Classic American West Coast Boxing

Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Expug wrote:
kikibalt wrote:“Judo” Gene LeBell, the Ageless Wonder

By Dan Hernandez

“A man that enjoys his work never goes to work”

Gene LeBell

Most commonly referred to as “Judo” Gene LeBell, LeBell is also known to his legion of fans as “The Godfather of Grappling” as well as “The Toughest Man Alive”. I met Gene recently at the Redondo Beach performing Arts Center in Redondo Beach, Ca. where he was one of the judges for the night’s card featuring Lance “Mount” Whitaker in the boxing arena and Sean “The Destroyer” Loeffler in the MMA event. Although this was our first meeting, I have known about LeBell since I was a boy attending the boxing matches at the fabled Olympic Auditorium in Downtown, Los Angeles, Ca. His mother, Aileen Eaton was one of the most successful women promoters in the history of the sport.

I recall seeing Gene perform in wrestling matches in the 1960’s and he was one of the well-known figures at many of the events around Los Angeles. It was just as exciting to see him, as it was to see many of the stars of stage, screen, and sports fame that walked through the doors of the old arena. Gene has authored at least 12 books, has appeared in over 110 films and TV productions as an actor, and has been involved in over 246 productions as a stunt man or stunt coordinator. Three of those films had LeBell in minor rolls, beginning fights with Elvis Presley and working on the set of the Green Hornet TV Show where he developed a solid friendship with Bruce Lee. Lee & LeBell went on to exchange many positive ideas on martial arts.

Gene was instrumental in teaching grappling skills to such well-respected wrestlers and martial artists as; ”Rowdy” Roddy Piper, Mando Guerrero, The Rock, Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Ken Shamrock, “Judo” Chris Adams, Benny ‘The Jet” Urquidez, Goker Chivichyan, Robert Wall (Bob Wall), Ed Parker, and Larry Zbysko. In addition to these credits “Judo” Gene has received numerous awards including the 2005 Frank Gotch Award to celebrate the positive recognition he has brought to the sport of wrestling. LeBell won the AAU National Judo Championships at 165 pounds in both 1955 and 1956. In 1963, LeBell accepted a public challenge to fight boxer Milo Savage, choking him unconscious in the 4th round. Gene also refereed the boxing-versus-wrestling contest between Muhammad Ali and Antonio Inoki.

A pink GI, a trademark of Gene LeBell, was actually the result of a laundry mix-up. While in Japan for a competition, a pair of red shorts was mixed into the laundry that contained his Gi and turned the uniform a shade of pink. There was no time to correct the mistake and he was forced to compete in the pink-colored Gi. This insulted the Japanese crowd and the wound was deeper as LeBell won the competition.

When I viewed LeBell in the parking lot of the event I was covering in Redondo, I made it to his side immediately, introduced myself, stated my affiliation, and waited for his words of wisdom. Mr. Gene LeBell said to me, “Hi, nice to meet you.” He had me at Hi. One of the nicest fellows you would ever want to meet, he made me feel immediately like I had known him most of my life. Within seconds, we were laughing and sharing stories, without hesitation, he agreed to an interview. He even admired my camera, asking if it was a camera/phone, since it was so small. I explained that it was a Sony pocket camera and that my son-in-law Robert, had one that I had admired a few years ago and soon after received this camera in the mail. I then added how I also admired Robert’s BMW and as yet had not found a BMW in the mail. Gene was kind enough to laugh at my joke and it was clear I had a new friend.

DH: Gene, the records show you were born in…

Forget about that, I don’t want everybody to know when I was born. I don’t want you tell them.

DH: OK Gene, you got it, however, it is a matter of record.

I know everybody knows but don’t put it in there. It’s like first they find out your personal address, then they know everything about you, and there are too many things like identity theft, etc. You get all sorts of hassles; people knocking on the door, people get a hold of my phone number. They call me all hours just to make friends with me, and I don’t know them. Don’t put anything like phone numbers or driver license numbers on your checks; believe me I know, nothing but trouble.

DH: Well Gene, it was a real pleasure meeting you the other day. It is always a thrill to meet one of your favorite personalities.

Yeah, with that and $5.00 you can buy a four dollar hamburger.

DH: There are probably not too many good four-dollar hamburgers anymore.

You know on my answer phone, I’ve been working on a couple of shows and when I got your message, I guess it was today, I called up and said to call me after 8PM and I didn’t know if your message was new or old.

DH: I just left the message yesterday.
I was working on something for a Sarah something productions. I played an old man, which is good. I go dancing and I fall down. It’s a comedy, so when I fall I take a tablecloth with me and the whole bit… It will be seen on Comedy Central. The next time I’m in a handicapped car and I kind of sue them while I’m comatose. Doesn’t sound funny, but it is.

DH: So, you’re still doing stunt work, is that right?

Yeah, I tell everybody that I’m retired for the last 15 years, but people are still nice to me. You know when you get to be 104 years old, it’s nice to go to the studios and you see so many people that you knew 10, 20, 30, years ago. I worked on this show and the first assistant named Johnny called me up so excited and told me that he worked on his first show with me 20 years ago.

DH: It is nice to be remembered, isn’t it?

It kind of makes you feel good to be remembered.

DH: Speaking of remembrances, I remember speaking with Aileen Eaton. Was she your mother or stepmother?

Aileen was my mom, my father died when I was 7 and she re-married many years later a fellow named Eaton, Cal Eaton.

DH: Did you have a good relationship with your mom?

Oh yeah, she was good people.

DH: That’s good to hear, we, the fans, used to feel like we knew the promoters and matchmakers.

George Parnassus, all of them. They were very, very, nice.

DH: You were on the “IN” with everybody being part of that family.

I boxed and I wrestled, so I got along good with George Parnassus. All the matchmakers; Babe McCoy, you can just go down the list of the matchmakers for boxing and wrestling too. People like Jules Strongbow, Mr. Moto, and others.

DH: Whom did you find the most colorful?

In the movies or wrestling?

DH: Both, how about wrestling first.

For color, or showbiz, or really being able to wrestle?
DH: How about each of those.

Colorful, Gorgeous George, he was entertaining. His real name was George Wheeler and he could wrestle too.

DH: I understand that Muhammad Ali based his early personality on the showmanship of Gorgeous George.

Well, when Ali came to fight for us at the Olympic, he went to the boxing arena and he saw Freddie Blassie.

DH: I remember him. He used to call people, “Pencil-necked yeek”.

Yeah, yeah, “Pencil-necked yeek”! Ali said, “I want to be just like him. When he got interviewed for the fight he said, “My opponents a bore. I’m gonna knock him out in four.” His name was Cassius then and I told him, “Cassius, you don’t understand, you don’t gotta go 4 rounds” He replied, “I can knock him out in any series I want.” He bobbed and weaved and everything for three rounds, did showboat because he was that much better. Came the fourth round , a few series of punches, and the guy was out cold.. To me Muhammad Ali, Cassius Clay, in his prime, was the best fighter of all time.

Ali fought Archie Moore for us, the light-heavyweight world champion. After the fight, Archie said, “This man is going to be champion, and for a lot of years. He was right.

DH: Did you ever see Joe Louis fight?

Only on film, but I did get to hire him on a Steve Allen Show. He refereed, I’ve got pictures of it, I think it’s in my life story. He was great. The thing is about Cassius Clay is that he could hit hard if he wanted to, but his main goal was not getting hit. He would see a lot of people that were punchy, from getting hit. You know they would trade punches, let themselves get hit, to give a punch. He wasn’t in that mode. He did the rope-a-dope with George Foreman until Foreman ran out of gas, then he knocked him out.

DH: Gene, why did you shy away from boxing and specialize in the martial arts?

I trained in boxing at the Main Street Gym, I worked out with Archie Moore. As a kid, I worked out with “Sugar” Ray Robinson and a few other top fighters from other divisions. My step dad Cal Eaton, was the promoter and I wanted to box. Cal said, “No”. So I wrestled, that’s all I did was wrestle and competed in Judo. I told Cal that I wanted to wrestle pro and he said that I would get killed. Well, my name is LeBell and a fellow named Vic Christie was teaching All-American football players how to wrestle and I went down there and worked out with him. Vic said, here comes the guy that’s the boss, Cal Eaton, Cal saw me and said if he ever saw me working out with pros that he would kill me. But he saw me wrestle the good guys and how easy I could handle them and he didn’t realize that I could wrestle. You know, when you do everything everyday of your life, your either good at it or bad at it and I was a fanatic and got pretty good. The funny thing is that I did a lot of Judo at the same time and I won the National in 1954 in Kezar Pavilion in San Francisco. I won the heavyweight title, although I was only weighing 165 pounds. My coach encouraged me to go heavyweight because they move slower, Larry Coughram was his name and I respected his opinion. He was primarily my Judo coach when I was young, but he was also a college wrestler.

