Overcoming Cancer Jack Klugman with Burton Rocks, Excerpt from Tony and Me (Good Hill Press 2005)
In 1989, I was rehearsing
in Los Angeles for a revival of Twelve Angry
Men. I was thrilled to be working on it again because this time I was
playing the role my idol, Lee J. Cobb, originated when we did the movie
together forty years earlier.
During rehearsals,
however, I noticed that at certain pitches my voice generated no sound. This
frightened me because many years before I had undergone radiation treatment for
throat cancer.
The first time I got
cancer was when I was performing in The Odd Couple on stage and I was
constantly getting laryngitis. I put off going to the doctor for a long time
but when I finally did, he told me that I had leukoplakia,
a dangerous pre-cancerous condition.
"If you stop smoking
now," the doctor told me "it will probably disappear. If you don't,
in a year I'll be taking out your vocal chords and that will be the end of your
acting career."
I stopped smoking that
minute and after three months, I went back for a follow-up visit. This time the
doctor told me that I had "virginal" vocal cords again -- not a mark on them. So, what did I do? I left his
office, went down the pharmacy that was in the building, and bought a pack of
cigarettes!
Anyway, fast-forward ten
years to the rehearsals for Twelve Angry Men. We only had one week left
of rehearsal, so I hurried to see my doctor about the crack in my voice. After
the examination, he told me he saw something on my larynx that bothered him. He
decided to perform a biopsy.
Two days later, he called
me and told me that I had invasive throat cancer and said that I must undergo
surgery immediately. I didn't like that word: invasive. What did that
mean? I felt fine! I had no discomfort, no laryngitis, and I felt no pain
whatsoever! I asked him if the operation could wait for about six weeks because
I really wanted to perform this role in Twelve Angry Men.
"Jack," the doc
told me plainly, "It's invasive." There was that word again.
"That means it's very aggressive. If we don't cut it out right away, in
three months you'll be short of breath and in four you'll be dead."
Nothing echoes like a
diagnosis. It has the sound of a bell that has been rung so hard, it cracks.
So, I left the show and
flew to New York to have the operation at Mount Sinai Hospital. My doctor, Dr. Max Som, who had been my main ENT (ear, nose, throat) man for
years, said he was too old to operate, but that he'd found this "kid"
with "golden hands."
Max explained to me that
me he would still be present in the operating room, but this kid would perform
the actual operation. The goal was to cut the cancer out, but leave my larynx
intact. My voice, everybody understood, was my livelihood.
Dr. Hugh Biller was that kid, and he did have golden hands. He
performed a sensational operation. The problem was that once they were inside,
it became apparent my condition had worsened to the point where they had to cut
a little deeper than planned. The result was that my right vocal cord was
reduced to a stump and the cause of preserving my full voice had been lost.
After the operation, I
was crushed by the news. Sure, I had beaten the cancer, but I had no voice at
all, no sound! I could only whisper. I felt like John Henry, the horse, who had
earned six million dollars while racing. The day he had to stop, he was not
only worthless -- he was a liability. He was a gelding who couldn't reproduce.
I was an actor who couldn't speak.
The first friend to visit
me in the hospital was Tony Randall.
"You're going to be
fine," he reassured me.
I gestured to indicate
how angry I was about losing my voice! He smiled and moved a little closer.
"Hey, let's face it,
Jack," he kidded me gently. "You never did sound like Richard
Burton."
I couldn't actually
laugh, but I smiled enough to let him know I appreciated the humor. Then he got
very serious, looked me right in the eye, and said, "Jack, if you ever
feel like going back to work, I will find a venue for us. And you know I mean
it."
I did know he meant it
and I appreciated the thought, but I felt lost! Overnight, I had gone from
being at the height of my powers, rehearsing for one of my favorite plays, to
this: a gelding in a world of studs. Acting had been my best friend for so many
years and now, suddenly, traumatically, my best friend had been taken away.
For a while, I was angry
and bitter. I remember watching television soon after the hospital stay and saw
that a New York Mets pitcher had lost his right arm to cancer. His right arm!
The one thing he needed most! I got so mad. "It's not fair!" I
gurgled at the television set. "I don't need my right arm and you don't
need your voice! Why can't we trade?"
Of course, that's not how
things work in this world. But I didn't care. I continued to rage for about
three weeks until I suddenly realized that I wasn't playing the hand that I'd
been dealt. Sure, I could sit around and blame God or the Fates, but it still
wasn't going to give me my voice back. So, I stopped. I still sulked a lot, but
I stopped shrieking in whispers.
Six months later, the
American Cancer Society called me to be a spokesperson for a function they were
having in Atlanta, Georgia. They wanted me to present the Tree
of Life to hundreds of cancer survivors and their spouses. They also wanted
me to make a speech.
