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Tom Turtle
TOM TURTLE ON
THE RED CARPET Would
you believe the green carpet? Would you believe the
rhododendron bush across the street?
 No,
that is not a turtle, you silly. That is Tom Hanks playing
a turtle in Yertle:
the Motion Picture
Heigh-ho,
'tis I, Tom Turtle, your favorite little green round person, back
from a weekend shellshine at a hedonistic retreat that will
remain nameless here. While I was on the table (so to speak),
getting my belly waxed and my beak sharpened, I had time to
reminisce again about Tom Hanks' AFI Lifetime Achievement Award
from a few years ago (as I so often do). I just feel so lucky, so
really fortunate and gifted, to have been able to witness it in
my own short lifetime. Well, not personally. I mean I wasn't
actually present. But I was there in spirit, cheering him on. Of
course everyone knows that Tom was the first to win back-to-back
best actor Oscars, for My
Favorite Martian
(where he played the role of Bugs Bunny) and for Gidget
Goes Hawaiian Again
(where he played the role of Sally Field battling the onset of
homosexuality). I was touched and moved by the spectacle
(meaning, there was a touching incident and a movement incident).
Tom has been a favorite of mine since I first saw him in
Bignitude,
where he proved to naysayers that he could indeed play the piano
with his feet while eating very small ears of midget corn. He was
also a huge success in DeForrest
Kelly, the Motion Picture,
where, playing the retarded starship's doctor, he dove through a
time machine and ended up fondling his own mother in drag, played
by Sally Field. But perhaps his greatest performance,
memorialized on postage stamps in the Deep South, was in Miss
Daisy: Driving, Chipping, and Putting,
where he played Miss Daisy Duke, both before and after her
winning the Masters by thirteen strokes; the black chauffeur,
both before and after the skin-blanching incident at Neverland;
and the 1948 Hudson roadster, both before and after its
transmogrification into a Delorean by Christopher Lloyd. Not
since Dick van Dyke played Christopher Plummer, Julie Andrews,
and all six children (including Chitty Chitty Bang Bang) in the
1965 extravaganza The
Sound of the Brady Bunch,
have we seen such a masterful technique from a man with no
natural legs. Some might say that Eddie Murphy attempted a
similar coup in The
Lord of the Rings: The Two Barbershops part 4,
where he played Cedric the Entertainer (as an elf), Chevy Chase
(as a dwarf), and Rosie O'Donnell (as Frodo Baggins). If the
directors hadn't tried to use flubber to express the rage of
Treebeard and the other ents, I think history would have looked
more kindly on the effort, and on Eddie's courageous and nearly
nominated feat.
Of course you can't really taste the
flavor of such a night of feting and feasting without being privy
to the comments of other luminaries of the stage and screen, all
present that evening after receiving a large check and a cache of
pills and booze from George Lucas. One of the hosts of
festivities, Steve Martin, bemused the stars attending when he
said that he wished he had been the one chosen for Castaway,
since he had always had a secret wish to get very tan, live in a
cave, and have extended relations with a volleyball. What most in
the audience apparently forgot was headlines in 1978, when Steve,
coked to the gills after the failed premiere of Dead
Men Don't Wear (Their Own) Underwear,
had been found doing just that in a cave outside of Laramie,
Wyoming. He claimed to police arriving at the scene that he
thought “Wilson” was his own wife, Rita Wilson, but
the authorities reminded him that Rita Wilson was the wife of Tom
Hanks (or would be, in 1988). Martin's own wife at the time,
Jerry Lewis, looked nothing like a volleyball, and wouldn't until
around 1999.
Meg Ryan was also on hand to honor Hanks,
with whom she appeared in When
Hairy met Sally Field.
Meg is famous for that restaurant scene, where she played Sally
Field choking on a lobster, before becoming a mermaid and being
installed on the shore of Copenhagen, Denmark. Meg said she would
always remember her time fondly with Hanks, as they sleeplessly
got mail in various cities and adopted various children named
Miss Daisy (in honor of Morgan Freeman). She said with tears in
her eyes that she would walk the green mile with Hanks anytime,
although she didn't know what that meant, but hoped it didn't
have anything to do with eating at Chili's.
Peter Scolari then took the stage to reminisce about
Bosom
Buddies,
a TV show from the late 50's where he and Jack Lemmon took turns
dressing up like Marilyn Monroe, only to be viciously sodomized
by the Kennedys. The director of this series, Billy Wilder, later
worked with Scolari again, on Sabrina,
the Teenaged Witch,
in which Hanks, playing Audrey Hepburn, infiltrates a coed dorm
and convinces the janitor (Matt Damon, played by Humphrey Bogart)
to run away to Paris with him. Of course it is in Paris where
Hanks gets his big break, being sodomized by Tawny Kitaen and
thus winning the lead in Animal
House.
Next up was Steven Spielberg, who everyone knows directed
Hanks in several movies, including Airplane,
Poltergiest,
and Joe
versus the Pooch.
