Joined
by Lance Armstrong, others, actor follows Bob Hope's
footsteps
U.S. AIR BASE, Kuwait – Army Staff
Sgt. Andrew Guffey was assigned to the distinguished
visitors just arriving to the airbase in the middle
of the Kuwaiti desert. The 27-year-old native of Pangburn,
Ark., with 10 and a half years of military service
was on his first tour of the Middle East and assigned
the duty of looking after members of the press.
The occasion was the USO tour just before Christmas
hosted by Navy Adm. Michael G. Mullen of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. Guffey had the photographers and
military media under control so he would have the
time to enjoy the concert himself.
An old pro of visiting the troops, Robin Williams
is on his fourth full USO tour.
Within moments, comedian Lewis Black, Kid Rock,
Miss USA Rachel Black and Lance Armstrong were going
to entertain the troops, but even before anyone took
the stage, Robin Williams was already putting on a
show.
This was William's fourth tour in the area of operations.
Among all the top celebrities paraded in the American
media today, it's difficult to find anyone who has
committed more energy and time to the troops than
the man known as Mrs. Doubtfire.
Guffey, for one, was happy to see the visitors give
soldiers "the sense that someone back home cares
enough to come out there."
"We dedicate between 7 to 8 million dollars
on entertainment," said John Hanson, USO senior
vice president of marketing and communication. "We
don't pay the talent but we will offer a small per
diem." he said. "Most of them refuse it."
Today the group was in Kuwait, yesterday was Qatar,
and then over to Afghanistan and Iraq before Turkey
and Italy. These weren't glamour tours, the dust alone
makes any attempt at flashy theatrics futile; and
the physical conditions, hard travel, impromptu stages
and questionable acoustics were anything but welcoming.
One of the main reasons why more stars don't come
out is the commitment.
"We got them working the same day they got into
town." Hanson said.
A home away from home, the USO is a resting stop
for troops traveling. This USO, in Ramstein, Germany,
has free wireless Internet and all-you-can-play video
games.
The daily program can change according to the mood
of a Blawkhawk helicopter, but the schedule is set
for two to three shows per day in seven countries
in just under two weeks.
"We have to be flexible," Hanson cautioned.
The military makes an effort to transport the distinguished
visitors, but they often have to wait in line for
air assets like anyone else.
"There's a war going on," said Hanson,
in the tone of a man who has met and overcome scheduling
issues without any of the arrogance normally afforded
to Hollywood icons.
Often the issue keeping other stars from coming out
are prior engagements. Robin Williams alone had four
movies releases in 2005 and six films in 2006. When
the stars are not working, the hundreds of people
who work with them are also not working.
Within touching distance
I first met Marine Sgt. Wayne Edmiston from Scranton,
Pa., in Fallujah during Operation Alljah. By chance,
we ran into each other on his way back to Cherry Point,
N.C. He just happened to be in town during the "great
show and a motivated taste of home." The young
sergeant was happy his brief stopover included this
treat.
"I'm honored they would donate their time,"
he said.
Edmiston, a tri-athlete, is a big fan of Lance Armstrong,
the Sports Illustrated Athlete of the Year and seven-time
consecutive Tour de France Champion. Many soldiers
throughout the Iraq and Afghanistan sport the famous
yellow "Live Strong" wrist bands, so the
audience was especially happy to shake hands with
the retired cyclist.
"People would pay $1,000 to get this close to
these guys, and we have them right here," said
the sergeant of the no-frills unidentified airbase
where most of the troops are either on their way back
home or "heading up North" to Iraq and Afghanistan.
The celebrities had no red carpet, no velvet ropes,
no dressing rooms and little if any of the amenities
many stars are accustomed to back home.
Edmiston's uncle had seen Robin Williams in Operation
Iraq Freedom, OIF One, back in 2003. Although it was
Williams' fourth visit to the combat zone, he was
still fresh and funny.
When Kid Rock took the stage, he illustrated why
many mega stars would probably prefer to stay away
from a USO tour. The Detroit bad boy was forced to
improvise, humming lyrics as he tuned a reluctant
guitar after having already started his first song.
