SINATRA PHOTOGRAPHS
FIGHT OF THE CENTURY
G'day folks,
It was billed as “the Fight of the Century”.
Muhammad Ali, who had been stripped of his World Heavyweight Championship and suspended from boxing for three years after refusing to serve in the Vietnam war, took on Joe Frazier, the man who had taken his title, at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Both fighters were undefeated and the contest was broadcast live to an
international television audience. It was also attended by a galaxy of
stars including Woody Allen, Diana Ross, Dustin Hoffman, Burt Lancaster, Barbra Streisand, Sammy Davis Jr, Hugh Hefner, author Norman Mailer and – doing it his way – Frank Sinatra.
Sinatra, who listed photography as a lifelong hobby, had secured a deal
(and with it a much sought-after ringside seat) with Life magazine to
take pictures of the fight. How he achieved this is uncertain. It was
rumoured that even with his connections and influence he was unable to
secure a place in the front row. So he approached Ralph Graves, the
managing editor of Life, to work for the magazine as a guest
photographer.
Graves insisted later: “Sinatra was always going to be at the fight and
was always planning on bringing a camera with him. For our pictures of
the action, we were relying on the magazine pool photographers at
ringside. But it never hurts to have a horseshoe in your glove.”
Four of Sinatra’s pictures, including the front cover shot, were used by Life to illustrate the story of the fight, written by Norman Mailer.
But not to everyone’s approval. Robert Kelley, a former Life staff
photographer, wrote a scathing letter to the magazine, saying: “Sirs:
I'm so mad I could chew nails and spit tacks. I've been a professional
news photographer 34 years (about 18 on Life’s staff) and what irks me
is your cover. It was obviously selected because Frank Sinatra
took it, rather than for any photographic excellence. In fact, it was a
bad picture. What millions of Life readers wanted to see was Frazier's
fist firmly implanted against Muhammad Ali's mouth.”
Sinatra said later: "I got some good pictures, but I kept watching
Frazier putting his head too far out for Ali to punch it. He was defying
Ali, and I said to the newspaper guy next to me: 'He may win, but if he
keeps that up, he's going to the hospital, taking all those punches.'”
He was right. Frazier did win but had to receive hospital treatment over
the following month suffering from hypertension and kidney problems.
Ali was also taken to hospital straight after the fight for treatment on
his badly swollen jaw.
Clancy's comment: Ah, back in the day!
I'm ...
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