Mickey Rooney got heartburn when he learned why his 1961 film "Breakfast at Tiffany's" had been pulled for "Ratatouille" at east Sacramento's free Screen on the Green movie series Saturday night.
" 'Ratatouille'? Never heard of it!" Rooney, 87, said in his classic Brooklyn accent in a spirited weekend interview by phone from his Southern California home.
One of the most beloved and enduring movie actors in American history, Rooney was shocked to hear that his comic role as Mr. Yunioshi, Audrey Hepburn's cantankerous upstairs neighbor in "Breakfast at Tiffany's," had been branded racist by several Asian American activists in Sacramento.
"Don't break me up I wouldn't offend any person, be they black, Asian or whatever," said the veteran of 360 films. Rooney still performs worldwide with his eighth wife, Jan Chamberlain.
To set the record straight, "Jan and I would love to do a show up there in Sacramento," he said. "We'll do it with open arms because (Gov. Arnold) Schwarzenegger is one of our friends. He might come with Maria. Let's put on a show!"
CAPITAL the Council of Asian Pacific Islanders Together for Advocacy and Leadership an umbrella group for more than 90 local organizations, told the Sacramento City Council that Rooney's bucktoothed Japanese character with thick glasses and exaggerated Asian accent perpetuated "offensive, derogatory and hateful racial stereotypes detrimental and destructive to our society."
Responded Rooney: "It breaks my heart. Blake Edwards, who directed the picture, wanted me to do it because he was a comedy director. They hired me to do this overboard, and we had fun doing it."
Rooney, who occasionally shows the Mr. Yunioshi clip as part of his traveling stage show, added that "never in all the more than 40 years after we made it not one complaint. Everyplace I've gone in the world people say, 'God you were so funny.' Asians and Chinese come up to me and say 'Mickey you were out of this world.' "
Rooney said he loves everybody, and his life is a testament to that. "I was born in Brooklyn, delivered by a Chinese doctor on a table in a boardinghouse on Sept. 23, 1920," he said. "I came from a poor family. My father was from Glasgow, Scotland; my mother's brothers were brakemen on the railroad. We didn't have anything but mush for breakfast."
He said he won a Bronze Star in World War II serving with Japanese American and Chinese American soldiers battling the Nazis in Europe.
Rooney's wife, Jan, who said they love Chinese art, food, culture and medicine, explained the film role was meant to be fun. "It's terribly sad, and I feel bad for the people taking offense," she said.
"I could see him almost in tears the other day. We both were," she said. "When people feel hurt that way, it hurts us."
What offends her, she said, are issues of "animal cruelty, elder cruelty, child neglect."
"Let's go after the things that are really important," she said.
Rooney said that if he'd known that people would be so offended, "I wouldn't have done it."
"Those that didn't like it, I forgive them and God bless America," he said. "God bless the universe, God bless Japanese, Chinese, Indians, all of them, and let's have peace."
Call The Bee's Stephen Magagnini, (916) 321-1072.


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