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About Steve :: Actor :: Influences
Tom Hanks
Steve and Tom have been good friends for a long time.
They play poker together, they socialize, they hang out.
But Steve admires Tom's dramatic acting
skills. As he has moved more to straight dramatic roles, he has analyzed
Tom's technique just as he analyzes everything.
This article is all about Tom, but Steve
is in it and it gives some insight.
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Los Angeles Times
Sunday, November 7, 1999
Average Joe Versus the Icons: Tom Hanks plays the heroes, but don't
discount his ability to portray the little guy or evil.
AMY WALLACE
Steve Martin cornered Tom Hanks at a party a few months ago and asked the
two time Oscar winner the question that has occurred at least once to any
perceptive moviegoer. "You've become this great actor," Martin, a fellow
funny man turned actor director writer, said to Hanks. "I'm curious what
took you there. What did you do?"
The question was neither a joke, told by one wild and crazy guy to another,
nor a pointed reference to what Hanks himself would describe as his lesser
movies 1986's "The Money Pit," for example, or 1989's "Turner & Hooch." It
was instead an earnest attempt to understand how Hanks had, in a relatively
short amount of time, graduated from portraying clueless guys who can't cope
to embodying a nation's best sense of itself.
"He's like the complicated John Wayne. Because he's iconic, but many
sided," an admiring Martin said, remembering what made him initiate the
discussion. "He has such complexity and depth, as well a great sense of the
absurd. I told him, 'I know that acting just doesn't improve through study.
There's some kind of personal growth to make that change.' "
Hanks is often decidedly closed mouth about his acting methods, according to
directors who've worked with him. But he likes Martin, so he endeavored to
answer.
"I used to just show up and say let's get on with it," Hanks remembers
saying. "But you get to that point as an actor where you realize you're
examining an aspect of the human condition as opposed to just a story that
starts on Page 1 and ends on Page 20. And to do that, you have to have some
other stuff that's loaded up inside you the stuff that happened [to your
character] before the movie began. You don't have to sit down and write it
out in longhand in single space on spiral notebooks. But it has to be a very
tangible thing, because it has to play out in every scene."
Then, according to Martin, Hanks said something else something so in
keeping with how we've come to think of Hanks that it's easy to imagine it
being uttered by astronaut Jim Lovell in "Apollo 13" or Capt. John Miller in
"Saving Private Ryan." "He said, 'I realized it was hard work that had to be
done.' "
In last year's "Saving Private Ryan," that hard work enabled Hanks to
portray an average man an English teacher, he likes to point out who was
"scared out of his pants" to be at war but rose to meet the demands of his
country. In 1995's "Apollo 13," Hanks gave Lovell the confident manner we'd
expect from someone larger than life, but with a twist. "What happens to Jim
is the great equalizer that removes him from the firmament," Hanks said,
with empathy, of Lovell's failure to reach the moon. "He misses out. He just
wants to go home."
To tick down the list of his last dozen films is to see how much of Hanks'
talent, as the New Yorker's Kurt Andersen wrote last year, is in creating
heroes that audiences embrace because of their flaws, not in spite of them.
And he has put that skill to varied use, from the sweet simpleton in
"Forrest Gump" to the AIDS stricken lawyer in "Philadelphia." Now, this
fall, he's doing it again, in two highly anticipated movies that could not
be more different.
In "The Green Mile," an adaptation of Stephen King's death row fable that
hits theaters Dec. 10, Hanks is a Depression era prison guard wrestling to
comprehend a miracle. He is, technically, an executioner, but one with so
large a conscience, so fair a mind and so kind a manner that he makes
killing people for a living look like a great career. And in "Toy Story 2,"
Disney/Pixar's animated sequel that opens Nov. 19, Hanks once again gives
voice to the floppy cowboy doll named Woody, endowing him with a likable mix
of self righteousness and vulnerability. Even without showing his face,
Hanks has the power to make seemingly any character more human.
"I think the best movies are the ones that don't have bad guys versus good
guys, but just people, where you understand everybody's motivations," Hanks
said during a recent interview at Shutters on the Beach in Santa Monica. And
Hanks' tastes seem to jibe with those of the moviegoing public: The last
eight movies in which he's starred have all been big hits. The result: This
ordinary looking actor has come to represent what it means to be a classy
movie star and an honorable man. There has been confusion at times about
whether the 43 year old is acting or simply playing himself. Part of that
stems from the widespread perception that Hanks is in real life "a kind of
hero," as Martin puts it "a model human without being in any way boring."
Part of it stems from his recent roles, several of which are patently heroic
in nature.
But another ingredient is more complex: Hanks has become so linked to our
definition of heroism that he now brings that quality with him wherever he
goes. And that has prompted some recurring questions. Is Hanks merely "Mt.
