Tom Hanks's involvement in each Toy Story film spans approximately 2.5 years, with recording sessions roughly every 6 months.
Tom Hanks on Toy Story, Sequels and The Scene He Regrets
Tom Hanks revealed Pixar scrapped 80% of the original Toy Story and rebuilt it from scratch — and admits there's still one scene in Cast Away he has to leave the room to avoid watching.
The Rest Is Entertainment
Tom Hanks on Toy Story, Sequels and The Scene He Regrets
Tom Hanks revealed Pixar scrapped 80% of the original Toy Story and rebuilt it from scratch — and admits there's still one scene in Cast Away he has to leave the room to avoid watching.
TL;DR
Richard Osman and Marina Hyde interview Tom Hanks at Claridge's, fielding listener questions about his career, Toy Story 5, and his personal life. Hanks reveals Pixar threw out 80% of the original Toy Story [1] — Tom Hanks "80% of Toy Story scrapped: Pixar threw out approximately 80% of the original Toy Story during production, deciding there was something intr…" 09:18 , reflects on his legendary 1990s run — which he thinks may have been cinema's last great decade [2] — Tom Hanks "The 1990s as cinema's last great decade: Tom Hanks argues the 1990s may have been the last great decade of cinema, combining artistic darin…" 14:38 — and admits there's a specific scene in Cast Away he still can't watch [3] — Tom Hanks "Cast Away scene Hanks still can't watch: Tom Hanks said there is one specific moment in Cast Away — a turnaround shot of him returning Kell…" 34:32 . He shares how playing Fred Rogers gave him a daily prayer he still uses: "Thank you, God." The single most useful takeaway: even the world's greatest movie star still feels terror on set every single day.
Richard Osman and Marina Hyde interview Tom Hanks at Claridge's, asking listener questions about Toy Story, his 1990s golden run, Aston Villa, his favourite WW2 tank, the roles that changed him, and the one scene in Cast Away he still can't watch.
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The episode opens with Richard Osman and Marina Hyde delivering a tongue-in-cheek sponsor read for Octopus Energy, riffing on the strangely radical notion that a utility company will actually let you reply to their emails. The segment neatly establishes the show's light, conversational tone — two witty hosts who don't take ad reads too seriously. This gives way to an EasyJet advertisement pitching flights to over 100 European destinations from £32 one-way and package holidays from £399 per person, with the hosts musing dreamily about Mediterranean filming locations and Mamma Mia sequels as their hook.
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A Carvana advertisement runs in a theatrical, mock-medieval format — 'Queen Carvania' standing in morning sunlight delivering a speech about the inexplicably queenly offer she received for her SUV. It's a brief interlude before the main interview begins, with a perfunctory legal disclaimer closing it out.
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Marina Hyde opens by welcoming listeners to what she frames as a 'Questions and Answers Edition,' before Richard Osman reveals the setting — Claridge's — and the guest. The pair visibly relish the moment, teasing the range of listener questions from Toy Story 5 to Aston Villa to WW2 tanks. The format of using listener questions rather than journalist-led interrogation sets the episode apart, promising a more personal and genuinely surprising interview.
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Tom Hanks answers a listener question about whether he sensed how transformative Toy Story would be. He recalls being shown just 12 seconds of animation — Woody gesturing against a blue background — taken from a scene of Hanks yelling at a dog in Turner & Hooch. That was enough. He was in. But the path from that moment to the finished film was far from straight. Pixar assembled about 80% of a movie before deciding something was fundamentally wrong with its DNA. [1] — Tom Hanks "80% of Toy Story scrapped: Pixar threw out approximately 80% of the original Toy Story during production, deciding there was something intr…" 09:18 The call went out to the cast: everything you've recorded, we're starting over. Hanks credits John Lasseter and the Pixar team with making an extraordinarily courageous creative decision — one that reshaped the entire relationship between Woody and Buzz. He explains that Pixar's secret is a relentless internal hothouse of testing — not audience screenings, but animatics, storyboards, and crews asking themselves 'Are we doing this right?' — which is why each film takes 2.5 years of Hanks's involvement.