No back up, no rehearsal no chorus, just an artist,
his skill and that rarity in today's MTV pop culture
– charisma.
In under an hour, the troops got more variety than
during a 15-month tour. Miss USA spoke about growing
up in a military family after posing on a newly arrived
Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle. Lance Armstrong
spoke of cancer and the challenges "the disease"
had given him while Williams was very frank about
his most recent tour in rehab during a "You know
you're a drunk when … " routine.
Tradition of service
The United Society of Organizations, or USO, came
about when six charities united in 1941 at the request
of President Franklin Roosevelt with the mission of
"providing morale and welfare" to U.S. uniformed
personnel. For a president known as the creator of
"big government," FDR made the uncharacteristic
decision to keep the USO autonomous and private, because
if the American public didn't support it, he felt,
it should not exist.
USO centers are located throughout the U.S. and abroad
in places you would expect and others you would not.
Some charities donate to the USO, but much of the
money comes from private contributions. The Afghanistan
USO, or Pat Tillman Center, was donated by the NFL.
Nestled in the "Bagram Bowl" – a valley
flanked by perpetually snow-capped mountains –
the log cabin cottage could easily pass for a ski
resort, where movies play 24 hours and military passengers
transitioning both in and out of Afghanistan fall
asleep on the over-sized chairs while waiting for
web pages to download through the wireless Internet.
Immediately upon arrival, Robin Williams, a USO veteran,
made his trip to the portable trailer latrines into
an event in itself. The Academy Award winner hugged
and posed for pictures with any and all comers, improvising
people-specific comedy that soldiers will pass on
to their grandchildren.
"He's been non-stop," said Staff Sgt. Guffey,
the media guard and Williams fan.
Williams has an enormous gift for breaking every
rule of civil discourse and still forcing everyone
to laugh. There were no boundaries to his 20-minute
act: sex, race, politics, culture and celebrity. In
front of the loosely camouflaged stage, and armed
with nothing more than a microphone he barely needed,
Williams shifted into rapid-fire comedy that spanned
literally a dozen accents he has mastered in a career
that began before most of the troops in the audience
were born.
The new Bob Hope?
"We don't really want a Bob Hope," said
USO rep Hanson.
Times have changed, and so has entertainment. Back
in his day, Hope produced tours using his relations
with the USO at a time when there was no cable TV
and fewer choices for prime time.
Today, it's difficult to get a network or producer
interested in a tour because "variety television
isn't as popular" and partially because of the
changing dynamics of television programming. Today's
younger audiences have often never seen a live performance.
Hanson is pleased the soldiers enjoyed the show,
but his mind was on the bigger picture At the end
of the day, volunteers handed out gifts to the troops.
With 130 centers throughout the world, the USO has
remained lean, keeping a mere 320 employees and mostly
staffed by volunteers.
The little known secret was that Williams had donated
much of the merchandise.
Kid Rock didn't avoid the controversy of his tabloid
divorces. The former DJ dedicated his song "She's
half your age and twice as hot" to his former
wife, Pamela Anderson.
During his skit, comedian Lewis Black told audiences
how much the military needed to change. But he wasn't
the only one to give advice.
Kid Rock performed his "What if Kid rock were
president of the U.S." and pledged he would "turn
churches into strip clubs" but promised, "We
would remain one nation under God." Both comments
got cheers from the audience.
Williams was present for the groundbreaking of the
first USO in Afghanistan and will be present for the
debut of the first USO in Iraq.
Army Cpl. Lee Dumbleton of Rochester, N.Y., is on
his second tour and stationed in Germany. He enjoyed
the show because he had never had much contact with
the USO. Stationed at FOB Naray, near the dangerous
Pakistan border, Dumbleton serves at a place "no
one visits." With just a guitar and guts, Toby
Keith has earned a reputation of going out to the
FOBS that have yet to make it on to official maps.
This article was first published
on December 25, 2007 on WorldNetDaily.com by Matt
Sanchez © 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
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