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REEL
LIFE: "ROCKY"
By Jeff
MerronESPN
Page 2 :: 5/29/02

Rocky, which won
an Oscar for Best Picture in 1976, has often been lauded
for its gritty realism, both in and out of the ring. The
movie showed Philadelphia at the depth of bleak
decrepitude during the 1970s. It also displayed an
ambitious fighter's harsh training and, from up close,
the brutality of the sport.
But still, most of Rocky
was pure invention. Which parts were real and which
weren't? Read on . . .
In
Reel Life:
Rocky
Balboa is a 30-year-old club fighter.
In Real Life:
Sylvester Stallone was
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character of "Rocky Balboa" was partially inspired by former
heavyweight Chuck Wepner. |
inspired by Chuck Wepner, a
35-year-old club fighter who also happened to be the No.
8-ranked heavyweight in the world. Stallone had watched
on closed-circuit as Wepner, nicknamed the "Bayonne
Bleeder," went 15 rounds in a title bout against
Muhammad Ali on March 24, 1975, in Cleveland. Wepner was
a heavy underdog, and his fight with Ali in Cleveland
was considered such a mismatch that Wepner appeared on a
Sports Illustrated cover with the headline "Boxing's
Strange Encounter."
Mark Kram, who previewed
the fight for SI, characterized the 6-foot-5, 220-pound
Wepner as "a wide, long slab of heart and dreams
who is one of the last club fighters, the kind who gives
you what he has, who turns a ring into a red-wine sea
and keeps coming on for more."
In Reel Life: Rocky's
apartment looks awful - it's dark and small and grungy,
and the only view is of a brick wall.
In Real Life: The
apartment was a "real" flophouse in Los
Angeles, and on their DVD commentaries both Talia Shire
and Stallone comment on the setting. Stallone says that
it really smelled terrible (which inspired his ad-libbed
"It stinks in here" when he yells at Mickey
later in the film). Shire says that there really were
bugs on the floor. The brick wall was placed outside the
window to obscure a palm tree.
In Reel Life:
Rocky's
friend, Paulie (played by Burt Young) is an angry loser,
an overweight, balding, disheveled drunk who despises
his fate - working in a meat locker.
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| Adrian
stuck with Rocky despite the repugnent smell of
his apartment. |
In Real Life: In some
ways, Young was the easiest actor to cast in the movie.
Before becoming an actor, at 29, he was a boxer and
carpet layer. In a 1986 People magazine profile of
Young, Jack Kelley wrote, "Young attacks the heavy
bag in his upstairs gym, displaying a sledgehammer power
that suggests Stallone wouldn't last a round with
him."
However, he wasn't nearly
as large as Paulie - in his DVD commentary, he says he
put on layers and layers of clothes. "I made him
arthritic," Young adds. "Made a big, wide
gait. Put turpentine on my hands so that they'd be tight
to remind me I was arthritic. I don't like sweet drinks,
so I'd put vermouth on my neck, so I'd feel
disgusted."
In Reel Life:
At
night in Rocky's neighborhood, guys (including Frank
Stallone Jr., Stallone's brother) stand around singing
doo-wop.
In Real Life:
Doo-wop, which is often sung a cappella (without
instruments), sprang up in inner cities in the
late-1940s and '50s - Philadelphia was a notable
hotbed. It evolved from jazz and blues. "American
Bandstand," a local TV show, starring Dick Clark,
went national in 1957 and frequently featured doo-wop
groups. Key elements are intricate harmonies and
nonsense words ("doo-be-doo-be," "sh-boom,
sh-boom") for rhythm. The first doo-wop song to
make it big was "Earth Angel," by the
Penguins, in 1954. Until the Beatles came along 10 years
later, doo-wop music -- from superstar groups like the
Four Seasons, Dion and the Belmonts, and the Five Satins
-- was one of the dominant strains of rock 'n' roll.
In Reel Life:
Rocky
characterizes himself as dumb. "I think we make a
real sharp coupla coconuts," he tells Adrian.
"I'm dumb an' you're shy."
In Real Life:
Stallone didn't do well in school, and when he was 16 he
took a three-day battery of aptitude tests. "My
mother was told, 'Your son is suited to run a sorting
machine or to be an assistant electrician, primarily in
the area of elevator operations,'" Stallone told
Playboy in 1978. "I wound up feeling like an
imbecile."
