Cancer surgery may have cost film critic Roger Ebert his speech, but his familiar voice was resurrected in a much-anticipated interview with Oprah Winfrey this afternoon. Ebert debuted a synthesized voice, developed by a Scottish company that compiled Ebert's DVD commentaries, singled out specific words, and crafted a computer program that delivers what he wants to say.
"It still needs improvement, but at least it sounds like me," Ebert said through his computer as his wife, Chaz, choked up beside him. "In first grade, they said I talked too much. And now I still can."
"Uncanny," he added. "A good feeling."
Listen to Ebert's synthesized speech and his original voice side-by-side.
Ebert, 67, "spoke" his first public words during a portion of 'The Oprah Winfrey Show' interview taped at his home, according to the Chicago Tribune. The rest of the interview was set at Oprah's Harpo studios, where Ebert used a more standard computerized voice.
Ebert prefaced the debut of "Roger Jr.," as he calls the customized voice, by saying, "It won't be me, but it'll cheer me up. You'll know it's a computer, but one that sounds like me." Chaz Ebert said she hadn't heard her husband speak since 2006.
"I actually think it's incredible, it's incredible that that's your voice," his wife said after Ebert's test drive of "Roger Jr."
In his column for the Chicago Sun-Times, Ebert wrote, "Yes, 'Roger Jr.' needs to be smoother in tone and steadier in pacing, but the little rascal is good," he wrote.
A particularly touching moment in the Winfrey interview occured when Ebert attempted to recall the last words he spoke on July 1, 2006, the day of his surgery for thyroid cancer. "I didn't realize they were going to be my last words. I probably spoke them to Chaz as they wheeled me out to the operating room," he said. "They were probably, 'I love you.' At least I hope those were my last words."
"On the other hand," Ebert joked, "they may have been, 'Good morning, doctor.'"
Watch His Oscar Picks in the New/Old Voice:
Ebert told Winfrey that he speaks in his dreams and a constant theme involves drinking root beers with his dad -- a poignant memory from his own childhood. Since his surgery, Ebert can't eat or drink.
The writer shared this anecdote with the audience: "My brother-in-law Johnny Hamill and his wife Eunice often came to visit at the rehabilitation institute. I told them that story. I told them I was totally fixated on root beer. I could smell it, taste it and feel it. I told them I had remembered that day with my father for the first time in 60 years."
"Johnny asked me if I had ever thought about it since. 'No,' I said, 'not even once.' Johnny said, 'It might be that when the Lord took away your drinking, he gave you back that memory.'"
Ebert was recently the subject of an in-depth Esquire interview; it featured a full-page portrait of his surgically altered face. Ebert told Oprah that he's uninterested in any more medical procedures: "No more surgery for me. I'm not going to talk, or eat or drink again. So the surgery would only be to patch my face back together. I don't want to go through that. This is the way I look. My life is happy and productive, so why have any more surgery? People ask if I mind Esquire running that photograph of me looking like this. I don't mind at all. Nobody looks perfect. We have to find peace with the way we look and get on with life."
On his own blog, Ebert explained the decision to share the intimate details of his post-cancer life with the world. "The idea of Esquire appealed to me. I did a bunch of interviews for them in the 1970s," he wrote.
He continued, "Chaz wondered if I really thought it was a good idea to invite Chris Jones or anyone else do to an interview that would involve being followed around and observed informally. I said I sensed he wasn't looking for a kill but just wanted to write a good article. ... What goes around, comes around. I've done interviews for years. This was no time to get sensitive and ask for photo approval, or an advance look at the piece. I'd been the goose, and now it was my turn to be the gander."
Ebert upheld the open door policy for Oprah's interview. Cameras were allowed into his home, where Chaz narrated a typical day in her husband's life. At lunchtime, she explained how Ebert eats with his body's new limitations. She said, "He has his meals in a gravity-drip bag suspended from this IV pole, and connected to a tube that goes through a port in his stomach."
Throughout the Esquire profile and Ebert's follow-up blog entry, Chaz was a constant presence, but never the primary voice. The Oprah interview gave a new glimpse into the Eberts' lasting relationship and Chaz's indelible role in her husband's recovery and reaffirmed sense of purpose. Oprah addressed Chaz directly:
"I would just like to say this to you, Chaz, as one woman to another. You are incredible. You make me proud to spell my name w-o-m-a-n ... Years ago, when everybody was saying it's done, its over, Chaz called me and said, 'I refuse to let him die.' She stood by him, and has taken care of him, and shown what true love is."
Chaz responded, "When I married Roger, I knew what an amazing man he was. He's smart, he's funny, he's very respectful of women, appreciative of other cultures. It's hard to find someone like him and I didn't want to lose him. I refused to give up."
Roger Ebert's Chicago Sun Reviews page is my goto for reviews. Sometimes I disagree with him, but he's usually on point. Sad to see him on his way out like this.
I was shocked at the sight of Roger Ebert! I haven't heard of him in a good while and to see him like this just made me gasp! I wish nothing but the best for him and his wife.
