King of the World
Acclaim for David Remnick’s
KING OF THE WORLD
“Remnick brings to his reading of the Ali scriptures a helpful sense of recent boxing history, inseparable from political history.… It doesn’t read like the case history of the man (though the man is here in living colors, sometimes funny as hell), but of a comic and cosmic superman.”
—Budd Schulberg, The New York Times Book Review
“It may prove to be a classic.… Beautifully reported, compelling.”
—New York Daily News
“Of the many books about Ali, [this] seems the closest to … illuminat[ing] the complexities of the man.”
—The Washington Post Book World
“Deftly told … a clear, well-written portrait.”
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Remnick shines a brilliant light on the myth and the man.”
—Elle
“An engrossing and important book.… The fight scenes are absolutely riveting—written with an excitement and an immediacy that only someone who loves his subject can consistently pull off.”
—National Review
David Remnick
David Remnick was a reporter for The Washington Post for ten years, including four in Moscow. He joined The New Yorker as a writer in 1992 and has been the magazine’s editor since 1998.
Books by David Remnick
Lenin’s Tomb: The Last Days of the Soviet Empire
The Devil Problem and Other True Stories
Resurrection: The Struggle for a New Russia
King of the World
FIRST VINTAGE EBOOKS EDITION, OCTOBER 1999
Copyright © 1998 by David Remnick
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, Penguin Random House companies. Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Random House LLC, New York, in 1998.
Vintage and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for permission to reprint previously published material:
James Baldwin Estate: Excerpt from “The Fight: Patterson vs. Liston” by James Baldwin, originally published in Nugget. Copyright © 1963 by James Baldwin. Copyright renewed. Reprinted by arrangement with the James Baldwin Estate. / Playboy: Excerpt from “The Playboy Interview: Cassius Clay” (October 1964). Copyright © 1964 by Playboy; excerpt from “The Playboy Interview: Muhammad Ali” (November 1975). Copyright © 1975 by Playboy. Reproduced by special permission of Playboy magazine. / Simon and Schuster: Excerpts From Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times by Thomas Hauser. Copyright © 1991 by Thomas Hauser and Muhammad Ali. Reprinted by permission of Simon and Schuster. / Gay Talese: Excerpt From “The Loser” by Gay Talese. Originally published in Esquire magazine. Copyright © 1962 by Gay Talese. Excerpt from “In Defense of Cassius Clay” by Gay Talese. Originally published in Esquire magazine. Copyright © 1966 by Gay Talese. All excerpts reprinted by permission of the author. / The Wylie Agency: Excerpt from “Ten Thousand Words a Minute” by Norman Mailer. Copyright © 1963 by Norman Mailer, first printed in Esquire magazine. Reprinted with the permission of The Wylie Agency.
eBook ISBN: 978-0-8041-7362-9
Frontispiece photograph by Howard L. Bingham
www.vintagebooks.com
Cover design by John Gall
Cover image © Chris Smith/Getty Images
v3.1
For my brother, Richard,
and for my friend Eric Lewis
CONTENTS
Cover
About the Author
Other Books by This Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue: In Michigan
PART ONE
ONE Underground Man
TWO Two Minutes, Six Seconds
THREE Mr. Fury and Mr. Gray
FOUR Stripped
PART TWO
FIVE The Bicycle Thief
SIX Twentieth-Century Exuberance
SEVEN Secrets
EIGHT Hype
PART THREE
NINE The Cross and the Crescent
TEN Bear Hunting
ELEVEN “Eat Your Words!”
TWELVE The Changeling
PART FOUR
THIRTEEN “Save Me, Joe Louis …”
FOURTEEN Gunfire
FIFTEEN The Anchor Punch
SIXTEEN What’s in a Name?
Epilogue: Old Men by the Fire
Notes on Sources and Acknowledgments
PROLOGUE: IN MICHIGAN
Cassius Clay entered the ring in Miami Beach wearing a short white robe, “The Lip” stitched on the back. He was beautiful again. He was fast, sleek, and twenty-two. But, for the first and last time in his life, he was afraid. The ring was crowded with has-beens and would-bes, liege men and pugs. Clay ignored them. He began bouncing on the balls of his feet, shuffling joylessly at first, like a marathon dancer at ten to midnight, but then with more speed, more pleasure. After a few minutes, Sonny Liston, the heavyweight champion of the world, stepped through the ropes and onto the canvas, gingerly, like a man easing himself into a canoe. He wore a hooded robe. His eyes were unworried, and they were blank, the dead eyes of a man who’d never gotten a favor out of life and never given one out. He was not likely to give one to Cassius Clay.
