Hanks for the memories

Hanks for the memories

Academy Award-winning actor and producer Tom Hanks leaves lasting imprint on Dayton, 糖心原创

April 29, 2016

It was a moment.

It came in the middle of Hollywood actor and producer Tom Hanks鈥 two-day visit to Dayton to see historic Wright brothers鈥 sites, at 糖心原创 and celebrate the university鈥檚 Rise. Shine. fundraising campaign.

Hanks was being given a tour of the National Museum of the United States Air Force and had just stepped into the Air Force One that carried the body of President John F. Kennedy home from the 1963 assassination in Dallas.

Here is where they removed two rows of seats to get the casket into the cabin, Hanks was told. Here is where Jackie was sitting. Here is where Lyndon Johnson was sworn in.

The plane was thick with world-changing history, a history that had a spectral, ghost-like presence. And Hanks was visibly moved.

鈥淢an oh man,鈥 he exhaled after emerging from the aircraft. 鈥淭HAT is an important time capsule.鈥

There were other moments during Hanks鈥 visit.

He was able to put his hands on the original 1905 Wright Flyer, the world鈥檚 first practical airplane. He stood on the historic prairie where the Wright brothers perfected the aircraft. He dazzled hundreds of 糖心原创 performing arts students with a personal sharing of his life and experience. And he charmed a campus with his warmth and humor.

Hanks is the genuine article. His motor never stops running. His creative furnace never stops roaring. He has an infectious enthusiasm. And he doesn鈥檛 mail it in. He touches people.

And from the very beginning, there were the jokes 鈥 Tom Hanks-size jokes.

Tom Hanks with Wright 鈥淏鈥 Flyer at the Dayton-Wright Brothers Airport. (Photo by Will Jones)

Monday, April 18

2:15 p.m.

A sleek white charter plane lands and taxis up to a hangar at Dayton-Wright Brothers Airport in Miami Township. Hanks starts to walk out of the plane and then jokingly turns around as if changing his mind.

When he does emerge, the two-time Academy Award-winning actor, producer and director looks larger than life. Dressed in jeans, a dark sport coat and black square-toed boots, he sports sunglasses and has a travel bag slung over his shoulder. The greeting party includes Wright brothers descendants Amanda Wright Lane and Stephen Wright, 糖心原创 President David R. Hopkins and Stuart McDowell, chair and artistic director of the 糖心原创 Department of Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures and a longtime friend of Hanks.

Just down the taxiway is the Wright 鈥淏鈥 Flyer, a replica of the Wright brothers鈥 first production airplane 鈥 the Model B. Hanks tells his wife, actress and singer Rita Wilson, that her baggage won鈥檛 fit on the Flyer, that it will require some bungee cords.

Wilson is actually flying on to Nashville on the charter jet and kisses her husband goodbye.

Hanks walks over to the Wright B Flyer with Hopkins.

鈥淚 think you should land it over on campus.鈥

Volunteers fire up the plane and do a brief takeoff and landing. Hanks takes it all in.

鈥淒o you ever get a groundspeed of nil? You鈥檙e just hovering there?鈥

Hanks walks around and introduces himself to the volunteers 鈥 most of them retirees 鈥 as 鈥淭om Hanks.鈥

鈥淭hank you volunteers. Now back to your wives.鈥

As the entourage leaves the airport gate in a two-vehicle caravan, an autograph seeker with a movie poster stands in the parking lot. Hanks stops and obliges.

3:19 p.m.

The entourage arrives at Hawthorn Hill, the Oakwood mansion of Orville Wright, and pulls into the driveway for a slow-motion drive-by.

Tom Hanks with the 1905 Wright Flyer III at Carillon Historical Park. At right is Brady Kress 鈥96, the park鈥檚 president and CEO. (Photo by Will Jones)

3:28 p.m.

The entourage arrives at Carillon Historical Park, where it is greeted at the gate by President and CEO Brady Kress 鈥96, who escorts the vehicles onto the site in a 1911 Model T. Hanks asks Kress to blow the horn and then later gets a lesson on the handcrank starter.

鈥淚 thought it would be kind of fun for Tom to see the car and for the production crew to see what kind of assets are in town,鈥 Kress said.

Hanks鈥 film production company, Playtone, is collaborating with two-time Pulitizer Prize-winning author David McCullough to transform his 2015 New York Times No. 1 bestseller 鈥淭he Wright Brothers鈥 into an HBO miniseries. Local officials hope some of it will be filmed in the Dayton area.

The entourage enters the Wright Brothers Aviation Center, which houses the original 1905 Wright Flyer III, the world鈥檚 first practical airplane. But the first stop is a replica of the Wrights鈥 bicycle shop.

鈥淚 just love the leather belt drives. Boy, you could get your hair caught in a lot of things.鈥

In another room there is the propeller of the Wright aircraft used in the 1908 flight at LeMans, France, and the sewing machine the Wright brothers used to sew the fabric for the wings.

