Mel Gibson probably doesn't have many friends like his "Lethal Weapon" franchise co-star Danny Glover.
Glover and I were getting along just fine until I pressed to discern the limits of his friendship with Gibson.
An activist as well as an actor, Glover was in St. Paul to support his friend and "Buffalo Soldiers" castmate Jeri Brunoe in "Salmon Woman." The performance at the Ordway was a benefit for the American Indian Prison Project Working Group.
"Actually 'Salmon Woman' was a project Jeri brought my company," said Glover. "Sometimes you do a movie and you are introduced to another community. It's not that you're unaware of that community; it's that you have another level on which you engage with that community. For me it was great because my grandmother is part Choctaw, so indirectly that is a community that was accessible to me."
Such a supporter is Glover that he turned over his honorarium for his appearance to AIPPWG.
Also clearly a longtime staunch supporter of Gibson's, Glover says he loves the man whom many in Hollywood have turned away from as a result of a series of controversies involving his hyperactive mouth.
Too many celebrities who live their lives among yes people would benefit from a friend telling them the naked truth. Friends are the people whose criticism means the most in a world where any knucklehead with a computer or phone can tell you what they think.
But Glover gruffly interrupted me making that point, as you can see on my startribune.com/video.