Nearly every sportswriter in the Miami Convention Hall expected Clay to end the night on his back. The young boxing beat writer for The New York Times, Robert Lipsyte, got a call from his editors telling him to map out the route from the arena to the hospital, the better to know the way once Clay ended up there. The odds were seven to one against Clay, and it was almost impossible to find a bookie willing to take a bet. On the morning of the fight, the New York Post ran a column written by Jackie Gleason, the most popular television comedian in the country, that said, “I predict Sonny Liston will win in eighteen seconds of the first round, and my estimate includes the three seconds Blabber Mouth will bring into the ring with him.” Even Clay’s financial backers, the Louisville Sponsoring Group, expected disaster; the group’s lawyer, Gordon Davidson, negotiated hard with Liston’s team, assuming that this could be the young man’s last night in the ring. Davidson hoped only that Clay would emerge “alive and unhurt.”
It was the night of February 25, 1964. Malcolm X, Clay’s guest and mentor, was at ringside, in seat number seven. Jackie Gleason and Sammy Davis were there, and so were the mobsters from Las Vegas, Chicago, and New York. A cloud of cigar smoke drifted through the ring lights. Cassius Clay threw punches into the gray floating haze and waited for the bell.
“SEE THAT? SEE ME?”
Muhammad Ali sat in an overstuffed chair watching himself on the television screen. The voice came in a swallowed whisper and his finger waggled as it pointed toward his younger self, his self preserved on videotape: twenty-two years old, getting warm in his corner, his gloved hands dangling at his hips. Ali lives in a farmhouse in southern Michigan. The rumor has always been that Al Capone owned the farm in the twenties. One of Ali’s dearest friends, his cornerman Drew “Bundini” Brown, had once searched the property hoping to find Capone’s buried treasure. In 1987, while living in a cheap motel on Olympia Avenue in Los Angeles, Bundini fell down a flight of stairs. A maid finally found him, paralyzed, on the floor; he died three weeks later.
Now Ali was whispering again, “See me? You see me?” And there he was, surrounded by his trainer, Angelo Dundee, and Bundini, moon-faced and young and whispering hoodoo inspiration in Ali’s ears: “All night! All night! Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee! Rumble, young man, rumble!”
“That’s
the only time I was ever scared in the ring,” Ali said. “Sonny Liston. First time. First round. Said he was gonna kill me.”
Ali was heavy now. He had the athlete’s disdain for exercise and ate more than was good for him. His beard was gray and his hair was going gray, too, I’d come up to Michigan to see him because I wanted to write about the way he’d created himself in the early sixties, the way a gangly kid from Louisville managed to become one of the most electric of American characters, a molder of his age and a reflection of it. As Cassius Clay, he entered the world of professional boxing at a time when the expectation was that a black fighter would behave himself with absolute deference to white sensibilities, that he would play the noble and grateful warrior in the world of southern Jim Crow and northern hypocrisy. As an athlete, he was supposed to remain aloof from the racial and political upheaval going on around him: the student sit-ins in Nashville in 1960 (the year he won a gold medal in Rome), the Freedom Rides, the march on Washington, and the student protests in Albany, Georgia, and at Ole Miss (as he was making his way up the heavyweight ladder). Clay not only responded to the upheaval, he responded in a way that outraged everyone from white racists to the leaders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He changed his religion and his name, he declared himself free of every mold and expectation. Cassius Clay became Muhammad Ali. Nearly every American now thinks of Ali with misty affection—paradoxically, he was a warrior who came to symbolize love—but that transformation in the popular mind came long after Ali’s period of self-creation in the early sixties, the period covered in this story.
Ali and I talked that afternoon about the three leading heavyweights of the time—Floyd Patterson, Sonny Liston, and Clay himself—and the uncanny way they seemed to mark the political and racial changes going on just as they were fighting one another for the title. In the early sixties, Patterson cast himself as the Good Negro, an approachable and strangely fearful man, a deferential champion of civil rights, integration, and Christian decency. Liston, a veteran of the penitentiary before he came to the ring, accepted the role of the Bad Negro as his lot after he discovered that he would not be permitted any other. For most sportswriters, Liston was monstrous, inexplicable, a Bigger Thomas, a Caliban beyond their reckoning. So this story begins with Patterson and Liston, their lives and their two quick and dramatic fights in 1962 and 1963. Each man, in his own way, represented the world that Ali would encounter and then transcend. Ali would declare himself independent of the stereotypes Patterson was beholden to; he became independent of the mobsters who, for years, had dominated boxing in general and Liston in particular.
“I had to prove you could be a new kind of black man,” Ali told me. “I had to show that to the world.”
At times, Ali was taken with the subject of himself, but sometimes his heavy lids would blink a few times and then stay shut and he would sleep, mid-conversation, for five, ten minutes or so. He used to do that when he was young. Now he did it a lot more often. Sometimes the present world, the life going on all around—the awards dinners, the championship games, the visits to the king of Morocco or the aldermen of Chicago—sometimes it all bored him. He thought about death all the time now, he said. “Do good deeds. Visit hospitals. Judgment Day coming. Wake up and it’s Judgment Day.” Ali prayed five times a day, always with death in mind. “Thinking about after. Thinking about paradise.”
