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Chicago Tribune
25-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Chicago Tribune
Column: You know him as Pee-wee Herman — a new documentary dives into the life of Paul Reubens
Of the very many famous people who admired the late comic actor Paul Reubens' singular creation named Pee-wee Herman — among them Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Kimmel, film director John Waters, Lily Tomlin, Beverly D'Angelo, Jason Alexander and others — one of the most surprising might be Mike Royko. 'At first, when 'Pee-wee's Playhouse' was brand new, the character annoyed me,' says Royko's eldest son, clinical psychologist, writer and critic David Royko. 'Somehow, he came up when Dad and I were talking, and it shocked me when it turned out that he was a huge fan. Right then, he started imitating Pee-wee, his facial expressions, and, especially, his voice. Pee-wee cracked him up, big time. Dad was the first rabid Pee-wee Herman fan I knew.' Mike Royko knew talent and he knew funny and he was one among millions who were drawn to the bow-tied, suit-wearing, toy-loving man-child with a distinctively high-pitched way of talking, a wild laugh and unbridled enthusiasm that Reubens developed over years before exploding into the national consciousness with an HBO special in 1981 and in films (the hit 'Pee-wee's Big Adventure,' director Tim Burton's first feature film in 1985, and the less successful 'Big Top Pee-wee' in 1987) and on frequent appearances on David Letterman's late night shows and in the TV series 'Pee-wee's Playhouse,' which ran Saturday mornings on CBS from 1986 to 1990. We hear from some of his fans and from others who knew Reubens intimately, but mostly from Reubens himself in a compelling, two-part, three-hour-long HBO documentary, 'Pee-wee as Himself.' The film is the work of Matt Wolf, who spent many years wooing Reubens and four years making the movie. As Wolf has written, 'For years, my dream documentary subject was Paul Reubens. Throughout my childhood, a Pee-wee pull-string doll dangled above my bed, and I'd stare at it every night before falling asleep.' What he wanted to create was a portrait of an artist, and that is what we get, but we also meet a complicated man who hid parts of himself behind the playful Pee-wee. We go to Sarasota, Florida, where Reubens was born and raised, and influenced by the characters of the Ringling Bros. circus that made the town its home base. His parents, Judy and Milton, seem to be fine and supportive folks, if the dad was a bit rough around the edges. A modestly successful child actor in regional theater Reubens earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the California Institute of the Arts in Santa Clara, becoming that rare breed of conceptual artist who also craves fame. Naturally it was off to Los Angeles and his years with the Groundlings, the noted Los Angeles-based improv group, where he became friends, for a time, with future star 'Saturday Night Live' star Phil Hartman, and where Pee-wee came to life. His first paying performance as Pee-wee came, of all odd places, on 'The Dating Game.' He was picked and stardom came fast over the next decade. But it also came crashing down in the wake of his 1991 arrest in an adult movie theater in Florida and a charge of indecent exposure. He said the charge was false but pleaded no contest. Still, the headlines were so garish, the late night jokes so intense that CBS felt compelled to pull episodes of 'Playhouse.' Though he did manage to work as a voice-over artist and sometime TV guest, in 2002 he was arrested on charges of child pornography, stemming from his vast collection of vintage erotica. The charges were later dropped, but still remained tied to his fame as a kids' TV star. He does not talk about either of these incidents at any length in the film, but there is enough in the more than 1,000 hours of archival film and interviews with his family and friends to provide ample evidence that he was unfairly victimized. Much of the film's 40-hour interview segments with Ruebens were filmed in his sprawling mid-century Los Angeles house jammed with archives and collectibles. There are indeed some awkward moments between Reubens and Wolf, though one surely senses the filmmaker's affection and admiration for his subject. During these sessions, often tense, Reubens talked publicly for the first time about his sexuality — he was gay — and detailed lovingly his college boyfriend, an artist named Guy. Reubens was a man of many secrets, and the last one is chilling. As Wolf was preparing for one final interview, he, along with the rest of the world, learned on July 30, 2023, that Reubens was dead at 70, the victim of cancer that he had privately battled for six years. He had, however, the day before he died, made a tape recording on which he talked of that 2002 arrest. You will hear him, near the film's end, his voice weak, saying, 'More than anything, the reason I wanted to make a documentary was to let people see who I really am and how painful and difficult it was to be labelled something I wasn't. The moment I heard somebody label me as, I'm just going to say it, a pedophile, I knew it was going to change everything moving forward and backwards.' David Royko and his wife Karen loved this documentary. So did I. It is a bit long but worth your time. It punctuates what a grand and influential talent Reubens was and how his greatest creation captured hearts and minds. The movie, the life of a complicated genius, will stay with you for keeps.


