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Thoughts on James Earl Jones, ‘Star Wars’ and Alaska

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Thoughts on James Earl Jones, ‘Star Wars’ and Alaska


Part of a continuing series on Alaska history by local historian David Reamer. Have a question about Anchorage or Alaska history or an idea for a future article? Go to the form at the bottom of this story. Reamer is presenting a series of free history talks at Bear Tooth Theatrepub this fall. The first, to be held Sept. 14 at 11 a.m., is on Alaska representation in a century of movies.

James Earl Jones is gone, and he is not. I search my mind and the memories are so sharp, so present. A Darth Vader action figure stares at me as I write. “Don’t fail me again,” he suggests as my deadlines approach. Jones has been a part of me since about the time my consciousness began to endure past each moment. In one of my earliest memories, I swing a light tube at a screen, helping Luke fight the Dark Lord of the Sith. I still don’t know why my parents allowed a toddler to play with light tubes like a hardcore wrestler. And so, Jones’ life may have ceased, but the presence is forever, pain and comfort mingling in my mind.

[James Earl Jones, acclaimed actor and voice of Darth Vader, dies at 93]

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Jones intersected with Alaska continually for decades. The presence. The humor (non-Vader roles). And the voice, unforgettably sonorous. Many of the theaters may be torn down or repurposed, but we remember. In Anchorage, “Dr. Strangelove” played at the 4th Avenue Theatre. “The Great White Hope” played at the Fireweed. “The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings” played at the Polar. “Coming to America” played at the Valley River Cinemas in Eagle River. “Field of Dreams” played at the University 6. “The Lion King” played at the Totem. Yes, the Totem is still here. There’s a limit to demolished theaters, even in Anchorage.

And then there is “Star Wars.” It was a different world for movies in Alaska then. “Stars Wars” was released nationally on May 25, 1977. It didn’t make it to Anchorage until all the way on Aug. 3. It opened here at the Polar Twin, now the Polaris K-12 School. Oddly, the movie was paired with a Vincent Price-narrated pseudo-documentary, “The Devil’s Triangle.” Before the real feature, the crowded houses had to sit through more than 50 minutes of far-fetched drivel about the Bermuda Triangle. Before you feel too bad for Anchorage residents, know that the film didn’t open in Fairbanks for another two months, on Oct. 8 at the Goldstream.

Jones also made a few personal and professional visits to Alaska, including with his only child, Flynn. In his 1993 biography, “Voices and Silences,” Jones wrote, “I have always thought it quite wonderful and necessary to keep connected to nature, to a place in the country landscape where one can rest and listen. Flynn and I share a love of the woods. We collect stamps and baseball cards. We travel together whenever we can as a family, but we try not to disrupt Flynn’s school schedule.”

His humor came through when talking about Alaska. “We have been to Italy recently, and to Alaska, where Flynn and I drank glacier water and then pissed off the edge of the glacier. I believe my son shares with me this visceral love for nature. Away from civilization and even from Ceci, whom we both adore beyond words, we can take sleeping bags out to the woods, eat what we want, pee outdoors, sleep under the stars.” Ceci is Cecilia Hart (1948-2016), Jones’ second wife, who he met on the set of the 1979-1980 CBS police drama “Paris.”

In the spring of 1990, Jones spent a few days in Juneau. The primary purpose was to record some narration for a Sea World film about Shamu, the killer whale. They had installed a large video screen to play footage of natural habitats during animal performances. His secondary purpose in Alaska was to get in some fishing. On his return home, he declared, “I didn’t catch anything except a heart full of love for this country.”

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More people know that baritone voice than his face, understandably so. Still, it represents a voice-acting career that almost never happened. As a child, he stuttered and for years was nearly mute to avoid any embarrassment. The voice didn’t just happen. He practiced and honed it like any other craft. He took speech lessons periodically for decades, well into his most famous period.

Moreover, he was humble about it, often denying that his voice was anything special. In a 1990 interview with the Anchorage Daily News, he said, “Is it really that famous? I suppose for young people of a certain generation it is. I dunno.”

