Friday, November 6th, 2009
Tom Hanks, other celebrities, look on as WW2 museum debuts theatre, restaurant
NEW ORLEANS - Peter Vandyke's steps have slowed since he stormed Normandy Beach, but his 1942 army uniform still fits and he wore it proudly as the National World War II Museum dedicated a $60-million expansion as Tom Hanks and other celebrities looked on Friday.
The museum has added a theatre, a restaurant and a replica of the "Stage Door Canteens" that cheered military men during the war. Vandyke was one of hundreds of Second World War veterans on hand for Friday's ceremony along with Hanks, fellow film star Patricia Clarkson and Mickey Rooney.
"This is quite a deal," said Vandyke, 91. "It's nice to know there'll be something to remember when we're all gone."
The new Victory Theater, Stage Door Canteen, and the American Sector restaurant make up a $60 million segment of the $300 million museum expansion to be completed by 2015. The next phase of the expansion is "The Campaigns Pavilion, which will document battles on land, sea and in the air.
The 6,500-square-metre theatre is showing "Beyond All Boundaries," a documentary about the war that was produced by Hanks.
"I've seen it in every mock version," Hanks said of the production that takes viewers from Pearl Harbor to V-J Day with archival footage, animation and special effects. "To finally see it fill up the space was great."
The American Sector restaurant, with a menu designed by Chef John Besh, will feature what he calls a "nostalgic nod to the past" and include hamburgers and Reubens as well as a gourmet twist on comfort foods such as sloppy joes and meatloaf.
The Stage Door Canteen was inspired by the original founded by the American Theater Wing in 1942. But unlike the original, and the copies it generated during the war, the museum canteen will feature a show that highlights Second World War culture and music.
"I went to the Stage Door Canteen in France," said John Kentzel, 84. "It was a lot of fun. There was good food and pretty girls to dance with. It did a lot to cheer us up."
There were 350 invited Second World War veterans and more than 100 active military personnel, representing all branches Friday. They included 16 members of the Tuskegee Airmen and three Medal of Honor winners.
The museum projects 300,000 visitors in 2010. Dedicated in 2000 as the D-Day Museum, the museum is now designated by Congress as the National World War II Museum.

