Bob Hope springs eternal
In a business in which age was mostly a guarded secret, Bob Hope
always laid it out straight. He was born in Eltham, England in 1903,
and when he hit 100 a few months ago, the world knew. And when he
died this week, the world mourned.
He was an icon to three generations of American soldiers and
sailors, and although I never crossed his path in the Pacific in
World War II, I was privileged to know him a little because I did a
lengthy profile of him 30 years ago for Good Housekeeping magazine.
His death sent me to my files and stirred some vivid memories of
those days I spent with him at his home in Toluca Lake.
He was 70 then, and didn’t look it. There was an obvious paunch
and thinning hair, but his step was light, his eyes wary and cool,
and the wise cracks at instant recall. He was still as devoted to
working as the rest of us are to eating, and when I asked him why,
considering he had about the same financial needs as Howard Hughes,
he told me: “I’d have to buy an applause machine just to get me up in
the morning if I ever stopped working.”
But he also had to underwrite the business of being Bob Hope,
which involved three different sets of press agents, a bevy of
secretaries and assorted aides operating under the title of Hope
Enterprises Inc. in a suite of offices adjacent to the eight-acre
Hope estate in the unfashionable San Fernando Valley, miles distant
from the opulence of Beverly Hills, where most of his co-stars lived.
The entrance to the Hope estate was through an outbuilding that
included a walk-in vault housing Hope’s correspondence and comedy
files, an office for his wife and a spacious, paneled room where Hope
could work surrounded by the artifacts of his travels and his career
that are mounted in display cases that take up three walls of the
room.
Hope’s home was open and bright with the entire backside paneled
in glass and overlooking the swimming pool and a 200-yard practice
golf hole. The art was tasteful and right for the walls it adorned,
the decor understated, the feeling warm.
When I suggested it would be tough leaving this spread for the
colossus he was then building in Palm Springs, Hope shrugged and said
he regarded moving there like playing permanent hooky.
I was armed with dozens of old photographs supplied by Hope’s
friends and associates, and he responded to them with honest delight
-- and always a story. There was, for example, his first love and
vaudeville dance partner, named Mildred Rosequist. When Hope wanted
to take their act on the road, Mildred’s mother said an emphatic
“No.” Thirty years later, Mildred resurfaced in the audience of a
Hope TV show and told him afterward: “If my mother was alive, I’d
punch her right in the mouth.”
And then there was another early member of Hope’s vaudeville act
who got ptomaine poisoning from a piece of pie in Huntington, W.Va.
-- Hope was clear on such details -- and died. Said Hope, “Maybe
you’d better not mention this because nobody there will ever eat pie
again.”
So it went through the recollection of a life. Hope had one-liners
to capture the essence of almost every memory, and it is doubtful if
Hope, himself, knew if the comments were spontaneous or parked in the
vast warehouse of jokes he carried about in his head for a century.
Most of the comedians I interviewed during this period were not funny
in conversation. They tended to be dour and downbeat. Hope was
different. He was animated and raunchy with a remarkably appropriate
story for every occasion.
American fighting men and women in three wars loved him, and he --
in turn -- loved them. I firmly believe that Hope was the only
civilian in history who was capable of standing military protocol on
its head and getting away with it. In one of his early performances
for troops in World War II, he invited enlisted men confined to the
rear of the audience to come forward and fill in empty seats in the
officers’ section. The response was so wildly enthusiastic that Hope
made a regular practice of putting dogfaces into the prime seats
thereafter.
“I’ve played before millions of GIs in every part of the world and
in every theater of three different wars,” he told me, “and I could
never define any substantial differences between the guys in any of
those wars. We would go on with shows that couldn’t even be assembled
at the Hollywood Bowl, and you could just feel the electricity. I
used to step back when somebody else was on and just look at the
faces in the audience. What exciting moments those were. And the
reception and the faces never changed one iota, from war to war or
place to place.”
Not all the memories brought up by the photographs inspired jokes.
Hope was especially sensitive to the perceptions of him as a hawk
during the three wars he entertained American troops.
“I never heard one piece of criticism about World War II,” Hope
said, “but in Vietnam, we were criticized for going over to entertain
when all we ever wanted to do was make the burden lighter for the
guys who were making the real sacrifice. A lot of kids back home
seemed to think that I was running the war. Well, maybe we didn’t
demonstrate or join parades, but we were all antiwar. Whenever people
asked me if this was my last trip to entertain GIs, I would tell them
that I hoped this would be our last war.
“I once got a letter from a woman who said, ‘You entertained my
husband in Korea and now my son is in Vietnam, and I wish you could
please go to his camp somehow.’ It makes you feel like going to bed
for awhile.”
One thing is certain. If Bob Hope could have summoned the energy
to go to Iraq, he would be there today. He might not have approved of
the war, but if there were GIs far from home in sore need of the
therapy Hope offered, he was on call. Only the playing of taps for
Bob Hope could have changed that pattern.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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