He provided his signature narration for everything from the Olympics to Sprint cellphone service, from CNN (“This … is CNN”) to Verizon. In 1990, he even did the voice-over for a Daily News commercial. That bit of local treasure is, unfortunately, lost media at the moment. If anyone has it, please get in touch with me as soon as possible.

That year, 1990, was a big one for Jones and Alaska. On Oct. 20, he performed with the Anchorage Symphony. He was the narrator for a performance of Aaron Copland’s “Lincoln Portrait,” a series of Lincoln speeches and observations set to music. Conductor Stephen Stein told the Anchorage Times, “In envisioning this performance, it was obvious from the beginning that James Earl Jones had the broad appeal, deep voice and statuesque presence to make this a truly extraordinary concert.”

In a dark suit and red tie, he took the stage to the applause of a full house. Orators as diverse as Margaret Thatcher and Barack Obama have narrated “Lincoln Portrait,” but none could say they did it better, and in Anchorage even. The orchestral work was written during World War II and meant as a triumphant experience, a giver of hope during a dark war. In power, presence, and performance, Jones met the challenge.

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He is gone, but I don’t forget. Some of my deadlines will be soon be met. Then, my Vader figure will tell me to meet new expectations, altering a deal. “Pray I don’t alter it any further.” Yet, for some reason, I smile.

• • •

Key sources:

Blucher, Jay. “Symphony Calls on a Big Voice.” Anchorage Daily News, G-1, G-8.

Foley, John. “James Earl Jones.” Anchorage Times, October 14, 1990, G-1, G-4.

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Jones, James Earl, and Penelope Niven. James Earl Jones: Voices and Silences. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1993.





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Opinion: A defining moment for Alaska’s congressional delegation

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Opinion: A defining moment for Alaska’s congressional delegation


The U.S. Capitol is seen Friday, Feb. 13, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

Sen. Dan Sullivan and Rep. Nick Begich must choose between complicity and commitment to their fundamental constitutional obligations as legislators. Like so many scandals before, the root cause and means of correction for our current national crisis resides in the deliberative body, not the executive.

It’s been nearly 25 years since energy giant Enron filed for bankruptcy. The company collapsed after it was discovered that CEO Kenneth Lay and other executives had concealed massive debt through fraudulent accounting practices. Billions disappeared from pension plans and retirement accounts of ordinary people across the country.

Executives, like Mr. Lay, capture our attention with their boundless capacity to believe in themselves to the very end, even as the lies, abuse and secrets finally catch up with them.

Despite the coverage they receive, such leaders are really a symptom of a more serious underlying autoimmune disease: a systemic failure of the organization’s policymaking and oversight body.

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Time and again, boards that could prevent or contain executive misconduct are caught up in the success of the moment, blinded by groupthink, constrained by the perceived necessities of competitive edge and public image, and passive in response to a forceful leader considered integral to the organization’s success.

The U.S. government provides an unparalleled example of this dual failure of executive leadership and legislative oversight.

President Trump has:

• Been found civilly liable for sexually abusing E. Jean Carroll and is the subject of numerous credible allegations of sexual misconduct.

• Incited an attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of his supporters, threatened the vice president and members of Congress in an attempt to interfere with the peaceful transition of power, and later pardoned or commuted the sentences of all those criminally convicted of violence against D.C. and Capitol police during the attack.

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• Openly profited off the presidency through the use of cryptocurrency pay-for-play political schemes to the tune of billions of dollars.

• Weaponized departments of the federal government to target his personal enemies.

• Terrorized lawful immigrants and U.S. citizens and stoked domestic conflict through the use of militarized and masked federal police forces in the name of crime reduction and immigration enforcement.

• Threatened our allies with military action in contravention of ratified U.S. treaties and committed acts of war without congressional approval.

• Through his Department of Justice, illegally concealed the names of possible co-conspirators in a case of child sex trafficking associated with the highest echelons in our society, a case in which the president himself is potentially implicated.

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Congress is the United States’ board of directors. It is responsible for investigating executive misconduct and, if warranted, impeaching and removing the president and cabinet members.