Do you think this could happen under Obamacare? No darn way! I have never liked Ebert or his politics but I won't begrudge him the advances of modern technology.
The voice is AMAZING! It sounds just like him and I don't even think it needs any improving - it is perfect. People use the word Awesome all of the time for things that truly are not awesome at all - but the voice they gave him is an awesome and wonderful thing. What a brave and positive man.
The article about Roger Ebert really hit home because my husband had a similar operation where he could not speak, eat or drink. When it was time to take off his bandages and face the world, he told me, "If they don't like it, fuxk 'em" - and off he went". People stared at him but I don't think they meant any harm. They just couldn't understand what happened to his face. My husband never allowed cancer - and his many operations - to change how he lived his life. He was my hero - and I was his!
I had a book review column for nearly seven years.I was fond of the Siskel and Ebert film reviews. I gained some tips from them that I was able to use in my column. It was good to see Ebert and to know he is thriving despite some limitation. This was a good story.
To have loved like the Eberts have loved and to appreciate the joy of life.............that is our ultimate purpose on this Earth. Bless you both. You inspire me.
God Bless them both - they have both been through alot and Roger's wife stood by him all the way! I am sure her support was a huge part in his recovery and for him to get this far!! True love!
These are extraordinary times we live within. In many cases it takes extraordinary efforts by people to make wonderful things happen. Roger Ebert,his wife Chaz,and the people who design the speech software of which Robert Ebert now uses,are EXTRAORDINARY.
Hello Roger, I've enjoyed your work over the years, many thanks. I loved watching you and Gene kicking it back and forth....I laughed so many times. Thank you. I have a bottle of IBC Root Beer, with your name on it, on ice. And an inCREDible vanilla ice cream, as a kicker. I miss Gene, also. Hang in there......You're still the tough guy. I'm looking forward to hear more. Your friend, Brian
Have thyroid cancer Paul and then talk your smack! . Your quick to say you would do that - but you obviously have no clue on the value of life. Keep up with your health Paul cuz if you ever had to have your throat slit for cancer - any moral god fearing person would do what they can to survive.
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Roger Ebert's Chicago Sun Reviews page is my goto for reviews. Sometimes I disagree with him, but he's usually on point.
Sad to see him on his way out like this.
Reply
I was shocked at the sight of Roger Ebert! I haven't heard of him in a good while and to see him like this just made me gasp! I wish nothing but the best for him and his wife.
Reply
Do you think this could happen under Obamacare? No darn way! I have never liked Ebert or his politics but I won't begrudge him the advances of modern technology.
Reply
The voice is AMAZING! It sounds just like him and I don't even think it needs any improving - it is perfect. People use the word Awesome all of the time for things that truly are not awesome at all - but the voice they gave him is an awesome and wonderful thing. What a brave and positive man.
Reply
The article about Roger Ebert really hit home because my husband had a similar operation where he could not speak, eat or drink. When it was time to take off his bandages and face the world, he told me, "If they don't like it, fuxk 'em" - and off he went". People stared at him but I don't think they meant any harm. They just couldn't understand what happened to his face. My husband never allowed cancer - and his many operations - to change how he lived his life. He was my hero - and I was his!
Reply
I had a book review column for nearly seven years.I was fond of the Siskel and Ebert film reviews. I gained some tips from them that I was able to use in my column. It was good to see Ebert and to know he is thriving despite some limitation. This was a good story.
Reply
To have loved like the Eberts have loved and to appreciate the
joy of life.............that is our ultimate purpose on this
Earth. Bless you both. You inspire me.
Reply
thats awesome , hope they work it out and he can do his reviews in his own "voice" again..
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Oh my sweet Jesus God...
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God Bless them both - they have both been through alot and Roger's wife stood by him all the way! I am sure her support was a huge part in his recovery and for him to get this far!! True love!
Reply
Wow, what an inspiration. That is class, that is courage, and that is love.
Reply
These are extraordinary times we live within.
In many cases it takes extraordinary efforts by people to make wonderful things happen.
Roger Ebert,his wife Chaz,and the people who design the speech software of which Robert Ebert now uses,are EXTRAORDINARY.
Reply
How brave. how giving, to show us that our bodies are the temporary homes for our souls.
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Hello Roger,
I've enjoyed your work over the years, many thanks. I loved watching you and Gene kicking it back and forth....I laughed so many times. Thank you.
I have a bottle of IBC Root Beer, with your name on it, on ice. And an inCREDible vanilla ice cream, as a kicker.
I miss Gene, also.
Hang in there......You're still the tough guy. I'm looking forward to hear more.
Your friend,
Brian
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Bye, bye! Bless your little heart.
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That is amazing. Roger, you rock! What a courageous and brilliant man he is.
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your right. it still needs work. doesn't sound much different that "microsoft sam". sounds like crap
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Have thyroid cancer Paul and then talk your smack! . Your quick to say you would do that - but you obviously have no clue on the value of life. Keep up with your health Paul cuz if you ever had to have your throat slit for cancer - any moral god fearing person would do what they can to survive.
Reply
Roger Ebert is married to a fat black chick, half his age?? How bizarre!
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