HOWARD HUGHES from page 43 The film also chronicles Hughes' struggle with his physical disabilities and phobias, and his increasingly erratic obsessive-compulsive behavior that led him ultimately to withdraw from the world. He died at 71 in 1976. DiCaprio at first looks too young to be playing Hughes, although the latter was only 42 when he flew the Spruce Goose. But DiCaprio "grows" into the role — with a prospective Oscar nomi- nation — as the 2-hour-40-minute film wears on. Supporting Roles Hughes was the son of the Texan inven- tor of a highly profitable oil drill bit who died when Hughes was 18, leaving most of the Hughes Tool Co. to his son. Young Howard proceeded to transform a small fortune into a massive one, drop- ping out of Rice University and moving to Los Angeles to continue as an aviator and launch a moviemaking career. Along the way, he romanced some of the world's most beautiful women, mainly movie actresses, launching the careers of such starlets as platinum- blonde bombshell Jean Harlow, who starred in Hell's Angels. She's played by singer Gwen Stefani in The Aviator. But Cate Blanchett almost steals the movie with her portrayal of a young Katharine Hepburn, with whom Hughes lived for a while. Her version of the famed Hepburn speech patterns and mannerisms are bound to earn her an Oscar nomination for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, especially for an amus- ing scene in which she takes Hughes to meet her family at their Connecticut estate. Kate Beckinsale also shines, as Ava Gardner, while Alec Baldwin plays Juan Trippe, president of Pan Am Airways and Hughes' fiercest competitor when the latter headed Trans World Airlines. Alan Alda is Hughes adversary Sen. Owen Brewster of Maine, who gave the Flying Boat its "Spruce Goose' nick- name. John C. Reilly portrays Noah Dietrich, chief of Hughes' movie sub- sidiary, and Jude Law makes a quick cameo appearance, as actor Errol Flynn, using his brief time on the screen to get into a nightclub fistfight. Many prominent figures are portrayed in The Aviator," including, top to bottom (above) Alan Alda as Maine's Sen. Owen Brewster; Alec Baldwin as Pan Am founder Juan Trippe; Jude Law as Errol Flynn; (at right) Cate Blanchett as Katharine Hepburn; Gwen Stefani as Jean Harlow and Kate Beckinsale as Ava Gardner . Working With Hughes David Grant, who lived with his wife in the Sherwood Forest section of Detroit and attended Temple Beth El, came into Hughes' life when Grant moved to California in 1946 at age 30 to handle the aviator's hydraulics work. He former- ly was a civilian employee of the U.S. Air Force in Ohio. Grant had three brothers: Dr. Joe, a dentist; Dr. Seymour, a physician; and Benjamin, a lawyer; and two sisters, Pearl and Florence. The latter is the only surviving family member; she lives in Atlanta, Ga. The siblings, all close in age, set some sort of record when all six attended U-M at the same time. Their father, Jacob, was the brother of Alex Grant, Allan's father. The men worked for Grant Iron & Metal in Detroit, founded by their brother, Harry S. Grant, one of the co-founders of the Franklin Hills Country Club and the former Detroit Standard Club. Allan Grant, who owns a Troy adver- tising agency and collects old cars he drives in the annual Woodward. Dream Cruise, recalls David telling him that Hughes "was really a nice guy, and noth- ing like the kook depicted in all of the books and other movies." David Grant worked in various facets of Hughes Aviation, and invented the Grant Valve used in the unmanned lunar landing craft that preceded the first manned space flight to the moon in 1969. Holder of seven hydraulics patents, he developed hydraulic drives for other spacecraft, missiles and heli- copters. He retired in 1981, but later did consulting and public relations work. "The Flying Boat was his most impor- tant project," said Ruth Grant, 83. Married for 61 years, she and David got immersed in the Hollywood social whirl during Hughes' heyday. "We attended parties and movie premieres and met many famous celebrities," she reflected. "Some of Howard's pals were Cary Grant, Jimmy Stewart and author Sidney Sheldon, and he would use their homes for secret nighttime meetings that David attended. We weren't very reli- gious, but we belonged to the Reform University Temple in Los Angeles." Of the Flying Boat, David Grant once said: "If there's anything T close to my heart, it's that airplane." He and Hughes detested the "Spruce Goose" nickname. "It was much too significant an aircraft to be called that," Grant said. Assigned to ride in the co-pilot's seat despite his lack of a pilot's license, Grant said Hughes really wanted him there to rely on for any hydraulics problems, not to take over the controls. "That short flight in 1947 was ecstasy all the way — like walking on air. As a young engineer, I couldn't imagine any- thing more thrilling. It wasn't a long flight, but it was enough to quiet Congress down," he added. HOWARD HUGHES on page 48 12/17 2004 47