BOBBY FISCHER
G'day folks,
Welcome to the world of a chess player. Robert James "Bobby" Fischer was an American chess Grandmaster and
the eleventh World Chess Champion. Many consider him the greatest chess
player of all time.
At age 13, Fischer won a "brilliancy" that became known as "The Game of
the Century".
Bobby
Fischer was a record-setting chess master who became the youngest player to win
the U.S. Chess Championship at 14, and the first American-born player to win
the World Chess Championship.
“Chess is life.”
—Bobby Fischer
Bobby
Fischer was born on March 9, 1943, in Chicago, Illinois. Fischer first learned
the game of chess at age 6 and eventually became the youngest international
grand master at the age of 15. In 1972, he became the first American-born world
chess champion after defeating Boris Spassky. An eccentric genius, who was believed to have an
I.Q. of 181, Fischer became known for his controversial public remarks in his
later years. He was granted Icelandic citizenship in 2005, following legal
trouble with the United States. He died on January 17, 2008.
Early Life
Robert James Fischer was born in Chicago, Illinois,
on March 9, 1943. Fischer's parents divorced when he was a toddler, and he
began learning chess at the age of 6 after his older sister Joan bought him a
chess set. He continued to hone his skills as a youngster at the Brooklyn Chess
Club and Manhattan Chess Club. Fischer had a strained relationship with his
mother, who supported his chess endeavors, but preferred that he pursue other
areas of interest.
A
brilliant, highly competitive player who lost himself in the game, Fischer
earned a place in the record books at age 14 when he became the youngest player
to win the U.S. Chess Championship. Then in 1958, at 15, he became the youngest
international grand master in history by winning the related tournament in
Portoroz, Yugoslavia (now Slovenia).
During
the early 1960s, Fischer continued to be involved in U.S. and world
championship matches, but was also making a name for himself with his erratic,
paranoid commentary. After having a 20-game winning streak in the early 1970s,
Fischer once again made chess history in 1972 with his defeat of the Soviet
Union's Boris Spassky at the Reykjavik, Iceland world championships, thus
marking the first time an American chess player had won the title. Fischer's
defeat of a Soviet opponent, which became known as the "Match of the
Century," took on iconic proportions in the midst of the Cold War and was
seen as a symbolic victory of democracy over Communism.
Fischer's historic win
also made chess a popular game in the United States.
Controversial Figure
Despite
his global popularity, Fischer's controversial behavior continued to make
headlines. In the mid-1970s he refused to play Anatoly Karpov, the challenger
to his title, and was thus stripped of his championship by the International
Chess Federation. Fischer was reportedly homeless for a time in the Los Angeles
area, becoming involved with a fringe church. He also became known for making
anti-Semitic remarks despite the fact that his mother was Jewish.
On the 20th anniversary of the famed
Fischer/Spassky game, the two met again in 1992 to play a $5 million rematch in
Yugoslavia, although travel to the country by American citizens was illegal at
the time. Fischer continued to live abroad for several years to avoid facing
criminal charges in the U.S., during which time he continued his anti-Semitic
diatribes, and on a radio broadcast he celebrated the 9/11 attacks on the World
Trade Center.
In July
2004, Fischer was detained at a Japanese airport for trying to leave the
country with an invalid passport and he was jailed for several months. He was
eventually granted citizenship by Iceland and moved there in 2005.
Bobby
Fischer died of kidney failure on January 17, 2008, in ReykjavÃk, Iceland.
Miyoko Watai, a Japanese women's chess champion and general secretary of the
Japanese Chess Federation, claimed that she had married Fischer in 2004,
although the validity of their marriage was questioned. Another woman
claimed that she had a daughter with Fischer. His body was exhumed to be DNA
tested, and the claim of paternity was found to be false. In 2011, an Icelandic
court ruled that Watai was Fischer's widow and the sole heir to his
estate.
Books and Films on Fischer's Life
Several
books and films have been made about Fischer's life and career. Fischer himself
published works like Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess (1966) and My 60
Memorable Games (1969), while biographies on the icon include Endgame:
Bobby Fischer's Remarkable Rise and Fall... by Frank Brady (2011), Fischer's
childhood friend. The documentary Bobby Fischer Against the World, directed
by Liz Garbus, was released in 2011.
Pawn
Sacrifice, a film
that focuses on Fischer's chess matches and the psychology of his troubled
genius, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2014
and was released in U.S. theaters a year later. Directed by Edward Zwick, actor
Tobey Maguire played the role of Fischer, with Liev Schreiber portraying Spassky.
Clancy's comment: Can't say I've ever been inspired to play chess, but each to their own.
I'm ...
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