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Even Before Apollo 13, Tom Hanks Was a Space Geek

When he was a boy, Tom Hanks was obsessed with the space program. "Man, I became addicted," said Hanks. "From Apollo 7 on up, I lived this stuff. I knew the crews. I'd run home for the launches. I got A's in physics, thinking maybe I could be one of those guys. I was Space Boy. I thought I was so lucky to be alive at a time when man was gonna walk on the moon."
Young Tom Hanks spent countless hours assembling models of lunar modules and imagining what it would be like to blast off into space. "I would sit at the bottom of our swimming pool with a brick stuffed in my swimming trunks, breathing through a garden hose stuck in my mouth, just so I could see what it was like floating, pretending I was a guy in space. I would go underneath the ladder with a fake wrench and pretend I was tightening the bolts, sucking on that garden hose, because to me, there was nothing in the world that was more interesting."
"I was always dazzled by the idea that frail human beings of flesh and bone could go off in these vacuum-packed little spacecraft and travel half a million miles. That's the thing that would always get me." Hanks remembers running all the way home from school to watch the newscasts about the imperiled Apollo 13 astronauts when he was 13. "They'll live the rest of their lives up there," he thought. "It's like being buried alive."
"There were nine Apollo missions to the moon, and I think they are nine of the greatest stories of all time," said Hanks. "If you're trying to tell the story about what the human consciousness can accomplish, going to the moon has never been topped." For years, Hanks had told anyone who would listen that the Apollo 13 story would make a terrific movie. Finally, in 1993, he came across someone who agreed with him -- director Ron Howard, who had recently bought the rights to Apollo 13 astronaut Jim Lovell's book, Lost Moon.
"I have always wanted to be in a pressure suit, somehow," said Hanks. "I've always wanted to play an astronaut. I've always wanted to shoot a vast section of a movie completely encapsulated by nothing but metal, glass and switches, and I finally have a chance to do that. So this is real dream-come-true stuff, here."
In Tom Hanks, director Ron Howard found a partner who would keep him honest on the myriad details of the Apollo 13 mission. "Tom was a key collaborator in the process," said Howard. "I was thrilled to learn of his interest in the project. When Tom and I met in New York about it, I saw that he had a long-standing love affair with the space program and had always been particularly interested in the story of Apollo 13. Due to his passion for all things NASA, he was miles ahead of me in knowledge of the basics of space flight and the details of the mission... He came to the project with an incredible knowledge of space."
Hanks admitted that while making Apollo 13, he sometimes felt like "the most annoying person around," because he was a stickler for following procedure. He studied the air-to-ground transcripts of the Apollo 13 flight to make sure he was mastering the technical language, cross-checked every detail and argued for accuracy in every plot twist. "I felt strongly about us sticking to what really happened," said Hanks. "There was enough suspense and drama in the real experience, so there was no need to add anything extra."
Apollo 13 astronaut Jim Lovell, portrayed by Tom Hanks in the film, was thrilled that Hanks took such an interest in the space program. "I couldn't have been happier with Tom, because Tom, in reality, is a closet astronaut," Lovell said.
Hanks insisted he'd jump at that chance to be a real astronaut. "I'd do it in a minute," he said, "but it costs around $400 million to send one of those shuttles up, and there's only seven seats. I don't think they need to send someone up there just so he can have funny stories for the David Letterman show."
Watch the DVD-enhanced version of Apollo 13. For a complete schedule of this movie on AMC, click here.
To read about how Apollo 13 put the space program back in the spotlight, click here.
To read how the Actors of Apollo 13 lost their lunch preparing for zero gravity, click here.
Sources:
Cindy Pearlman, "Space Race," Chicago Sun-Times, 6/25/95
Jeffrey Kluger, The Apollo Adventure, Pocket Books, 1995
Malcolm Jones, Jr., "Out of this World, Really," Newsweek, 7/3/95
Richard Corliss, "Hell of a Ride," Time, 7/3/95
Piers Bizoni, "The Film Director Ron Howard Is Riding High on the Back of Apollo 13," The Independent, 9/18/95
Larry Rohter, "On a Mission to Dramatize the Space Race," New York Times, 5/25/97
Don Aucoin, "Tom Hanks' Space Odyssey," Boston Globe, 4/5/98
Apollo 13 DVD Extras: Lost Moon Featurette












Thank-you for showing such high quality and much loved movies. I just got done watching 'Apollo 13' for maybe the 20th time. And yep, I still cried right along with Ed Harris when contact was finally made at the end. PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE don't ever change or second guess your choice's to be aired. You are now and always have been dead on. Dawn Chisholm, Chicago, IL
This is one of the most exciting movie I have seen. Maybe because it really happened in my lifetime, maybe the actors were great, maybe because of Ron Howard. I really think it was all of them. I enjoyed the commentaries on the bottom of the screen. They brought the movie, actors, and real life people together.
I love this movie...it is one of my favorites !!!!
I enjoyed seeing the info about the stars and
about the making of the movie...
It really makes you feel as if you are part of the
action and drama that is taking place.
I have been watching the launches from the
beginning...and remember when this was really
taking place.
I used to fake a stomache and stay home from
school...just to watch the launch on tv. When
my family moved to Florida, it was great...
I have only missed 1 launch, when the shuttle
blew up. I didn't want to go out and see it lift-off.
I stayed inside and suddenly started crying...when
my friends came in, they asked if I knew. I said,
knew what? I told them I heard people screaming
and started crying...they told me what had happened.
Thanks for showing this movie...I loved it.
Did I read the information correctly about the deaths of Chaffee, Grissom and White in Apollo 1? Did it really say that the fatal fire occured shortly after launch?
In fact, the fire occurred during a ground simulation test of the capsule inside a building at the Cape. It was never on top of a rocket and it certainly was never launched.
Does anyone check the information that gets included in those footnotes?
the total number of times Houston was said in the movie Apollo 13 is 94. This is one of the most inspiring movies I have ever seen. I think this was one of Tom Hanks most brilliant performances.It's just absolutely amazing how far we have come in space travel since this "sucessful failure."No matter how many times I see this movie it's like watching it for the first time.
Good day!
Although not exactly relating to the thread please allow me, dear friend, to tell you of the newest home of British comedy on the online.
English For Dirty Foreigners is the only show on the internets that will lie to you outrightly about British language, traditions, customs and stuffs.
Oh yes, we have many stuffs.
http://www.EnglishForDirtyForeigners.com
Come for the comedy.
Stay for the hilarity.
I think every kid dreamed of the space shuttle.
Best Lash