Two more tales of Hope
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I knew you Bob Hope fans were out there I just didn’t know where to
find you.
Luckily, the readers keep me on my toes and let me know when there
is more reporting to be done on a subject. Apparently, Hope is still
alive in the memories of Newport-Mesa residents.
When we first heard Bob Hope had died, my editors assigned me to
do a reaction piece from residents with fond memories of the actor
and comedian. It was a Monday afternoon, and I was on a hunt for Hope
fans. I found a few at the Costa Mesa Senior Center, but struck out
at the American Legion in Newport Beach (Monday is a slow day there)
and also at the Santa Ana Country Club, which is closed Mondays. Man,
it sure would be nice if the news happened when it is convenient.
So I wrote the stories, with great memories from a few people, but
knew there were so many more stories out there. Thanks to Betty
Porter -- a former Daily Pilot reporter -- and reader Maudie Whyte, I
found two more.
“I first heard the happy voice of Bob Hope in the mid-1930s, when
my father, mother, six siblings and I gathered in around a
battery-operated radio on an isolated cotton farm, near Fayetteville,
Tenn.,” Porter wrote in a letter to the Pilot.
She had no idea, at the time, she would come face to face with the
actor twice in her adult years.
Much later, after marrying Mervin Porter, a Bob Hope look-a-like
and Marine colonel, and moving with him to California, Betty saw Hope
in 1971 at a military fund-raiser at the Beverly Wilshire. Too shy to
go up to his table and talk to the larger-than-life celebrity, she
sent him a simple note, which read:
“Dear Mr. Hope, Folks say that my husband (in the Marine uniform)
looks like you, do you agree?”
Hope, who was then 68, turned, looked, smiled and wrote back:
“Yes, he looks like me, but I am younger and much better looking.”
Mervin Porter was 50 then.
Betty was so excited, she wrote home about it, but her mother was
not impressed.
“I’ve told my friends you would meet Bob Hope, and all you did was
write a note,” her mother wrote back.
In 1985, Betty had a chance to make it up to mom while covering
the Bob Hope Marine Air Golf invitational for the Daily Pilot. Hope
wore a Marine Corps dress uniform and was named an honorary general
during the banquet at the Meridian Hotel in Newport Beach. Porter was
there watching it all.
At the end of the night, she made good on her promise to meet Hope
face to face and talked with Bob and Dolores Hope as they walked to
their car. Hope told her that day had been “one of the best in his
life.”
Porter, who now lives in Newport Beach, said that was true for
her, too, and she could hardly wait to get home and call her mother.
Maudie Whyte, a Costa Mesa resident, was nice enough to stop by
the Daily Pilot office and to tell me about seeing Bob Hope host the
Academy Awards in 1965 and 1966. She showed me the original programs,
signed by various celebrities, such as Steve McQueen, Dick Van Dyke
and Jimmy Stewart. While Hope’s signature did not grace the pages,
his role as master of ceremonies was one of the highlights.
The charismatic Hope filled the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium with
side-splitting laughter, she said.
“Oh, he was just wonderful,” Whyte said, with a large grin on her
face. “He was his casual, wonderful, delightful self.”
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
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