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His first contact with Ebert came in an email exchange in the early 1990s. An intoxicated Leitch worked up the courage late one night to ask his hero about rumors of a romantic encounter he'd had in the newsroom. Ebert issued a witty denial, and the two started a correspondence that eventually led Ebert to help Leitch find occasional work reviewing movies. Leitch says he still has a lot of those old emails. The writing there and elsewhere says a lot about where Ebert came from, Leitch said. "There's something inherently un-showy about where he's from, and where I'm from," Leitch said. "Put your head down, do the work, do it right
-- and then go do it again. That's the way Mattoon is, and that's the way most of downstate is." Ebert's accomplished life probably puts him at the top of the list of the most well-known people from Urbana
-- but the list is a long one for a town of 41,000 After Ebert, there's fellow Illinois graduate and writer George Will. And a number of university professors, Nobel Prize winners among them. And a fictional entry, HAL, the quietly menacing computer from "2001: A Space Odyssey." In the movie he says he was assembled in Urbana. Ebert, all his life, celebrated the place. "The Illini were the University of Illinois, the world's greatest university, whose football stadium my father had constructed
-- by himself, I believe," Ebert wrote, with a bit of exaggeration, in the same blog post in which he explained how the barbecue pit his dad built out back helped make his old home the center of all existence. Nate Kohn is an Urbana native and University of Georgia professor who directs Ebertfest. Though the two were in school together as kids, he didn't know Ebert until they met while putting together a birthday party for HAL at the university back in the 1990s. Urbana, Kohn says, stuck with Ebert for two reasons. One, Ebert was a creature of habit
-- "He worked at one place his whole life, the Chicago Sun-Times," Kohn said. And the other? "It was, I guess in many ways, an idyllic childhood, a classic American childhood," Kohn said. Esteves isn't from Urbana, but he's lived there for years, moving down from Chicago and never leaving. Since he bought Ebert's home, those occasional visitors once in a while included Ebert himself, starting with the day in 2009 when the city unveiled the plaque. After the ceremony, Ebert asked if he could come inside. Ebert by then couldn't speak because of his long bout with cancer, but Esteves says he roamed the rooms, writing notes. "(He said) 'Oh, I did a million dishes in here.' It was funny," Esteves said. And Ebert, he said, looked over his movie collection, heavy with super-hero flicks and movies from the 1980s. "He was like, 'Two thumbs up!'"
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