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A listener named Charlotte asks what Hanks struggles to let go of, inspired by the Toy Story 3 incinerator scene that made her promise never to throw away her daughter's toys — a promise she has kept for 17 years. Hanks responds warmly, confessing to a battle between Marie Kondo's joy principle and the 'diabolically sounding' Swedish death cleaning practice, concluding that some items — like the sweatshirt he wore the day he moved his son into college — simply cannot be discarded regardless of their condition. [1] — Tom Hanks "56-year-olds who grew up with Toy Story: Tom Hanks noted that Toy Story's original audience has now aged to 56, and those fans are now shar…" 09:54 He then speaks with genuine emotion about the multigenerational reach of Toy Story: the original audience is now in their mid-50s and sharing the films with their own children. This leads to a vivid anecdote about meeting Keir Dullea of 2001: A Space Odyssey — turning into 'a babbling fool' — and his elevator trick with young children who can't compute that Woody is real until he asks them to close their eyes.
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Marina Hyde asks whether the shared cultural experiences that films like Toy Story create are becoming harder to produce in a fractured, algorithmically-sorted media landscape. Hanks acknowledges the challenge but pushes back on any simplistic pessimism. He argues that while entertainment can now be consumed in three-minute increments all day, the power of an experience shared with 200 strangers in the same room — or talked about by millions simultaneously — will never disappear. It just becomes rarer. In a moment of inspired wordplay, Hanks coins 'Grand Unifying Moments' — GUMs — to describe these rare cultural events that bind everyone across age, language, and culture. [1] — Tom Hanks "Grand Unifying Moments (GUMs): Tom Hanks coined the term 'Grand Unifying Moments' (GUMs) to describe the increasingly rare cultural events …" 13:00 Richard Osman immediately abbreviates it to GUMP, which Hanks calls a 'not bad example' of exactly that phenomenon.
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Listener Neil Anderson flags the 'frankly ridiculous' graphic of Tom Hanks's 1990s run and asks whether Hanks knew at the time that he was in the middle of something once-in-a-generation. Hanks says no — he was simply fascinated by each subject as it came along. But looking back, he's willing to make a sweeping claim: the 1990s may have been the last great decade of cinema, a rare alignment of artistic daring and matching economics that the franchise era has since foreclosed. [1] — Tom Hanks "The 1990s as cinema's last great decade: Tom Hanks argues the 1990s may have been the last great decade of cinema, combining artistic darin…" 14:38 He's blunt about what happened next: sequels and franchises took over. He imagines, with dark comic relish, a version of his career in which he'd be here defending Forrest Gump 12. He didn't make sequels — outside Toy Story — and he argues that's precisely why those films still hold up. Most strikingly, he reveals that studio executives told him no one would see Apollo 13 because they already knew the ending. His response: in that case, no one would ever rewatch Star Wars, Casablanca, or Citizen Kane.
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Richard Osman and Marina Hyde deliver a Club Lloyds sponsor read, comparing the Thursday Murder Club to The A-Team (Elizabeth = Hannibal, Ron = Howling Mad Murdoch). The benefits — six free cinema tickets, coffee club membership, fee-free international spending — are delivered with characteristic wit. This is followed by a Cancer Research UK segment promoting CAR-T cell immunotherapy research, and a Peyronie's disease awareness ad directing listeners to talkaboutpd.com. The break forms a clean pause before the interview resumes.
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Listener Patrick Farrell asks what still genuinely surprises or challenges Tom Hanks on set. His answer is simultaneously humbling and electrifying: 'total terror of losing the battle against self-loathing.' [1] — Tom Hanks "Tom Hanks still feels total terror before every take. The fear of being exposed as a fraud by the 'authenticity police' never goes away — a…" 21:05 Even after decades of celebrated work, the fear of being exposed by the 'authenticity police' never goes away. Hanks frames this not as weakness but as the essential engine of good performance — the fuel that keeps everyone honest in hour 14 of day 47. He then tells a vivid story about his new WW2 destroyer film, shot in Australia, in which he's playing a commander under attack and must deliver precise naval orders he's spent weeks memorising. An Australian extra — grimy, burnt, doing the same background work for two weeks — waits for the final take of the day, then says to Hanks: 'Every time I walk by, all I hear is Woody.' Hanks receives this with characteristic grace, noting it simply illustrates the suspension of disbelief that has underpinned theatre since Aeschylus.
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A listener named H asks Tom Hanks which of his characters he'd most enjoy spending time with. Without hesitation, Hanks rules out Woody: too similar, too competitive, too much of a mirror. They'd be in a continuous power struggle over who was in charge, with Hanks sulking in the toy box. It's a brief, playful exchange that reveals something genuine about how Hanks relates to the character he's voiced for 30 years — admiration edged with rivalry.
