with the kind of wholesome, debonair, charming, and witty characters that he tends to favor.
At the ceremony, as the group sings,
Hank sits in the balcony with Wilson right behind him, waving his head in joyous, uncomplicated beat.
For maybe two seconds, a second camera goes to the grown Hank's children in the audience,
each of them singing along and bobbing their heads too. Colin is an actor and owns a handkerchief company called, uh,
Hank's Kerchiefs.
Elizabeth is a writer.
Chester has been chasing a rap career with Attendant Rap Controversy
and now plays a rapper on Empire.
And Truman is working on film sets
and, his father tells me,
has a degree in mathematics from Stanford.
I watched those two seconds at the Kennedy Center maybe 10 or 12 times.
Tom Hanks got his first typewriter when he was 19.
He told me this at our second meeting, which was in Santa Fe,
where he's shooting News of the World.
It was a Sunday, and he'd just come from seeing Ad Astra with his youngest son, Truman.
He'd altered his schedule that day for me.
Santa Fe has an elevation of 7,200 feet, and I'd woken up breathless
and had gone to an urgent care center for oxygen that morning.
So, after they'd gone to an earlier movie than they had planned,
he met me in a conference room at a hotel ahead of schedule
so I could leave town earlier than I'd
planned. He walked in wearing a big straw hat and the same beard he'd had in Canada.
Once, a person I was interviewing showed up four hours late so that our interview began at 11 p.m.
Hanks grew up in Northern California, in the era of the Zodiac Killer and Patty Hearst and the
Black Panthers and the People's Park Riots.
He was five when his parents divorced, and he and his older brother and sister went to live with his father,
while another brother lived with their mother.
Both parents were in rough shape, just trying to survive.
His father worked in a variety of small restaurants, remarrying again and again, and moving every few months.
He and his siblings had the run of the house while their father worked long hours.
They didn't eat the frozen vegetables he brought home, and they mostly knew what time it was
because of what was on television. No one told me how to brush my teeth, he said. I never flossed
until I was out of high school, because dental hygiene was handled by a film strip that we saw in second grade that said,
really, try to eat an apple, and that cleans your teeth.
So, hey, I had an apple last week, so my teeth are kind of clean.
He was never angry at his parents.
He's still not.
He saw how hard it was for them to function.
They never explained things to him.
Now he knows.
It's because they didn't have the verbiage.
They didn't have the vocabulary.
And they were so wracked with self-loathing and guilt and etc.
All that stuff that went along.
And there were four of us, for God's sake.
And they just, you know, couldn't do it.
Now I've got four kids myself.
And as soon as you start having your own kids, you go like,, couldn't do it. Now I've got four kids myself, and as soon as you start having
your own kids, you go like, oh, I get it. He remembers Oprah once asked him on her show about
his dysfunctional family growing up, and he thought, what's that? Oh, that's us. He'd never
thought of himself that way. But somewhere underneath, he must have known that something was off,
because he had started accumulating a lot of typewriters, hundreds of them.
It was something about how he never got to keep the things he loved through all of his family's moves.
Now that he's 63 and he's thought a lot about it,
he realizes that when he was young, he'd often have to move on a moment's notice
and was not in charge of packing,
so he often lost things that were important to him.
I had nothing, actually, that stayed with me all through my life.
I don't have anything from when I was five years old.
I don't have anything from when I was three.
Like I said, he was 19 when he got his first typewriter.
A friend gave it to him.
It was a hunk of junk, a toy, he said.
He went to get it serviced, and the repairman said to him,
This is a toy. Why are you using a toy?
The man sold him a Hermes 2000, which is now lost.
So he invested in another.
I said, Oh yeah, this is going to stay with me for
a while. And I am soothed by it. I'm soothed by having it. I'm soothed by knowing that I can take
it anywhere with me. Everyone I spoke with about him told a story about notes they received from
one of his typewriters. Sally Field recently received a note from Hanks that conveyed how moved he was by her
2018 memoir, In Pieces. She was kicking herself because she has yet to convey to him how much
she enjoyed his book of short stories, Uncommon Type, which she had read a year earlier.
She also told me about the weekly newsletter he wrote on a laptop on the set of Forrest Gump about happenings among the cast and crew.
A weekly newsletter.
He loves typewriters because
they're brilliant combinations of art and engineering,
but art, engineering, and purpose, he said.
Every machine is as individual as a set of fingerprints,
so every time you type something on a typewriter,
it's a one-of-a-kind work of art. He even created a sweet little app called
HanksWriter that allows you to type and send a message rendered in typewriter style.
When he started collecting them, he was married, but he was just as transient as he'd been as a
child. He was getting gigs on the Love Boat
and at the Great Lakes Theater outside Cleveland.
He began to collect typewriters,
maybe because he finally had control over his belongings,
even though he still moved a lot.