Rushmore for people," as fellow $20 million leading man Jim Carrey recently
told Vanity Fair an actor who has to be a "rock solid America man" in every
role? Can he "do" dark? And will the public let him?
"Tom gets a kind of convenient rap for being everyman. My feeling about Tom
is he's not so much an everyman as an every character," said Steven
Spielberg, a close friend of Hanks who directed him in "Saving Private
Ryan."
"Don't preclude colorful villains. Don't preclude characters of questionable
morals. The choices he makes as an actor might have more recently defined
who he is to all of us. But when he does make a choice to play the dark side
of human nature, and we are required to despise the character he's playing,
he will be despised."
Striding into a hotel lobby one recent afternoon, Hanks looked preoccupied.
The family Samoyed had had surgery on her hind legs, he explained, and
needed to be carried outside regularly to relieve herself. Hanks, it seems,
was the one doing the carrying. He looked a little harried, like any working
parent with too many errands to do.
"I'm in my child rearing years right now," he said, only half joking. "I
don't have time to do much of anything."
That Hanks is a stand up guy who does his duty both on and off the screen is
not big news. Stories of his collegial manner with other actors, of his
collaborative interplay with directors and of his commitment to his second
wife, actress Rita Wilson, and his four children (two from a previous
marriage) abound in Hollywood. What's more, as has been reported so often
that even Hanks appears a little tired of hearing it, this guy is a genuine
mensch.
"Have you heard about the Friday thing? It's amazing," said Frank Darabont,
the writer director of "The Green Mile," referring to Hanks' habit of
boosting the morale of the weary cast and crew by feeding them at his own
expense. "Tom loved to bring a treat to the set for everybody. On Friday
evenings a couple of
sushi chefs would show up. Or the In N Out Burger truck. You were looking at
well over 100 people, so it wasn't cheap. More than the generosity, though,
was the thoughtfulness. He's a very sweet and open man."
John Lasseter, director of "Toy Story 2," agreed.
"When Tom Hanks walks in the room, it's Tom Hanks! But he immediately puts
everybody at ease," he said. "Every compliment he gets, you can tell it
really means a lot to him to receive it. He's humble, and first and
foremost, he's spreading [the compliments] around."
At the photo shoot for this article, for example, he amiably mugged and
posed, but not before expressing genuine interest in the photographer's
watch, the same type worn by the first astronauts on the moon. Gazing out
the window at the ocean, he pronounced it a beautiful day and mischievously
suggested we all go home.
"Let's all quit," he said in that familiar Tom Hanks voice, playful and
poised at the same time, suggesting that instead of an article, The Times
could run "a cryptic three lines a Tom Hanks haiku! that just says: 'The
movie opens Dec. 10.' What would be wrong about that? The public would
appreciate it. It's to the point. And there's nothing they don't know about
this guy anyway." Hanks' quick wit and puckish charm are hard to resist. But
they are not, fundamentally, at the root of his appeal to movie audiences
(had they been, several of his earlier movies the ones like "Bachelor Party"
and "Joe Versus the Volcano" that he wryly refers to as his "checkered past"
might have done better at the box office). Instead, in his last several
films, Hanks has tapped into what he calls the "beautifully ambiguous"
nature of the struggles of common men.
"Look, I could play a terrorist tomorrow," he said at one point, as an ocean
breeze blew in through an open window. "I could manufacture that. But
ultimately, to what end? . . . It's not a matter of 'OK, I don't want to
play somebody who's not heroic, because what will that do?' I don't want to
play somebody who isn't dealing with something that most of us can actually
imagine ourselves having to deal with."
Hanks said he would have signed on "in a minute" to play the downtrodden
would be adulterer Kevin Spacey plays in "American Beauty." He said he would
have "leaped at the chance" to play William H. Macy's sleazy car dealer in
"Fargo" because "I understand exactly what that guy was going through."
If Hanks is ever going to play venal, he simply needs a villain with a
believable human core, he said. "Because any other kind is like the guy who
says things like, 'Before I kill you, Mr. Bond, perhaps you'd like a tour of
my installation.' There's nothing to be gained by doing it."
Curious to see Hanks get irritated, ever so slightly? Introduce the idea
that to some it appears he isn't stretching as much as he could.
"Look, I've got news for you, whatever the place that Capt. Miller was, it
was a dark and bad place," he said pointedly. "Now, I
realize it was a movie that became a national phenomenon and blah blah blah.
. . . But Capt. Miller is scared out of his pants. So much so that his hands
shake and he can't stop it."
" 'The Green Mile' is pretty dark, would you not agree?" he continued,
somewhere between amused and exasperated. "I mean, come on! This is a good
example of this. OK, I play a professional executioner. I play a man" he
paused a beat "who makes his living" another beat "by strapping men into a
chair and electrifying them to death. That's my job!"