In Reel Life:
Rocky
works as a collector for a loan shark, Gazzo (Joe
Spinell).
In Real Life:
Spinell, who died from a heart attack at 52 in New York,
made a career out of playing tough guys and bad guys,
notably hit man Willie Cicci in The Godfather. According to his bio at the
Internet
Movie Database, "His best (or worst) or most
disgusting role is probably the one (for which) he is
best remembered; in a rare starring role, his character
of Frank Zito in Maniac (1980) is a serial killer that
kills women and uses their scalps to dress up female
mannequins he keeps in his apartment."
"Maniac," which was co-written by Spinell, is
so disturbingly violent that it has been banned in the
U.K. and Germany.
In Reel Life:
During
a scene while he's talking with Rocky, Gazzo pulls out
an inhaler mid-sentence and uses it.
In Real Life: That
wasn't written into the script. Spinell had asthma and
really had to use the inhaler, and barely missed a beat
while doing so, which is why it was left in the film.
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scenes of Rocky running the streets of
Philadelphia benefited from the new innovation
known as Steadicam. |
In Reel Life:
Rocky
trains by running through the streets of Philadelphia.
He runs through abandoned lots next to bleak railroad
yards, along the Schuylkill River, and through the
Italian Market early in the morning. He also, famously,
runs up the steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum.
In Real Life: Most
of the exterior shots in Rocky were done on
location in Philadelphia - primarily in South Philly.
The running scenes and the Creed-Balboa bout benefited,
cinematographically-speaking, from a new invention
called the Steadicam, which kept the moving camera
stable enough so that images would remain smooth. This
was the first movie to be filmed with the Steadicam, and
Garrett Brown, who worked the camera for Rocky, won a special Oscar for his invention
in 1978.
In Rocky III,
Balboa is honored by the city, which places an 8-foot-6
bronze statue atop the steps. Designed by Denver artist
Thomas A. Schomberg, the statue became a matter of
dispute in real life - Stallone offered it as a
permanent contribution to the Philadelphia Museum of
Art, but it turned him down. There was a huge public
debate in Philadelphia as to the statue's fate -- one
Philadelphia Daily News reader suggested: "Put it
near the Liberty Bell." Another wrote, "Dump
it in the Schuylkill." As part of a deal to
premiere Rocky III in Philly, though, the
city finally agreed to display the statue at the top of
the steps for a few weeks, before moving it to a
permanent home outside The Spectrum.
In Reel Life: Rocky
can barely make it up the steps of the Art Museum when
he begins training, but weeks later he's able to run up
easily and celebrate at the top.
In Real Life: The
two stair-running scenes were filmed within an hour of
each other, the first (where Rocky struggles) just
before dawn and the second shortly after.
In Reel Life:
Rocky
eats with Gazzo, who gives him $500 for training.
In Real Life: That
scene was filmed in one of Philadelphia's most famous
eateries, Pat's King of Steaks. If you want to pay a
visit, it's at the intersection of 9th, Wharton and
Passyunk Ave. near the Italian Market in South Philly.
Angelo Dundee, Ali's
manager, who grew up in South Philly, says the scene at
Pat's added to the film's realism. In 1977, Dundee told
the Washington Post, "The credibility of the Rocky
movie was perfect. You remember Pat's Steakhouse in the
movie? I worked there - Pat Olivieri's - as a kid. I
made sandwiches."
In Reel Life: Mickey
tells Rocky he shouldn't fool around with Adrian (Talia
Shire). "Women weaken legs!" he says.
In Real Life: It's
a fact - legs of countless boys and men have wobbled
around pretty women. But what Mickey's really saying is
"don't have sex." It's lousy advice. As Casey
Stengel and others have pointed out, it's the pursuit
of sex that causes problems for athletes. There's no
solid evidence that good old-fashioned intercourse has
any impact on athletic performance.
In Reel Life: Adrian
works in a pet shop.
In Real Life: The
pet shop scenes were among the few interiors that were
shot in Philadelphia (the rest were shot in Los
Angeles.). It's a real pet store that's still around -
J&M Tropical Fish. "Used to be these Rocky
tours and limos would stop in front," Joseph Marks,
the store's co-owner, told the Philadelphia Inquirer in
2001. "People still come here, from France, the
Netherlands, California, Utah, they still want to see
the pet shop where Rocky was filmed." If you're
inclined to pay a visit, the shop is in Kensington at
Front and Susquehanna. Bring your nose plug. "We
were in some of the most bizarre locations," says
Shire in her DVD commentary. "That pet shop was the
most pungent, to say the least."