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A Villa fan named Brenda asks whether Hanks will support Scotland's John McGinn at the World Cup. What follows is one of the episode's most joyful digressions: Hanks's origin story as an Aston Villa supporter. It was 1985. His first UK press junket. A BBC football scoreboard. And a name — Aston Villa — that sounded to his American ears like an island off the Côte d'Azur, near Portofino. [1] — Tom Hanks "Hanks fell for Aston Villa in 1985: Tom Hanks became an Aston Villa fan during his first UK press junket in 1985 after seeing the name on a…" 26:46 He was in. Forty years of claret-and-blue faith followed — mostly hopeful, occasionally heartbroken, culminating in Villa's recent European adventures. He notes with a rueful laugh that he expects they'll finally win the Premier League after his death. The conversation then broadens into the World Cup, and Hanks delivers a beautiful observation about why Americans have fallen for football: the drama of a 2-1 match going into extra time, when your heart can break or swell on a single moment of the ball being in the right place.
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James Regan asks the simple but perfectly pitched question: what is Tom Hanks's favourite tank? Hanks throws himself into it with genuine enthusiasm, recounting his conversations with WW2 experts who explained that the American Sherman was not a technical match for German Cromwells or Panzers. [1] — Tom Hanks "Sherman tank: a volume business: Experts told Tom Hanks the American Sherman tank succeeded in WW2 not because of technical superiority ove…" 29:40 The American answer? Volume. They just made vastly more Sherman tanks. It's a satisfying, counterintuitive piece of military history from a man who has clearly done his homework — and it connects directly to the WW2 destroyer film he revealed earlier in the interview.
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Listener Delise asks who would win a table tennis showdown between Forrest Gump and Marty Supreme, the fictional table tennis prodigy. Hanks is delightfully unequivocal: Forrest Gump, no question. The man played with both hands. He was ambidextrous. Though Hanks concedes it would be close, and definitely pay-per-view. The exchange is brief and playful — a palate-cleanser before the episode's most emotionally substantial passages.
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Listener Megan Pollack asks whether any of Hanks's characters have fundamentally changed him as a person. He says they all have, before homing in on two. Richard Osman calls Captain Phillips the best film of the 21st century, and Hanks explains that what made the role possible was the real Richard Phillips's willingness to expose his psychological devastation — to be examined 'worn down to a granular puddle of a human being.' But the deeper answer is Fred Rogers. [1] — Tom Hanks "Playing Fred Rogers changed Tom Hanks's life. Rogers's three-word prayer — 'Thank you, God' — became Hanks's own daily practice. It works f…" 31:40 Hanks says he didn't consider himself particularly spiritual. But everyone he spoke to about Rogers said both the same universal thing and something uniquely personal. Rogers was an ordained minister whose flock was toddlers watching television. When asked about prayer, he said: 'It only takes three words: Thank you, God.' Hanks heard that and said 'this is what has been missing in my life.' He now uses it daily — for pain, joy, and everything in between. It is, he says, a gift he received only because he played Fred Rogers in a movie.
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Listener Ellie Jagger, a piano teacher, asks about mistakes that felt catastrophic at the time but turned out to be valuable. Hanks reframes the question: the harder thing is knowing in retrospect that you failed in a major scene. [1] — Tom Hanks "There is one scene in Cast Away — when Chuck returns Kelly's watch — where Tom Hanks knows he didn't get there. He does a gesture he consid…" 34:28 He identifies one specific moment in Cast Away — a turnaround shot in which Chuck returns Kelly's watch — where he performs a gesture he considers false and unauthentic. He didn't know during filming; only when he watched the finished film did he see it. The scene still troubles him so much that he leaves the room whenever it comes on television. He then offers a fascinating counterpoint: the only times he feels he genuinely succeeded are the moments he cannot remember at all — when he was so absorbed in his co-star's performance that his own responses became instinctive. He cites Bosom Buddies as an example: he remembers Peter Scolari's lines, not his own. The episode closes with warm farewells, Hanks reflecting that he and his colleagues would all 'do this for free sandwiches and haircuts,' and Richard Osman paying tribute to the joy Hanks has brought generations of audiences.
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With Tom Hanks whisked away by his publicist — who had to open the door to indicate the interview was over — Richard and Marina decompress. They reflect on the extraordinary scope of Hanks's career: the 1990s run, the iconic roles before and after, the sense that he is one of the last true movie stars. Osman reiterates his claim that Captain Phillips is the best film of the 21st century, acknowledging listeners may disagree. Marina declares she is going straight home to find the Cast Away scene Hanks regrets. Both agree the listener-question format draws out something more genuine and personal than a conventional celebrity interview — perfectly suited to a guest whose defining quality is trying to bring people together.