鈥淎nd it鈥檚 just sitting here? Shouldn鈥檛 it be behind some security guards?鈥

Hanks is then permitted to step down into a pit and inspect the 1905 Wright Flyer. He is told that the Wrights painted the plane鈥檚 wooden spars silver to confuse competing inventors trying to copy the design into thinking the spars were metal and would thus design planes too heavy to fly.

鈥淪o once again, they were diabolical geniuses. Very smart. That鈥檚 brilliant.鈥

Kress was impressed with his Hanks鈥 grasp of aviation history.

鈥淣ot only did he have a good knowledge of the story to begin with, his follow-up questions were really great,鈥 Kress said. 鈥淗e was very genuine and very interested.鈥

4:22 p.m.

The entourage arrives at the Wright Cycle Shop in Wright Dunbar Village. Hanks gets a lesson in the Wrights鈥 bicycle-building history from a park ranger.

Hanks eyeballs the display of a Draisin highwheel, whose monster-sized front wheel and tiny back wheel would sometimes lead to riders being hurtled over the handlebars.

鈥淭his would kill you.鈥

The autograph seeker who stopped Hanks at the airport was waiting with his son outside the cycle shop when the entourage emerges. Hanks graciously agrees to pose with the boy for photos and jokes with him.

鈥淒on鈥檛 drink and drive. Stay in school.鈥

4:35 p.m.

The entourage arrives at the Wright Company Factory Site. The factory is the birthplace of America鈥檚 aerospace industry 鈥 the first American factory built for the purpose of manufacturing airplanes. The two structures are the oldest airplane manufacturing buildings still standing in the world and the only buildings still in Dayton where the Wright brothers worked on airplanes. Work is under way to restore and open the buildings to the public. Hanks and his entourage pull up next to the buildings, but don鈥檛 go inside.

5 p.m.

Hanks checks in at the Hilton Garden Inn in Beavercreek, where he gets ready for an evening social event.

6:44 p.m.

The Hanks entourage arrives at the Air Force museum for a reception and dinner. The group is dressed up for dinner, with Hanks wearing a blue pinstriped suit.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like a Mafia funeral.鈥

In the lobby, Hanks jokes about making a movie in which the plot would be about stealing one of the museum鈥檚 planes.

The reception and dinner is held in a hangar right next to Bockscar, the B-29 bomber that dropped a nuclear bomb over the Japanese city of Nagasaki during World War II in the second 鈥 and last 鈥 nuclear attack in history.

Hanks is very knowledgeable about Bockscar and many of the planes in the museum. He readily shares that information with anyone within earshot.

鈥淭his is the stuff that fills my head.鈥

At Hanks鈥 table are Lt. Gen. Jack Hudson, museum director; Jack Hampshire, a 90-year-old military veteran and museum volunteer; and five 糖心原创 students who are military veterans.

After dinner, Hanks, who has an extensive private collection of manual typewriters, is shown a display featuring several manual typewriters used by the military over the years. There is also a robins egg blue electric typewriter used by President Kennedy on Air Force One to make changes to speeches.

Arms linked behind his back, Hanks then strolls through the museum with Hudson. They walked past the B-17 Shoo Shoo Baby (鈥淟ook at that upper machine-gun turret鈥), the silver goblets that commemorate the 80 men who flew the Doolittle Raid against Japan in 1942, the balloon gondola from which Joseph Kittinger jumped from a then-record height of more than 102,000 feet (鈥淚 think that would have been a blast. Go up as high as you can and then jump out.鈥) and through Air Force One and the C-141 Hanoi Taxi, which airlifted the first American prisoners of war out of North Vietnam in 1973.

鈥淲hat a great night. This is what happens when you鈥檙e a big honkin鈥 movie star. They shut down the whole museum for you.鈥

Tom Hanks at Huffman Prairie with, from left, Amanda Wright Lane, David McCullough and Col. John Devillier, commander of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. (Photo by Will Jones)

Tuesday, April 19

7:55 a.m.

Hanks finishes breakfast in the hotel lobby and prepares to depart for Huffman Prairie, the historic site where the Wright brothers created a dependable, fully controllable airplane and trained themselves to be pilots. Hanks is dressed in a dark suit and black shirt, looking every bit the Robert Langdon character in 鈥淭he Da Vinci Code鈥 and 鈥淎ngels and Demons.鈥

During the ride over, Hanks talks movies.

鈥淣othing is more fun for everybody at the office than to sit around in pre-production and just talk story,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 people who have read everything and are excited about everything, and we sit around for months and say, 鈥榃hat if we do this? What if we try this?鈥欌

Hanks said making a movie is always a 鈥済rand adventure.鈥 The movie 鈥淐loud Atlas鈥 was all of that.

