Sweet Thunder Page 49
I didn’t think I hit him: CPD, 6-25-1947.
anything serious: Cleveland Press, 6-25-1947.
extensive damage: ibid.
I’m sure sorry: ibid.
He told me after the Levine fight: Cleveland Press, ibid.
unholy pressure: NYT, 6-26-1947.
no power whatsoever: ibid.
Why not consider this: Cleveland Press, 6-26-1947.
I will not identify him: ibid.
tip-top: NYT, 6-27-1947.
Did you personally rank Doyle: Cleveland Press, 6-26-1947.
Well, … Doyle had a very impressive record: ibid.
I’m not a physician, sir: ibid.
smart … evasive: Cleveland Call & Post, 7-5-1947.
If there are any manslaughter charges: Chicago Daily Tribune, 6-27-1947.
The rugged business of fisticuffs: Cleveland Press, 6-25-1947.
absolutely blameless: WP, 7-1-1947.
should not be considered negligent: ibid.
I don’t know how it will affect: Cleveland Call & Post, 7-5-1947.
Well, did you notice: CPD, 6-26-1947.
Getting him in trouble: ibid.
You killed a man: NYT, 8-25-2006.
You don’t have to tell everybody: ibid.
An Opera in Six Brutal Acts
I fought like I didn’t deserve: LaMotta, Raging Bull, xi.
On the streets, it was the “nigger”: Royal interview by author.
A fight … is all of a piece: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 68.
The Italians who come: LaGumina, WOP, 63–64.
the dagoes: ibid., 75.
I cry to you with a million voices: Milford, Savage Beauty, 298.
“Justice Denied in Massachusetts”: ibid., 299.
It was the first time: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 4.
nuts: ibid., 45.
goddam moron: ibid., 51.
home relief and boxing: ibid., 83.
LA MOTTA WINS FOURTH STRAIGHT: ibid., 83.
Many of those colored six-round fighters: ibid., 87.
You would just about have to kill: ibid.
a lot of shaking of the head: AN, 10-3-1942.
Robinson has an alarming tendency: ibid.
Sugar Ray was the boss: LaMotta interview by author.
Sugar Ray took on LaMotta: Dundee interview by author.
A fighter who performs in the windmill style: AN, 10-3-1942.
A surprisingly large number of boxing experts: CD, 10-3-1942.
The welterweights, you know, are tricky: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 87.
favored: ibid., 112.
hard puncher: ibid.
a flood of nerve-jarring right and left hooks: AN, 10-10-1942.
The Harlem fighter worked: NYT, 10-3-1942.
victim: ibid.
with the grace and artistry: AN, 10-10-1942.
There’s a lot things: ibid.
Beating middleweights is among them: ibid.
He hit me one left hook: ibid.
a poor ignorant Italian: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 112.
I’m his good luck charm: Detroit News, 2-3-1943.
Not much space: ibid.
There’s where you learned: ibid.
Oh, oh, I wonder how that gal: ibid.
I used to carry Joe Louis’s gloves: ibid.
Yep … there’s gonna be a jam session: ibid.
People pay too much attention: DFP, 2-3-1943.
Often one good punch: ibid.
When Ray defeated Jake: DFP, 2-2-1943.
It’s His Big Night: DFP, 2-5-1943.
the gallery gods: ibid.
Jake stomped me: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 109.
The crowd let out a roar: DFP, 2-6-1943.
When Jacob LaMotta brought the Sugar Man: DFP, 2-9-1943.
When I met Ray in the Garden: Detroit News, 2-7-1943.
JAKE IS CITY’S CINDERELLA: DFP, 2-7-1943.
I still think I can defeat: CD, 2-13-1943.
END OF ROBINSON STRING: NYT, 2-7-1943.
had given Detroit a brand: DFP, 2-26-1943.
That’s the biggest check: Detroit News, 2-7-1943.
This boxer is in unusually good condition: DFP, 2-25-1943.
Sugar Ray’s Dynamite Knobs: ibid.
Ray is a boxer: Detroit News, 2-25-1943.
He’ll have a tough time: ibid.
For a long time … Jake was a $25: ibid., 2-23-1943.
The crowd didn’t like that: ibid., 2-27-1943.
and two jarring uppercuts: ibid.
trying for a knockout: ibid.
So deafening and so prolonged: ibid., 2-27-1943.