In that time period Cal saw me wrestling and he said, “OK. You can start pro.” I told him that I couldn’t go pro because if I won the Nationals that year I would get to go to Japan for the Internationals and represent the United States. That was a big deal to me. Cal accepted my position and the Nationals turned out to be in Los Angeles. Cal told me, “You stupid idiot, if you win second, that means nothing. You have to win gold!” I had tonsil problems and nose problems that go with that and Cal told me that I better just quit then. I was brain dead then, and I’m still brain dead and I told him, “No, I’m entering it and I’m better than I was last year. A lot of guys said that I won a lot of matches by luck , and I agreed that some of those guys were a little better than me and I was maybe a little luckier.

Anyway, the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) rents auditoriums, and what do they rent? The Olympic Auditorium! My home, that was funny. The first match I had I threw the guy and Cal loved to tease me and he said, “Ah, the guy jumped for you”. Now you can win the tournament with four or five wins, then the system was different and they had two days and 18 matches to declare a champion. Well the next day we were all kind of sore and some guys were complaining that they could hardly breathe. I told them, I don’t know, I feel great. “Cause that’s what Freddie Blassie used to say, “Just Psyche them out.” I think that helped me win.

DH: Then what came next?

Then they had the overall where all the champions went together and for the second year I won that. That was in 1955, 104 years ago. But I got a chance to go to Japan and compete. It was very interesting, all these experiences were terrific.

DH: Gene, these are all positive experiences. Were there any not so positive?

Negative experiences, huh?

DH: Well, it sounds as if you’ve led a charmed life. It is also clear that you have always been a hard worker, is that right?
Well, the harder you work, the luckier you get. People that don’t work hard, usually don’t get as many good things happen to them. I always tell my grandson, “If you get A’s in school, you’re gonna be making 150, 200 thousand a year. If you get B’s, you’ll be making 60 to 80 thousand, C’s, you’ll be making 45 thousand, D’s, you’ll be making 20 thousand, and F’s, you’ll probably be in jail.

DH: What a great philosophy to teach your children and grandchildren.

Yes, this grandson is 9 years old, and I have other grandkids, two from my daughter Monica and her husband, who both work for the government, have a 3 and a 4 year old. I have a step-grandson, Daniel, who is named after me, Daniel Gene, and he is a straight A gifted student, his parents are great. My other grandson comes from a broken home and that is sad to me. My wife and I buy his clothes and his shoes. Today I took him out swimming and if he can swim two lengths of the pool under water, he gets a dollar I have pigeons that live on the telephone wire by my back yard and if they land on him and eat out of his hand, he gets a quarter for each one he feeds. Later we went to another stunt mans house and he did flips on his trampoline. It’s important that he gets his share of exercise.

DH: Gene, I get the feeling that you always enjoy what you do.

A man that enjoys his work, never goes to work.
What do you like to do Dan?

DH: I enjoy this Gene, speaking with people like yourself has been a sincere treat and each new interview presents a new and interesting challenge that keeps me invigorated.

Don’t repeat it, but I’m older than you Dan and I’ve always loved racing and doing tricks on motorcycles and I test bikes for Honda of North Hollywood. That means that they give me free bikes, merchandise, and everything. In stunt work, I might get a job and do some kind of a trick down the street, but I’m not gonna compete against the young guy who will use me for tracks, but it’s something I enjoy. I’ve played a lot of Hell’s Angels and other parts like that.

DH: I’ve seen you in film for years and always enjoyed recognizing you.

I did a thing called RENO 911, I’ve done 8 or 10 of them. In one of them , they came to arrest me and the gal says “What name do we give you?” Because she didn’t read the script, I told her the name they gave me was Gene LeBell, just to tease her. So they said, “Are you Gene LeBell?” I replied yes and they said I was under arrest. I said that’s nice, I’m an old man that’s shaking and I’m in my under shorts. Then I go to the kitchen, invite them in and hop on a little motorcycle and speed out of the door.. The next thing you know, they are running down the street trying to catch me, and they don’t. So they were shooting the movie, “RENO 911” and right across the street here, I live across from a park. Well, I know the producers and they are very, very nice and I told them, “I’m not gonna watch this movie. There is an old man and you can’t even catch him on a motorcycle.” They asked me if I had a motorcycle and I responded yes and they told me to put my skivvies’ shorts on. They did the shot and gave mo more than should, and they still don’t catch me in the movie so I teased them again. So a couple of months pass and they called me and said, “I think we’re gonna beat you today.” They will never beat me. Anyway there are four comedians, one of them is called, Senior Abuse. One guy hits me with a chair, knocks me down. The other guy stabs me, I mean, it’s in different sections. Then another guy brakes a bottle over my head, and the other one kicks me in the groin. I mean I’m going up and down, you know? Four different people beat me and the producers are teasing me, saying, “Now we got you!” They showed each beating on different dates, so I got paid four different times instead of just once. But beyond the money the pleasure is working with the actors and producers of people like the ones on RENO 911. When I worked with James Garner, it was terrific. Working with Jack Benny was terrific. I try to treat people like I want, with respect.

Everybody in the world counts and if I were to give a message on my deathbed it would be that, “This would be a much better world if there wasn’t so much hate.” Everybody puts their shoes on one shoe at a time just like everybody else and we must love.

DH: How long have you been married Gene?

This time, too long, 30 years. New motorcycles come out every year, maybe I’ll trade her in.

DH: I think your past that, don‘t you?

Definitely. You know I‘ve lived in sin with my wife, Midge, II call her Mitchell. She is a very religious Catholic, I’m a heathen, .I mean I follow the 10 Commandments to the letter, but my wife wanted to get married on a Sunday. I told her, ‘You’ve got to be kidding, that’s motorcycle day.” “I’m not getting married on a Sunday!” She is very religious and a devout Catholic and insisted. I told her that regardless, I was going motorcycle riding every Sunday. I have a little cabin up in Frazier Park in an area called Pine Mountain. I told her if you want to get married on a Sunday, you’re going to get married on the back of a motorcycle. The next thing I know, she has the minister and herself on the back of a truck and I’m following along on my motorcycle. I’m doing a wheelie for about a mile or a mile and a half and I’m waving and having a good old time. Now I’ve never had a drink in my life, she got excited, had a few glasses of wine and got on my bike. She had mud in her helmet and it was hooked on her arm and I hooked my legs over her so she wouldn’t fall off the bike, ‘cause otherwise I’d have to go back and pick her up.

DH: Always a gentleman Gene. That would be a nice thing to do.

Oh yeah, so we got married and had a lot of fun. The next day she woke up and said, ‘We’re married.” And I said “we’re what?” She said, ”we got married on the back of a motorcycle.” I told her I was selling all my motorcycles.”
Midge has everything but a sense of humor. She did not find that funny. She’s good people and its been a great marriage.

By the way, you asked me earlier about my favorite wrestlers. They are: Lou Thesz, who was a world champion. Ed “Strangler” Lewis, my first coach and world champion. Karl Gotch taught me a lot, he just passed away a year ago. Those were all people that could really wrestle. Roddy Piper has been a student and friend of mine for years. He is a terrific wrestler and he gets a lot of movie work, I got him his first job in the movies.

DH: Gene, I really enjoyed your conversation and your sense of humor.

I believe a little levity is refreshing. The people that I have associated with that have a sense of humor and were not vindictive, are the ones I enjoy most. I often make myself the brunt of my jokes, which may make me sound ignorant or stupid and the fans have no trouble agreeing with that assessment. And you know, humor sells tickets.

Great interview from Mr. Hernandez about Gene.
Gene is without a doubt a very legitimate tough guy. A great Judoka one of Americas best ever.
HE isnt a guy that dwells on the negative. However, he was basicaly disowned by the powers that be in his dojo which was I believe called the Hollywood dojo back in the late fifties. They had a real problem with Gene becoming a pro wrestler after he won the Judo Nationals for the second time. The head instructor who knew Gene for years and years banished him. It was like being thrown out of his home. It must have been hard.
There was and still is politics involved in the sport. Im no Gene Lebell, but I have even felt a little disdain from some of the traditionalists here in Chicago because I was a pro boxer at one time. They respect that in a way , but at the same time I think in their minds, Im less than legit. I dont know, maybe Im just overly sensitive to it , but its a feeling I get once in awhile. Its hard to put into words. Ive heard of people talking sh.t behind my back." What does Higgins know about judo? he was a boxer."It started when I strated teaching it.
Anyway, Gene also beat in the Nationals a great Judoka named Johnny Osako. Johnny was from Chicago and was absolutely brilliant. I think they were ready to give him the Gold Medal at the weigh in . They figured nobody could beat Johnny. Gene did twice.
All of this cross training in combat sports that everyone does now in mma, Gene was doing half a century ago.