Members of Congress who refuse to perform their constitutional duties of oversight share responsibility for President Trump’s actions.

That Sen. Sullivan and Rep. Begich belong to the same party as the president is irrelevant. No one considers it a valid excuse if trustees happen to belong to the same political party as the executive leadership they are charged with overseeing. The job remains the same: oversight, accountability, exercise of budgetary authority and policymaking.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, often alone in her party, has stood up to the Trump administration, modeling the independent-minded leadership we need from all members of the legislative branch.

The United States of America is not a large energy company. Much more is at stake. Innocent people in Alaska and across the nation and world will suffer even more if Republican legislators, including Sen. Sullivan and Rep. Begich, refuse to investigate and fulfill their oath to check the abuse of executive power.

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If the Alaska delegation does not act decisively now, they will never be able to wash their hands of these things. The stench of President Trump’s actions will remain with them long after their service to our state has ended.

Joel Potter is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Alaska Anchorage.

• • •

The Anchorage Daily News welcomes a broad range of viewpoints. To submit a piece for consideration, email commentary(at)adn.com. Send submissions shorter than 200 words to letters@adn.com or click here to submit via any web browser. Read our full guidelines for letters and commentaries here.





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Former Alaska cop convicted of assault after lying about vehicle attack, according to state

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Former Alaska cop convicted of assault after lying about vehicle attack, according to state


BETHEL, Alaska (KTUU) – A former Bethel police officer has been convicted of assault and related charges after a jury concluded he used excessive force against a man during a 2023 traffic stop, and then provided false information about the encounter.

Jonathan Murphy, 39, was found guilty of fourth-degree assault, providing false information implicating another in a crime, and second degree tampering with evidence last week following a six day trial.

The charges stem from a Dec. 23, 2023 incident in Bethel, where Murphy, then an officer with the Bethel Police Department, assisted in a traffic stop involving a report of a stolen vehicle. Body-worn camera footage showed Murphy and another officer approach the driver and order him to raise his hands, which the driver did, according to the Alaska Department of Law.

Prosecutors said Murphy then attempted to forcibly remove the driver from the vehicle and struck him in the face. The victim drove away.

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Murphy later radioed to the other officer, claiming the driver had attempted to hit him with the vehicle, according to the Department of Law.

After a short pursuit, officers forced the driver’s vehicle into a snowbank. Murphy and other officers surrounded the vehicle, broke its windows, deployed pepper spray and used tasers. Video showed the driver retreating into his vehicle and attempting to remove taser wires while curling into a defensive position, according to the state.

During the encounter, Murphy grabbed the victim through the driver’s window and repeatedly punched him in the head. Body-camera footage showed Murphy striking the driver more than 20 times in rapid succession, according to the Department of Law.

Prosecutors said Murphy later reported that the driver had struck him with the vehicle and implied he had been dragged by it. Investigators said the video did not show the driver attempting to hit Murphy or any part of the vehicle striking him.

Murphy resigned from the Bethel Police Department at the start of the investigation in 2024. He later worked briefly with the Sitka Police Department and currently serves as police chief in Diamond City, Arkansas, according to the Department of Law.

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Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 19. Murphy faces a maximum of three years in confinement.

See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com



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Alaska’s governor race picks up 17th candidate

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Alaska’s governor race picks up 17th candidate


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Meda DeWitt, a traditional healer and community organizer, announced her candidacy in this year’s gubernatorial race Monday.

DeWitt entered the race as an independent and filed a letter of intent, according to Alaska Public Offices Commission paperwork. DeWitt’s announcement coincided with Elizabeth Peratrovich Day.

“Alaska is at a crossroads,” DeWitt said in her announcement. “We can continue down a path of division and short-term thinking, or we can choose a future grounded in courage, cooperation and responsibility to those who come after us. I am running for Governor because I believe in the strength of our people and the promise of this place.”

DeWitt said her campaign will focus on ensuring government transparency, investing in education and public safety and protecting Alaska’s natural resources.

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More information can be found on her campaign website medaforalaska.com.

See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com



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