Showing posts with label Jake LaMotta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jake LaMotta. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

The day I met Jake LaMotta, 'greatest middleweight that ever lived', at his favourite restaurant in New York



The day I met Jake LaMotta, 'greatest middleweight that ever lived', at his favourite restaurant in New York

It’s late September 1997 and Mark Collings, rookie boxing reporter, blags an interview with his hero for Esquire magazine


Mark Collings
Sunday 21 May 2017


I met Jake LaMotta at his favourite restaurant, La Maganette, on the corner of 50th and 3rd in Manhattan, two weeks after the death of Princess Diana in 1997. It was one of those molten hot late summer New York days, but I had a wool suit and tie on. Beforehand I’d read a quote from LaMotta that said, “If you are somebody, you dress like somebody,” so I had decided to wear my only suit. I was drinking ice-cold Coca-Cola, trying to stop myself from sweating, when Jake arrived. “He’s just a baby!” he said to his son Jake Jr, gesturing towards me. I was 25, but looked younger than my age.

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Jake LaMotta / A flawed character alchemised by Raging Bull into a mythical figure

Jake LaMotta


Jake LaMotta: a flawed character alchemised by Raging Bull into a mythical figure

 

LaMotta was immortalised on screen by Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, but their brilliant 1980 movie remade boxing history in the process


Peter Bradshaw

Thursday 21 September 2017


“Now, sometimes, at night, when I think back, I feel like I’m looking at an old black-and-white movie of myself. Why it should be black-and-white, I don’t know, but it is. Not a good movie, either, jerky, with gaps in it, a string of poorly lit sequences, some of them with no beginning and no end.”

Jake LaMotta, former boxer whose life was subject of Raging Bull, dies aged 95

Jake LaMotta


Jake LaMotta, former boxer whose life was subject of Raging Bull, dies aged 95


Bryan Armen Graham

Wed 20 September 2017
 

Jake LaMotta, the Bronx boxer who captured the world middleweight championship in 1949 and whose turbulent life was later the subject of the 1980 film Raging Bull, died on Tuesday because of complications from pneumonia. He was 95.