Classic American West Coast Boxing

kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

THEHAMMER321 wrote:A friend of mine was traveling through the mostly black ''The old west side'' Las Vegas and at the intersection is a black man dressed in a suit and he is trying to collect money his speal is ''we are trying to stop gang violence in our community'' well my friend is at the light and the guy is giving him the ''speal'' and he holds out his hand for a handshake aka ''part of the con'' and my friend doesn't give his hand for the handshake,then the man replies ''you afraid to shake a black man's hand'' and then my friend says as he is shaking the man's hand ''I don't mind shaking your hand but I aint got no money'' :lol:
:lol: :lol:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Tales From The Simons Brickyard
“Riding The Gauntlet”

I used to live in “El Hoyo Simons”. The Mom and Pop stores were up the hill from El Hoyo. Us guys from El Hoyo were always having brick fights with the guys from up the hill. When Panfelita would sent me to the store I would ride my bike as fast as I could by Carlos and Elio Diaz’s house because they would throw bricks at me as I rode by their house, They would then wait for me to ride back and throw some more bricks at me, after dodging bricks going and coming, I would get back to Panfelita’s, get off my bike and go “WOW” and wipe my forehead.

Brick fights? Now that's hard core! :lol:
Rick, one day the guys from up the hill came down to El Hoyo for a brick fight, I was behind a small mount of dirt, about 3 feet high, I would get up throw a brick, get down for the incoming bricks, the action slowed down, no incoming bricks so I figure they had gone up the hill, I figure wrong, I stood up to see if indeed the guys had gone up the hill and "POW" I get hit on the chest with a brick, I went down on my butt, couldn't get up for a while..... :witzend: :lol:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Tales From The Simons Brickyard
“Riding The Gauntlet”

I used to live in “El Hoyo Simons”. The Mom and Pop stores were up the hill from El Hoyo. Us guys from El Hoyo were always having brick fights with the guys from up the hill. When Panfelita would sent me to the store I would ride my bike as fast as I could by Carlos and Elio Diaz’s house because they would throw bricks at me as I rode by their house, They would then wait for me to ride back and throw some more bricks at me, after dodging bricks going and coming, I would get back to Panfelita’s, get off my bike and go “WOW” and wipe my forehead.

Brick fights? Now that's hard core! :lol:
Rick, one day the guys from up the hill came down to El Hoyo for a brick fight, I was behind a small mount of dirt, about 3 feet high, I would get up throw a brick, get down for the incoming bricks, the action slowed down, no incoming bricks so I figure they had gone up the hill, I figure wrong, I stood up to see if indeed the guys had gone up the hill and "POW" I get hit on the chest with a brick, I went down on my butt, couldn't get up for a while..... :witzend: :lol:
Bricks!!! :o :o :o And I thought acorns were bad.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

kikibalt wrote:
raylawpc wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
L.A. Boxing TV broadcasts, mid 60's-70's . . .

Tom, closed-circuit was used for the major Forum cards promoted by George Parnasus, such as Chacon-Olivares, Zarate-Zamora, etc.
I know many were shown on closed circuit in Mexico, and many states with a sizeable Latino population.
Don Fraser's weekly Forum cards in the early 70's, were televised locally on KTLA-Ch.5, with the Olympic broadcasting on KCOP-Ch.13.
Some of the weekly cards would find their way outta town/state, and appear on independent channels via syndication.


-Rick Farris
That makes sense, Rick. We had to drive to dallas to see the fights from the forum. Dallas had and has a large Hispanic population.
And they were there first..... :lol: :lol:
Yes, and they call themselves Tejanos, not Chicanos . . .

She's a Tejano:

Image

Some Tejanos are pretty emphatic about it. If you call a Tejano a chicano, you are likely to get: "I'm not chicano. I'm Tejano."