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The episode closes with a Zocdoc ad framing doctor-booking as a video-game side quest, and a Ryan Reynolds-voiced Mint Mobile spot advertising $15/month unlimited wireless. Dominic Sandbrook then appears to cross-promote The Rest Is History Book Club, which has released a deep-dive into George R.R. Martin's A Game of Thrones — covering the Wars of the Roses, Hadrian's Wall, Tolkien's influence, and whether Martin will ever finish the series. Upcoming Book Club episodes on The Leopard, Circe, and The 39 Steps are also previewed.
- animatics
- Rough animated sequences or moving storyboards used during film production to plan scenes before final animation is created; Hanks mentions Pixar uses these extensively in their internal testing process.
- cels
- Transparent celluloid sheets on which individual frames of traditional hand-drawn animation are painted; Hanks contrasts this older technique with Pixar's computer-generated approach.
- suspension of disbelief
- The willingness of an audience to accept implausible story elements as real for the sake of enjoying a narrative; Hanks cites it as a contract that has existed since ancient Greek theatre.
- zeitgeist
- The defining spirit or mood of a particular period in history; Hanks uses it to describe the cultural current that his 1990s films both captured and tested.
- Swedish death cleaning
- The Scandinavian practice of decluttering one's possessions late in life to spare relatives the burden after death; Hanks mentions it alongside Marie Kondo as he reflects on what he keeps.
- Marie Kondo
- Japanese organizing consultant and author of The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, whose method involves keeping only items that 'spark joy'; referenced by Hanks discussing possessions.
- Aeschylus
- Ancient Greek playwright (525–456 BC), often called the father of tragedy; Hanks references him to ground the actor-audience contract in the oldest traditions of theatre.
- Epidavros
- Ancient Greek city famous for its well-preserved theatre, considered one of the finest examples of classical Greek architecture; Hanks uses it as the birthplace of the theatrical tradition.
- CAR-T cell therapy
- A type of immunotherapy where a patient's own T cells are extracted, genetically reprogrammed to recognise cancer cells, then reinfused; discussed in a Cancer Research UK ad segment.
- phalanx
- A compact, coordinated body of people; Hanks uses it figuratively to describe the close-knit Pixar creative team who relentlessly test their material.
- antihero
- A central character who lacks conventional heroic qualities; Hanks references antiheroes as a hallmark of the morally complex 1970s cinema he admires.
- granular
- Broken down to the finest, most detailed level; Hanks uses it vividly ('a granular puddle of a human being') to describe Richard Phillips's psychological state after his ordeal.
- nomenclature
- The system of names and terms used in a particular field; Hanks uses it when describing the specific naval commands he had to memorise for his WW2 destroyer film.
- altruistic
- Showing selfless concern for the well-being of others; Hanks uses it playfully when debating whether the fictional table-tennis player Marty Supreme had any redeeming social qualities.
- dispassionate
- Not influenced by strong emotion; objective and calm. Hanks uses it to describe how Richard Phillips gave him a cool, analytical account of his own traumatic experience, which enabled the performance.
Chapter 4 · 03:51
Toy Story Origins: Pixar's Bold 80% Reboot
Tom Hanks answers a listener question about whether he sensed how transformative Toy Story would be. He recalls being shown just 12 seconds of animation — Woody gesturing against a blue background — taken from a scene of Hanks yelling at a dog in Turner & Hooch. That was enough. He was in. But the path from that moment to the finished film was far from straight. Pixar assembled about 80% of a movie before deciding something was fundamentally wrong with its DNA. [1] — Tom Hanks "80% of Toy Story scrapped: Pixar threw out approximately 80% of the original Toy Story during production, deciding there was something intr…" 09:18 The call went out to the cast: everything you've recorded, we're starting over. Hanks credits John Lasseter and the Pixar team with making an extraordinarily courageous creative decision — one that reshaped the entire relationship between Woody and Buzz. He explains that Pixar's secret is a relentless internal hothouse of testing — not audience screenings, but animatics, storyboards, and crews asking themselves 'Are we doing this right?' — which is why each film takes 2.5 years of Hanks's involvement.
Claims made here
Tom Hanks described Pixar's internal testing process — not public screenings but a hothouse boiler-room atmosphere of constant in-house critique — as the reason the films take so long but turn out right.