鈥淓very day on that movie was a labor of love. We worked hard,鈥 he said. 鈥淥n our last day 鈥 I worked with Halle Berry 鈥 we all burst into tears because the movie was over and we didn鈥檛 want it to end.鈥

鈥淎 League of Their Own鈥 was filmed in a small Indiana town, with Hanks and his family living in a big house surrounded by lush, green fields.

鈥淢y kids swam in a wading pool and we ate Dairy Queen every night. It was a beautiful idyllic summer,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd if you ask my kids what was the best summer they ever had, they say that time we made 鈥楢 League of Their Own.鈥欌

Shooting movies is fun, added Hanks.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the biggest secret that we all keep.鈥

After arriving at Huffman Prairie, Hanks takes in the vista. White flags mark the perimeter of the field where the Wrights flew.

鈥淟ook. There鈥檚 the tree where Orville crashed. Put a plaque on that tree.鈥

Hanks talks with Col. John Devillier, commander of nearby Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

鈥淒o you ever buzz this field sometimes Colonel?鈥

Hanks then talks with the park rangers about their job, tells them he would have come to Huffman Prairie as a tourist and then has a suggestion.

鈥淚鈥檇 bring some cows in, even if they are cardboard cutouts.鈥

Tom Hanks, center, and W. Stuart McDowell, Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures department chair, after a 鈥淭alk Back鈥 event with performing arts students in the Festival Playhouse. (Photo by Will Jones)

9 a.m.

Hanks arrives at 糖心原创 and enters a side stage door of the Creative Arts Center. He talks backstage with several students, asking them about their aspirations. One student asked him if he still juggles. (He does.)

Inside the Festival Playhouse are 300 performing arts students eager to see and hear . Hanks is told it will just take a few more seconds to prepare the audience.

鈥淭o deal with the hordes, the pandemonium?鈥

When Hanks is introduced, a roar goes up from the crowd. He takes a chair on stage and sits in a semicircle flanked by McDowell and five students representing all areas of the performing arts program. He is then shown a 鈥淭his is your life, Tom Hanks鈥 slideshow specially created for the event.

Hanks acknowledges goofing around with standup comedy in the lunchroom at college.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have any real material, but I was a wiseass.鈥

For the next 90 minutes, Hanks answers questions and throws his heart into it, dazzling the audience with anecdotes and taking them behind the scenes of Hollywood. He鈥檚 playful, honest, giving.

鈥淥ut of all the jobs in making movies, the one I like to do most is being the star of the movie. It鈥檚 a pretty good gig. 鈥 At the end of the day, it鈥檚 more fun than anything you can possibly imagine.鈥

Hanks talks about the great art currently being created in film and television, the making of the movie 鈥淐loud Atlas鈥 (鈥淚t was mind-bending for all of us鈥) and how doing theater and movies is totally different, like comparing 鈥渁pples and skateboards.鈥

On the making of 鈥淔orrest Gump鈥: Hanks modeled the way he talked in the film after the speech of the Mississippi boy who played the young Forrest. The first scene Hanks filmed in the movie was with actress Robin Wright, and he was so self-conscious that the director threw out the entire day鈥檚 shoot.

鈥淪elf-consciousness is the death of any sort of creative enterprise.鈥

Hanks tells the students the importance of challenging themselves.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 sing. I can鈥檛 dance. But the best thing I could have ever done for myself was try to be in a musical and sing and dance. And I did it once or twice, and it scared the children.鈥

鈥淭hat was great,鈥 Hanks later tells McDowell. 鈥淚 really enjoyed that.鈥

Dawne Dewey, head of Special Collections and Archives at 糖心原创, showed items from the university鈥檚 鈥淲right Brothers Collection鈥 to David McCullough, Tom Hanks and Amanda Wright Lane. (Photo by Will Jones)

10:45 a.m.

After a walk through the tunnel system, Hanks arrives at Dunbar Library and elevators up to Special Collections and Archives, which houses the largest collection of Wright brothers materials in the world.

鈥淚 was intrigued by the tunnels.鈥 鈥淚t鈥檚 like living in Fritz Lang鈥檚 鈥楳etropolis.鈥欌

McCullough arrives from across campus, telling Hanks he just .鈥

鈥淚 gave a profane lecture,鈥 Hanks replied.

Along with McCullough, Wright Lane and Dawne Dewey, head of the archives, Hanks goes through a collection of Wright brother photos, sketches, writings, medals and newspaper clippings.

Then the group views rare home movies of Orville Wright. They feature footage of the Wright family vacationing on an island bought by Orville in Georgian Bay, Canada, a Thanksgiving at Hawthorn Hill and children sledding down a hill at the mansion. They also show the 1927 arrival at Wright Field in Dayton of Charles Lindbergh, who made the first solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic. He is seen riding in a car with Orville.