If they say I lost: ibid.
He really hurt me with a left: DFP, 2-27-1943.
I didn’t lose it: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 119.
That’s when I began to think: ibid.
Watching those guys: Dinkins interview by author.
and moves about the ring: CD, 1-27-1945.
This bout is a natural: ibid., 2-3-1945.
We never had such an advance sale: ibid.
If he does [win]: ibid.
Not since Joe Louis fought: ibid., 2-24-1945.
[A]ll you had to do was drop in: ibid., 2-24-1945.
All the rumors and suspicions: NYHT, 2-21-1945.
Every one likes Joe Louis: ibid.
They were out to kill: Mercante interview by author.
a definite legend: New York Daily Mirror, 2-14-1945.
There are only three or four pounds: NYHT, 2-22-1945.
pawing away at the body: New York Daily Mirror, 2-24-1945.
slow-thinking: ibid.
a murderous left hook: NYHT, 2-24-1945.
His left was a classic: ibid.
right crosses, upper cuts: AN, 3-3-1945.
one of the slickest bits: ibid.
Class … told against bull-like strength: NYT, 2-24-1945.
How LaMotta stood up: AN, 3-3-1945.
You don’t keep fighting: LaMotta interview by author.
I was getting a little tired: AN, 3-3-1945.
There was a time: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 79.
I knew what I wanted: LaMotta interview by author.
What makes Robinson doubly anxious: CD, 8-25-1945.
the best money match: Chicago Daily Tribune, 9-25-1945.
We’ll wager the best fists: CD, 9-8-1945.
ultimate goal is a fight: CT, 9-25-1945.
I still was no nearer a crack: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 121.
inspiring: Chicago Daily Tribune, 9-27-1945.
visibly tired: ibid.
out from nowhere: ibid.
close victory: ibid.
unpopular decision: ibid., 9-28-1945.
last ditch stand: AN, 10-6-1945.
And as in the others: PM (Marshall Field’s newspaper), 9-27-1945.
LaMotta is the toughest man: CD, 10-6-1945.
I thought I won: CT, 9-28-1945.
The only thing I really wanted: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 151.
All quotes in “Interlude: Dreaming Sugar”: Dick interview by author.
We actually left home: Buckley, The Hornes, 213.
dripping ermine: ibid.
It was a special club: Stovall, Paris Noir, 149.
quadruple pearl choker: Buckley, The Hornes, 214.
I wanted the instruments: Davis, Autobiography, 118.
Even the band and the music: ibid., 126.
Miles didn’t go there: Szwed, So What, 197.
Practically everybody is going: Nichols, Bontemps-Hughes Letters, 272.
the mark of a true professional: Video/Bigfights, 11-8-1950.
It wasn’t usual for nine Negroes: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 169.
The boxer, Sugar Ray Robinson: ibid.
captured Paris more completely: CT, 3-20-1951.
Yet here I was, fifteen years old: LaMotta, Knockout, 48.
She looked like a beauty-contest winner: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 119.
He was jealous of other men: LaMotta, Knockout, 64.<
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I remember one of the Robinson fights: LaMotta, Raging Bull, 148.
be trying his rushing: NYT, 11-14-1947.
Then he backed across the ring: ibid., 11-15-1947.
numerous lefts and rights: ibid.
Stop the fight!: ibid.
FOX KNOCKS OUT LAMOTTA: ibid.
The popularity of LaMotta here: NYT, 6-15-1949.
I want an authentic world middleweight: ibid.
And it was a thing of beauty: LaMotta, Knockout, 76.
against a huskier stronger: NYT, 6-17-1949.
white silk stockings: LaMotta, Knockout, 76.
That was Jake’s moment: ibid., 76.
With all my strength: NYT, 10-29-1949.
Having accomplished first part: ibid.
had plunged the nation: ibid.
What did you expect?: LaMotta, Knockout, 77.
see you february 14: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 179.
This exclusive DuMont picture: NYT, 2-14-1951.
Davega Will Take Any Size: ibid., 2-15-1951.
Keep it: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 183.
You look too cool: ibid., 184.
This broadcast tonight: Video/Bigfights, 2-14-1951.
The bout the world’s been waiting for: ibid.
Ray’s lean ribs: CT, 2-15-1951.
A right obviously hurt: Husing, Video/Bigfights, 2-14-1951.