And I'd call Eva Longoria anything she wanted . . . :OhYes: :OhYes:
Last edited by raylawpc on 21 Apr 2010, 17:52, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Tales From The Simons Brickyard
“Riding The Gauntlet”

I used to live in “El Hoyo Simons”. The Mom and Pop stores were up the hill from El Hoyo. Us guys from El Hoyo were always having brick fights with the guys from up the hill. When Panfelita would sent me to the store I would ride my bike as fast as I could by Carlos and Elio Diaz’s house because they would throw bricks at me as I rode by their house, They would then wait for me to ride back and throw some more bricks at me, after dodging bricks going and coming, I would get back to Panfelita’s, get off my bike and go “WOW” and wipe my forehead.

Brick fights? Now that's hard core! :lol:
Rick, one day the guys from up the hill came down to El Hoyo for a brick fight, I was behind a small mount of dirt, about 3 feet high, I would get up throw a brick, get down for the incoming bricks, the action slowed down, no incoming bricks so I figure they had gone up the hill, I figure wrong, I stood up to see if indeed the guys had gone up the hill and "POW" I get hit on the chest with a brick, I went down on my butt, couldn't get up for a while..... :witzend: :lol:
BTW Frank did Panefilita ever throw you any money or did you have to rely on the lord for your good deed :witzend:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

raylawpc wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
Brick fights? Now that's hard core! :lol:
Rick, one day the guys from up the hill came down to El Hoyo for a brick fight, I was behind a small mount of dirt, about 3 feet high, I would get up throw a brick, get down for the incoming bricks, the action slowed down, no incoming bricks so I figure they had gone up the hill, I figure wrong, I stood up to see if indeed the guys had gone up the hill and "POW" I get hit on the chest with a brick, I went down on my butt, couldn't get up for a while..... :witzend: :lol:
Bricks!!! :o :o :o And I thought acorns were bad.
Yeah Tom, you can say it was "home grown" ammo.... :lol:

The F*ckers hurt.... :OhYes:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

Image

Rick, you've worked with Eva Longoria before, haven't you? She seems like a really nice, down-to-earth woman - at least the few times I've seen her interviewed on TV. Is she as stunningly beautiful in person as she is on TV? Or does the camera just happen to love her?
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

THEHAMMER321 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
Brick fights? Now that's hard core! :lol:
Rick, one day the guys from up the hill came down to El Hoyo for a brick fight, I was behind a small mount of dirt, about 3 feet high, I would get up throw a brick, get down for the incoming bricks, the action slowed down, no incoming bricks so I figure they had gone up the hill, I figure wrong, I stood up to see if indeed the guys had gone up the hill and "POW" I get hit on the chest with a brick, I went down on my butt, couldn't get up for a while..... :witzend: :lol:
BTW Frank did Panefilita ever throw you any money or did you have to rely on the lord for your good deed :witzend:
No, no money from Panfelita, have to wait and see what the good Lord has in store for me.... :oo
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

raylawpc wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
raylawpc wrote: That makes sense, Rick. We had to drive to dallas to see the fights from the forum. Dallas had and has a large Hispanic population.
And they were there first..... :lol: :lol:
Yes, and they call themselves Tejanos, not Chicanos . . .

She's a Tejano:

Image

Some Tejanos are pretty emphatic about it. If you call a Tejano a chicano, you are likely to get: "I'm not chicano. I'm Tejano."

And I'd call Eva Longoria anything she wanted . . . :OhYes: :OhYes:
Tejanos? yes, after all they are from tejas, us in califas like to be call chicanos.... :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

Frank you ever go fishing up in big bear,went there in the early 1970s with my friend and his dad was nice up there but never made it back there always wanted to go again. :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Expug »

Hell, Im in the mood for some Outlaw Country.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aBqZs7oGPZQ
Enjoy
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

Rick Farris wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:Faye Dunaway . . .

A few years ago, when I returned to work in the film business, a cinematographer friend of mine asked me if I'd do him a favor and help him shoot a pilot for a TV series he hoped to sell as a series. He was using his own money (well, most of it would come from his mother-in-law, actress Connie Stevens). My friend was married to Connie's daughter Jolie Fisher.

I was just restablishing myself in town, and happily took the job, which would be a two week shoot.

I would learn that Faye Dunaway (Bonnie & Clyde) would be in the cast.