Brian . . . Thanks for the great inside story on Gene LeBell. I'm as interested in your Judo experience and knowledge as I am what we write of here.
Gene wasn't a pro boxer, but as the son of a legendary L.A. boxing promoter, and Internationally known as a true tough guy, I appreciate anything about him.


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

Randyman wrote:Image

No words needed.
Thanks Randy.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

Just read that Patrick Swayze died of cancer. I always liked his acting.

Rick
Anything to share wth us on him?

My condolences to his family.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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dagosd2000 wrote:Just read that Patrick Swayze died of cancer. I always liked his acting.

Rick
Anything to share wth us on him?

My condolences to his family.

Rog, I worked with Patrick Swayze twice, on one of his early films, "Red Dawn" (which we shot for MGM in Las Vegas, New Mexico), and "Uncommon Valor" which we shot with Gene Hackman, "Tex" Cobb and my good friend, actor Reb Brown (My buddy who fought in the 1970 L.A. Diamond Belt tournament for Johnny Flores and found himself in a good acting career).

May Patrick Swayze rest in peace, I didn't know him as I knew Gene Hackman, Reb Brown and Tex Cobb.
He kept to himself, a bit different chemistry than with the rest of the cast & crew on Uncommon Valor.
We shot most of the film in Thailand, which was supposed to be Viet Nam.
Patrick Swayze got third billing on that flick, below my pal Reb.
Seems Patrick didn't approve of the after hours habits of Reb, myself and Tex Cobb.
He pissed off Tex Cobb, who told Swayze "You're too light in the loafers for me."

Too be honest, we regarded him as a prima donna.
No disrespect for a talented actor/dancer/singer, but you asked if I had any Patrick Swayze stories and that's about it.


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Paul Burke dies at 83; actor starred in gritty TV show 'Naked City'
The Emmy-nominated actor was also in the TV series '12 O'Clock High' and the films 'Valley of the Dolls' and 'The Thomas Crown Affair.' In the 1980s, he had a recurring role on 'Dynasty.'

Image

Paul Burke played Col. Joe Gallagher in the TV series "Twelve O'Clock High," above, and received two Emmy nominations for his role as Det. Adam Flint on the critically acclaimed New York cop drama "Naked City." (Basra Entertainment)


By Dennis McLellan

September 15, 2009

Paul Burke, who received two Emmy nominations in the early 1960s for his role as Det. Adam Flint in the acclaimed dramatic TV police series "Naked City" and later starred as a World War II Army Air Forces colonel in the action-adventure series "Twelve O'Clock High," has died. He was 83.

Burke, who had leukemia and non-Hodgkins lymphoma, died Sunday at his home in Palm Springs with his wife Lyn at his side, said family spokeswoman Daniela Ryan.

During a four-decade career that included roles in the movies "Valley of the Dolls" (1967) and "The Thomas Crown Affair" (1968), Burke starred as U.S. 8th Air Force Col. Joe Gallagher on "Twelve O'Clock High," which ran from 1964 to '67.

He also was a frequent TV guest star and played the recurring role of congressman Neal McVane on "Dynasty" in the '80s.

One of the roles Burke was most proud of was Flint on "Naked City," the 1958-63 ABC series shot on location in New York City and known for its gritty realism. He joined the show in 1960, the year it expanded from half an hour to an hour.

When the series ended, Los Angeles Times TV columnist Cecil Smith wrote that it "may be remembered as television's finest weekly hour."

"It took the police show and gave it a dignity and compassion that at times approached high tragedy," Smith wrote. "And it shot them on the harrowing schedule of television, trying for impossible deadlines. But the end result was films and productions of such quality that they rivaled the finest theater films."

Burke did numerous stunts on the show, including climbing to the top of the 59th Street Bridge.

"Another time," he told Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper in 1963, "I had to jump from one roof to another when the stunt man refused because it was too windy to take the chance."

To get a feel for the role, Burke went on raids and arrests with New York police detectives.

"I know areas of the city that are truly jungles," he said. "I wouldn't be a detective there for $1,000 a day."

For an episode in which his detective character is sent to Sing Sing prison to witness the execution of a man he arrested, Burke actually spent a night at the facility.

"The area of the condemned has barred windows that look down over the Hudson," he told Smith in 1963. "You can see trains going by -- as if to emphasize the life outside that is to be taken away. I was not against capital punishment before we made that show -- but now, I don't know.

"It's experiences like that on 'Naked City' that make it tough to see it end," Burke said of the series. "It went beyond the monetary -- it was something you were proud to be associated with."

Born on July 21, 1926, in New Orleans, Burke was the son of prize fighter Martin Burke, who became a promoter and nightclub owner. While growing up, Burke's family owned the popular French Quarter nightclub and restaurant Marty Burke's.

After moving to Hollywood as a young man in the late '40s, Burke studied acting at the Pasadena Playhouse for two years. Movie director Lloyd Bacon, a friend of Burke's father, got him his first role: an uncredited bit part in the 1951 Betty Grable musical "Call Me Mister."

Small parts in films such as "Francis in the Navy" and guest roles on series such as "Highway Patrol," "Navy Log" and "Dragnet" followed.

Burke also starred in the short-lived 1956-57 series "Noah's Ark" and the 1957-58 series "Harbourmaster."

His last credit was the 1990 movie "The Fool."

In addition to his wife of 30 years, Burke is survived by his three children from his first marriage, Paula Burke-Lopez, Paul Brian Burke and Dina Burke-Shawkat; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

A memorial service is pending.

[email protected]
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:Paul Burke dies at 83; actor starred in gritty TV show 'Naked City'
The Emmy-nominated actor was also in the TV series '12 O'Clock High' and the films 'Valley of the Dolls' and 'The Thomas Crown Affair.' In the 1980s, he had a recurring role on 'Dynasty.'

Image

Paul Burke played Col. Joe Gallagher in the TV series "Twelve O'Clock High," above, and received two Emmy nominations for his role as Det. Adam Flint on the critically acclaimed New York cop drama "Naked City." (Basra Entertainment)


By Dennis McLellan

September 15, 2009

Paul Burke, who received two Emmy nominations in the early 1960s for his role as Det. Adam Flint in the acclaimed dramatic TV police series "Naked City" and later starred as a World War II Army Air Forces colonel in the action-adventure series "Twelve O'Clock High," has died. He was 83.

Burke, who had leukemia and non-Hodgkins lymphoma, died Sunday at his home in Palm Springs with his wife Lyn at his side, said family spokeswoman Daniela Ryan.

During a four-decade career that included roles in the movies "Valley of the Dolls" (1967) and "The Thomas Crown Affair" (1968), Burke starred as U.S. 8th Air Force Col. Joe Gallagher on "Twelve O'Clock High," which ran from 1964 to '67.

He also was a frequent TV guest star and played the recurring role of congressman Neal McVane on "Dynasty" in the '80s.

One of the roles Burke was most proud of was Flint on "Naked City," the 1958-63 ABC series shot on location in New York City and known for its gritty realism. He joined the show in 1960, the year it expanded from half an hour to an hour.

When the series ended, Los Angeles Times TV columnist Cecil Smith wrote that it "may be remembered as television's finest weekly hour."

"It took the police show and gave it a dignity and compassion that at times approached high tragedy," Smith wrote. "And it shot them on the harrowing schedule of television, trying for impossible deadlines. But the end result was films and productions of such quality that they rivaled the finest theater films."

Burke did numerous stunts on the show, including climbing to the top of the 59th Street Bridge.

"Another time," he told Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper in 1963, "I had to jump from one roof to another when the stunt man refused because it was too windy to take the chance."

To get a feel for the role, Burke went on raids and arrests with New York police detectives.

"I know areas of the city that are truly jungles," he said. "I wouldn't be a detective there for $1,000 a day."

For an episode in which his detective character is sent to Sing Sing prison to witness the execution of a man he arrested, Burke actually spent a night at the facility.

