Roger Ebert: The Essential Man

It has been nearly four years since Roger Ebert lost his lower jaw 
and his ability to speak. Now television's most famous movie critic 
is rarely seen and never heard, but his words have never stopped.

By: Chris Jones

Roger Ebert's cancer took away his ability to talk, drink, and eat. 
But, as Esquire's Roger Ebert interview shows, Roger Ebert is happy - 
and has never seemed more alive.

For the 281st time in the last ten months Roger Ebert is sitting down 
to watch a movie in the Lake Street Screening Room, on the sixteenth 
floor of what used to pass for a skyscraper in the Loop. Ebert's been 
coming to it for nearly thirty years, along with the rest of 
Chicago's increasingly venerable collection of movie critics. More 
than a dozen of them are here this afternoon, sitting together in the 
dark. Some of them look as though they plan on camping out, with 
their coats, blankets, lunches, and laptops spread out on the seats 
around them.

The critics might watch three or four movies in a single day, and 
they have rules and rituals along with their lunches to make it 
through. The small, fabric-walled room has forty-nine purple seats in 
it; Ebert always occupies the aisle seat in the last row, closest to 
the door. His wife, Chaz, in her capacity as vice-president of the 
Ebert Company, sits two seats over, closer to the middle, next to a 
little table. She's sitting there now, drinking from a tall paper 
cup. Michael Phillips, Ebert's bearded, bespectacled replacement on 
At the Movies, is on the other side of the room, one row down. The 
guy who used to write under the name Capone for Ain't It Cool News 
leans against the far wall. Jonathan Rosenbaum and Peter Sobczynski, 
dressed in black, are down front.

"Too close for me," Ebert writes in his small spiral notebook.

Today, Ebert's decided he has the time and energy to watch only one 
film, Pedro Almodóvar's new Spanish-language movie, Broken Embraces. 
It stars Penélope Cruz. Steve Kraus, the house projectionist, is busy 
pulling seven reels out of a cardboard box and threading them through 
twin Simplex projectors.

Unlike the others, Ebert, sixty-seven, hasn't brought much survival 
gear with him: a small bottle of Evian moisturizing spray with a pink 
cap; some Kleenex; his spiral notebook and a blue fine-tip pen. He's 
wearing jeans that are falling off him at the waist, a pair of New 
Balance sneakers, and a blue cardigan zipped up over the bandages 
around his neck. His seat is worn soft and reclines a little, which 
he likes. He likes, too, for the seat in front of him to remain 
empty, so that he can prop his left foot onto its armrest; otherwise 
his back and shoulders can't take the strain of a feature-length 
sitting anymore.

The lights go down. Kraus starts the movie. Subtitles run along the 
bottom of the screen. The movie is about a film director, Harry 
Caine, who has lost his sight. Caine reads and makes love by touch, 
and he writes and edits his films by sound. "Films have to be 
finished, even if you do it blindly," someone in the movie says. It's 
a quirky, complex, beautiful little film, and Ebert loves it. He 
radiates kid joy. Throughout the screening, he takes excited notes - 
references to other movies, snatches of dialogue, meditations on 
Almodóvar's symbolism and his use of the color red. Ebert scribbles 
constantly, his pen digging into page after page, and then he tears 
the pages out of his notebook and drops them to the floor around him. 
Maybe twenty or thirty times, the sound of paper being torn from a 
spiral rises from the aisle seat in the last row.

The lights come back on. Ebert stays in his chair, savoring, 
surrounded by his notes. It looks as though he's sitting on top of a 
cloud of paper. He watches the credits, lifts himself up, and kicks 
his notes into a small pile with his feet. He slowly bends down to 
pick them up and walks with Chaz back out to the elevators. They hold 
hands, but they don't say anything to each other. They spend a lot of 
time like that.

...

http://www.esquire.com/features/roger-ebert-0310

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