I haven't time to finish this story now, as I must leave for work, but when I return I'm going to share a funny story (funny for me) relating to the actress. What a 24K PAIN-IN-THE-ASS!!!! :witzend:


-Rick Farris

The name of the project was "The Cougar Club", and it was about a bunch of old broads that seduce younger men. I actually would see it on a cable station the following year. I've worked on great films and some losers. This was a loser, the worst waste of film I've ever been associated with. Typical youth raunch of today, such as the "American Pie" films.

On the first shooting day, we report to a location in the San Fernando Valley. As I'm walking thru our camp of trucks in the morning I go to the caterer and order my breakfast. While eating my breakfast, a nervous assistant director walks up to me and tells me that Faye Dunaway wants to see me immediatly. I tell the A.D. I'll see her in a few minutes, after I've finished eating. "No, no . . . she said she wants to see you now." I tell the shakey young man I'll see her when I finish breakfast. I'm working at a lower rate than usual, as a favor to the director/producer, so I tell the AD, I'll see her after I eat. He tells me she's in the make-up trailer, and he warns me, "She's very aggitated." Aggitated?

You see I worked with this woman before, while she was still a shadow of the Academy Award winner she once was ("Chionatown"). She had an industry wide rep as a bitch, and it was will earned. When she was doing big time films in the 70's, she pulled a lot of weight. Now she has been reduced to the lowest budget crap on film, and on a project that would never sell to become a series. I was taking less money to help my friend his pilot. The actress would have to wait for me.

When I finally get to the make-up trailer she was no longer there. She was in her dressing room trailer. As I approach the trailer, I hear a woman shouting, and see pieces of clothing flying out the door and into the street. "What the hell?" I thought.
"I wont wear this sh*t!", she screamed at a young wardrobe attendent. I step up into the room and see the red faced actress throwing a tantrum. I said, "Excuse me, I'm the lighting gaffer, my name is Rick." I put my hand out to shake hers but she doesn't shake my hand. She steps right into my face, looks into my eyes and says, "How to plan on lighting me."

You see, despite the woman's foul nature, she was once a big star. And like Barbara Streisand, she knew she needed special lighting. I remember her in "Bonnie & Clyde", "Chinatown" and the one where she had portrayed Joan Crawford in, "Mommie Dearest". At this moment, she was recreating her Joan Crawford "bitch" role, but we were not acting.

When I say "Special lighting", I mean that her face has major flaws. For one thing, years of drug and alcohol abuse had left deep lines in her face. Only so much could be plastered over with make-up, she need me to hide her inperfections in very soft light and shadows. This is my specialty, I have a rep for being able to light women.

In answer to her question, I calmly said that I planned on lighting her face with the softest source available, a "China Ball". A china ball is simply one of those inexpensive paper lamps that you buy in Chinatown. A simple light bulb mounted inside the paper lamp emits the softest light source on earth, and the light wraps nicely around an actors face, filling the wrinkles instead of shadowing them as a hard light source would do. Of all the expensive high tech lighting units available to me, for a beautiful female close-up, I use a $10 item made in China.

She really proved to me that she knew lighting when I saw her face suddenly relax, after hearing my plan. "I'll light you flat with a china ball and then give your hair a nice back light edge. I'll light you, capture the image on the monitor, and then I'll show you how you look." Her entire mood changed, "Thank God somebody knows what they're doing!" she said. She put her arms around me and said, "We're going to get along just fine." Of course we are, I thought, because if we don't I'm outta here.

As I turn to leave, her face returns to that of a witch as she continued to rag on the poor wardrobe girl.
A couple days later I'm sitting at lunch and her make-up artist approaches me. "I need your help" she tells me.
I say, "OK, what's up?"
"I have to tell her something about her make-up, but I'm afraid, could you tell her for me?", she asks.
"Why me?" I reply.
"Because she hates everybody but you, you are her new best friend." I had to laugh.

I told the make-up artist that she'd have to handle her own problem, to just look in her eyes and speak firmly and honestly and things would be OK. I gave her a pep talk and sent her on her way. A little later, I see the make-up artist sobbing during lunch.
I ask her, "Well, how did things go when you stood up to her?"
The girl glared at me and said, "She told me to go Fu*k myself. Thanks for the help."

