People Plus - Tomahawk Leader
Transcription
People Plus - Tomahawk Leader
Page 10— Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013 People Plus Kathy’s Kolumn By Kathy Tobin When I was a little boy my father would take us away west past the fall of the Spirit – we’re going to God’s Country, he’d say Take me to the Newwood – out where I know I’ll have room to roam where the air’s clear as crystal and the morning mist will always be calling me home. Deep in the heart of my darkest days when my soul cries out for a sweet place to fly, I dream of its beauty, the tall shining timbers, the black velvet star-studded sky. So take me to the Newwood, out where I know I’ll have room to roam where the air’s clear as crystal and the morning mist will always be calling me home… -Jay Leggett “Although his address was Los Angeles, this was where he lived,” said longtime friend and actor, Mitch Rouse as part of the eulogy for Jay Michael Leggett preceding his memorial Mass at St. Mary Church Saturday. Tomahawk’s “Hollywood star” died of an apparent heart attack doing what he loved most, deer hunting with his family and friends at the shack. It was opening day – a day he considered “better than Christmas.” He had gotten his deer and came back to the shack for a knife. Leggett, 50, was found collapsed near his ATV. No one ever had to ask Jay where he was from, Rouse said. “He brought the entire town (of Tomahawk) to Los Angeles,” he noted. “He was an amazing, amazing man on so many levels,” Rouse said, unable to maintain his composure. “I spent so much time with Jay trying not to laugh; to try not to cry is hard now,” he stated, with long, broken moments of sorrow. Jay had a way of making him feel special, Rouse related, but added he has since learned his friend did that to everyone. “If there were a few more of him around, the world would be a better place,” Rouse said, thanking his family and the Tomahawk community for what he considered a gift. Likewise, an actor friend from London, Lesley Jones, said Jay was a combination of energy, creativity, humor, wit, insight and compassion. “In a real and profound way, he never left Tomahawk,” said John Millard, a college friend from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Referring to his musical talents, Millard felt certain the strumming of a guitar and not the plucking of a harp would now greet friends and family in heaven. Another good friend, Paul Chilson, played the guitar and sang. According to Kevin Krueger of Generations Funeral Home and Crematory, Joel Murray, Bill Murray’s brother, was among those who attended the services. Also speaking during the eulogy, Linda Moore, who mentored the Tomahawk actor at UW-SP during his college years, saw him as talented, a perfectionist – “a smart and such a compassionate man.” His gifts included writing, humor and the ability to teach, she said. Mike Sandry spoke on behalf of the gang at hunting camp who enjoyed Jay’s wit and extraordinary cooking abilities. “He embodied the spirit of the Newwood,” Sandry said. Noting that Jay was an avid Wisconsin and Green Bay Packer fan, Sandry recalled Jay’s concern about missing a Badger game opening day of hunting. But not to worry, he said, the Newwood Club may not have running water and uses a generator for electricity, but it does have satellite TV with a DVR. “He left us with a video documentary, “To The Hunt,” Sandry observed. “To The Hunt, buddy,” he said directed at Jay. “I hope the hunting up there is a lot better than down here.” Jay’s brother, Josh Leggett, shared emotional comments on behalf of the family. So many people have reached out to them and told them how Jay made a difference in their lives, he said: How he brought out the best in them: How to live; how to really live rather than just get ahead. His brother “pursued his dream with every ounce he could muster, every day,” Josh said. Josh read something Jay wrote while in Los Angeles that looked at the value of one’s life. “In the end, we are who we are based on our actions and character,” Jay had said. It’s the tapestry one weaves, not a single thread. It’s patterns over time that matter most. “Jay left a legacy he’d be so very proud of,” Josh stated J a y ’s n e p h e w a n d niece, who was a Godchild, Jack and Miranda Leggett, Oshkosh, wowed everyone with a powerful rendition of “Amazing Grace, My Chains Are Gone,” while their mother, Karla, accompanied them. Fr. John Anderson, who Top left: With Jay Leggett’s parents consoling each other in the lower left and memorabilia from his life on the table, Fr. John Anderson, right, and Deacon Darrell Smerz preside over a memorial Mass for him Saturday. Above, Jay’s brother, Josh, and actor friend, Mitch Rouse, fight back tears during the eulogy. Continuing clockwise, nephew and niece, Jack and Miranda Leggett, sing as their mother, Karla, accompanies them. Upper right, with his brother, Joe, and his father, Jack, at her side, Jay’s mother, Judy Leggett, releases one of 50 doves. The number signified Jay’s age. -Tomahawk Leader Photos by Kathy Tobin officiated, made a reference to the actor’s prayer card. In it, his birth was referred to as his “Debut.” His death, the “Final Curtain Call.” “I think there will be an ‘Encore,’” Fr. John stated. Our parting thoughts: “Here’s to that final hunt, Jay Leggett.” As he said in his song about the Newwood, it “will always be calling me home.” A FEW PARTING THOUGHTS “Jay was hysterically funny. He performed at my installation banquet when I became president of the Wisconsin Newspaper Association. with his Blue Velveeta improv troop. Terrific humor, no foul language and not a hint of off-color material. Everyone there loved it. Wish I could have known him better. Will miss him regardless.” -Larry Tobin, Publisher, Tomahawk Leader “Jay enjoyed coming to sing with our choir at St. Mary’s, when he came home for summer visits. Our congregation appreciated his powerful voice very much, and yet he was very modest when others complimented him. Despite his success in the entertainment world, he seemed firmly grounded in his hometown roots, and often spoke of how much he appreciated everyone who had supported his journey. He will be missed, and I hope his family will find comfort in knowing that the world is better because of him.” -Jan Huseby, Director of Music and Liturgy, St. Mary Church Jay Leggett and friend/co-collaborator, Mitch Rouse. “Jay never forgot where he came from and he tried hard to make the rest of the world see his hometown through his own eyes. Good art entertains, teaches and inspires. Jay Leggett made good art ...” -Mark Gaedtke, musician, Leader columnist, author Tomahawk Leader Year in Review, among the top stories from 2004 Jay Leggett appears on big screen For Jay Leggett, a 1981 graduate of Tomahawk High School, 2004 ended up to be the important year of his professional life. “Without a Paddle,” a screenplay he co-wrote with his best friend, Mitch Rouse, was purchased by Paramount Pictures, shot in New Zealand and touted such stars as Burt Reynolds, Matthew Lillard and Seth Green. “Without a Paddle” was one of Paramount Picture’s biggest movies all summer, bringing in more than $13 million its debut weekend and nearly $60 million during its theater showing. The film, which is about three friends who set out on a camping trip in search of a lost treasure, makes several references to Tomahawk and the surrounding area. Jay Leggett shared his Hollywood successes with the town he loved so much. Far left, his documentary, “To The Hunt,” focused on one of his passions, deer hunting in the Tomahawk area. A crowd of orange-clad hunters and non-hunters alike enjoyed the premiere at the Tomahawk Cinema. Upper, the brainchild of the Tomahawk Leader, this newspaper joined with the theater in presenting well-wishes from Tomahawk, written on canoe paddles, and presented them to Jay at the local opening of “Without A Paddle.” Below, Jay visits the Tomahawk American Legion Hall and watches himself as Gus in one of the episodes of “Factory.” -Tomahawk Leader Photos by Kathy Tobin