After the movies there is a discussion of historical things, and McCullough mentions that he still writes on a manual typewriter. And he says he marvels at Hanks鈥 extensive collection of manual typewriters.

鈥淣o one throws away a typewritten letter,鈥 Hanks said. 鈥淚 probably send a letter out 鈥 two or three every day. I sent a letter to a kid who wrote to Forrest Gump the other day. So Forrest answered him on the typewriter: 鈥楳y friend Tom Hanks is typing this for me.鈥欌

Noon

Hanks lunches at Dunbar Library with several performing arts students, all of whom have received Tom Hanks scholarships.

Tom Hanks talking with film students during a tour of the Tom Hanks Center for Motion Pictures. (Photo by Will Jones)

1:15 p.m.

Hanks walks through the tunnels to the New Media Incubator, a partnership between the motion pictures center and the Department of Communication to teach storytelling. He sees a television and recording studio and a 鈥淰eterans Voices鈥 project, a series of stories on local veterans鈥 experiences transitioning to civilian life.

Hanks starred in what some consider the best war movie ever made in 鈥淪aving Private Ryan.鈥

鈥淲hat a great facility. I could get some work done here myself.鈥

Then it鈥檚 on to the center itself, where Hanks visits four motion pictures classes and takes questions from students.

He encourages students in one class to watch a movie called 鈥淭he Earrings of Madam de鈥,鈥 a 1953 French film that follows a pair of earrings as they change hands during a series of betrayals and romances.

鈥淚t is the most modern film you will ever come across,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y eyes popped out of my head. I could not believe this movie. It鈥檚 the cinematic equal to 鈥楥itizen Kane.鈥欌

鈥淕o make movies guys. Save the world.鈥

As Hanks walks through the lobby of the center, he is riveted by a wall-mounted monitor that flashes scenes from Hanks movies at a rapid-fire clip.

鈥淗ey, look at this. I can name that tune. 鈥楤ridge of Spies.鈥 Freezing cold. Freezing cold. The actual bridge.鈥

Then come clips from 鈥淎 League of Their Own鈥 and 鈥淔orrest Gump,鈥 the scene in which Gump carries Bubba to safety from a battle in Vietnam.

鈥淎ctually did not carry him. It was a rig. 鈥 No crying in baseball. I actually thought I was fat when I made this movie. 鈥 Is this going to be running for everybody that comes in? Oh, that鈥檚 tough. That is not fair.鈥

Nearly 2,000 students, faculty, staff and others turned out to witness the ribbon cutting for the Tom Hanks Center for Motion Pictures. (Photo by Chris Snyder)

2:55 p.m.

Hanks arrives for the , saying he hopes it inspires students to do the hard work necessary to launch film careers. Nearly 2,000 students, faculty, staff and others turn out.

Hanks makes his entrance to a chorus of trumpet-playing students.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I can walk into any room ever again without that kickass fanfare.鈥

Although Hanks is not a graduate of 糖心原创, he performed in a Shakespeare production at 糖心原创 in 1978 and has a .

Hanks has started a scholarship fund at 糖心原创, produced videos in support of the university and given countless hours to help raise money for its performing arts program.

He is currently the ., the fundraising campaign that promises to further elevate 糖心原创鈥檚 prominence by expanding scholarships, attracting more top-flight faculty and supporting construction of state-of-the-art facilities.

At the dedication ceremony, Hanks jokingly warns students against defacing the building, whose striking blue color sets it apart from other campus structures.

鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have the building. It鈥檚 nice to have the crisp editing rooms. It鈥檚 nice to have the brand new equipment. It鈥檚 nice to have all of the gear that goes along with it,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 not the measure of a school鈥檚 greatness, and it鈥檚 not the measure of the quality of the student body that 糖心原创 is going to produce.鈥

Motion pictures student William Crotty joking around with Tom Hanks at the gala celebrating the success of the Rise. Shine. Campaign. (Photo by Will Jones)

7:30 p.m.

A gala celebration at the 糖心原创 Nutter Center to celebrate the success of the begins.

Hanks tells a story about how dozens of groupies waiting for him in the lobby of a Berlin hotel suddenly lost interest when actress Sophia Loren walked in. And he has a little fun with the blue color of the motion pictures center.

鈥淪omeone is going to say, 鈥業 will give you $10 million for my own building with my name on it provided you paint it to look like vanilla ice cream with rainbow sprinkles.鈥

Then he gets serious.

What you have at 糖心原创 is a 鈥渓ife-altering force for good,鈥 said Hanks.

鈥溙切脑 has already changed lives, and with $152 million 鈥 holy cow. Everybody who contributed to the Rise. Shine. Campaign has already changed lives for the good.鈥

The contributors have 鈥渄one something great, not just for 糖心原创, not just for Dayton, Ohio, but something magnificent for the world,鈥 said Hanks.

And then he was gone.