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stand.And if he could beat Frazier in the rematch we would have | stand.And if he could beat Frazier in the rematch we would have | ||
at last a national hero who was hero of the world as well. (''King'' 92–92) | at last a national hero who was hero of the world as well. (''King'' 92–92) | ||
Ali was a national hero, for his moral and physical courage.His heroismhad | |||
fascinated Mailer for years. In a short piece, “An Appreciation of Cassius | |||
Clay,” he wrote: “[I] don’t want to get started writing aboutMuhammad Ali, | |||
because I could go on for a book” (''Errands'' 264). He went on to condemn | |||
Ali’s exclusion from boxing because of his conscientious objection to the | |||
Vietnam War and concluded: “Therefore we are all deprived of an intimate | |||
spectacle which was taking place in public—the forging of a professional artist | |||
of extraordinary dimensions...he was bringing a revolution to the theory | |||
of boxing....” (264).And when I asked him,“... now that it’s pretty well documented that Ali has been damaged by boxing, do you love the sport as | |||
much as you did?”Mailer responded, “Well, I don’t think I love it as much as I used to. One reason is because he’s out of it” (Leeds 1). | |||
All of this of course points directly to Mailer’s most significant work on boxing, ''The Fight''. Suffice it to say that Mailer’s obsessive preoccupation with | |||
existentialism and Manichean polarities, his newly found fascination with | |||
African mysticism and the concept of ''N’golo'' (or force), his vision of | |||
Muhammad Ali as artist and hero, find their serendipitous confluence here. | |||
As in virtually all of his work after 1968,Mailer treats a factual situation, | |||
and the people involved, in terms of highly subjective and fascinating digressions. | |||
Thus, in addition to an in-depth account of the fight and the circumstances | |||
preceding and following it, the reader is offered observations on | |||
African religion and politics, allusions to Hemingway, Hunter Thompson, | |||
and George Plimpton, and further candid insights into Mailer himself: the | |||
status of his projected big novel, his compulsion to walk parapets, his hatred | |||
of jogging.Most amusing, however, is the self-deprecating anecdote in which | |||
Mailer, returning late at night along a jungle path on which he had been | |||
doing road work with Ali, hears a lion roar.He proceeds through a series of | |||
serio-comic reactions, culminating in the fantasy that he is about to be eaten | |||
by “Hemingway’s own lion”waiting all these years for a fit substitute, and the | |||
final recognition that the lion he hears is probably caged in the city’s zoo ~91– | |||
92!. This announces, I believe, an attractive new modesty in Mailer. | |||
Such modesty pervades “The Best Move Lies Close to the Worst,” in | |||
whichMailer recounts his adventures and misadventures in boxing in a consistently | |||
self-deprecating manner. Boxing with José Torres is described thus | |||
(''Time 1048''): | |||
He was impossible to hit and that was an. interesting experience you | |||
felt as if you were sharing the ring with a puma.... Over ten | |||
years of boxing with José Torres I was able to catch him with a | |||
good right hand lead twice, and the first occasion was an event. | |||
He ran around the ring with his arms high in triumph, crying | |||
out, “He hit me with a right—he hit me with a right!” unconscionably | |||
proud that day of his pupil. | |||
The story, in a mildly oversimplified form, has circulated for years that | |||
Mailer gave Torres writing lessons in return for boxing lessons. Actually, | |||
B A R R Y H. L E E D S { 389 | |||
Mailer first began to learn boxing under the tutelage of the father of Adele | |||
Morales, his second wife. In the “Sixth Advertisement for Myself,”Mailer | |||
states: | |||
I was doing some boxing now.My father-in-law had been a professional; | |||
he was always putting on the gloves with me.... I was | |||
in nice shape, and my senses were alert. (''Advertisements'' 331) | |||
Most interesting in the later collaboration are the parallels that Torres and | |||
Mailer found between the two occupations.When asked if there is a difference | |||
in the discipline required for writing and boxing ~in an interview with | |||
Jessica Blue and LegsMcNeil for Details!, Torres responded,“No fucking difference” | |||
(''Details'', nd., 86). But earlier in the same interview, he tells of how | |||
Mailer “told me that writing was about truth.... He knew that boxing was | |||
the opposite. It’s about cheating and deceiving and lying, and he said that it’s | |||
a very hard transition.... You’re cheating the other guy by feinting with a left | |||
and cheating with a jab” (''Details'' 85). | |||
Another regular at the Gramercy Gym in the 1980s was Sal Cetrano,who | |||
is mentioned ~though not by name! in “The Best Move.” In a hitherto | |||
unpublished interview with J. Michael Lennon (dated May 24, 2007), | |||
Cetrano disarmingly recounts a series of anecdotes regarding his experiences | |||
with Mailer, Torres, and Ryan O’Neal. | |||
Cetrano first met Mailer by accident on Broadway in 1980, and the first | |||
thing they talked about was the Paret/Griffith fight. Subsequently, Cetrano | |||
wroteMailer a letter which was reciprocated by a postcard that simply said, | |||
“Be at the Gramercy Gymat 10:30AM Saturday.” Sal had been in the Golden | |||
Gloves as a kid, but he“weighed about 145 pounds and everyone seemed bigger.” | |||
His solution to this problem, since “I had been a distance runner as a | |||
kid,” was to keep opponents at arm’s length. Of the relationship between | |||
Mailer and Torres, he describes it as one of “power to power: Norman was a | |||
king of literature; Jose a king of boxing.” | |||
When asked byMichael Lennon of the parallels betweenMailer as boxer | |||
and as writer, Cetrano responds ~with deprecating laughter as risking a cliché! | |||
that he’s “existential” in both:“He does things to their fullest.” Although | |||
Norman had a “wonderful teacher in Jose,” he’s not a fast boxer.“He wades | |||
in and clubs you to death.” This suggestion of Mailer’s legendary fearlessness will echo for anyone who knows his life and work, in every act or stunt | |||
as well as every piece of prose. |
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