"Are you nuts?"
I asked.
"We know you have no
voice and have difficulty speaking," they replied.
"Difficulty
speaking?"
I gasped. "Gimme a
break!"
"Actually, it's your
celebrity status that we're interested in," they confessed. "Your
presence would mean a great deal to those survivors." I wondered why. Why
would my speech make any difference to them? Who the hell was I to them, or them to me for that matter?
Up to that point in my
life, I hadn't let anybody see me vulnerable, not even my children. Why should
I start now? In fact, I'd always made it a point, throughout my entire life, to
never ask anybody for anything. As far back as age six, I shined shoes for
spending money so I wouldn't be obligated to anyone. I sold pretzels for a
penny a piece for lunch money. When I wanted a bicycle, I sold subscriptions to
Colliers, the Saturday Evening Post, and the Ladies Home
Journal. All through my life, it was this way. It was how I protected
myself. As a result, I was a gracious giver, but a lousy receiver of love.
Well, in spite of myself,
I let them talk me into going. I agreed to be the guest of honor at the Cancer
Society event as long as they didn't want to give me anything. If my
celebrity status could offer people a little inspiration, great. It sure as
hell wasn't doing me any good.
So, I flew to Atlanta, Georgia, but with trepidation in my
heart. I couldn't shake an uneasy feeling about the American Cancer Society
event. As soon as I landed in Atlanta, I knew why: it was over one
hundred degrees with ninety percent humidity. I knew the event was to take
place outside and when I actually got there, my worst fears were confirmed:
there was no shade anywhere and it was topping out at one hundred and three
degrees. Man, this event was off to a bad start -- and so was my attitude.
What I didn't know was
that the heat was going to be the least of my problems because just as I
approached the podium to speak, the PA system broke down!
I couldn't believe it! No
microphone, no voice, just me standing in front of a large, expectant crowd of
people with no way to communicate. I was talking but no one could hear me. It
was like a bad dream. What made it worse was that with all of the ambient
noise, I couldn't even hear myself.
I was so mad. I hated
myself for agreeing to come. I hated the American Cancer Society for asking me
to come. I hated the survivors and their spouses; and now, to top it all off, I
had to present the Tree of Life to these people!
There must have been five
hundred people there and every one of them wanted to meet me. They came toward
me two at a time; the survivor and their spouse, and I was supposed to
congratulate them and give them a Tree of Life placard.
When I saw the people
lining up, it took all of my strength not to run. The only thing that kept me
there was my word. I had made a promise to stay for the entire evening and I couldn't, wouldn't ever break it.
Then, something
completely unexpected started to happen. It was a small thing, but it would
change my life. I realized that after I had given out about five placards that
I was starting to feel better. In fact, as more and more people came toward me
the good feeling I had increased. I suddenly started listening to what people
were saying as I gave them the Tree of Life: "We love you,
Jack," they said, or "You look wonderful, Jack," or "We
prayed for you," or "You're gonna make it
through this, Jack."
Maybe it was because I
was needy, I didn't know; but these people I had hated a minute ago were
suddenly helping me. What was it? What had happened so suddenly that I felt
hope again and connection?
Before I had even
finished asking the question, I got the answer. Not one of the people who
approached me that day, not one in five hundred, had used the pronoun
"I." Not one came up to me with self-pity or complained about the way
they felt or looked for me to save them. On the contrary,
every single one of those people, except me, was thinking about someone
else! In that instant, I knew what it meant to be a cancer survivor.
I was so overcome with
feeling that I had to excuse myself. I ran to the nearest men's room where I
had the second happiest cry of my life. Then I left my pity pot right there in
that bathroom -- where it belonged -- and went back out to the event.
They took two hundred and
fifty pictures of me that day and my smile was genuine in every one of them.
I decided to become a
spokesperson for the American Cancer Society, and I traveled all over the world
-- to Guam, to Europe, to Asia -- telling total strangers my story and listening
to theirs. It was a great experience as we all became brothers and sisters in a
battle for our lives.
Excerpted from Tony
and Me (Good Hill Press, 2005) by Jack Klugman and Burton Rocks
Copyright © 2005 Jack Klugman
with Burton Rocks. All rights reserved. Reprinted by
permission of publisher.
Jack Klugman lives in Malibu, California. His closest family
are his two sons, David and Adam, their lovely wives Carol and Nancy,
and his two beloved granddaughters, Olivia and Katharine. Burton Rocks is also the co-author of
the New York Times bestseller Me and My Dad
with New York Yankees outfielder, Paul O'Neill. He has published five books.
For more information, please visit www.tonyandme.com.
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