"The area of the condemned has barred windows that look down over the Hudson," he told Smith in 1963. "You can see trains going by -- as if to emphasize the life outside that is to be taken away. I was not against capital punishment before we made that show -- but now, I don't know.

"It's experiences like that on 'Naked City' that make it tough to see it end," Burke said of the series. "It went beyond the monetary -- it was something you were proud to be associated with."

Born on July 21, 1926, in New Orleans, Burke was the son of prize fighter Martin Burke, who became a promoter and nightclub owner. While growing up, Burke's family owned the popular French Quarter nightclub and restaurant Marty Burke's.

After moving to Hollywood as a young man in the late '40s, Burke studied acting at the Pasadena Playhouse for two years. Movie director Lloyd Bacon, a friend of Burke's father, got him his first role: an uncredited bit part in the 1951 Betty Grable musical "Call Me Mister."

Small parts in films such as "Francis in the Navy" and guest roles on series such as "Highway Patrol," "Navy Log" and "Dragnet" followed.

Burke also starred in the short-lived 1956-57 series "Noah's Ark" and the 1957-58 series "Harbourmaster."

His last credit was the 1990 movie "The Fool."

In addition to his wife of 30 years, Burke is survived by his three children from his first marriage, Paula Burke-Lopez, Paul Brian Burke and Dina Burke-Shawkat; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

A memorial service is pending.

[email protected]

Another actor I liked. Could play a variety of roles. Naked City was one of my favorite programs. RIP.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Expug »

Rick Farris wrote:
Expug wrote:
kikibalt wrote:“Judo” Gene LeBell, the Ageless Wonder

By Dan Hernandez

“A man that enjoys his work never goes to work”

Gene LeBell

Most commonly referred to as “Judo” Gene LeBell, LeBell is also known to his legion of fans as “The Godfather of Grappling” as well as “The Toughest Man Alive”. I met Gene recently at the Redondo Beach performing Arts Center in Redondo Beach, Ca. where he was one of the judges for the night’s card featuring Lance “Mount” Whitaker in the boxing arena and Sean “The Destroyer” Loeffler in the MMA event. Although this was our first meeting, I have known about LeBell since I was a boy attending the boxing matches at the fabled Olympic Auditorium in Downtown, Los Angeles, Ca. His mother, Aileen Eaton was one of the most successful women promoters in the history of the sport.

I recall seeing Gene perform in wrestling matches in the 1960’s and he was one of the well-known figures at many of the events around Los Angeles. It was just as exciting to see him, as it was to see many of the stars of stage, screen, and sports fame that walked through the doors of the old arena. Gene has authored at least 12 books, has appeared in over 110 films and TV productions as an actor, and has been involved in over 246 productions as a stunt man or stunt coordinator. Three of those films had LeBell in minor rolls, beginning fights with Elvis Presley and working on the set of the Green Hornet TV Show where he developed a solid friendship with Bruce Lee. Lee & LeBell went on to exchange many positive ideas on martial arts.

Gene was instrumental in teaching grappling skills to such well-respected wrestlers and martial artists as; ”Rowdy” Roddy Piper, Mando Guerrero, The Rock, Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Ken Shamrock, “Judo” Chris Adams, Benny ‘The Jet” Urquidez, Goker Chivichyan, Robert Wall (Bob Wall), Ed Parker, and Larry Zbysko. In addition to these credits “Judo” Gene has received numerous awards including the 2005 Frank Gotch Award to celebrate the positive recognition he has brought to the sport of wrestling. LeBell won the AAU National Judo Championships at 165 pounds in both 1955 and 1956. In 1963, LeBell accepted a public challenge to fight boxer Milo Savage, choking him unconscious in the 4th round. Gene also refereed the boxing-versus-wrestling contest between Muhammad Ali and Antonio Inoki.

A pink GI, a trademark of Gene LeBell, was actually the result of a laundry mix-up. While in Japan for a competition, a pair of red shorts was mixed into the laundry that contained his Gi and turned the uniform a shade of pink. There was no time to correct the mistake and he was forced to compete in the pink-colored Gi. This insulted the Japanese crowd and the wound was deeper as LeBell won the competition.

When I viewed LeBell in the parking lot of the event I was covering in Redondo, I made it to his side immediately, introduced myself, stated my affiliation, and waited for his words of wisdom. Mr. Gene LeBell said to me, “Hi, nice to meet you.” He had me at Hi. One of the nicest fellows you would ever want to meet, he made me feel immediately like I had known him most of my life. Within seconds, we were laughing and sharing stories, without hesitation, he agreed to an interview. He even admired my camera, asking if it was a camera/phone, since it was so small. I explained that it was a Sony pocket camera and that my son-in-law Robert, had one that I had admired a few years ago and soon after received this camera in the mail. I then added how I also admired Robert’s BMW and as yet had not found a BMW in the mail. Gene was kind enough to laugh at my joke and it was clear I had a new friend.

DH: Gene, the records show you were born in…

Forget about that, I don’t want everybody to know when I was born. I don’t want you tell them.

DH: OK Gene, you got it, however, it is a matter of record.

I know everybody knows but don’t put it in there. It’s like first they find out your personal address, then they know everything about you, and there are too many things like identity theft, etc. You get all sorts of hassles; people knocking on the door, people get a hold of my phone number. They call me all hours just to make friends with me, and I don’t know them. Don’t put anything like phone numbers or driver license numbers on your checks; believe me I know, nothing but trouble.

DH: Well Gene, it was a real pleasure meeting you the other day. It is always a thrill to meet one of your favorite personalities.

Yeah, with that and $5.00 you can buy a four dollar hamburger.

DH: There are probably not too many good four-dollar hamburgers anymore.

You know on my answer phone, I’ve been working on a couple of shows and when I got your message, I guess it was today, I called up and said to call me after 8PM and I didn’t know if your message was new or old.

DH: I just left the message yesterday.
I was working on something for a Sarah something productions. I played an old man, which is good. I go dancing and I fall down. It’s a comedy, so when I fall I take a tablecloth with me and the whole bit… It will be seen on Comedy Central. The next time I’m in a handicapped car and I kind of sue them while I’m comatose. Doesn’t sound funny, but it is.

DH: So, you’re still doing stunt work, is that right?

Yeah, I tell everybody that I’m retired for the last 15 years, but people are still nice to me. You know when you get to be 104 years old, it’s nice to go to the studios and you see so many people that you knew 10, 20, 30, years ago. I worked on this show and the first assistant named Johnny called me up so excited and told me that he worked on his first show with me 20 years ago.

DH: It is nice to be remembered, isn’t it?

It kind of makes you feel good to be remembered.

DH: Speaking of remembrances, I remember speaking with Aileen Eaton. Was she your mother or stepmother?

Aileen was my mom, my father died when I was 7 and she re-married many years later a fellow named Eaton, Cal Eaton.

DH: Did you have a good relationship with your mom?

Oh yeah, she was good people.

DH: That’s good to hear, we, the fans, used to feel like we knew the promoters and matchmakers.

George Parnassus, all of them. They were very, very, nice.

DH: You were on the “IN” with everybody being part of that family.

I boxed and I wrestled, so I got along good with George Parnassus. All the matchmakers; Babe McCoy, you can just go down the list of the matchmakers for boxing and wrestling too. People like Jules Strongbow, Mr. Moto, and others.

DH: Whom did you find the most colorful?

In the movies or wrestling?

DH: Both, how about wrestling first.

For color, or showbiz, or really being able to wrestle?
DH: How about each of those.

Colorful, Gorgeous George, he was entertaining. His real name was George Wheeler and he could wrestle too.

DH: I understand that Muhammad Ali based his early personality on the showmanship of Gorgeous George.

Well, when Ali came to fight for us at the Olympic, he went to the boxing arena and he saw Freddie Blassie.

DH: I remember him. He used to call people, “Pencil-necked yeek”.

Yeah, yeah, “Pencil-necked yeek”! Ali said, “I want to be just like him. When he got interviewed for the fight he said, “My opponents a bore. I’m gonna knock him out in four.” His name was Cassius then and I told him, “Cassius, you don’t understand, you don’t gotta go 4 rounds” He replied, “I can knock him out in any series I want.” He bobbed and weaved and everything for three rounds, did showboat because he was that much better. Came the fourth round , a few series of punches, and the guy was out cold.. To me Muhammad Ali, Cassius Clay, in his prime, was the best fighter of all time.

Ali fought Archie Moore for us, the light-heavyweight world champion. After the fight, Archie said, “This man is going to be champion, and for a lot of years. He was right.