When he thinks about that time, he said,
I start thinking about mistakes I made with my own kids
and not explaining things or not being there for them,
or being so preoccupied with other things that are going on in our adult world.
My son Colin was born when I was very young, as well as my daughter, but that means we have this
gestalt understanding because they remember when their dad was just a guy trying to, you know,
make the rent. My other kids, they were born after I had established a beachhead in every way,
and so their lives were just different.
I told him then that I'd watched his Kennedy Center honors ceremony
probably more times than is appropriate.
His older children have weathered divorce and uncertainty.
His younger sons have weathered a life of wealth and privilege.
And I wanted to know how you could be a transient person trying to make a name for yourself in the world,
and also end up with children that sing along to your songs with great affection when you're done raising them.
My children are getting older, the oldest about to turn 12, I told him.
And I felt like lately everything I said was misunderstood, everything was seen as criticism or nagging, and suddenly I could clearly see how a child who used to want to lie in bed with you and watch movies on his birthday could drift towards someone who could barely look at you.
Someone who could barely look at you.
Someone who didn't understand that all your insistence was just about being a good person in the world,
and the myriad ways to do that, and the even more myriad ways you could stumble upon the opposite.
This coupled with an awareness that being good wasn't so simple anymore,
and that I ran the risk of my children seeing behind the nagging and criticism down to my basic daily deeds,
and finding that I wasn't so good in the world,
that at best, I was neutral.
It isn't easy being a parent, not for any of us, he said.
Somewhere along the line, I figured out the only thing really, I think, eventually a parent can do
is say, I love you. There's nothing
you can do wrong. You cannot hurt my feelings. I hope you will forgive me on occasion. And what do
you need me to do? You offer that up to them. I will do anything I can possibly do in order to
keep you safe. That's it. Offer that up, and then just love them.
He looked at me for my next question, and when he saw my face, he said,
Okay, go ahead. I'm right here for you, Taffy. It's good to cry. It's good to talk.
Somewhere in the last 40 years, Tom Hanks came to the conclusion that he doesn't scare anyone.
in the last 40 years, Tom Hanks came to the conclusion that he doesn't scare anyone.
I recognized in myself a long time ago that I don't instill fear in anybody, he said. Now,
that's different than being nice, you know. I think I have a cachet of mystery, but it's not one of malevolence. So when people ask him why he rarely plays a bad guy, that's what he says.
So when people ask him why he rarely plays a bad guy, that's what he says.
It's because I never get them, because bad guys, by and large,
require some degree of malevolence that I don't think I can fake.
Not that all of his characters are saints.
He played an assassin in Road to Perdition,
and a terrible villain as one of the several characters he played in Cloud Atlas.
But that was under an awful lot of makeup, he said.
But he can't play a villain who wants to destroy for no reason because he can't bring himself to understand what that motivation might be.
That's one of the reasons his production company, Playtone,
options and develops so much nonfiction material.
It's why he ends up playing so many real people. Real people have
real motivations. They are complicated in realistic ways. But it's more than that. He favors stories
of extraordinary acts that are based on reality. Proof that extraordinary things exist. That they
don't just have to be imagined. It's a movie with optimism. It's a role
where you get to wear a uniform and a hat. It's a debonair man with good values who has the perfect
comeback. It's war heroes and the promise that science will make us better and how history should
be memorized. It's a belief in humankind that we can't all be that bad.
I laughed out loud.
He looked at me again and waited.
It's just all been so dark lately, I told him.
It feels like the world has been engulfed in a chronic-seeming grimness,
and it was beginning to feel like it was no longer an aberration, but the new reality.
I told him I remembered that in 2015, we'd make jokes on social media
about what a cursed year it was. But it got worse, and so on, until now, here we are,
a journalist crying in a conference room in Santa Fe. He told me about these speculative
fiction books he reads by Kim Stanley Robinson. In one of them, about New York in the year 2140, it says,
history is a record of humanity trying to get a grip. It's completely relative, he said. And if
you had gone back not very far, this level of vitriol and excitement and worry was just as huge
back in the Monica Lewinsky era, and we thought, oh, that's about as big and as insane as it's going to get.
And then along comes something equally big and insane.
Then he told me about a trip he and Truman took on the Los Angeles light rail.
So many people complain about public transportation,
and most people, as recognizable as Hanks, wouldn't dream of using it.
But while he was on the train,
he couldn't think of a thing you'd complain about.
He couldn't stop marveling about how well it worked,
what a miracle it was.
Meaning, things were always this bad,
but they were also always this good.
Lately, he's been giving away his typewriters.
Now that he's had a home all these years and stability,
and a wife who sings to him,
and children who bring his three granddaughters to visit him regularly,
he wants to get a little leaner on stuff again.
He's down to about 120.
One day, he'll just have one.