About a week into the shoot, Faye Dunaway was sent away, fired from a low budget piece of crap.
How things change in this town. Faye Dunaway was one of the biggest of her era, along with Jane Fonda,etc.
Now she's finished in Hollywood.


-Rick Farris
Rick, for the heck of it I pulled up the film on imdb. Incredibly, it made its premiere at the Cannes Film Fesitval and then went straight to DVD. That film went downhill faster than Lindsey Vonn!!
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Expug »

Yep, its hard to picture Rick suffering the foolishness of some of these starlets.
Im sure he doesnt put up with too much flack.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

THEHAMMER321 wrote:Frank you ever go fishing up in big bear,went there in the early 1970s with my friend and his dad was nice up there but never made it back there always wanted to go again. :TU:
I have a few times and also at near by to Big Bear, Green Valley Lake..but I do most of my fishing up in the Eastern Sierra
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

raylawpc wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
raylawpc wrote: That makes sense, Rick. We had to drive to dallas to see the fights from the forum. Dallas had and has a large Hispanic population.
And they were there first..... :lol: :lol:
Yes, and they call themselves Tejanos, not Chicanos . . .

She's a Tejano:

Image

Some Tejanos are pretty emphatic about it. If you call a Tejano a chicano, you are likely to get: "I'm not chicano. I'm Tejano."

And I'd call Eva Longoria anything she wanted . . . :OhYes: :OhYes:

LOL! A bout three hours ago, I was lighting this little Tejano (or Tejana?).
Just got home from work, today I was Desperate Housewives 2nd Unit lighting gaffer.
And just for the record, "Eva Parker" (that's how her name now appears on the call sheet) is a cool little lady, and I do mean little. She's barely 5' tall, and her body has not once ounce of fat.
She's also pretty nice to work with. On the back of her set chair- "Little Eva"
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

raylawpc wrote:Image

Rick, you've worked with Eva Longoria before, haven't you? She seems like a really nice, down-to-earth woman - at least the few times I've seen her interviewed on TV. Is she as stunningly beautiful in person as she is on TV? Or does the camera just happen to love her?
Tom, I answered this in the above post, however, let me just confirm your thoughts: She's a DOLL!
And by the way, a couple years ago I asked her if she was any relation to Tony "Kid" Longoria, your buddy Pat O'Grady's Texas heavyweight from the 60's? She answered, "No, there are lots of Longorias in Texas."

-Rick
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Expug wrote:Yep, its hard to picture Rick suffering the foolishness of some of these starlets.
Im sure he doesnt put up with too much flack.

Brian, people are surprised when I tell them that one of the worst ever is Sally Field.
I've done five major films with her. She was great on Smokey & The Bandit (my first major feature), but after Burt Reynolds dumped her she turned into a real bitch! We were in the South shooting "Norman Rae" and she was impossible (but won an Oscar). A few years later, we were in Florida shooting "Absence of Malice", and again, a real pain (and again, another Oscar, I think?). However, Paul Newman taught her a lesson. It was great! I'll share it on another occasion. Last year I was working at Disney Studios, where they film "Brothers & Sisters"on a stage next to the one I was working on. I'd see her riding her bike outside the stage. She's 63 today, and is showing her age. They say she has mellowed? I guess she finally got over Burt. :lol:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

raylawpc wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:Faye Dunaway . . .

A few years ago, when I returned to work in the film business, a cinematographer friend of mine asked me if I'd do him a favor and help him shoot a pilot for a TV series he hoped to sell as a series. He was using his own money (well, most of it would come from his mother-in-law, actress Connie Stevens). My friend was married to Connie's daughter Jolie Fisher.

I was just restablishing myself in town, and happily took the job, which would be a two week shoot.

I would learn that Faye Dunaway (Bonnie & Clyde) would be in the cast.

I haven't time to finish this story now, as I must leave for work, but when I return I'm going to share a funny story (funny for me) relating to the actress. What a 24K PAIN-IN-THE-ASS!!!! :witzend:


-Rick Farris

The name of the project was "The Cougar Club", and it was about a bunch of old broads that seduce younger men. I actually would see it on a cable station the following year. I've worked on great films and some losers. This was a loser, the worst waste of film I've ever been associated with. Typical youth raunch of today, such as the "American Pie" films.

