Title: After Image/IU Commencement Article Post by: walktall2010 on December 02, 2010, 11:25:49 pm May 5, 2000
'Rock doctor' Mellencamp speaks By Mike Leonard By his own reckoning, John Mellencamp has been "working like a dog" the past few weeks, but not, as one might expect, on the commencement address he will deliver at Indiana University on Saturday. "I'm learning sign language for a movie role I'm playing, and that's about all I've been doing for the last couple of weeks," he explained when reached at his Lake Monroe-area home Wednesday. The commencement address? "I haven't written it yet," he confessed. "I already know what I'm talking about. I'll write it tomorrow." Mellencamp will draw on the experiences of his lengthy career in popular music for his commencement theme. "I'm going to talk about how there's no reward in life settling for something you don't want," he said. "If you don't do that, you don't have to go through 25 years of telling people, 'No, my name is not John Cougar.'" The Seymour native and Vincennes University graduate was a raw and unknown commodity when he traveled to New York City in 1975, hooked up with the manager Tony Defries and the MainMan management company that also handled "space oddity" David Bowie and soon found himself renamed Johnny Cougar. "It's a constant reminder that as a kid, I made some mistakes," Mellencamp said. Not only was the young singer and band leader from Indiana saddled with a name he did not choose or want € ’· he would learn later that he had signed away most of the rights to his early music and that he would continue to pay out a percentage of his income from yet-to-be-created music for the next two decades. Although he loathes the memory of the derision that accompanied the cheesy Cougar moniker, Mellencamp grudgingly concedes that the name stood out and probably did do something positive for his career. "Yeah," he said, "it was a good thing in a heart attack way." That was a droll reference to his own heart attack in 1994, a traumatic experience, to be sure, but one that has paid appreciable benefits in forcing him to begin and maintain an exercise program, pay attention to his diet and moderate his three- pack-a-day smoking habit. The 48-year-old Mellencamp proved both the vitality of his health and his place in popular music last year with an extensive tour schedule that averaged more than 13,000 fans a show. When he finished off 1999 with a New Year's Eve celebration at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, he pledged to take some significant time off. That time off ended a little more quickly than the Hoosier rock icon expected. In March, Mellencamp delivered what one reviewer called a "rambling, profane and funny introduction speech for the Lovin' Spoonful" when that band, Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt and James Brown were among those feted at the 15th annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York. The movie for which Mellencamp is learning American Sign Language is tentatively titled After Image, and shooting is scheduled to begin in Rochester, N.Y., Wednesday. "The guy I play (a crime scene photographer) falls in love with a deaf girl, which is why I need to learn sign language," he said. "The people making the film are into the deaf community. They don't want me to go up there and look like a piano player who can't play piano." Oscar winner Louise Fletcher will also star in the film, which will mark Mellencamp's second foray into filmmaking. He also starred in a 1992 movie, Falling From Grace, which was written by acclaimed novelist and screenplay author Larry McMurtry. It won't come as a surprise if the singer, songwriter, painter and actor makes reference to his upcoming acting challenge when he speaks at IU's 171st commencement ceremony Saturday. "You always have to be ready to reinvent yourself," he mused this week. "I would never have survived 25 years in the entertainment business if I couldn't reinvent myself. If you don't keep moving, you get left behind." The dual honors of being asked to deliver IU's commencement speech and to be named an honorary doctor of music are not lost on the occasionally dismissive Mellencamp. "The part I like the best is that they asked the students and the students wanted me, that's really the most gratifying part. "I've been very fortunate, that's all I can say," he concluded. "Fifteen years ago this would have been something I would have never entertained the idea of doing or even imagined the opportunity to do. I think it's great." |