USA Today
06-04-2025
- General
- USA Today
For 3 decades, elephants have found a peaceful retreat in an unlikely place: Tennessee
For 3 decades, elephants have found a peaceful retreat in an unlikely place: Tennessee The nation's largest natural elephant habitat celebrated its 30th anniversary in March. Show Caption Hide Caption Meet Dr. Sarah Cannizzo and her groundbreaking work at Fort Worth Zoo Fort Worth Zoo associate veterinarian, Dr. Sarah Cannizzo, talked about her groundbreaking work at Fort Worth Zoo. As Nashville grows and changes at a breakneck pace, a parcel of land just an hour outside the city is growing increasingly wild — and has been for the past 30 years. The Elephant Sanctuary, in Hohenwald, celebrated its 30th anniversary in March, marking three decades of adopting former circus and show elephants and allowing them to retire in peaceful wilderness. Started in 1995 with just one rescued elephant named Tarra who roamed 110 acres of land, the sanctuary has grown into the nation's largest natural habitat refuge for elephants at 3,060 acres, including an educational center for the public. Wide open fields and native foliage provide a backdrop for 12 retired African and Asian elephants to live out their golden years under the loving care of their handlers. Janice Zeitlin, CEO of the sanctuary since 2013, expressed excitement for the future of the sanctuary and said reaching the anniversary is 'overwhelming.' 'We're sharing this world with some really beautiful and wonderful creatures,' she said. 'And we need to take care of them. We need to be respectful and keep them safe.' The habitat has seen its fair share of heartwarming stories — from a documentary-inspiring friendship between two elephants as well as the refuge serving as partial inspiration for the book 'Leaving Time' by best-selling author Jodi Picoult — and hardships, like the decade-long legal fight over ownership of the sanctuary's first elephant and the accidental death of an elephant trainer in 2006. The gentle giants that call the sanctuary home — of which there have been 34 in total — come from a wide range of circumstances. One from the Louisville Zoo, a number from a private owner in Chicago, two from the Knoxville Zoo and even one from the cast of the 1988 "Big Top Pee-wee" movie. 'In many of these situations, the zoos and owners are making decisions because their elephants are getting older, and they really want them to have socialization opportunities that they might not have gotten previously,' Zeitlin said. 'Elephants really need social opportunities. They're very social creatures.' One favorite resident of the facility, Shirley, born in 1948 in Sumatra, made a tremendous impact on her handlers. The Asian elephant, a former circus performer, survived an unlikely sequence of events, including being kidnapped by forces belonging to Cuba's Prime Minister Fidel Castro, a shipwreck off of Nova Scotia, a truck wreck, being attacked by another elephant and living for 20 years as the only elephant at a small zoo in Louisiana, before retiring to the sanctuary. She died in 2021 at 72 years old, making her the second-oldest elephant in North America. Shirley's story: North America's second oldest elephant dies at 72 in Tennessee sanctuary 'Shirley was just really special,' Zeitlin said with emotion. 'She was so intelligent and entirely her own animal. Shirley kind of epitomized what this sanctuary is all about: giving a home to and helping these big animals have a safe place where they're taken care of through their lifetime, through all those phases of life.' Looking to the future, Zeitlin said the refuge is excited to be developing its international partnerships and advocating for elephants everywhere. 'We give out grants once a year for protecting elephants and trying to create better welfare for them, both in human care and in the wild. … We have a group in Vietnam that helps elephants retire from giving rides to tourists, and another group that's tracking elephants through India and trying to keep pathways open from human conflict,' she said. 'We just want to create a better world for elephants wherever they are.'