But don't bother looking
for "Mighty Mick's Gym," the exterior of which
was across the street from the pet shop. At the time of
the filming, that was a vacant building, and the
interior gym scenes were filmed in L.A.
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| Stallone
and Weathers rehearsed for more than 35 hours to
choreograph the fight scenes. |
In Reel Life:
Rocky
develops a fondness for Butkus, a big bull mastiff in
the pet shop.
In Real Life:
Butkus was Sylvester Stallone's dog; Stallone took the
145-pound Butkus on the three-day train trip from L.A.
to Philadelphia for the exterior filming of the film.
In Reel Life: Paulie
flies into a rage, because Adrian won't go out with
Rocky on Thanksgiving. She says she can't go out,
because she has a turkey in the oven. Paulie responds by
tossing the turkey out the back door, but he manages to
hang on to a turkey leg to munch on.
In Real Life: In
his DVD commentary, Young said the turkey scene caused
some problems. "We had one turkey, only one turkey.
There were two guys out there, catching the turkey. Each
take, they'd re-spike the leg on it. That's why I didn't
eat that much."
In Reel Life:
Rocky and Adrian go ice skating
on Thanksgiving. The rink is closed, but Rocky pays the
ice rink attendant $10 for 10 minutes of ice time.
Adrian skates, but Rocky walks and jogs around the rink
in street shoes.
In Real Life: The
filmmakers say that originally there were supposed to be
300 extras skating along with Rocky and Adrian, but they
couldn't afford to pay the extras. So they rewrote the
scene to explain why they'd be skating alone. Stallone
didn't know how to skate (Shire couldn't skate too well
either, obviously), which is why he's in street shoes.
In Reel Life: Rocky
asks Mickey (Burgess Meredith) why he has given his
locker to another fighter, Dipper. Mickey replies,
"Dipper's a climber - you're a tomato."
In Real Life:
Before the Ali bout, Wepner's manager, Al Braverman,
explained the boxing hierarchy and where Wepner stood in
it. The hierarchy: 1) name fighters; 2) club fighters,
who "don't know how to box well but are in there
fighting;" 3) tomato cans ("maybe box a
little, punch a little"); 4) dogs (fighters without
guts); 5) kyoodles ("a hound, a mutt, a pig
even"). Wepner? "Maybe there's a lot of club
in him, but he's much more. He's just pure mean."
Dundee told the
Washington Post, "The gym scene was perfect. I
liked the way they showed the attention given to the
star of the gym, Big (sic) Dipper, the boxer they gave
Rocky's locker. You don't take a boxer's locker away
from him; that hurts."
In Reel Life:
Apollo
Creed (Carl Weathers) is world heavyweight champ, and
he's scheduled a title bout for Jan. 1, 1976, in
Philadelphia - a fight touted in a promotional poster
as the "Bicentennial Super Battle." But five
weeks before the bout, his opponent, Mac Lee Green,
cancels because of a hand injury - a "severely
cracked third metacarpal in his left hand." Other
serious contenders are unavailable. "I've contacted
all the ranked contenders, and they all say the same
thing: five weeks isn't enough time to get into
shape," says Jergens (Thayer David), the fight
promoter, in one of the several scenes that take place
in his office.
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| The
confident Apollo Creed had a lot of Muhammad Ali
in him. |
Creed comes up with the idea
of fighting an unknown, and says, "Apollo Creed, on
January 1st, gives a local underdog fighter an
opportunity. A snow-white underdog, and I'm gonna put
his face on this poster with me."
In Real Life: Don
King was the promoter of the Ali-Wepner fight, and,
wrote Kram in SI, King said "that Ali is an
equal-opportunity employer, and that it is about time a
white man got a break. 'I am for the heavy-laden and
downtrodden.' " But Wepner disputed the
"underdog" hype. "Ali wanted to fight
somebody white who was ranked. Well, I'm ranked No. 8,
and I'm about as white as you can get. What's he going
to do? Fight Jerry Quarry again?"
Jergens' office was
actually the office of Rocky producer Irwin
Winkler. When filming in the direction of the office
windows, they put a fake Philadelphia skyline in the
background.