DH: Did you ever see Joe Louis fight?

Only on film, but I did get to hire him on a Steve Allen Show. He refereed, I’ve got pictures of it, I think it’s in my life story. He was great. The thing is about Cassius Clay is that he could hit hard if he wanted to, but his main goal was not getting hit. He would see a lot of people that were punchy, from getting hit. You know they would trade punches, let themselves get hit, to give a punch. He wasn’t in that mode. He did the rope-a-dope with George Foreman until Foreman ran out of gas, then he knocked him out.

DH: Gene, why did you shy away from boxing and specialize in the martial arts?

I trained in boxing at the Main Street Gym, I worked out with Archie Moore. As a kid, I worked out with “Sugar” Ray Robinson and a few other top fighters from other divisions. My step dad Cal Eaton, was the promoter and I wanted to box. Cal said, “No”. So I wrestled, that’s all I did was wrestle and competed in Judo. I told Cal that I wanted to wrestle pro and he said that I would get killed. Well, my name is LeBell and a fellow named Vic Christie was teaching All-American football players how to wrestle and I went down there and worked out with him. Vic said, here comes the guy that’s the boss, Cal Eaton, Cal saw me and said if he ever saw me working out with pros that he would kill me. But he saw me wrestle the good guys and how easy I could handle them and he didn’t realize that I could wrestle. You know, when you do everything everyday of your life, your either good at it or bad at it and I was a fanatic and got pretty good. The funny thing is that I did a lot of Judo at the same time and I won the National in 1954 in Kezar Pavilion in San Francisco. I won the heavyweight title, although I was only weighing 165 pounds. My coach encouraged me to go heavyweight because they move slower, Larry Coughram was his name and I respected his opinion. He was primarily my Judo coach when I was young, but he was also a college wrestler.

In that time period Cal saw me wrestling and he said, “OK. You can start pro.” I told him that I couldn’t go pro because if I won the Nationals that year I would get to go to Japan for the Internationals and represent the United States. That was a big deal to me. Cal accepted my position and the Nationals turned out to be in Los Angeles. Cal told me, “You stupid idiot, if you win second, that means nothing. You have to win gold!” I had tonsil problems and nose problems that go with that and Cal told me that I better just quit then. I was brain dead then, and I’m still brain dead and I told him, “No, I’m entering it and I’m better than I was last year. A lot of guys said that I won a lot of matches by luck , and I agreed that some of those guys were a little better than me and I was maybe a little luckier.

Anyway, the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) rents auditoriums, and what do they rent? The Olympic Auditorium! My home, that was funny. The first match I had I threw the guy and Cal loved to tease me and he said, “Ah, the guy jumped for you”. Now you can win the tournament with four or five wins, then the system was different and they had two days and 18 matches to declare a champion. Well the next day we were all kind of sore and some guys were complaining that they could hardly breathe. I told them, I don’t know, I feel great. “Cause that’s what Freddie Blassie used to say, “Just Psyche them out.” I think that helped me win.

DH: Then what came next?

Then they had the overall where all the champions went together and for the second year I won that. That was in 1955, 104 years ago. But I got a chance to go to Japan and compete. It was very interesting, all these experiences were terrific.

DH: Gene, these are all positive experiences. Were there any not so positive?

Negative experiences, huh?

DH: Well, it sounds as if you’ve led a charmed life. It is also clear that you have always been a hard worker, is that right?
Well, the harder you work, the luckier you get. People that don’t work hard, usually don’t get as many good things happen to them. I always tell my grandson, “If you get A’s in school, you’re gonna be making 150, 200 thousand a year. If you get B’s, you’ll be making 60 to 80 thousand, C’s, you’ll be making 45 thousand, D’s, you’ll be making 20 thousand, and F’s, you’ll probably be in jail.

DH: What a great philosophy to teach your children and grandchildren.

Yes, this grandson is 9 years old, and I have other grandkids, two from my daughter Monica and her husband, who both work for the government, have a 3 and a 4 year old. I have a step-grandson, Daniel, who is named after me, Daniel Gene, and he is a straight A gifted student, his parents are great. My other grandson comes from a broken home and that is sad to me. My wife and I buy his clothes and his shoes. Today I took him out swimming and if he can swim two lengths of the pool under water, he gets a dollar I have pigeons that live on the telephone wire by my back yard and if they land on him and eat out of his hand, he gets a quarter for each one he feeds. Later we went to another stunt mans house and he did flips on his trampoline. It’s important that he gets his share of exercise.

DH: Gene, I get the feeling that you always enjoy what you do.

A man that enjoys his work, never goes to work.
What do you like to do Dan?

DH: I enjoy this Gene, speaking with people like yourself has been a sincere treat and each new interview presents a new and interesting challenge that keeps me invigorated.

Don’t repeat it, but I’m older than you Dan and I’ve always loved racing and doing tricks on motorcycles and I test bikes for Honda of North Hollywood. That means that they give me free bikes, merchandise, and everything. In stunt work, I might get a job and do some kind of a trick down the street, but I’m not gonna compete against the young guy who will use me for tracks, but it’s something I enjoy. I’ve played a lot of Hell’s Angels and other parts like that.

DH: I’ve seen you in film for years and always enjoyed recognizing you.

I did a thing called RENO 911, I’ve done 8 or 10 of them. In one of them , they came to arrest me and the gal says “What name do we give you?” Because she didn’t read the script, I told her the name they gave me was Gene LeBell, just to tease her. So they said, “Are you Gene LeBell?” I replied yes and they said I was under arrest. I said that’s nice, I’m an old man that’s shaking and I’m in my under shorts. Then I go to the kitchen, invite them in and hop on a little motorcycle and speed out of the door.. The next thing you know, they are running down the street trying to catch me, and they don’t. So they were shooting the movie, “RENO 911” and right across the street here, I live across from a park. Well, I know the producers and they are very, very nice and I told them, “I’m not gonna watch this movie. There is an old man and you can’t even catch him on a motorcycle.” They asked me if I had a motorcycle and I responded yes and they told me to put my skivvies’ shorts on. They did the shot and gave mo more than should, and they still don’t catch me in the movie so I teased them again. So a couple of months pass and they called me and said, “I think we’re gonna beat you today.” They will never beat me. Anyway there are four comedians, one of them is called, Senior Abuse. One guy hits me with a chair, knocks me down. The other guy stabs me, I mean, it’s in different sections. Then another guy brakes a bottle over my head, and the other one kicks me in the groin. I mean I’m going up and down, you know? Four different people beat me and the producers are teasing me, saying, “Now we got you!” They showed each beating on different dates, so I got paid four different times instead of just once. But beyond the money the pleasure is working with the actors and producers of people like the ones on RENO 911. When I worked with James Garner, it was terrific. Working with Jack Benny was terrific. I try to treat people like I want, with respect.

Everybody in the world counts and if I were to give a message on my deathbed it would be that, “This would be a much better world if there wasn’t so much hate.” Everybody puts their shoes on one shoe at a time just like everybody else and we must love.

DH: How long have you been married Gene?

This time, too long, 30 years. New motorcycles come out every year, maybe I’ll trade her in.

DH: I think your past that, don‘t you?

Definitely. You know I‘ve lived in sin with my wife, Midge, II call her Mitchell. She is a very religious Catholic, I’m a heathen, .I mean I follow the 10 Commandments to the letter, but my wife wanted to get married on a Sunday. I told her, ‘You’ve got to be kidding, that’s motorcycle day.” “I’m not getting married on a Sunday!” She is very religious and a devout Catholic and insisted. I told her that regardless, I was going motorcycle riding every Sunday. I have a little cabin up in Frazier Park in an area called Pine Mountain. I told her if you want to get married on a Sunday, you’re going to get married on the back of a motorcycle. The next thing I know, she has the minister and herself on the back of a truck and I’m following along on my motorcycle. I’m doing a wheelie for about a mile or a mile and a half and I’m waving and having a good old time. Now I’ve never had a drink in my life, she got excited, had a few glasses of wine and got on my bike. She had mud in her helmet and it was hooked on her arm and I hooked my legs over her so she wouldn’t fall off the bike, ‘cause otherwise I’d have to go back and pick her up.

DH: Always a gentleman Gene. That would be a nice thing to do.

Oh yeah, so we got married and had a lot of fun. The next day she woke up and said, ‘We’re married.” And I said “we’re what?” She said, ”we got married on the back of a motorcycle.” I told her I was selling all my motorcycles.”
Midge has everything but a sense of humor. She did not find that funny. She’s good people and its been a great marriage.