The one he'll keep is the Olivetti Latara 22,
the same model they keep at MoMA. I told him I make too many mistakes to work on a typewriter,
but Tom Hanks is more optimistic than I am. It was this optimism I'd been hoping to capture
when I took on this story. It was this optimism I was hoping to marinate in so that I'd
feel a little better about the world for a couple of hours a day for a few weeks. I'd been depressed
lately, and the amount of time you have to spend researching a profile, reading the old articles,
re-watching the movies, would help me avoid any kind of subversiveness. In exchange, my story would be boring. It's okay, I told him. Some stories are
boring. And maybe it was because this paragon of professionalism spent half of the interview
crying, or maybe because Hanks felt bad about my altitude sickness, or maybe this is just what it
means to be nice, but this is what he said to me.
Let's not call this a dark side, but I realize, and I used it over and over again,
the ability to seduce a room, seduce a group of people, and that it started off when I was very young as a self-defense mechanism, but then turned into a manipulative kind of thing,
mechanism, but then turned into a manipulative kind of thing, because I didn't realize that I was as good at it as I was. And part of that is I am not malevolent. I am not mysterious.
You're not going to get a huge amount of anger out of me or anything like that.
I'm not coming in to dominate a room, but I am coming in to seduce it somehow.
The niceness is the seduction.
It's the thing he can do better than anyone,
and it also helped him hide, he said.
I thought the thing to do was to win the moment
more than carry through with an idea.
I'd come to a meeting and they'd say,
I understand you have problems with the rewrite.
I'd say, no, no, no, hell, we can make it work.
That's a cowardice there.
And that's me being willing to seduce whoever that person is on the other side of the room.
In which, what do I come off as?
Oh, he's got no problem.
He can make it work.
He's a good guy to work with, et cetera, et cetera.
Which is not much by way of darkness, and all it really proves is that
Tom Hanks is even nicer than I thought. He wants to save my story from being boring. Which I could
do on my own. I could make a convincing argument that performance art as a nice person, from your
public actions to your choice of roles as altruistic heroic types,
is a way to hide from expanding your range. I could ask questions about that weird one-sided
feud with Henry Winkler, who was fired from directing Turner and Hooch after 13 days,
and who recently told Andy Cohen that he got along great, great, with that dog.
I could call old assistants to try to find out what he
was really like back then, since the most recent ones I spoke with were warmly talking about how
wonderful he is. But if I had that kind of instinct, I was worn down over the next few
weeks as I spent hours on the phone with people who knew him well. The things they said about him were both remarkable and unremarkable.
Heller called him a human who treats everyone like people. Meg Ryan, who starred with him in
Sleepless in Seattle and other movies, said he has an astronomical curiosity. Peter Scolari,
who co-starred with him on the sitcom Bosom Buddies and then Lucky Guy on Broadway,
who co-starred with him on the sitcom Bosom Buddies and then Lucky Guy on Broadway,
called him this very special man who was touched by God. Sally Field told me that Tom Hanks is so good that it actually makes her feel bad. She calls him once-in-a-lifetime Tom.
Hearing that made me think of something Tom Junot said to me in Toronto,
how he went into the Mr. Rogers story looking for who
Fred was, but came out knowing only what he did. He stared at all his reporting for a long time
before he realized that the doing is actually the thing we should be paying attention to.
I don't know if Fred was the mask or the mask was Fred, he said. But in the end, does it even matter?
I'm not sure where we got the concept of an everyman,
but Tom Hanks isn't really it.
I don't know people with hundreds of typewriters.
He is the platonic ideal of a man,
a projection of what we wish we were,
or, more worrisome, a theory of what we actually are.
And, well, have you read the other pages of this newspaper?
I am too old for Mr. Rogers. My children are too old for Mr. Rogers, too. So instead,
I showed them Splash, then Forrest Gump, then Big, then a league of their own. I showed them that thing you do,
and parts of Castaway. I told them about the man who heard I wasn't feeling well and adjusted his
schedule for me. I told them that it doesn't matter why you do nice things. All that matters
is that you do them. And one day, something changed. I had just finished Toy Story 4,
and suddenly all my algorithms were recommending
open-hearted movies with heroes and good values, and I realized that I had begun to feel a little
better. My heart was never a spike, it was always an umbrella, but sometimes it would invert against
a storm. That day I recalibrated, and suddenly my umbrella was upright, once again
able to shield me from the weather. It was enough. It was more than enough.
This is an accurate reflection of the time Tom Hanks spent with a journalist.
This was recorded by Autumn.
Autumn is an app you can download to listen to lots of audio stories
from publishers such as the New York Times.
This is me.
If you suddenly realize that you have been tortured these years,
you too need to tell me.
You'd be surprised how often people talk about it.
Well, if you have anything, if you have any other questions,
just, you know, just let me know.
I will. You're wonderful. you