Each Toy Story film takes about 2.5 years of Tom Hanks's involvement, with sessions roughly every 6 months.
Chapter 5 · 09:00
The Toy Story Emotional Contract and Multigenerational Magic
A listener named Charlotte asks what Hanks struggles to let go of, inspired by the Toy Story 3 incinerator scene that made her promise never to throw away her daughter's toys — a promise she has kept for 17 years. Hanks responds warmly, confessing to a battle between Marie Kondo's joy principle and the 'diabolically sounding' Swedish death cleaning practice, concluding that some items — like the sweatshirt he wore the day he moved his son into college — simply cannot be discarded regardless of their condition. [1] — Tom Hanks "56-year-olds who grew up with Toy Story: Tom Hanks noted that Toy Story's original audience has now aged to 56, and those fans are now shar…" 09:54 He then speaks with genuine emotion about the multigenerational reach of Toy Story: the original audience is now in their mid-50s and sharing the films with their own children. This leads to a vivid anecdote about meeting Keir Dullea of 2001: A Space Odyssey — turning into 'a babbling fool' — and his elevator trick with young children who can't compute that Woody is real until he asks them to close their eyes.
Claims made here
Pixar threw out approximately 80% of the original Toy Story and rebuilt it from scratch because of fundamental problems with the film's DNA.
Tom Hanks has watched 2001: A Space Odyssey 119 times and always found something different each viewing.
Pixar threw out 80% of the original Toy Story because the DNA was fundamentally wrong. Starting over from scratch — changing the entire Woody-Buzz dynamic — was the decision that made the franchise what it became.
Pixar threw out approximately 80% of the original Toy Story during production, deciding there was something intrinsically wrong with its DNA before starting over.
The original Toy Story audience is now in their mid-50s. They're watching the films again with their own children, who are the same age they were at the first viewing. The emotional contract renews itself with every generation.
Tom Hanks noted that Toy Story's original audience has now aged to 56, and those fans are now sharing the films with children who are the same age they were when they first saw it.
Tom Hanks has watched 2001: A Space Odyssey 119 times and always found something new. When he finally met its star Keir Dullea, he became a 'babbling fool' — proof that even Hollywood's biggest star gets starstruck.
Tom Hanks told Keir Dullea — star of 2001: A Space Odyssey — that he had seen the film 119 times and always found something new.
When Tom Hanks meets children in elevators, his identity as Woody simply doesn't compute — until he tells them to close their eyes and imagine Woody. The moment their face explodes with recognition is, he says, the production of high art.
Tom Hanks coined the term 'Grand Unifying Moments' (GUMs) — the increasingly rare cultural events that bind everyone across age, culture, and language. They're getting rarer, but their power is growing precisely because of their scarcity.
Chapter 6 · 12:25
Grand Unifying Moments and Fractured Culture
Marina Hyde asks whether the shared cultural experiences that films like Toy Story create are becoming harder to produce in a fractured, algorithmically-sorted media landscape. Hanks acknowledges the challenge but pushes back on any simplistic pessimism. He argues that while entertainment can now be consumed in three-minute increments all day, the power of an experience shared with 200 strangers in the same room — or talked about by millions simultaneously — will never disappear. It just becomes rarer. In a moment of inspired wordplay, Hanks coins 'Grand Unifying Moments' — GUMs — to describe these rare cultural events that bind everyone across age, language, and culture. [1] — Tom Hanks "Grand Unifying Moments (GUMs): Tom Hanks coined the term 'Grand Unifying Moments' (GUMs) to describe the increasingly rare cultural events …" 13:00 Richard Osman immediately abbreviates it to GUMP, which Hanks calls a 'not bad example' of exactly that phenomenon.
Tom Hanks coined the term 'Grand Unifying Moments' (GUMs) to describe the increasingly rare cultural events that bind everyone together regardless of age, culture, or language.
Chapter 7 · 14:15
The Legendary 1990s Run and the End of a Golden Age
Listener Neil Anderson flags the 'frankly ridiculous' graphic of Tom Hanks's 1990s run and asks whether Hanks knew at the time that he was in the middle of something once-in-a-generation. Hanks says no — he was simply fascinated by each subject as it came along. But looking back, he's willing to make a sweeping claim: the 1990s may have been the last great decade of cinema, a rare alignment of artistic daring and matching economics that the franchise era has since foreclosed. [1] — Tom Hanks "The 1990s as cinema's last great decade: Tom Hanks argues the 1990s may have been the last great decade of cinema, combining artistic darin…" 14:38 He's blunt about what happened next: sequels and franchises took over. He imagines, with dark comic relish, a version of his career in which he'd be here defending Forrest Gump 12. He didn't make sequels — outside Toy Story — and he argues that's precisely why those films still hold up. Most strikingly, he reveals that studio executives told him no one would see Apollo 13 because they already knew the ending. His response: in that case, no one would ever rewatch Star Wars, Casablanca, or Citizen Kane.
