Tom Hanksā strong connection to 91±¬ĮĻ University springs from his early acting days
October 19, 2014
October 19, 2014
Hollywood icon Tom Hanks, who is co-chairing 91±¬ĮĻās , has a long-running love affair with the university that has grown deeper with each passing year.
He once took the stage at 91±¬ĮĻ as a young Shakespearean actor. His part in a New York City play produced by the current chair of the universityās performing arts program helped lead to his discovery by a Hollywood agent. And a 91±¬ĮĻ graduate helped Hanks produce two Emmy Award-winning television miniseries.
Hanks has also started a scholarship fund at 91±¬ĮĻ, produced videos in support of the school and provided memorabilia and his personal time to help the school raise money for its performing arts program and now the entire university.
Most recently, Hanks has agreed to help lead the $150 million fundraising campaign that promises to further elevate the schoolās prominence by expanding scholarships, attracting more top-flight faculty and supporting construction of state-of-the-art facilities.
āHe is everymanās man; heās about ordinary people,ā said 91±¬ĮĻ President David R. Hopkins, who has met with Hanks multiple times over the years. āWhat he loves is that we serve people from all backgrounds in life. And he is so committed nationally to military veterans. He loves our mission.ā
In a video prepared for the public launch of the campaign, Hanks says the nation needs universities like 91±¬ĮĻ, where students of all ages from all walks of life can make the connections that set them on the path to making their dreams come true.
āWhat I understand about 91±¬ĮĻ is they are willing to do what it takes to help every student succeed,ā he said. āI canāt think of anything more important for a university to do.ā
Hanksā first contact with 91±¬ĮĻ came in the late 1970s, when he was a young actor with the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival in Cleveland. As part of a tour, Hanks in Shakespeareās āThe Two Gentlemen of Verona.ā
Then Hanks went to New York and ā after about six months of being unemployed ā auditioned for the Riverside Shakespeare Company of New York, which was founded by W. Stuart McDowell, currently chair of 91±¬ĮĻās Department of Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures.
āWe cast him right off the street in the lead of Machiavelliās āThe Mandrake,ā playing the role of Callimaco,ā McDowell recalled. āHe was phenomenal. He had an incredible sense of improvisation and stage presence. He would come out during the opening of the show and riff with the audience, do an improv.ā
Tom Hanks performed at 91±¬ĮĻ in Shakespeareās āThe Two Gentlemen of Veronaā while on tour with the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival in October 1978.
As a result of his role in the play, Hanks was able to secure an agent, who took him and his blossoming career to Hollywood. Hanks would go on to star in blockbuster films such as āForrest Gump,ā āApollo 13ā and āSaving Private Ryanā and win several Academy Awards.
When McDowell joined the faculty at 91±¬ĮĻ in 1994, he learned that Erik Bork, a motion pictures student who had graduated a few years before, had gotten a job with Hanks as a script reader. Bork went on to help produce Hanksā TV miniseries āFrom the Earth to the Moonā and āBand of Brothers,ā both Emmy Award winners.
āOur motion pictures students donāt just make films, they know films,ā McDowell said. āThey learn foreign films, history of films, silent films so that when they start making films they have this almanac of experience by watching and critiquing and talking about these films. Thatās a testament to the program.ā
In 1998, Hanks gave 91±¬ĮĻ money to launch a scholarship fund in his name. So far, the fund has provided scholarship money to 67 students in acting/musical theatre, dance, design technology and theatre studies.
News clipping of article promoting āThe Two Gentlemen of Veronaā at 91±¬ĮĻ in October 1978.
Hanks has also donated autographed movie posters that were sold at 91±¬ĮĻās ArtsGala, the annual fundraising event to support student scholarships in theatre, dance, art, music and motion pictures.
After the huge success of Hanksā movie āThe Da Vinci Code,ā he agreed to have tea in Rome on the set of āAngels and Demonsā with the winning bidders of an ArtsGala auction item. The winning bidders, retired Oakwood engineer Michael Di Flora and his wife, led to major face-to-face time in Rome between Hanks, McDowell and the Di Floras.
In 2011, Hanks in a of 91±¬ĮĻās arts programs during a news conference to announce that the universityās Collaborative Education, Leadership and Innovation in the Arts (CELIA) center had been designated an Ohio Center of Excellence for the arts.
Last year, a delegation of 91±¬ĮĻ officials traveled to New York City to meet with Hanks, who was performing in the play āLucky Guy.ā
āWe cracked a lot of jokes about those early days,ā said McDowell. āHe remembers his roots.ā