When it was noted that he plays the most humane and respectful executioner
imaginable, he laughed but didn't give in. "That's right: I'm the all
American executioner," he said, gently sarcastic. "Yes, that's right. I was
a good guy."
Apparently, we'd hit a nerve.
"After doing 'Philadelphia' and 'Forrest Gump' and 'Apollo 13,' [some
critics] said, 'Look, he's just playing the same guy over and over again.'
I'm sorry, but I don't get it. And I don't get the concept that I'm always
playing the all American guys. I play all the guys. That's true. It is me.
There's no doubt about that," he said. "But I don't see any of these
characters as being big massive icons that are somehow placed up on Mt.
Rushmore. That is a prism that is applied by way of retrospect onto the
movies."
Bob Zemeckis worked with Hanks on "Forrest Gump," one of Hanks' Oscar
winning performances, and is in the middle of shooting "Cast Away," in which
Hanks plays a man stranded alone on a desert island. The director said that
Hanks can't help but be viewed through the lens of his own mega stardom.
"Actors of the caliber of Tom get into this place where they're both a great
actor and they're a gigantic movie star. The audience has a perception of
what they expect when you become a brand name. And you have to work with
that and acknowledge it," said Zemeckis, who like many others likens Hanks
to Jimmy Stewart. "But Tom can play anything. He's brilliant. Brilliant."
Which brings the discussion back to how Hanks chooses roles. He has more
scripts to pick from than he can actually read ("Sometimes it's hard, in all
honesty, to get through [them] all. There's only 24 hours in the day"),
though he stresses that despite his clout, he doesn't have access to
everything.
"I'm not omnipotent," he said. "You would think, 'Well, I'm a big star so I
would have had a shot.' But that's not the way it works." Still, he
acknowledges that he is largely in the driver's seat right now. If he likes
a movie, he can get it made, provided the budget is right. So how does he
chart his course? The actor admits to applying a sort of prism of his own to
the process.
"I like stories that are about the mystery of why in the world do we act
this way? Why do we do this to each other? Why do some people do great and
some people do badly? Why do some people live and some people die? You
embrace the mystery of it all. And all you can do is struggle with it you'll
never be able to answer it. But out of that struggle comes some brand of
triumph," he said.
"That's all we're looking for, no matter who we are. We want to experience
some brand of triumph that is going to make us feel
special," he continued, sounding suddenly and this is a habit with him more
like a moviegoer than a movie star. "It's almost an old fashioned kind of
sensibility. And I may change, so I don't want to lay down any credos here.
But if the movie doesn't somehow try to examine that, it's just not that
interesting to me."
What Hanks clearly finds fascinating is the process of building a character.
He describes this as being "the great fun" of his job.
It was not always this way. Early in his career, soon after director Ron
Howard turned him from a TV star (on the sitcom "Bosom Buddies") into a
movie star with "Splash" in 1984, he admits, "I didn't really know what I
was doing. It was just, 'Ooooh, this is fun! I'm in a movie again.' You can
do it that way."
But over time, he figured out that doing it that way had limits. For one
thing, the movies he did in the late 1980s were, by and large,
disappointing. The delightful exceptions "Big" and "Punchline" (both in
1988) featured characters with which Hanks had a natural affinity: a child
trapped in a man's body and a struggling stand up comic. He could embody
them, it seemed, not without effort, but without the painstaking preparation
he now so prizes.
The turning point came with "A League of Their Own," the 1992 women's
baseball comedy directed by Penny Marshall. Hanks' character, a team manager
named Jimmy Dugan, was originally conceived as a 52 year old alcoholic.
Hanks, who was 36 at the time, persuaded Marshall to let him play the part
younger, and thus more tragically.
"I specifically wanted to do it because this was a man who'd experienced
bitter compromise in his life," Hanks recalled. "He should have still been
playing ball, but he wasn't because of his own foolishness or what have you.
So there was a life experience prior to the movie that was really
important."
Hanks sat down with his agent, Richard Lovett, the president of Creative
Artists Agency, and laid down the law.
"I said, 'I don't want to play a pussy anymore.' I was done," he said. "I
had examined that concept of a guy in the middle of something he didn't
understand. A guy who can't fall in love. A guy who can't build his house.
Or a guy who had not had any real life behind him and so therefore could
only react to the reality of that individual circumstance. The end result:
Kookiness ensues." The decision could not have had a richer payoff,
catapulting him from solid B status (what the New Yorker described as "more
or less on the same level of the Hollywood food chain as Steve Guttenberg")
to the top of the heap. In the years since, his paycheck per picture has
quadrupled from about $5 million to about $20 million. And his roles and the
resulting accolades are the envy of any actor honest enough to admit it.