Claims made here
Studio executives told Tom Hanks that no one would want to see Apollo 13 because the ending was already known.
The 1990s were the last time artistic ambition and box-office economics aligned in Hollywood. Hanks argues that window is closed — sequels and franchises have replaced the one-off originals that defined an era.
Tom Hanks argues the 1990s may have been the last great decade of cinema, combining artistic daring with matching economics, before sequels and franchises took over.
Executives told Hanks that nobody would see Apollo 13 because the ending was already known. He pointed out that by the same logic, nobody would ever rewatch Star Wars, Casablanca, or Citizen Kane — and made the film anyway.
Chapter 8 · 18:15
Sponsor Break: Lloyds Club & Other Ads
Richard Osman and Marina Hyde deliver a Club Lloyds sponsor read, comparing the Thursday Murder Club to The A-Team (Elizabeth = Hannibal, Ron = Howling Mad Murdoch). The benefits — six free cinema tickets, coffee club membership, fee-free international spending — are delivered with characteristic wit. This is followed by a Cancer Research UK segment promoting CAR-T cell immunotherapy research, and a Peyronie's disease awareness ad directing listeners to talkaboutpd.com. The break forms a clean pause before the interview resumes.
Claims made here
Cancer Research UK's work over the past 50 years has helped double cancer survival rates in the UK.
Tom Hanks still feels total terror before every take. The fear of being exposed as a fraud by the 'authenticity police' never goes away — and he argues that's exactly what keeps performances honest.
Chapter 9 · 21:15
The Terror of the Set: Tom Hanks on Acting Fear
Listener Patrick Farrell asks what still genuinely surprises or challenges Tom Hanks on set. His answer is simultaneously humbling and electrifying: 'total terror of losing the battle against self-loathing.' [1] — Tom Hanks "Tom Hanks still feels total terror before every take. The fear of being exposed as a fraud by the 'authenticity police' never goes away — a…" 21:05 Even after decades of celebrated work, the fear of being exposed by the 'authenticity police' never goes away. Hanks frames this not as weakness but as the essential engine of good performance — the fuel that keeps everyone honest in hour 14 of day 47. He then tells a vivid story about his new WW2 destroyer film, shot in Australia, in which he's playing a commander under attack and must deliver precise naval orders he's spent weeks memorising. An Australian extra — grimy, burnt, doing the same background work for two weeks — waits for the final take of the day, then says to Hanks: 'Every time I walk by, all I hear is Woody.' Hanks receives this with characteristic grace, noting it simply illustrates the suspension of disbelief that has underpinned theatre since Aeschylus.
Claims made here
Tom Hanks is making a second Greyhound film set during World War II about a destroyer under attack, filmed in Australia.
Chapter 10 · 25:15
Which Character Would Tom Hanks Get On With in Real Life?
A listener named H asks Tom Hanks which of his characters he'd most enjoy spending time with. Without hesitation, Hanks rules out Woody: too similar, too competitive, too much of a mirror. They'd be in a continuous power struggle over who was in charge, with Hanks sulking in the toy box. It's a brief, playful exchange that reveals something genuine about how Hanks relates to the character he's voiced for 30 years — admiration edged with rivalry.
Chapter 11 · 26:05
Aston Villa: 40 Years of Misplaced Mediterranean Hope
A Villa fan named Brenda asks whether Hanks will support Scotland's John McGinn at the World Cup. What follows is one of the episode's most joyful digressions: Hanks's origin story as an Aston Villa supporter. It was 1985. His first UK press junket. A BBC football scoreboard. And a name — Aston Villa — that sounded to his American ears like an island off the Côte d'Azur, near Portofino. [1] — Tom Hanks "Hanks fell for Aston Villa in 1985: Tom Hanks became an Aston Villa fan during his first UK press junket in 1985 after seeing the name on a…" 26:46 He was in. Forty years of claret-and-blue faith followed — mostly hopeful, occasionally heartbroken, culminating in Villa's recent European adventures. He notes with a rueful laugh that he expects they'll finally win the Premier League after his death. The conversation then broadens into the World Cup, and Hanks delivers a beautiful observation about why Americans have fallen for football: the drama of a 2-1 match going into extra time, when your heart can break or swell on a single moment of the ball being in the right place.
