Hope remembered fondly by seniors
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Lolita Harper
She was dressed sharply in her navy blue uniform and cap. The air was
cool and the night was electric at Treasure Island in San Francisco.
Dorothy Montgomery, serving in the Navy as a Woman Accepted for
Volunteer Emergency Service in 1944, eagerly awaited the show.
It was nearly 60 years ago, but Montgomery recalled Bob Hope’s act
clearly.
On Monday, Montgomery and other seniors at the Costa Mesa Senior
Center recalled Hope fondly. Hope, who entertained on the big and
small screens for more than 50 years, died Sunday in his Toluca Lake
home from pneumonia. The comedian and actor was 100.
Montgomery smiled and glanced off in the distance as she told her
story.
“He was there with his whole ball of wax to entertain the
sailors,” Montgomery said. “Of course, the WAVES and the nurses got
to sit in the officers’ section. The rest of the sailors were farther
back. Boy, was that a show.”
Montgomery, who was working the front desk at the Costa Mesa
Senior Center, remembered Hope’s remarkable energy level.
“He did two- and three-hour shows and never tired,” Montgomery
said. “I don’t know how he did it. He was amazing.”
Colleague Dorothy Goeman agreed.
“There’ll never be another like him,” Goeman said. “The world has
lost one of the greatest entertainers it ever had.”
Although he was born in England, Hope won the hearts of Americans
with his witty humor, speedy delivery and poignant comments. Hope,
who famously performed for active military troops from World War II
to the Persian Gulf, received numerous decorations for his role in
military morale.
The country celebrated his 100th birthday two months ago, with a
huge party and various tributes to his laundry list of
accomplishments. Even a day after his passing, people were still
thanking him for the memories and remembering his role in the
country’s history.
Montgomery said Monday that she always knew the day would come
that Hope would pass, but she was still not prepared for it.
“I was shocked,” Montgomery said. “I knew he was bound to go, but
it was still ... just shocking.”
While Hope was always on the cutting edge, he never resorted to
“dirty” talk to make things funny. That is what made him even better,
the two Dorothys aid.
“He was funny as can be and never had to be dirty,” Goeman said.
“Yeah, I don’t know why it can’t be like that anymore,” Montgomery
added. “Young people don’t need all this vulgarity nowadays.”
A quick survey of the senior center lobby named Hope’s “road
series” of movies, with co-stars Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour, as
his top work. Montgomery, Goeman and Paul Motlenski recalled their
favorite moments from the comedy.
“Remember when he was in bed, with that horse and the horse kept
stealing all the covers from him?” Motlenski said.
“What was the name of that movie?” Goeman asked.
“I know the one you are talking about, I liked that one, too,”
Montgomery said.
They never did remember the name.
“I never, ever, heard a bad word about him, and to me, that’s
pretty good,” Goeman said.
Goeman was not in the sun room, down the hall, where other members
were more tight-lipped about Hope.
“When I was a kid, I laughed at him,” said Rich Reiser, who was
more concerned with the TV remote than Hope’s death. “I think this
should be a positive community story, so I should not comment.”
Senior center member Gary Roseberry also didn’t have anything nice
to say, and so said nothing at all.
“He was a great entertainer, though, you’ve got to give him that,”
Roseberry said.
Senior center director, Aviva Goelman, said she could not disagree
more. Goelman, who used to draw caricatures of Hope in art class,
called him a wildly talented entertainer whom she remembers as a
generous person.
“I think he is a legend and it is a shame he is gone,” Goelman
said. “More seniors can learn from him how to have a totally positive
attitude.”
Hope’s connection to the Newport-Mesa area is stronger than just
memories. The comedian performed in front of a crowd of 6,000 at an
Orange Coast College fund-raiser at Labard Stadium in 1980 and was
honored at a Marine Corps. regalia in Newport Beach in 1985.
He also is among the famous people who were guests at the Balboa
Bay Club, along with John Wayne, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall and
movie partner Crosby.
* 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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