They buried their medals and their memories and their trauma, and they carried it alone for decades. Some of them are still carrying it. The studio was quiet, the usual late night energy replaced by something heavier, more reverent. In this documentary, Morgan continued, “We interviewed veterans in their 70s and 80s, men who are finally, finally willing to talk about what they experienced.
” And the common theme across every single [music] interview was this sense of it’s too late now. I should have spoken sooner. My family doesn’t know me. I’ve been a stranger in my own home for 50 years. [music] Morgan’s voice caught slightly. That broke my heart. The idea that these heroes felt they had to hide, that they thought their stories would burden the people who loved them.
That’s when Lily Chen, 12 years old, raised her hand. Jimmy noticed first. “Oh, we have a question from the audience.” He smiled at the young girl. “Go ahead, sweetheart.” Lily stood [music] up, nervous but determined. Her voice shook. Mr. Freeman, my grandpa is sitting right here. [music] He served in Vietnam.
He has a purple heart, but I didn’t know until 3 days ago because he kept it hidden in a shoe box for my entire life, for my mom’s entire life, for 53 years. The cameras immediately found William Chen in his wheelchair, tears streaming down his face, the purple heart visible in his trembling hands. [music] Morgan Freeman’s expression changed instantly.
He stood up from his chair without asking, walked off the stage, and moved directly into the audience. Jimmy followed immediately. When Morgan reached row 8, he knelt down, this 87-year-old legendary actor kneeling in front of an 87year-old veteran, and looked directly into William’s eyes. Sir, Morgan said, his famous voice now soft, intimate.
What’s your name? William, the old man whispered. [music] William Chen. William,” Morgan repeated as if tasting the name, giving it weight. “May I see your medal?” William’s hands shook so badly he couldn’t unwrap the handkerchief. [music] Margaret gently helped him, revealing the purple heart.
The side distinctive purple and white ribbon, the gold border, George Washington’s profile in the center. Morgan took the metal with both hands, holding it with profound reverence. November 14th, 1968. He read the engraving on the back. William, that’s the date you earned this? William nodded, unable to speak. Can you tell me what happened that day? Morgan asked gently. William shook his head. I can’t.
I’ve never I can’t. You don’t have to, Morgan assured him. But William, I want you to know something. This medal isn’t just metal. This represents an act of extraordinary courage. You were wounded in service to your country. You bled for people you didn’t know. in a place most Americans couldn’t find on a map because someone told you it mattered.
You were 19 years old, a child, and you did something that most adults couldn’t do.” William was sobbing now, but the others, the ones who didn’t come home. They’re the heroes, not me. I got to live. Tommy didn’t. He was my best friend. And he didn’t. His voice broke completely. The studio was dead silent.
240 people watching an 87year-old man finally [music] finally speak about the friend he lost 56 years ago. Morgan’s eyes filled with tears [music] when he spoke. His voice, that legendary, unbreakable voice, [music] cracked. Tommy would want you to live, William. He would want you to tell your story.
He would want your granddaughter to know her grandfather is a hero. Some heroes don’t get to come home, William whispered the same words Lily had heard 3 days ago. Tommy was supposed to come home. We had plans. We were going to open a restaurant together. He was going to be my best man at my wedding. He was William couldn’t continue.
Morgan placed his hand over Williams. Both of them holding the purple heart together. Tell me about Tommy. And William Chen did something he hadn’t done in 53 years. He talked. Tommy Rodriguez from Texas. He could make anyone laugh even when we were in hell. November 14th, we were on patrol. Our squad got ambushed. Tommy was 10 ft ahead of me when the shooting started.
He went down immediately. I ran to him, pulled him behind a tree. He was hit bad. So bad, but he was still conscious and he was looking at me and he said, William’s voice broke again. He said, “Get them out, Chen. Don’t waste time on me. Get them out. Margaret was crying, hearing this story for the first time after 56 years of marriage.
There were 11 other men pinned down, William continued. [music] Tommy told me to leave him, told me to save the others. So, I did. I got them out. All 11. But by the time I got back to Tommy, he couldn’t finish. He was gone, [music] Morgan said softly. William nodded. They gave me the purple heart for my wounds and a bronze star for the rescue.
But they should have gone to Tommy. [music] He’s the one who made the call. He’s the one who sacrificed. I just I just did what he told me to do. Morgan shook his head. William, you saved 11 men. 11 fathers, brothers, sons who got to come home because of you. Because you listened to your friend’s last words and you honored them.
Tommy gave you an order and you followed it. That’s not guilt. That’s duty. [music] That’s honor. Jimmy Fallon was openly weeping, making no attempt to hide it. The camera operators, the audience, the crew, everyone was crying. For 53 years, Morgan [music] said, his voice thick with emotion. You’ve been carrying Tommy’s sacrifice alone. [music] You’ve been honoring him with silence.
But William, I think Tommy would want something else. I think he’d want his story told. I think he’d want his best friend to stop punishing himself. I think he’d want Lily to know about the brave man named Tommy Rodriguez who loved his friend enough to make sure that friend would live. William looked at his granddaughter who was crying but smiling.

You think so? I know so, Morgan said firmly. Heroes don’t hide, William. And you’re a hero. So was Tommy. It’s time everyone knew that. Morgan stood up and addressed the entire studio. [music] This medal represents one day, November 14th, 1968. But it also represents 53 years of carrying an impossible weight. William Chen saved 11 lives that day.
But he spent five decades thinking he wasn’t worthy of being saved. That ends tonight. He turned back to William. With your permission, I want to tell Tommy’s story in the documentary. I want people to know about Tommy Rodriguez from Texas who told his best friend to save the others. I want people to know about William Chen who honored that final order and spent the rest of his life wondering if he’d made the right choice.