Toronto Star

Host inspired ‘Good Morning Vietnam’

Robin Williams’ role in film loosely based on Cronauer’s radio show Military radio host Adrian Cronauer died Wednesday. He was 79.

- BEN FINLEY ADRIAN CRONAUER

NORFOLK, VA.— Adrian Cronauer, the man whose military radio antics inspired a character played by Robin Williams in the film Good Morning, Vietnam, has died. He was 79.

Mary Muse, the wife of his stepson Michael Muse, said Thursday that Cronauer died Wednesday from an age-related illness. He had lived in Troutville, Va., and died at a local nursing home, she said.

During his service as a U.S. air force sergeant in Vietnam in 1965 and 1966, Cronauer opened his Armed Forces Radio show with the phrase, “Goooooood morning, Vietnam!” Williams made the refrain famous in the 1987 film, loosely based on Cronauer’s time in Saigon. The film was a departure from other Vietnam War movies that focused on bloody realism, such as the Academy Award-winning Platoon. Instead, it was about irreverent youth in the 1960s fighting the military establishm­ent.

“We were the only game in town and you had to play by our rules,” Cronauer told The Associated Press in 1987. “But I wanted to serve the listeners.”

The military wanted conservati­ve programmin­g. American youths, however, were “not into drab, sterile announceme­nts” with middle-of-the-road music, Cronauer said. In the film, Williams drops Perry Como and Lawrence Welk from his 6 a.m. playlist in favour of the Dave Clark Five. Cronauer said he loved the movie, but he said much of the film was Hollywood make-believe. Robin Williams’ portrayal as a fast-talking, nonconform­ist, yuk-it-up disc jockey sometimes gave people the wrong impression of the man who inspired the film.

“Yes, I did try to make it sound more like a stateside station,” he told The Associated Press in 1989. “Yes, I did have problems with news censorship. Yes, I was in a restaurant shortly before the Viet Cong hit it. And yes, I did start each program by yelling, ‘Good Morning, Vietnam!’ ”

The rest is what he delicately called “good script crafting.”

Cronauer was from Pittsburgh, the son of a steelworke­r and a schoolteac­her. After the military, he worked in radio, television and advertisin­g.

In 1979, Cronauer saw the film Apocalypse Now with his friend Ben Moses, who also served in Vietnam and worked at the Saigon radio station.

“We said that’s not our story of Vietnam,” Moses recalled Thursday. “And we made a deal over a beer that we were going to have a movie called Good Morning, Vietnam.”

It wasn’t easy. Producers were incensed at the idea of a comedy about Vietnam, said Moses.

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