I just couldn’t level away: WP, 2-15-1951.
… the more I kept punching: ibid.
a dying swan gesture: ibid.
Then he pulled the switch: ibid.
No man can endure: Husing, Video/Bigfights, 2-14-1951.
I’m here with you: WP, 2-15-1951.
ROBINSON TKO’S LAMOTTA: ibid., 2-15-1951.
SPECTACULAR: NYT, 2-16-1951.
At least a million Hoosiers: WP, 2-16-1951.
Physically and psychologically: LaMotta, Knockout, 83.
W.W., I did the best: Video/Bigfights, 2-14-1951.
He had always scoffed: Gabler, Winchell, 348.
Now, sensing his: ibid., 348.
When I die, if I had: ibid., 350.
Winchell really wanted Sugar Ray: Rand interview by author.
You’re with me: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 152.
Extraordinary Limited Engagement!: Baker, Josephine, 305.
It was like the revelation: ibid., 6.
Well … last night after the show: ibid., 116.
Who the fuck let her in?: Blumenthal, The Stork Club, 164.
I wish you wouldn’t, champ: Gabler, Winchell, 414.
I can’t tell you how: ibid., 416.
Why are you here?: Baker, Josephine, 310.
I will not go to the Stork Club: Blumenthal, Stork Club, 179.
a radio trial: ibid., 172.
to defend the honor: Baker, Josephine, 313.
The suspect list: Blumenthal, Stork Club, 178.
But of all those things: ibid., 174.
an ally of black people: Baker, Josephine, 313.
Winchell’s valet: Gabler, Winchell, 429.
blood would flow: ibid.
it was like trying to console: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 211.
What’s the use: Mead, Champion, 259.
I didn’t want to make the same mistake: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 211.
It seemed a terrible punishment: Mead, Champion, 265.
Around (a Part of) the World in Fifty Days
I will pay the shipping charge: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 186.
They were of migrant workers: Parks, Voices, 87.
You have to get at the source: ibid., 106.
Chico was a badass dude: Brown interview by author.
The return of Napoleon Bonaparte: Parks, Voices, 188.
I loved to drive around Paris: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 188.
On the Champs-Elysées: Life, 7-23-1951.
Paris’ No. 1 celebrity: Time, 6-25-1951.
Sure, if she wants to: Life, 7-23-1951.
about Detroit and Georgia: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 193.
at his feet: Parks, Voices, 193.
But even this blow: NYT, 5-27-1951.
You are too good: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 194.
a combination of smashing blows: WP, 6-25-1951.
Foul! Foul! Foul!: ibid.; “Just like”: ibid.
There were no workouts: Parks, Voices, 193.
Robinson slept late: WP, 7-10-1951.
blues and boogie-woogie: Life, 7-10-1951.
take Turpin apart: Parks, Voices, 193.
forlorn hope: Times of London, 7-10-1951.
The way Turpin leapt: Birtley, The Tragedy of Randolph Turpin, 27.
This is the first time: WP, 7-10-1951.
Why is Ray doing this: Parks, Voices, 194.
One may smile a little: Times of London, 7-10-1951.
have been designed: London Observer, 7-15-1951.
lefts from the start: Times of London, 7-11-1951.
No cause to worry: Parks, Voices, 194.
Turpin was outpunching me: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 202.
whiplash lefts and rights: Times of London, 7-11-1951.
His eye!: London Observer, 7-15-1951.
I could tell it was: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 201.
It’s bad: ibid., 202.
Hold on, Sugar: Life, 7-23-1951.
Get him: ibid.
from then on he couldn’t: NYT, 7-11-1951.
I hope I’m able to keep this: Los Angeles Times, 7-11-1951.
I thought I was winning: NYT, 7-11-1951.
You were a real champion: ibid.
Come on, everybody: London Observer, 7-15-1951.
RAY ROBINSON LOSES: New York Times, 7-11-1951.
Randolph Turpin upset: Times of London, 7-11-1951.
TITLE TO TURPIN: Los Angeles Times, 7-11-1951.
It was boxing’s biggest upset: Current Biography, Turpin entry, 1951.
triumphal tour: London Observer, 7-15-1951.
This’ll do us no harm: ibid.
I’ll kill him: Parks, Voices, 194.
I don’t think I even want to see: Life, 7-23-1951.