By the way, you asked me earlier about my favorite wrestlers. They are: Lou Thesz, who was a world champion. Ed “Strangler” Lewis, my first coach and world champion. Karl Gotch taught me a lot, he just passed away a year ago. Those were all people that could really wrestle. Roddy Piper has been a student and friend of mine for years. He is a terrific wrestler and he gets a lot of movie work, I got him his first job in the movies.

DH: Gene, I really enjoyed your conversation and your sense of humor.

I believe a little levity is refreshing. The people that I have associated with that have a sense of humor and were not vindictive, are the ones I enjoy most. I often make myself the brunt of my jokes, which may make me sound ignorant or stupid and the fans have no trouble agreeing with that assessment. And you know, humor sells tickets.

Great interview from Mr. Hernandez about Gene.
Gene is without a doubt a very legitimate tough guy. A great Judoka one of Americas best ever.
HE isnt a guy that dwells on the negative. However, he was basicaly disowned by the powers that be in his dojo which was I believe called the Hollywood dojo back in the late fifties. They had a real problem with Gene becoming a pro wrestler after he won the Judo Nationals for the second time. The head instructor who knew Gene for years and years banished him. It was like being thrown out of his home. It must have been hard.
There was and still is politics involved in the sport. Im no Gene Lebell, but I have even felt a little disdain from some of the traditionalists here in Chicago because I was a pro boxer at one time. They respect that in a way , but at the same time I think in their minds, Im less than legit. I dont know, maybe Im just overly sensitive to it , but its a feeling I get once in awhile. Its hard to put into words. Ive heard of people talking sh.t behind my back." What does Higgins know about judo? he was a boxer."It started when I strated teaching it.
Anyway, Gene also beat in the Nationals a great Judoka named Johnny Osako. Johnny was from Chicago and was absolutely brilliant. I think they were ready to give him the Gold Medal at the weigh in . They figured nobody could beat Johnny. Gene did twice.
All of this cross training in combat sports that everyone does now in mma, Gene was doing half a century ago.

Brian . . . Thanks for the great inside story on Gene LeBell. I'm as interested in your Judo experience and knowledge as I am what we write of here.
Gene wasn't a pro boxer, but as the son of a legendary L.A. boxing promoter, and Internationally known as a true tough guy, I appreciate anything about him.


-Rick Farris
Thanks Rick.
I believe that Genes sensei was Ken Kunniyuki.
When Gene went to Japan after winning Nationals for the second time, he went with a crew of some othe tremendous Judoka to train and compete in a number of tournaments against the Japanese.
At the end of the stay, they were all tested for promotion to higher Dan grades as they were already all Black Belts .
Gene passed his tests with flying colors as did the others.
They were all to receive certificates as they were leaving to get on the Plane to come back to the US.
They were all bumped up except Gene who was embarrassed in front of everyone when he was denied a certificate.
Evidently his instructor had reached out to his connections in Japan and told them not to promote Gene because of his becoming a pro wrestler.
Then of course as I mentioned , when Gene went to his dojo in L.A, he was banished.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Mexican American astronaut isn't changing course on immigration stand

NASA went ballistic when Jose Hernandez advocated legalization of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. shortly after his return to Earth. The California-born son of migrants isn't backing down.

Image

Jose Hernandez waves to well wishers as he leaves for the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center. (Gary I Rothstein / EPA / August 25, 2009)

By Tracy Wilkinson
September 16, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City - He may have soared a gazillion miles in outer space, but back here on Earth, U.S. astronaut Jose Hernandez has stepped knee-deep in controversy.

Hernandez, the California-born son of Mexican immigrants, is a full-fledged media star in Mexico. Fans here followed his every floating, gravity-free move during two weeks recently as he Twittered from the Discovery space shuttle mission and gave live interviews to local TV programs.

After the shuttle returned to this planet last week, Hernandez told Mexican television that he thought the United States should legalize the millions of undocumented immigrants living there so that they can work openly in the U.S. because they are important to the economy.

Officials at NASA flipped. They hastened to announce that Hernandez was speaking for himself and only for himself.

"It all became a big scandal," Hernandez told television viewers Tuesday. "Even the lawyers were speaking to me."

Hernandez was back on Mexican network Televisa's popular morning chat show, where he has seemingly been a fixture, to update host Carlos Loret de Mola on how he was adapting back on Earth.

Loret de Mola asked Hernandez, 47, about the controversy, and the astronaut said he stood by what he had said a day earlier on the same program, advocating comprehensive immigration reform -- a keenly divisive issue in the United States.

"I work for the U.S. government, but as an individual I have a right to my personal opinions," he said in a video hookup from a Mexican restaurant owned by his wife in Houston. "Having 12 million undocumented people here means there's something wrong with the system, and the system needs to be fixed."

He added that it seemed impractical to try to deport 12 million people. In the previous day's conversation, he spoke of circling the globe in 90 minutes and marveling at a world without borders.

Hernandez, whose first language is Spanish, grew up picking cucumber in the fields of California. He joined NASA in 2004. His orbit-trotting on the Discovery mission included a salsa demo and mini-science lessons for viewers back on Earth. He made taquitos for his fellow fliers.

TV host Loret de Mola said his audience was flooding him with one question above all: How does a humble son of peasant immigrants manage to become an astronaut?

Hernandez cited two crucial factors: a good education and parents who forced him to study, who checked his homework and stayed involved in his schooling.

"What I always say to Mexican parents, Latino parents, is that we shouldn't spend so much time going out with friends drinking beer and watching telenovelas, and should spend more time with our families and kids . . . challenging our kids to pursue dreams that may seem unreachable," he said.

Hernandez said he planned to visit Mexico soon to take up President Felipe Calderon on an invitation to the presidential residence for a meal. Calderon extended the invite during a nationally televised videoconference with the astronaut before the Discovery voyage.

Calderon's and Hernandez's parents hail from the same state, Michoacan, and the president has called the astronaut his paisano.

[email protected]
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Brian and Rick
Down at the Coliseum in San Diego the wrestlers would go through their stuff after the boxers would finish training. I used to like to watch the wrestlers workout once in a while. They were really funny. Blassie,Moto,Don Manookian,The Destroyer were always screwing around playing jokes on each other.

I remember one afternoon I saw this tough looking guy come in with Freddie Blassie. He looked like a wrestler,but he didn't change into wrestling togs to workout. I could tell everyone knew him. I remember watching Judo Gene Lebell on TV wrestle. I thought that it might be him,but wasn't sure. Then I heard Blassie call him Gene. Gene Lebell was a scary looking dude. At least that's how I saw him.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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kikibalt wrote:Mexican American astronaut isn't changing course on immigration stand

NASA went ballistic when Jose Hernandez advocated legalization of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. shortly after his return to Earth. The California-born son of migrants isn't backing down.

Image

Jose Hernandez waves to well wishers as he leaves for the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center. (Gary I Rothstein / EPA / August 25, 2009)

By Tracy Wilkinson
September 16, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City - He may have soared a gazillion miles in outer space, but back here on Earth, U.S. astronaut Jose Hernandez has stepped knee-deep in controversy.

Hernandez, the California-born son of Mexican immigrants, is a full-fledged media star in Mexico. Fans here followed his every floating, gravity-free move during two weeks recently as he Twittered from the Discovery space shuttle mission and gave live interviews to local TV programs.

After the shuttle returned to this planet last week, Hernandez told Mexican television that he thought the United States should legalize the millions of undocumented immigrants living there so that they can work openly in the U.S. because they are important to the economy.

Officials at NASA flipped. They hastened to announce that Hernandez was speaking for himself and only for himself.

"It all became a big scandal," Hernandez told television viewers Tuesday. "Even the lawyers were speaking to me."

Hernandez was back on Mexican network Televisa's popular morning chat show, where he has seemingly been a fixture, to update host Carlos Loret de Mola on how he was adapting back on Earth.

Loret de Mola asked Hernandez, 47, about the controversy, and the astronaut said he stood by what he had said a day earlier on the same program, advocating comprehensive immigration reform -- a keenly divisive issue in the United States.

"I work for the U.S. government, but as an individual I have a right to my personal opinions," he said in a video hookup from a Mexican restaurant owned by his wife in Houston. "Having 12 million undocumented people here means there's something wrong with the system, and the system needs to be fixed."

He added that it seemed impractical to try to deport 12 million people. In the previous day's conversation, he spoke of circling the globe in 90 minutes and marveling at a world without borders.

