He's a Harvard- and Princeton-educated economist. But he's most known for his expertise in Godzilla. Yes, Godzilla. Reporter Doualy Xaykaothao from member station KERA found he developed the passion for the radioactive monster while growing up in Texas.
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "GODZILLA")
DOUALY XAYKAOTHAO: That's the roar that Bill Tsutsui first heard when he was 8 years old living in the tiny college town of Bryan, Texas.
BILL TSUTSUI: Unlike many Japanese Americans, I've not ever had the experience of living in a place with a large Asian-American community. So I've never lived on the West Coast. I've never lived in Hawaii. So for me, it's really been, in a way, a very lonely experience.
XAYKAOTHAO: Tsutsui was an only child, and he was biracial. His dad was Japanese, and he had an Anglo mom. There was only one other Asian-American family in Bryan. He felt like an outlier and was bullied so much he had to be transferred to a different school.
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "GODZILLA")
XAYKAOTHAO: But everything changed that day as he lay on the shag carpet in his parents bedroom watching a big old Sylvania TV set.
TSUTSUI: I see this huge Japanese monster dragging his scaly feet through Tokyo, and I thought, that is so cool.
XAYKAOTHAO: Life became more fun.
TSUTSUI: I'd be Godzilla and James would be Rodan. And we'd have this epic battle of monsters of the playground at Davy Crockett Elementary School in Bryan, Texas.
XAYKAOTHAO: Tsutsui went on to become an economist. He wrote books about business and banking in Japan. Most recently, he was a dean at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.
TSUTSUI: I realized all the books I wrote about Japanese history, most of the people who read them were my relatives. Whereas, I wrote about a giant rubber monster rampaging through toy cities in Japan, and tens of thousands of people read it. So I'm actually real proud to be known as the guy that studies Godzilla.
XAYKAOTHAO: His first book on the giant lizard, called "Godzilla On My Mind," earned him a new nickname, recalls Tsutsui's wife, Marjorie Swan.
MARJORIE SWAN: Often, his students had trouble pronouncing his last name, Tsutsui, and so they'd call him Professor Godzilla.
XAYKAOTHAO: It wasn't always easy being the wife of Professor Godzilla.
SWAN: I've had to draw a very firm line in the sand about how much Godzilla is allowed in the house. So he has to have very large professional offices to take up all the Godzillas.
XAYKAOTHAO: Paul Dunscomb recalls the lengths Tsutsui would go to acquire Godzilla paraphernalia. Dunscomb is a former student of Tsutsui's who did his dissertation in Japan.
PAUL DUNSCOMB: He actually sent to me his bank card and passbook so I could draw on funds to basically buy for him Godzilla-related merchandise. It is one of the things that certainly defines him as a human being - the fact that he has the rather, you know, outsized love for a 50-meter radioactive lizard.
XAYKAOTHAO: Tsutsui looks at it like this.
TSUTSUI: Asians are not really known in this culture for being really leadership types. Godzilla clearly was the boss. You know, he was in charge. He was the hero. He was the focus of these movies. And I think from that I've, perhaps, taken some lessons about leadership and stepping forward and asserting myself.
XAYKAOTHAO: And as the new boss of Hendrix College, Tsutsui's planning to make his mark by putting a giant inflatable Godzilla out on the quad for his inauguration next spring. For NPR News, I'm Doualy Xaykaothao.