MUM … I LOST ON DECISION: AN, 7-14-1951.
But there is something really charming: London Observer, 7-15-1951.
you took too many pictures: AN, 7-14-1951.
Ray, we don’t know: ibid.
In some deep, black, stony: Baldwin, James, Notes of a Native Son, (Boston: Beacon Press, 1957), 158.
I call him Vince: NYT, 6-25-1951.
his fellow human beings: CD, 8-11-1951.
The title is only lent: NYT, 7-12-1951.
But Ray didn’t want: Dick interview by author.
Ray … what are you gonna do: ibid.
He stood there: ibid.
Yeah, why don’t you go over: ibid.
I had my father: ibid.
His red vest was adorned: NYT, 9-12-1951.
Not since the Marquis: CD, 9-15-1951.
patriotic duty: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 208.
Turpin has the youth: NYT, 9-12-1951.
towards the end of a long career: Times of London, 9-11-1951.
smarting under the terrific blows: NYT, 9-13-1951.
I paced myself slowly: ibid.
Robinson shook me: ibid., 9-15-1951.
ROBINSON KNOCKS OUT TURPIN: ibid., 9-13-1951.
a savage attack: ibid., 9-13-1951.
forgot what to do: ibid.
Drive me downtown: Liebling, The Sweet Science, 61.
As we approached the Theresa: ibid.
That was a Cadillac night: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 210.
Dreams
Ray didn’t want people to think: Dick interview by author.
There was one instance: Breslin interview by author.
I would have taken that fellow: AN, 6-21-1952.
In a year or two: ibid., 9-22-1951.
was scoring solidly: NYT, 3-14-1952.
surprising battle: ibid.
cunning: ibid., 3-14-1952.
I never fought so hard: San Francisco Chro
nicle, 3-14-1952.
Olson is a clean fighter: ibid.
Now get me Robinson!: NYT, 4-16-1952.
tarnished with: ibid., 4-14-1952.
he slipped from so high: ibid.
His heart no longer: ibid.
well over the hill: AN, 4-12-1952.
I’ll knock him out: NYT, 4-16-1952.
He came out of his corner: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 216.
with such breathtaking speed: NYT, 4-18-1952.
a rocking right: AN, 4-19-1952.
three inches further: ibid.
I’ll meet you at the Archway: Dick interview by author.
I had it tonight: NYT, 4-17-1952.
Robinson is a cold-blooded machine: ibid., 4-18-1952.
Sooner or later you come: NYT, 4-17-1952.
enigma: AN, 7-5-1952.
was the man selling the tickets: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 218.
I’m just plain tired: AN, 3-22-1952.
Maxim is as good a fighter: Liebling, Sweet Science, 63.
Sugar Ray is no ordinary fighter: NYT, 6-23-1952.
You let me make: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 218.
I got as much right: ibid.
I can shoot you: ibid.
Have you ever fought a man: Liebling, Sweet Science, 67.
Most fighters jump rope: ibid., 68.
big-money men: AN, 6-28-1952.
We even referred to: NYT, 6-24-1952.
The car clips off: AN, 6-28-1952.
the new crop of glamour girls: ibid.
a full length coat-dress: ibid.
giving Maxim a boxing lesson: NYT, 6-26-1952.
I’m getting sleepy: Robinson, Sugar Ray, 221.
I thought I was being roasted: Life, 7-7-1952.
Can you stand up?: ibid.
He didn’t knock me out: NYT, 6-27-1952.
The heat didn’t get my brother: Berardinelli interview by author.
What have I got to gain: AN, 6-28-1952.
any man with two hands: Time, 6-25-1951.
Robinson thought he could sing: Breslin interview by author.
And I remember the day: Dick interview by author.
Here was the coldest concentration: Mead, Champion, 72.
The Very Thought of You Onstage
He’d have suits and sports jackets: Bristow interview by author.
a black motherfucking nigger: Davis, Autobiography, 169.
Sugar Ray looked like a socialite: ibid., 174.
Sugar Ray used to train there: ibid., 180.
That’s where a lot of hip people: ibid., 182.
He’d be standing there: ibid.
He used to come up and tell everyone: ibid., 183.
I done got my feet caught: Bernard, Remember Me to Harlem, 282.
a running text: ibid.
a delicate and lovely fictiondocument: ibid.