First, in 1993, came "Philadelphia," for which he won an Oscar, and the hit
romantic comedy "Sleepless in Seattle." With "Forrest Gump" in 1994 he
became the first person since Spencer Tracy to win back to back best actor
Academy Awards. "Apollo 13" and "Toy Story" were both blockbuster hits in
1995. He had a supporting role the next year in "That Thing You Do!," which
marked his
writing and directing debut. In 1998, in addition to starring in "Saving
Private Ryan" and Nora Ephron's "You've Got Mail," he also created and
executive produced the acclaimed HBO miniseries "From the Earth to the
Moon."
"Right after you say, 'OK, I'd like to do this,' then you have to start
working."
That's what Hanks says about attempts to give his characters a convincing
back story. Listen to Hanks talk about Paul Edgecomb, the death row
supervisor in "The Green Mile," and you can hear empathy at work: "This guy
is glad to have this job. And he's been able to somehow compartmentalize the
tasks that are at hand. What these guys have to look forward to with the big
event on E Block an execution is a very long day. They pull out the
cleansers, polish up Old Sparky, clear out the warehouse, sweep it out, line
up the chairs nice and neat. And down in the basement afterward, we've got
the body on the gurney. . . . Man, it's a long day."
Having given this much attention to what isn't in the script, can it be any
surprise that Hanks is a meticulous analyst of what is? He is known for
speaking up about the movies he's in, making suggestions and revisions,
though usually so charmingly that no one takes offense.
On the set of "Ryan," Spielberg remembers Hanks, whom he calls simply Old
Faithful, "was extremely deferential. We never had a fight or an argument
about anything. I would come to the set and say, 'I'm cutting out 20 of your
lines.' And he'd run over, get his script and [show me] Tom overnight had
cut out the same 20 lines that I'd cut out. We'd look at each other with our
mouths open, we were so tuned in to each other."
Similarly, Zemeckis describes Hanks as a "creative soul mate."
"I use Tom as a gigantic sounding board," he said, "because the reason he is
exceptional as a performer is that he approaches his part from the
perspective of the whole movie. He's not just looking at what he has to do.
'Generous with other actors' is the term that's often used. But actually,
he's taking care of the movie."
In the next Zemeckis Hanks project, "Cast Away," taking care of the movie
literally means taking care of Hanks for much of the film, he will be the
only one on screen. Hanks plays a man who is stranded for 32 years on an
island before being rescued and reentering the world. The production is
unusual; the first segment of the film was shot in Fiji in March, and it
will resume next April after Hanks has lost enough weight to resemble an
island dweller. But the movie's appeal is, for Hanks, strikingly familiar:
an ordinary man facing extraordinary obstacles.
Hanks is visibly excited about the project, which he said has posed all
sorts of physical, philosophical and storytelling difficulties.
"You'd think: What do you need? A pair of cutoffs and some coconuts? End of
story. How bad can it be?" said Hanks, who developed a serious knee
infection during the first tropical phase of shooting. "There were people
dropping like flies. Because you think: Oh, it's paradise. But it's only
paradise if you can walk really slow and take a three hour nap in the
afternoon. If you're actually trying to make a movie. . . ."
The film also battles the lingering specter of "Gilligan's Island," which
has lulled Americans into believing, as Hanks hilariously riffs, "Well,
there's bamboo. You can make an Exercycle which can power the generator
which recharges the battery of the transistor radio! How hard can that be?"
But the biggest challenge has been the most basic one: deciding who his
character will become. "The hardest thing about the whole movie is, what
happens after [I'm rescued]?" he said refusing to even hint at the answer.
"Is [my character] the new sensitive man because he's been jungle boy for
all this time? Or does he just want to go to Pizza Hut and start eating?
Does he become famous and the next thing you know he's on 'Crosswits' with
the cast of 'CHiPs'? What happens to him? That's what we've ended up
discussing. It's highfalutin stuff!"
Zemeckis, too, is mum about where the project will lead. "But I must tell
you," he confided, "that in 'Cast Away' Tom plays a character that is
certainly a lot more flawed emotionally than anything we've ever seen Jimmy
Stewart do. Except maybe 'Vertigo.' Tom's character is not a perfectly
rounded human being. There are some cracks in the veneer."
Could it be that Hanks is sneaking up on true evil? Is this a warmup for Tom
Hanks, bad to the bone?
The closest we got to an answer was when Hanks explained the realistic
qualities of the scariest character in "The Green Mile," a condemned
murderer named Wild Bill.
"He's a sociopath and there are sociopaths in this world," Hanks said. "He's
not a drug lord who wants to take over the world and colonize space with a
race of beautiful model creatures." Wouldn't he ever want to try such a
thing, just for a lark? "God bless! I just wouldn't know how!" Hanks said,
somehow making his modest folksiness ring true. A beat, however, and his
voice changed, as if he was trying nefarious on for size.
"Well," he said, "maybe one of these days. . . ."
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