Claims made here
Tom Hanks became an Aston Villa fan in 1985 during his first UK press junket, after seeing the team name on a BBC football scoreboard.
Aston Villa won the European Cup in 1982.
Tom Hanks chose Aston Villa in 1985 because the name sounded like a Mediterranean island. He's been a loyal fan for 40 years through disappointment and Europe — and he's still waiting for the Premier League title.
Tom Hanks became an Aston Villa fan during his first UK press junket in 1985 after seeing the name on a BBC football scoreboard and thinking it sounded Mediterranean.
Aston Villa last won a major European trophy in 1982, just before Tom Hanks became a fan.
Chapter 12 · 29:30
WW2 Obsession: Sherman Tanks and a New Greyhound Film
James Regan asks the simple but perfectly pitched question: what is Tom Hanks's favourite tank? Hanks throws himself into it with genuine enthusiasm, recounting his conversations with WW2 experts who explained that the American Sherman was not a technical match for German Cromwells or Panzers. [1] — Tom Hanks "Sherman tank: a volume business: Experts told Tom Hanks the American Sherman tank succeeded in WW2 not because of technical superiority ove…" 29:40 The American answer? Volume. They just made vastly more Sherman tanks. It's a satisfying, counterintuitive piece of military history from a man who has clearly done his homework — and it connects directly to the WW2 destroyer film he revealed earlier in the interview.
Claims made here
The American Sherman tank was inferior to German Panzers in firepower and armour, but the US prevailed through sheer volume of production.
The American Sherman tank couldn't match German Panzers on firepower or armour. But the US won because they simply had vastly more of them. Tom Hanks says this answer — pure industrial volume — genuinely surprised him.
Experts told Tom Hanks the American Sherman tank succeeded in WW2 not because of technical superiority over German Panzers, but simply because the US produced vastly more of them.
Chapter 14 · 31:10
Characters That Changed Him: Captain Phillips and Fred Rogers
Listener Megan Pollack asks whether any of Hanks's characters have fundamentally changed him as a person. He says they all have, before homing in on two. Richard Osman calls Captain Phillips the best film of the 21st century, and Hanks explains that what made the role possible was the real Richard Phillips's willingness to expose his psychological devastation — to be examined 'worn down to a granular puddle of a human being.' But the deeper answer is Fred Rogers. [1] — Tom Hanks "Playing Fred Rogers changed Tom Hanks's life. Rogers's three-word prayer — 'Thank you, God' — became Hanks's own daily practice. It works f…" 31:40 Hanks says he didn't consider himself particularly spiritual. But everyone he spoke to about Rogers said both the same universal thing and something uniquely personal. Rogers was an ordained minister whose flock was toddlers watching television. When asked about prayer, he said: 'It only takes three words: Thank you, God.' Hanks heard that and said 'this is what has been missing in my life.' He now uses it daily — for pain, joy, and everything in between. It is, he says, a gift he received only because he played Fred Rogers in a movie.
Claims made here
Fred Rogers was an ordained minister whose 'flock' was the 2- and 3-year-old children watching his television show.
Fred Rogers's personal prayer practice consisted of just three words: 'Thank you, God.'
Richard Osman declared Captain Phillips the best film of the 21st century. Hanks explained that the role worked because the real Richard Phillips gave him a 'dispassionate examination of his absolute being completely worn down to a granular puddle of a human being' — a phrase that tells you everything about what great acting demands.
Playing Fred Rogers changed Tom Hanks's life. Rogers's three-word prayer — 'Thank you, God' — became Hanks's own daily practice. It works for pain, joy, and everything in between.
Fred Rogers told researchers that prayer only takes 3 words — 'Thank you, God' — a philosophy Tom Hanks adopted after playing Rogers on screen.