Who can forget that moving scene in the latter where Private Joe
Ryan fights his way across the killing fields of Belgium to reach
the lunar module? And who could misremember those now legendary
words, “Houston, have a box of chocolates!” And who
could have failed to be genuinely touched by honest human feeling
when Ed Harris in a beret admits to him that the Moon is really a
big metal beachball? And who among us could have left the theater
dry-eyed when Meg Ryan, playing Matt Damon, had to shoot "Pooch"
after his heroic fight with a rabid Nazi coyote? I myself felt
positively sick with remorse until I saw one of Sally Field's
puppies steal some cornbread from Colonel Klink, at which point I
understood that man was not meant to land on a big metal
beachball over a plastic ocean. No, he was meant to escape
through a sidedoor painted like fake clouds, where he could
rendezvous with Kate Winslet. Anyway, Spielberg had some very
poignant words for Hanks, whom he had always treated as a sort of
challenged stepson. Pointing at Billy Crystal (sitting in a
highchair nearby), Spielberg recommended that Hanks study his
career closely: Billy, who had been presented not one but two
Lifetime Achievement Awards before he hit the age of 40. Billy,
who, if he followed the pattern of George Burns, could win as
many as seven Lifetime Achievement Awards in one lifetime. Billy,
who had not even needed to be in Bruce
Almighty
or Sleeping
with Men in Philadelphia
to cop Academy Awards for them. Billy, who, at some point in the
late 90's, had, by silent acclamation, been given the entire
oeuvre
of Alan Arkin, and any lifetime achievement awards that might
produce in the future. Summing up, Spielberg admitted that he and
George Lucas were really the same person, one on flubber and one
not.
At last, Hanks himself took the podium to thank his
peers, those of the Institute, and all those around him who
deserved as much as himself to be institutionalized. He said he
wished to thank his wife first of all, for if she hadn't had the
last name Wilson, he would never have been able to get it up for
a volleyball. Pointing to astronaut Jim Lovell (seated nearby in
a stalled lunar rover), Hanks said he wished to thank him and all
the astronauts for making his role in My
Favorite Martian
so much more rewarding and lifelike. Without their help he would
never have known how to chase the Sleestak through the
underground caverns. He admitted that before his secret briefing
from NASA, he hadn't even known what a “Fraggle” was.
With a nod to Sally Field, Hanks bowed and doffed his hat,
honoring the grand dame of Hollywood, an actress who had made
three generations of audiences long for the return of vaudeville
and silent pictures. To fellow funnyman Steve Martin, Hanks
offered his hand, showing him the precise method for leaving the
volleyball without any fingerprints or forced points of entry. To
Meg Ryan (now reseated in a vat of peroxide) he blew a heartfelt
kiss. He said that to him she would always be pretty much
indistinguishable from Calista Flockhart, Nicole Kidman, Daryl
Hannah, and so many others: just someone else who never got a
Lifetime Achievement Award or even a Dean Martin Roast. To Billy
Crystal he shot a wicked glance, one that seemed to whisper, “We
will see who has the least hair or the most chins at the end my
friend! Sure, Dick van Dyke has drunk oceans more than we could
ever hope to drink, but we already look far more red and bloated.
Give me a few more years, and I won't need flubber to look like
Jerry Lewis. In fact, just look at Jon Lovitz (seated nearby in a
child's pool of vanilla pudding): Jon has managed to look
flubberized since the age of 23, with very little liquor or
prescription meds.” But the end of the show was signaled by
Hanks inviting Spielberg back up to the stage for another round
of self-gratulations. Each man presented himself with another
award, thanked the Academy, eachother, and the cleaning staff
before retiring from stage.
As the ballroom cleared and
everyone returned to Robert Downey, Jr.'s mansion to update their
facebook pages, have a Creatine shake, and do a second thousand
sit-ups for the day, I led myself through a short but very sweet
montage of Hanks' storied career: playing (and drawing) himself
in The
Simpson's Movie,
where no one noticed he was not the same character as Homer,
Crusty, and background guy #11; playing Leonardo DiCaprio in The
DaVinci Code,
where he painted those famous lines “catch me if you can”
in backwards script under the Fibonacci Altar; playing Woody Boyd
in Toy
Story,
in the part of “Coach” after Nicholas Colasanto dies
mid-season; playing Kevin Bacon in Splashdance,
with Jennifer Beals playing the part of Sally Field; reprising
his role from Joe
versus the Pooch
as Joe “NY 152” Fox in You've
Got to be a Male (or You're Wearing your Pants Wrong),
where Hanks utters those immortal words “Sorry, I thought
you were Harvey Milk”; playing Walter Matthau in 20,000
Leagues of Their Own Under the Sea,
where he battles a giant octopus which is threatening the Bears'
dugout; playing Charlie Sheen in Saving
Private Meg Ryan,
in which Sandra Bullock plays Meg Ryan, Ryan Reynolds plays the
part of Willem Dafoe, and Goldie Hawn plays the wacky cadet who
can't keep her mitts off Armand Assante's volleyballs; as Josh
Baskin-Robbins in Bignitude,
also starring Ricky Gervais as Mary Kay Letourneau, a teacher who
seduces her 12 year old officemate, is sentenced to life on
Alcatraz as a birdman, but who uses the miracle of flubber to
escape; and finally, as Mr. Wilson in Charlie
Wilson's War,
with Neil Patrick Harris as Dennis the Menace and John Candy as
Sally Field (notable since John reportedly had to lose 350 pounds
for the part, seven times what Sally Field actually weighs).
Yes, with such a filmography, it is no wonder that Tom
Hanks is the number one box office draw of all time. Oh the
memories!
In a pile Upon a log Over the water Third
from the bottom Secreting my own hard shell Tom Turtle
More Tom
Turtle
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