On the first shooting day, we report to a location in the San Fernando Valley. As I'm walking thru our camp of trucks in the morning I go to the caterer and order my breakfast. While eating my breakfast, a nervous assistant director walks up to me and tells me that Faye Dunaway wants to see me immediatly. I tell the A.D. I'll see her in a few minutes, after I've finished eating. "No, no . . . she said she wants to see you now." I tell the shakey young man I'll see her when I finish breakfast. I'm working at a lower rate than usual, as a favor to the director/producer, so I tell the AD, I'll see her after I eat. He tells me she's in the make-up trailer, and he warns me, "She's very aggitated." Aggitated?

You see I worked with this woman before, while she was still a shadow of the Academy Award winner she once was ("Chionatown"). She had an industry wide rep as a bitch, and it was will earned. When she was doing big time films in the 70's, she pulled a lot of weight. Now she has been reduced to the lowest budget crap on film, and on a project that would never sell to become a series. I was taking less money to help my friend his pilot. The actress would have to wait for me.

When I finally get to the make-up trailer she was no longer there. She was in her dressing room trailer. As I approach the trailer, I hear a woman shouting, and see pieces of clothing flying out the door and into the street. "What the hell?" I thought.
"I wont wear this sh*t!", she screamed at a young wardrobe attendent. I step up into the room and see the red faced actress throwing a tantrum. I said, "Excuse me, I'm the lighting gaffer, my name is Rick." I put my hand out to shake hers but she doesn't shake my hand. She steps right into my face, looks into my eyes and says, "How to plan on lighting me."

You see, despite the woman's foul nature, she was once a big star. And like Barbara Streisand, she knew she needed special lighting. I remember her in "Bonnie & Clyde", "Chinatown" and the one where she had portrayed Joan Crawford in, "Mommie Dearest". At this moment, she was recreating her Joan Crawford "bitch" role, but we were not acting.

When I say "Special lighting", I mean that her face has major flaws. For one thing, years of drug and alcohol abuse had left deep lines in her face. Only so much could be plastered over with make-up, she need me to hide her inperfections in very soft light and shadows. This is my specialty, I have a rep for being able to light women.

In answer to her question, I calmly said that I planned on lighting her face with the softest source available, a "China Ball". A china ball is simply one of those inexpensive paper lamps that you buy in Chinatown. A simple light bulb mounted inside the paper lamp emits the softest light source on earth, and the light wraps nicely around an actors face, filling the wrinkles instead of shadowing them as a hard light source would do. Of all the expensive high tech lighting units available to me, for a beautiful female close-up, I use a $10 item made in China.

She really proved to me that she knew lighting when I saw her face suddenly relax, after hearing my plan. "I'll light you flat with a china ball and then give your hair a nice back light edge. I'll light you, capture the image on the monitor, and then I'll show you how you look." Her entire mood changed, "Thank God somebody knows what they're doing!" she said. She put her arms around me and said, "We're going to get along just fine." Of course we are, I thought, because if we don't I'm outta here.

As I turn to leave, her face returns to that of a witch as she continued to rag on the poor wardrobe girl.
A couple days later I'm sitting at lunch and her make-up artist approaches me. "I need your help" she tells me.
I say, "OK, what's up?"
"I have to tell her something about her make-up, but I'm afraid, could you tell her for me?", she asks.
"Why me?" I reply.
"Because she hates everybody but you, you are her new best friend." I had to laugh.

I told the make-up artist that she'd have to handle her own problem, to just look in her eyes and speak firmly and honestly and things would be OK. I gave her a pep talk and sent her on her way. A little later, I see the make-up artist sobbing during lunch.
I ask her, "Well, how did things go when you stood up to her?"
The girl glared at me and said, "She told me to go Fu*k myself. Thanks for the help."

About a week into the shoot, Faye Dunaway was sent away, fired from a low budget piece of crap.
How things change in this town. Faye Dunaway was one of the biggest of her era, along with Jane Fonda,etc.
Now she's finished in Hollywood.