Most boxers - including
Rocky Graziano - agreed that five weeks wasn't nearly
enough training time. "The training for such a big
fight was too short in 'Rocky,' " Graziano told the
Washington Post in 1977. "He came up too fast; I
had 121 fights."
In Reel Life:
Rocky
is a lefty. He tells Adrian that he's a southpaw, and
explains the term's etymology to her: "You know
where southpaw comes from? I'll tell ya. A long time ago
there was this guy, maybe a couple a hundred years ago,
he was fighting around, I think it was around
Philadelphia, and his arm - he was left-handed - and his
arm was facing toward New Jersey, you see? And that's
south. So then naturally they call him south paw. You
see? South paw, south Jersey, South Camden, south paw.
You know what I mean?"
In Real Life:
Rocky's explanation includes a grain of truth. According
to the "New Dickson's Baseball Dictionary,"
the term was coined in the late 1800s to describe
left-handed pitchers, who, facing west in most
ballparks, had their left arms hanging on the south side
of the ballpark. A sportswriter, Harry Grayson,
investigated this theory in 1951, and determined that
most ballparks did, indeed, place home plate on the west
side of the diamond, on the principle that this would
keep the sun out of hitters' eyes during day games. The
term has been applied to other sports, including boxing,
and obviously came into general use. The term "northpaw"
never caught on, though.
In Reel Life:
When
Mickey's trying to convince Rocky to let him be his
manager, he says he almost had his shot, but he had the
bad luck to fight his big fight on the wrong day.
"You should have seen me when I knocked Guinea
Russo out of the ring - out of the dammed ring. That's
September the 14th, 1923, and it was the same night that
Firpo knocks Dempsey out of the ring."
In Real Life: On
Sept. 14, 1923, 82,000 fight fans jammed New York's Polo
Grounds to watch heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey face
off against Argentinean Luis Angel Firpo. Dempsey was a
3-1 favorite, but his manager, Doc Kearns, worried
before the bout that the "big bum could get
lucky."
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was a virtual unknown before "Rocky"
hit theaters in 1976. |
Dempsey pummeled Firpo, but
somehow, in the midst of a brutal beating, Firpo managed
to land a right with such force that it propelled
Dempsey out of the ring head first. He fell into a group
of reporters in the first row, and they helped him back
into the ring. That was illegal, but the ref didn't stop
the fight.
Dempsey, completely
disoriented, managed to come out for Round 2. Within a
minute he knocked Firpo down for the eighth and ninth
times. The ninth time was a charm -- after that one,
Firpo didn't get up.
After the fight, Firpo
accused Dempsey of violating their pre-fight agreement
to go to a neutral corner after a knockdown. And many
speculated that without the help of the sportswriters
during Round 1, Dempsey wouldn't have been able to get
back into the ring before the end of the 10 count.
In Reel Life:
All
Creed seems to care about before the fight is promotion.
He doesn't take Rocky seriously.
In Real Life:
"I'm getting paid $1.5 million to fight this pug,
and it's fool's gold," said Ali before the Wepner
bout. "This sucker is a cinch."
In Reel Life:
Rocky's
pro record coming into the title bout is 44-20.
In Real Life:
Wepner was undefeated in 65 amateur bouts, and had a
30-9-2 professional record going into the Ali fight.
In Reel Life: Creed
comes out before the fight dressed up as George
Washington. As he's carried out, he throws money to the
crowd. The announcers say that he's throwing money just
like Washington threw a dollar across the Delaware
River.
In Real Life:
Washington didn't throw a dollar across the Delaware.
The "real" myth is that he threw a
dollar-sized piece of slate across the Rappahannock
River near Fredericksburg, Va. According to the official
Mount Vernon website, there's no solid evidence that he
tossed the slate, either. But "historians concede
that the feat is possible. At the site of the Washington
family homestead, the Rappahannock measures only 250
feet across, an impressive but not impossible throwing
distance."
In Reel Life:
The
fight looks spontaneous.
In Real Life:
Stallone and Carl Weathers, who played linebacker for
the Oakland Raiders in 1970 and 1971, sparred for months
before filming the fight. The fight was choreographed to
look spontaneous, because Stallone thought that
most boxing movies included scenes that looked staged.
Stallone wrote out a punch-by-punch account, which the
two actors followed. Weathers got the part after Ken
Norton turned it down.