Chapter 15 · 34:28
Mistakes and the Scene in Cast Away He Can't Watch
Listener Ellie Jagger, a piano teacher, asks about mistakes that felt catastrophic at the time but turned out to be valuable. Hanks reframes the question: the harder thing is knowing in retrospect that you failed in a major scene. [1] — Tom Hanks "There is one scene in Cast Away — when Chuck returns Kelly's watch — where Tom Hanks knows he didn't get there. He does a gesture he consid…" 34:28 He identifies one specific moment in Cast Away — a turnaround shot in which Chuck returns Kelly's watch — where he performs a gesture he considers false and unauthentic. He didn't know during filming; only when he watched the finished film did he see it. The scene still troubles him so much that he leaves the room whenever it comes on television. He then offers a fascinating counterpoint: the only times he feels he genuinely succeeded are the moments he cannot remember at all — when he was so absorbed in his co-star's performance that his own responses became instinctive. He cites Bosom Buddies as an example: he remembers Peter Scolari's lines, not his own. The episode closes with warm farewells, Hanks reflecting that he and his colleagues would all 'do this for free sandwiches and haircuts,' and Richard Osman paying tribute to the joy Hanks has brought generations of audiences.
Claims made here
Tom Hanks said his TV show Bosom Buddies co-starred a man named Peter Scolari.
There is one scene in Cast Away — when Chuck returns Kelly's watch — where Tom Hanks knows he didn't get there. He does a gesture he considers false, and to this day he leaves the room before it comes on screen.
Tom Hanks said there is one specific moment in Cast Away — a turnaround shot of him returning Kelly's watch — where he feels he didn't achieve authenticity and leaves the room if the scene comes on.
Tom Hanks revealed he remembers his co-star Peter Scolari's lines from their TV show Bosom Buddies better than his own because he was always watching Scolari perform.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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American television personality and ordained minister whom Tom Hanks portrayed in a film; Rogers's three-word prayer philosophy profoundly changed Hanks's life.
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Former head of Pixar who Hanks credits with the bold decision to scrap and rebuild the original Toy Story from scratch.
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Actor famous for starring in 2001: A Space Odyssey; Hanks describes becoming a 'babbling fool' when he met Dullea and told him he'd seen the film 119 times.
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English Premier League football club that Tom Hanks has supported since 1985 after discovering them on a BBC scoreboard during a UK press junket.
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Animation studio behind the Toy Story franchise; Hanks describes their bold decision to scrap 80% of the original film and their intensive internal testing process.
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Episode sponsor; described as Britain's most awarded energy supplier, praised for allowing customers to reply directly to emails.
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The Pixar animated franchise that Tom Hanks has voiced Woody in since 1995; Toy Story 5 is the upcoming instalment discussed throughout the episode.
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1994 Tom Hanks film cited as a defining moment of his 1990s run and used as an example of why sequels would have been a creative mistake.
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Tom Hanks's 2000 film described as the last and most daring movie of his 1990s golden run; also the film containing a specific scene he regrets.
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1995 Tom Hanks film that studio executives warned against making because the ending was already known; held up as an example of creative risk-taking.
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2013 film starring Tom Hanks as the eponymous captain; Richard Osman called it the best film of the 21st century.
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Stanley Kubrick's 1968 science fiction film that Tom Hanks says he has watched 119 times and always found something new.
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Early 1980s US TV sitcom in which Tom Hanks starred alongside Peter Scolari; Hanks references it to illustrate how actors remember their co-stars' lines better than their own.
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American WW2 tank that Tom Hanks discusses; experts told him it succeeded not through technical superiority but through sheer volume of production.
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1993 Tom Hanks film cited as part of his legendary 1990s run of original, one-off films.
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1998 Tom Hanks WW2 film cited as part of his legendary 1990s run.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Pixar threw out approximately 80% of the original Toy Story and rebuilt it from scratch because of fundamental problems with the film's DNA.
Tom Hanks's involvement in each Toy Story film spans approximately 2.5 years, with recording sessions roughly every 6 months.
Tom Hanks became an Aston Villa fan in 1985 during his first UK press junket, after seeing the team name on a BBC football scoreboard.
Aston Villa won the European Cup in 1982.
Tom Hanks has watched 2001: A Space Odyssey 119 times and always found something different each viewing.
Studio executives told Tom Hanks that no one would want to see Apollo 13 because the ending was already known.
Fred Rogers was an ordained minister whose 'flock' was the 2- and 3-year-old children watching his television show.
Fred Rogers's personal prayer practice consisted of just three words: 'Thank you, God.'
The American Sherman tank was inferior to German Panzers in firepower and armour, but the US prevailed through sheer volume of production.
Tom Hanks said his TV show Bosom Buddies co-starred a man named Peter Scolari.
Tom Hanks is making a second Greyhound film set during World War II about a destroyer under attack, filmed in Australia.
Cancer Research UK's work over the past 50 years has helped double cancer survival rates in the UK.