-Rick Farris
Rick, for the heck of it I pulled up the film on imdb. Incredibly, it made its premiere at the Cannes Film Fesitval and then went straight to DVD. That film went downhill faster than Lindsey Vonn!!
:lol: :lol: :lol: Yup!
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:
THEHAMMER321 wrote:
kikibalt wrote: Rick, one day the guys from up the hill came down to El Hoyo for a brick fight, I was behind a small mount of dirt, about 3 feet high, I would get up throw a brick, get down for the incoming bricks, the action slowed down, no incoming bricks so I figure they had gone up the hill, I figure wrong, I stood up to see if indeed the guys had gone up the hill and "POW" I get hit on the chest with a brick, I went down on my butt, couldn't get up for a while..... :witzend: :lol:
BTW Frank did Panefilita ever throw you any money or did you have to rely on the lord for your good deed :witzend:
No, no money from Panfelita, have to wait and see what the good Lord has in store for me.... :oo

Frank, at the Lincoln Heights Jail Gym, Johnny Flores had Ali visit the gym in the early 80's.
There are murals painted on the walls of boxers, Art Aragon, Joe Louis and Ali.
Next to Ali's mural, the greatest took a black felt pen and wrote:

"Service to others is the rent we pay for our room in Heaven."

If this is true, your rent is paid up for a dozen lifetimes. :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
THEHAMMER321 wrote: BTW Frank did Panefilita ever throw you any money or did you have to rely on the lord for your good deed :witzend:
No, no money from Panfelita, have to wait and see what the good Lord has in store for me.... :oo

Frank, at the Lincoln Heights Jail Gym, Johnny Flores had Ali visit the gym in the early 80's.
There are murals painted on the walls of boxers, Art Aragon, Joe Louis and Ali.
Next to Ali's mural, the greatest took a black felt pen and wrote:

"Service to others is the rent we pay for our room in Heaven."

If this is true, your rent is paid up for a dozen lifetimes. :TU:
Rick, I hope you're right.... :OhYes:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

Rick Farris wrote:
Expug wrote:Yep, its hard to picture Rick suffering the foolishness of some of these starlets.
Im sure he doesnt put up with too much flack.

Brian, people are surprised when I tell them that one of the worst ever is Sally Field.
I've done five major films with her. She was great on Smokey & The Bandit (my first major feature), but after Burt Reynolds dumped her she turned into a real bitch! We were in the South shooting "Norman Rae" and she was impossible (but won an Oscar). A few years later, we were in Florida shooting "Absence of Malice", and again, a real pain (and again, another Oscar, I think?). However, Paul Newman taught her a lesson. It was great! I'll share it on another occasion. Last year I was working at Disney Studios, where they film "Brothers & Sisters"on a stage next to the one I was working on. I'd see her riding her bike outside the stage. She's 63 today, and is showing her age. They say she has mellowed? I guess she finally got over Burt. :lol:
A number of years ago, I was on a late Delta flight from Atlanta to Orlando right at the start of Spring training. I bet there were only ten people on the plane, and one of them was Ted Williams who was sitting up in first class. He freely signed autographs for everybody on the plane who wanted one.

Anyway, I struck up a conversation with a flight attendant, who told me that he used to regularly work the LA-NYC run in first class. He told me that he got to serve a lot of the stars on those fights. When I asked him who was the nicest, he said, hands down, Elizabeth Taylor. When I asked him who was the worst, he, too, said the answer would surprise me, and he named Lucille Ball and Andy Griffith. Its interesting the differences we hear between a star's public persona and real life. One would think that Lucy and Sally would be lovely ladies and Elizabeth Taylor a bitch . . . but not true.
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Happy Birthday to Connie.... :TU: :bow:
THEHAMMER321
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

kikibalt wrote:Happy Birthday to Connie.... :TU: :bow:
Happy birthday Connie, and many more. :bow:
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

THEHAMMER321 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Happy Birthday to Connie.... :TU: :bow:
Happy birthday Connie, and many more. :bow:
Thanks Paul...

Connie
raylawpc
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

kikibalt wrote:Happy Birthday to Connie.... :TU: :bow:
Many happy returns, Connie!!
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