Confession: I like NPR (yeah, I’m one of those geeks), I love the music of the artist once again known as Prince, and as you already know I [heart] Hibbing. So color me happy the other day when the planets aligned and gave me all three of my loves in one neat little package—the story “
Minneapolis’ Staring Role in ‘Purple Rain’” featured on Weekend Edition Saturday.
It was part of an on-going NPR series examining movies that have a very definite sense of place. For five minutes and 48 seconds, I listened to clips from one of my favorite 80’s movies and reflected on how Minneapolis did indeed play a major role in the film. While various interviewees debated the extent of its overall impact, no one could deny that the choice of the artist’s hometown setting was significant for both the film and the city. One person even mentioned another musician who stopped off in Minneapolis for a year of college, who was originally from—yup, here it comes—“northern Minnesota” (a.k.a. Hibbing): Bob Dylan. Of course this aside was to demonstrate an artist that had to leave his hometown for New York City in order to achieve success, but I digress.
The veiled Hibbing reference was what made me smile, and I’m not going to get into reflecting on Bob Dylan and his relationship with our shared hometown. That’s another story for another time and people who are more equipped to tell it. What I am interested in are movies like Purple Rain that can anchor and connect people to particular places and how these films affect native citizens, former residents, and people who have never set foot in the area. Those movies you watch where you can say,
I know that place. I’m a part of it.
I remember trying to explain my hometown on the Iron Range to friends in Tallahassee during my brief sojourn in Florida. There was no single film that I could refer to that would do any justice in capturing it.
The two movies that most readily come to mind are
Iron Will (1994) and
North Country (2005), both filmed in the region. I was a young teenager when
Iron Will was in production. I smile thinking about how my dad would frequently talk about trying out to be an extra in my grandfather’s raccoon coat. (Note: he never did actually try out, but the talk of it was memorable enough.) I also chuckle thinking of a young cousin of mine (must have been around 6 years old at the time) raised in the Twin Cities, who was obsessed with the movie and thus developed the impression that those of us who live “up north” must all have easy access to sled dogs.
The filming of
North Country, based on the story of a ground-breaking class action suit regarding sexual harassment in an area mine, was a much different experience. I was an adult and there really wasn’t much joking around. Excitement at having film crews (and the money they brought with them) in the region was palpable. Someone’s son was a body double for an actor during a hockey scene, so-and-so was working on the crew, and a friend of a friend was helping Hollywood actors master a Ranger accent. It was exciting. Yet, this did not erase the accompanying tension. How were these people, these outsiders, going to portray a very raw and shameful part of recent Iron Range history? The story exposed an ugly reality and although I (and many locals I knew) did not wish to deny that reality, we were concerned that it would bleed into and all over the big picture of the Iron Range and its people.
At the end of the day, each of these movies can tell you something about the Iron Range and by extension Hibbing.
Iron Will, I believe, captures something of the spirit and optimistic determination of this region, while
North Country highlights some of the harsh realities of life on the Range by showing both positive and negative aspects of the local culture.
Still, neither of these films is the story of Hibbing. As far as I can tell there is no
Purple Rain for my dear hometown. Some might argue the equivalent would be a Dylan-penned piece. They are probably right.
Yet, there are so many other stories to be told, and so many other storytellers who could tell it. Hibbing is filled with dramatic tension. Think of the striking backdrops of the
Hull Rust Mahoning Mine or the
Hibbing High School auditorium. Think of the intriguing mystery old foundations north of town invite. Think of the secrets exchanged and uncovered out at
Mesaba Co-op Park. Consider the people. Proud. Stubborn. Survivors. People in love with big ideas. People who are pushed away from and pulled back into a town by the realities of economic opportunity and family ties.
There was the musical
Home Again, which I never saw, and
Growing Pains, which I did as part of the Hibbing Centennial celebration in 1993. There is also
this valiant effort by students competing in National History Day.
Yet. . . still. . . in my opinion, Hibbing could use a Prince. Any takers?
Note: A dramatic piece that comes close in my imagination is the musical Mesabi Red (1990) about the 1916 miner’s strike. Although I have never seen the show (originally produced for the History Theater in St. Paul) listening to the song
The Strike Is On always conjures images and feelings of home for me. Something about it resonates with the pride and strength that I associate with the heritage of Hibbing. Talented musician Charlie Maguire is one of the few people raised outside of the area that I would say deserve the title of honorary Iron Ranger. Listen to a clip of the song
here on his website.