Tom Hanks pays tribute to Nora Ephron
Actor Tom Hanks has penned a moving tribute to Nora Ephron, revealing he became a fan of the late screenwriter and director after his wife Rita Wilson dragged him to a screening of her movie This Is My Life.
The moviemaker died on Tuesday (26Jun12) after losing her secret battle with acute myeloid leukemia, and Hanks, who starred in Ephron's films Sleepless in Seattle and You've Got Mail, was among the celebrities who offered up condolences.
He has now written a lengthy tribute piece for Time magazine, and
admits he was only made aware of Ephron's talents after Wilson took
him to a screening in 1992.
Hanks recalls, "As wives are wont to do, mine announced one evening
in 1992 that we were going to a movie. The movie was This Is My
Life, the writer and first-time director was Nora Ephron, and
within the hour, there we were in the cinema watching the opening
credits of a middle-aged-chick flick.
"I thought it was... an ideal debut film that sparkled with bits of
genius. This was the first time I had seen a geographically correct
moving montage in a movie - real cars in real traffic in the actual
order of transit required to get from point A (the ordinary life in
not - Manhattan) to point B (Manhattan), a distance of miles
physically but light-years culturally."
The film made Hanks determined to work with Ephron: "When I was
told she was going to direct a second movie - Sleepless in Seattle
- and wanted to meet, I actually hollered at my agent, 'She shot
that geographically authentic move into Manhattan!'"
The Cast Away star has only fond memories of his friend and
collaborator, adding, "Knowing and loving Nora meant her world - or
her neighborhood - became yours. She gave you books to read and
took you to cafes you'd never heard of that became legends.
"She would give your kids small, goofy parts in movies with the
caveat that they might not make the final cut but you'd get a tape
of the scene. For a wrap gift, she would send you a note saying
something like, 'A man is going to come to your house to plant an
orange tree - or apple or pomegranate or whatever - and you will
eat its fruit for the rest of your days.' Rita and I chose orange,
and the fruit has been lovely, sweet and abundant, just as Nora
promised - a constant and perfect reminder of the woman we loved so
much."