Die Hard Donation
Bruce Willis gives John McClane's blood-smeared undershirt to the Smithsonian. Yippee-ki-yay...
- By Amy Crawford
- Smithsonian.com, July 01, 2007, Subscribe
Actor Bruce Willis visited the Smithsonian on June 27 to donate a dirty, blood-smeared undershirt to the National Museum of American History. Why? Willis wore the shirt when he played New York police officer John McClane in 1988's Die Hard.
Besides the undershirt, Willis donated a poster from the 1988 movie and a prop police badge and script from the 2007 sequel, Live Free or Die Hard. The original is "a quintessential Hollywood action movie," according to museum director Brent Glass, who accepted the donation.
Along with the boxing gloves from Rocky and the ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz, the Die Hard collection will represent American movie heritage. The items will go on display July 12 as part of the "Treasures of American History" exhibition, hosted by the Air and Space Museum while the National Museum of American History is closed for renovations. Bruce Willis spoke with the magazine's Amy Crawford.
How does it feel to have your undershirt in a museum with Abraham Lincoln's top hat?
It's pretty amazing. I was really surprised by this. I never really thought of this film as part of the culture. I never thought that it would come this far, and it is an honor. The Smithsonian Institution is a big deal—I used to come here when I was a kid.
What do action movies say about American culture?
You can draw a straight line from westerns and cowboy movies, to military movies and gangster movies, to what they now call "action movies"—they're really just about good triumphing over evil. They're morality stories that sometimes work and sometimes don't, and these films just seem to work.
Is John McClane a quintessentially American character?
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Comments (1)
Dear Pauline Lanciotti, Four years later.
Bruce Willis is American History.
Love, Wuce Brillis.
Posted by Richeous King, Wuce Brillis on March 9,2012 | 10:28 PM
Dear Smithsonian: Regarding the acquisition of Bruce Willis' shirt from "Die Hard": Who are you, and what have you done with the National Museum of American History? For the past 10-15 years, my husband and I have grumbled over the disheartening change in direction of the Museum's presentation of American "history." Certainly, proper historic interpretation requires a multi-disciplinary approach. However, items from movies and TV (such as Dorothy's slippers, Archie's chair, and Willis' shirt) belong in a pop culture repository! An item such as Lincoln's hat makes sense: Lincoln was a real man - a American president whose actions warrant his artifacts' presence in Smithsonian. If Smithsonian is going to display pop culture items for public viewing, then please intepret them within a larger historic context (whatever that may be - it's the job of cultural anthropologists). Otherwise, I fear the message Smithsonian is sending may be that fact and fiction are one reality...that our "movie heritage" is, indeed, our heritage. Please, don't dumb down our history; it doesn't well serve the American public.
Posted by Pauline Lanciotti on January 10,2008 | 12:56 PM