Hernandez, whose first language is Spanish, grew up picking cucumber in the fields of California. He joined NASA in 2004. His orbit-trotting on the Discovery mission included a salsa demo and mini-science lessons for viewers back on Earth. He made taquitos for his fellow fliers.

TV host Loret de Mola said his audience was flooding him with one question above all: How does a humble son of peasant immigrants manage to become an astronaut?

Hernandez cited two crucial factors: a good education and parents who forced him to study, who checked his homework and stayed involved in his schooling.

"What I always say to Mexican parents, Latino parents, is that we shouldn't spend so much time going out with friends drinking beer and watching telenovelas, and should spend more time with our families and kids . . . challenging our kids to pursue dreams that may seem unreachable," he said.

Hernandez said he planned to visit Mexico soon to take up President Felipe Calderon on an invitation to the presidential residence for a meal. Calderon extended the invite during a nationally televised videoconference with the astronaut before the Discovery voyage.

Calderon's and Hernandez's parents hail from the same state, Michoacan, and the president has called the astronaut his paisano.

[email protected]
Frank
I thought Bill Dana was the first Mexican astronaut.
"My name Jose Jimenez."
Remember? :lol:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cM_WYZEo-r0

Bill Dana
"The Astronaut."
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cm8Q-dhmMWU

Jose Jimenez Teaching Santa Claus To Speak
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Robero Duran
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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Booked my reservation at the LAX Marriot for the WBHOF Banquet. See you all there. Can't wait to see the gang again. :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

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dagosd2000 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Mexican American astronaut isn't changing course on immigration stand

NASA went ballistic when Jose Hernandez advocated legalization of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. shortly after his return to Earth. The California-born son of migrants isn't backing down.

Image

Jose Hernandez waves to well wishers as he leaves for the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center. (Gary I Rothstein / EPA / August 25, 2009)

By Tracy Wilkinson
September 16, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City - He may have soared a gazillion miles in outer space, but back here on Earth, U.S. astronaut Jose Hernandez has stepped knee-deep in controversy.

Hernandez, the California-born son of Mexican immigrants, is a full-fledged media star in Mexico. Fans here followed his every floating, gravity-free move during two weeks recently as he Twittered from the Discovery space shuttle mission and gave live interviews to local TV programs.

After the shuttle returned to this planet last week, Hernandez told Mexican television that he thought the United States should legalize the millions of undocumented immigrants living there so that they can work openly in the U.S. because they are important to the economy.

Officials at NASA flipped. They hastened to announce that Hernandez was speaking for himself and only for himself.

"It all became a big scandal," Hernandez told television viewers Tuesday. "Even the lawyers were speaking to me."

Hernandez was back on Mexican network Televisa's popular morning chat show, where he has seemingly been a fixture, to update host Carlos Loret de Mola on how he was adapting back on Earth.

Loret de Mola asked Hernandez, 47, about the controversy, and the astronaut said he stood by what he had said a day earlier on the same program, advocating comprehensive immigration reform -- a keenly divisive issue in the United States.

"I work for the U.S. government, but as an individual I have a right to my personal opinions," he said in a video hookup from a Mexican restaurant owned by his wife in Houston. "Having 12 million undocumented people here means there's something wrong with the system, and the system needs to be fixed."

He added that it seemed impractical to try to deport 12 million people. In the previous day's conversation, he spoke of circling the globe in 90 minutes and marveling at a world without borders.

Hernandez, whose first language is Spanish, grew up picking cucumber in the fields of California. He joined NASA in 2004. His orbit-trotting on the Discovery mission included a salsa demo and mini-science lessons for viewers back on Earth. He made taquitos for his fellow fliers.

TV host Loret de Mola said his audience was flooding him with one question above all: How does a humble son of peasant immigrants manage to become an astronaut?

Hernandez cited two crucial factors: a good education and parents who forced him to study, who checked his homework and stayed involved in his schooling.

"What I always say to Mexican parents, Latino parents, is that we shouldn't spend so much time going out with friends drinking beer and watching telenovelas, and should spend more time with our families and kids . . . challenging our kids to pursue dreams that may seem unreachable," he said.

Hernandez said he planned to visit Mexico soon to take up President Felipe Calderon on an invitation to the presidential residence for a meal. Calderon extended the invite during a nationally televised videoconference with the astronaut before the Discovery voyage.

Calderon's and Hernandez's parents hail from the same state, Michoacan, and the president has called the astronaut his paisano.

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Frank
I thought Bill Dana was the first Mexican astronaut.
"My name Jose Jimenez."
Remember? :lol:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cM_WYZEo-r0

Bill Dana
"The Astronaut."
Jose Jimenez might have been the first MEXICAN astronaut, But Jose Hernandez was the first MEXICAN-AMERICAN asttronaut.... :lol:
Chuck1052
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Chuck1052 »

Paul Burke's father, Martin Burke, was a journeyman boxer with one hundred recorded bouts who fought Gene Tunney, Harry Greb, Tommy Loughran, Jeff Smith and George Godfrey and Young Stribling. Take a look at his record on BoxRec.

- Chuck Johnston
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Chuck1052 wrote:Paul Burke's father, Martin Burke, was a journeyman boxer with one hundred recorded bouts who fought Gene Tunney, Harry Greb, Tommy Loughran, Jeff Smith and George Godfrey and Young Stribling. Take a look at his record on BoxRec.

- Chuck Johnston
I was told that one time Martin Burke and some fight people from L.A. went to T.J for some fights back in the late 1940's and they couldn't get him out of the Boom Boom Club and the the whore houses.... :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

kikibalt wrote:
Chuck1052 wrote:Paul Burke's father, Martin Burke, was a journeyman boxer with one hundred recorded bouts who fought Gene Tunney, Harry Greb, Tommy Loughran, Jeff Smith and George Godfrey and Young Stribling. Take a look at his record on BoxRec.

- Chuck Johnston
I was told that one time Martin Burke and some fight people from L.A. went to T.J for some fights back in the late 1940's and they couldn't get him out of the Boom Boom Club and the the whore houses.... :TU:
Chuck
Very enlightening.

Frank
That's even more enlightening. :lol:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Image

Terry Downes
April 10, 1962, Boston

PENDER WINS TITLE BACK FROM DOWNES

Terry Downes of Britain cools down, with an ice bag on his head, after losing a
fifteen round decision to Paul Pender and with it his World Middleweight Championship.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Thanks Rick.
I believe that Genes sensei was Ken Kunniyuki.
When Gene went to Japan after winning Nationals for the second time, he went with a crew of some othe tremendous Judoka to train and compete in a number of tournaments against the Japanese.
At the end of the stay, they were all tested for promotion to higher Dan grades as they were already all Black Belts .
Gene passed his tests with flying colors as did the others.
They were all to receive certificates as they were leaving to get on the Plane to come back to the US.
They were all bumped up except Gene who was embarrassed in front of everyone when he was denied a certificate.
Evidently his instructor had reached out to his connections in Japan and told them not to promote Gene because of his becoming a pro wrestler.
Then of course as I mentioned , when Gene went to his dojo in L.A, he was banished.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Thanks, Brian. Anything on Gene that you post is of interest to me. The Japanese culture is tricky, especially to those who go there to compete against the Japanese. My first knowledge of the Japanse was thru my manager, Johnny Flores. who in 1967 took Dwight Hawkins to Tokyo for three bouts. Dwight was a heavy underdog when he took on future featherweight champ, Kiniaki Shibata. When Dwight flattened Shibata and they had to carry the Japanese boxer out of the ring on a stretcher, they invited him to return a few weeks later to face another Japanese contender Rokuro Ishiyami. Again, Hawkins KOed his opponent in two rounds, further embarrassing the Japanese. Dwight loved Japan and they liked him, but they had to beat Hawkins to save face and from that he was matched with the great Fighting Harada, whom just lost his bantam title and moved up to featherweight. The fight was a toe-to-toe blood bath that most thought should have been a draw, however, Harada was on his feet at the end so he got the nod. Johnny said it was a bad decision and that the only way Dwight would have won was if he had KOed Harada.