In Reel Life:
Both
boxers are bruised, battered, and bloody through almost
the entire fight.
In Real Life: Most
of that is the magic of makeup, but Stallone and
Weathers did improvise a bit, and, wrote Stallone in
"The Official Rocky
Scrapbook," they were both
in real pain during the day the fight was filmed,
because of the damaged inflicted by the
"Casanova" gloves they wore. Casanova gloves,
explained Stallone, are illegal in the U.S., but the
filmmakers used them "because of their sleek
appearance."
In Reel Life:
During
the fight, Adrian doesn't watch - she stays in a waiting
room. Toward the end of the match, she glimpses the
action, but turns away.
In Real Life:
Phyllis Wepner told SI that she couldn't watch her
husband fight: "I'm there, but I won't watch the
fights. I can tell you what kind of shoes everybody has
on in my row, because that's where my eyes are while
he's fighting."
In Reel Life:
Rocky
lands a lot of good punches, and knocks Creed down.
In Real Life:
Wepner knocked Ali down in the ninth round with a wide
right hand to the chest, in what some say was his only
good punch of the fight. Later in the fight, Ali said,
Wepner stepped on his foot and pushed him down, but the
referee, Tony Perez, called it an official knockdown.
In Reel Life:
Rocky
says he wants to "go the distance" with Creed,
meaning last through all 15 rounds. He succeeds in doing
this.
In Real Life:
Stallone expressed admiration for Wepner for "going
the distance," but knew Wepner fell just short of
the feat, with the ref calling a TKO with 19 seconds
left in the 15th round. Wepner had been pounded by Ali,
but was praised by the champ. "There's not another
human being in the world that can go 15 rounds like
that," said Ali after the fight. According to the
AP's account, "For 14 rounds, and most of the 15th,
the big, awkward, barroom brawler from New Jersey stood
toe to toe with the world titleholder, taking Ali's best
shots without buckling."
Stallone told Playboy
that he watched the Ali-Wepner fight at the Wiltern
Theater in LA: "I'm sitting there, looking around
at the audience, and a drama is unfolding. Wepner
is a trial horse who's supposed to last maybe three
rounds, so Ali can go to the showers early, but he's
hanging in there. And then, all of a sudden, Ali falls
down - he tripped - but now the place is going crazy!
Guys' eyes are turning up white; I mean, the crowd is
going nuts. And here comes the last round, and
Wepner finally loses on a TKO. I said to myself, 'That's
drama. Now the only thing I've got to do is get a
character to that point and I've got my story.' "
In Reel Life:
Before
the 15th round, Rocky's swollen right eye is sliced open
so that he can see. This procedure is done by his
"cut man," Al Salvani, who was introduced
earlier in the film.
In Real Life: Al
Salvani (also known by the alternative spelling Silvani)
trained Floyd Patterson and Rocky Graziano, was Frank
Sinatra's bodyguard, and made a mini-career as an
advisor, assistant director. and sometime-actor in
boxing films. He helped train Elvis Presley for the 1962
movie Kid Galahad, taught Barbra Streisand
how to box on the set of Funny Girl (there
was no boxing in that film - the lessons were just for
fun), was a technical advisor for Raging Bull, and appeared as a referee in the 1981 O.J.
Simpson TV movie Goldie and the Boxer Go to Hollywood. He also appeared in
Rocky
II and Rocky III.
In Reel Life:
The
fight goes 15 rounds.
In Real Life: The
fight was filmed in one day, with Weathers and Stallone
going backward - they started with Round 15, and the
last round shot was Round 1. The biggest practical
reason for this was makeup; both actors were heavily
made up to look crushed at the end of the fight, and as
filming progressed, makeup came off.
In Reel Life:
Rocky
is proud of himself for going the distance, and the
movie ends as he and Adrian hug.
In Real Life:
Stallone wrote the first draft of Rocky in
three or four days of caffeine-induced frenzy.
Originally, the plot was very different from the final
version - for example, Mickey was a nasty racist who
shouted things, said Stallone, like, "Kill him! I
want you to kill him! Beat him to death!" in the
Creed fight, Adrian was a Bette Midler type, and Apollo
Creed, in one early rewrite, was Jamaican. There was a
great deal of profanity, and Rocky ended up throwing the
fight against Creed. With his loser's share, he bought a
pet shop for himself and Adrian.
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