Benny Urquidez and I had a long talk on a film set a few years back about what happened to him in Japan. He was invited to Tokyo to watch a world title fight and when he and his brother Smiley arrived in Tokyo, he saw posters in the airport advertising the Japanese champ vs. Benny. Benny and Smiley's passports were confiscated and Benny was told he would have to fight the Japanese fighter later in the week. Benny was in no condition for a title fight and they were now prisoners in the country. Somehow, Benny and his brother were able to escape the country and make their way back to L.A. Upon arriving home, Benny learned that a contract had been taken out on his life. He contacted the Japanese promoter, and told him respectfully that he would fight the Japanses kickboxer, but that he was in no shape to fight. Another date was agreed upon, Benny returned to Tokyo and KOed the Japanses fighter. I know that many of the Japanses kickboxers make their reputations by defeating over-the-hill Thai fighters who have a major name. The catch them at the end of their careers when they suffer from joint injuries, etc. The Japanese don't like tol ose, or care how they win.


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

dagosd2000 wrote:Image

Robero Duran

This is also a good one, you really capture Roberto Duran. :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

dagosd2000 wrote:
Randyman wrote:Image

No words needed.
Thanks Randy.
Roger . . .

Your painting of Duran, posted a couple days back, has been getting a lot compliments from friends that I've showed it to.
I realize that art is a personal thing and that not everybody appreciates the same things. However, I have yet to show your work to anybody that wasn't impressed.
They don't just look at your paintings politley and say, "Well, that's nice." They take a good look at it and note the detail, they connect with the spirit of the subject.
Many are knowledgable of art, including my former sister-in-law, Kameron, who was married to one of the world's top art dealers in the 80's. She was very impressed.
I don't know of anybody who paints boxers like you do. The more I see, the more I believe.


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Expug »

Rick Farris wrote:Thanks Rick.
I believe that Genes sensei was Ken Kunniyuki.
When Gene went to Japan after winning Nationals for the second time, he went with a crew of some othe tremendous Judoka to train and compete in a number of tournaments against the Japanese.
At the end of the stay, they were all tested for promotion to higher Dan grades as they were already all Black Belts .
Gene passed his tests with flying colors as did the others.
They were all to receive certificates as they were leaving to get on the Plane to come back to the US.
They were all bumped up except Gene who was embarrassed in front of everyone when he was denied a certificate.
Evidently his instructor had reached out to his connections in Japan and told them not to promote Gene because of his becoming a pro wrestler.
Then of course as I mentioned , when Gene went to his dojo in L.A, he was banished.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Thanks, Brian. Anything on Gene that you post is of interest to me. The Japanese culture is tricky, especially to those who go there to compete against the Japanese. My first knowledge of the Japanse was thru my manager, Johnny Flores. who in 1967 took Dwight Hawkins to Tokyo for three bouts. Dwight was a heavy underdog when he took on future featherweight champ, Kiniaki Shibata. When Dwight flattened Shibata and they had to carry the Japanese boxer out of the ring on a stretcher, they invited him to return a few weeks later to face another Japanese contender Rokuro Ishiyami. Again, Hawkins KOed his opponent in two rounds, further embarrassing the Japanese. Dwight loved Japan and they liked him, but they had to beat Hawkins to save face and from that he was matched with the great Fighting Harada, whom just lost his bantam title and moved up to featherweight. The fight was a toe-to-toe blood bath that most thought should have been a draw, however, Harada was on his feet at the end so he got the nod. Johnny said it was a bad decision and that the only way Dwight would have won was if he had KOed Harada.

Benny Urquidez and I had a long talk on a film set a few years back about what happened to him in Japan. He was invited to Tokyo to watch a world title fight and when he and his brother Smiley arrived in Tokyo, he saw posters in the airport advertising the Japanese champ vs. Benny. Benny and Smiley's passports were confiscated and Benny was told he would have to fight the Japanese fighter later in the week. Benny was in no condition for a title fight and they were now prisoners in the country. Somehow, Benny and his brother were able to escape the country and make their way back to L.A. Upon arriving home, Benny learned that a contract had been taken out on his life. He contacted the Japanese promoter, and told him respectfully that he would fight the Japanses kickboxer, but that he was in no shape to fight. Another date was agreed upon, Benny returned to Tokyo and KOed the Japanses fighter. I know that many of the Japanses kickboxers make their reputations by defeating over-the-hill Thai fighters who have a major name. The catch them at the end of their careers when they suffer from joint injuries, etc. The Japanese don't like tol ose, or care how they win.


-Rick Farris

Rick, fascinating stuff about Hawkins and Urquidez.
You are right about the Japanese culture being a bit tricky.
When I first started training with my Judo instructor Takayuki Yoshinaga, I was already at Sankyu level low Brown Belt and had been training and competing for a few years.
He was happy to have me training in his dojo, however, because I had been with another instructor first and possibly because I was a fighter years previous, he wanted to see how tough I was. How much I could endure I think.
Every workout he had me do randori after randori (the name for sparring in Judo) with all of his toughest Black Belts. (mostly Russians). Vlad, Eduard and Eugene were the best. For awhile there I was catching my ass every day. Eventually it started to even out but at first it was rough.After a couple years, he would call me at home if a student from another club came in and I wasnt there. He wanted me to be the one doing the randori with the new guys to show how tough our club was.
He was old school Japanese Judo.In the long run I was grateful for it.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Randyman »

Image
Roberto "Manos de Piedra" Duran
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

In plain English, Marquez remains quietly confident of upset chance against Mayweather

GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer

September 16, 2009

LAS VEGAS (AP) — While Floyd Mayweather Jr. trashed their fight's promoter and his uncle Roger ripped every other boxing trainer in the world, Juan Manuel Marquez made the biggest statement of fight week so far when he took the podium Wednesday and spoke in clear, confident English.

Marquez is a major underdog in Saturday's comeback fight for the unbeaten Mayweather, yet the longest odds of the Mexican three-division champion's career don't seem to shake his growing confidence, both in front of cameras and in the ring. Although Marquez is solidly bilingual, he has rarely used English in public until recently.

"I feel as good and happy as I can," Marquez said. "I always put forth the effort, and now I see the reward. I don't want to be the Mexican No. 1 fighter. I want to be the global No. 1."

With a huge payday awaiting him after the highest-profile bout of his career, Marquez (50-4-1, 37 KOs) might feel he has validation in a tumultuous career that has included frustrations and triumphs in almost equal numbers — most notably his failure to win two agonizingly close fights against pound-for-pound champion Manny Pacquiao.

Marquez has spent much of his career with a chip on his shoulder from those bouts, which propelled him in strange directions. After famously turning down a $750,000 rematch for his 2004 draw against Pacquiao because he felt insulted, Marquez ended up traveling to Indonesia to fight for $30,000 against Chris John, who claimed Marquez's 126-pound title with a hometown decision.

Now, John is fighting on Marquez's undercard at the MGM Grand Garden.

"He's had some tremendous knockout fights, and he's just beginning," Oscar De La Hoya said of the 36-year-old Marquez. "He's just getting started. We haven't even seen everything Juan Manuel Marquez is capable of doing, and (Mayweather) is about to find out."

Although Marquez is widely respected, he's never even been considered Mexico's greatest active fighter until the past few years. Erik Morales and Marco Antonio Barrera were quicker to fill the vacuum created by Julio Cesar Chavez's decline, but Marquez has proved to be the best and most enduring of the trio.

"It doesn't bother me any more," Marquez said. "I don't worry about any of that any more. I've been behind Morales. I've been behind Barrera, and now they're done. Now is my time."

Indeed, De La Hoya pointed out that Marquez isn't the prototypical Mexican warrior, willing to take three punches to deliver two before an early finish to a brutal career. Marquez is a skilled counterpuncher who can apply pressure when necessary, but still has defensive skills that some of his contemporaries lacked.

Marquez got his biggest American exposure during the weeks leading up to the fight when he allowed HBO's cameras into every aspect of his training camp near Mexico City for the network's "24/7" series, which documented his unorthodox strength-training strategies — and his belief in urine recycling to restock his body with proteins and vitamins.

"I train very hard for each fight," Marquez said. "I don't like to drink. I don't like to smoke. I don't like to go to sleep late. And my style is different. I try not to get hit, and I try to be smart about what I do."

Mayweather also seemed calm and mentally prepared for his first fight since December 2007, quietly answering questions one day after he made wide-ranging inferences about what he sees as America's endemic racism limiting his stardom.

Yet while his uncle Roger boasted that every other boxing trainer can't hold his heavy bag, Floyd Mayweather also took a little time to trash De La Hoya, whose Golden Boy Promotions is staging the bout. Mayweather says the Golden Boy is a "fake" who wants a rematch of their 2007 bout, won by Mayweather in a split decision.

"I know he truly doesn't like me, and I don't like him," Mayweather said. "I don't like him from the bottom of my heart."
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