The fight began. In black and white, Cassius Clay came bounding out of his corner and right away started circling the square, dancing, moving around and around the ring, moving in and out, his head twitching side to side, as if freeing himself from a neck crick early in the morning, easy and fluid—and then Liston, a great bull whose shoulders seemed to cut off access to half the ring, lunged with a left jab. Liston missed by two feet. At that moment, Clay hinted not only at what was to come that night in Miami, but at what he was about to introduce to boxing and to sports in general—the marriage of mass and velocity. A big man no longer had to lumber along and slug, he could punch like a heavyweight and move like Ray Robinson.
“It’s sweet, isn’t it?”
Ali smiled. With great effort, he smiled. Parkinson’s is a disease of the nervous system that stiffens the muscles and freezes the face into a stolid mask. Motor control degenerates. Speech degenerates. Some people hallucinate or suffer nightmares. As the disease progresses, even swallowing can become a terrible trial. Parkinson’s comes on the victim erratically. Ali still walked well. He was still powerful in the arms and across the chest; it was obvious, just from shaking his hand, that he still possessed a knockout punch. No, for him the special torture was speech and expression, as if the disease had intended to strike first at what had once pleased him, and pleased (or annoyed) the world, most. He hated the effort that speech now cost him. (“Sometimes you won’t understand me,” he said when we first met. “But that’s okay. I’ll say it again.”) He rarely risked a word in front of a camera. And usually it was an enormous effort to show a smile. I said I knew what he was talking about. My father has Parkinson’s. He can no longer walk more than a few steps, and his speech, depending on the time of day, can be a trial. So I knew. What I couldn’t tell him was that my father is over seventy. His speech is better than Ali’s. But my father had not spent decades getting hit hundreds, thousands of times, by the best heavyweight fighters of his era.
Ali was smiling now as his younger self, Cassius Clay, flicked a nasty left jab into Liston’s brow.
“You watchin’ this? Sooo fast! Sooo pretty!”
Liston seemed hurt and confused. He had no answer to this new species of athlete.
Ali’s fourth wife, Lonnie, came up the stairs and put her hand on Ali’s shoulder. She is a sturdy and handsome woman with a face full of freckles. Lonnie is fifteen years younger than Ali. She grew up near the Clay family in Louisville’s West End. She went to Vanderbilt and used to work as a sales rep for Kraft in Los Angeles. When Ali’s third marriage, to Veronica Porsche, was on its way out, he called her to come be with him. Eventually, Ali and Lonnie married. Lonnie is precisely what Ali needs. She is smart, calm, and loving, and she does not treat Ali like her patient. Besides Ali’s closest friend, the photographer Howard Bingham, Lonnie is probably the one person in his life who has given more than she has taken. In Michigan, Lonnie runs the household and the farm, and when they are on the road, which is more than half the time, she keeps watch over Ali, making sure he has rested enough and taken his medicine. She knows his moods and habits, what he can do and what he can’t. She knows when he is suffering and when he is hiding behind his symptoms to zone out of another event that bores him.
Ali didn’t look up from the television. He reached out and rested his hand on the small of Lonnie’s back.
“Muhammad, you’ve got to sign a couple of pictures, okay?” Lonnie said. She put a couple of eight-by-ten glossies in front of him. Cassius Clay was dancing around the ring, stopping only to needle a tattoo on the meat of Sonny Liston’s face.
“Ali, can you make that ‘to Mark’? M-A-R-K. And ‘to Jim.’ J-I-M. And later on, you’ve got to sign some pictures and some boxing gloves.”
This is how Ali makes much of his living these days. Ali made plenty of money in boxing, but he didn’t keep as much of it as he could have. There were alimonies, hangers-on, the IRS, good times, the Nation of Islam. But the advantage of being the most charismatic sports figure of the century is that even in his reduced state, slow and nearly speechless, he can show up at a banquet or a convention and walk away with a big check. Of all the sixties icons—the Kennedys, King, Malcolm X, John Lennon, Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Mickey Mantle—only a few are left, and Ali is, by far, the most adored among them.
“I sign my name, we eat,” he said sheepishly.
The tape kept rolling. Cassius Clay was in complete control of the fight. There were welts under both of Liston’s eyes. He had aged a decade in fifteen minutes. Ali loved it then and he was loving it now, “People shouted every time
Liston threw a punch,” he whispered. “They was waitin’. But now they can’t believe it. They thought Liston’d knock me into the crowd. Look at me!” Clay danced and jabbed. By the sixth round Clay was a toreador filling a bull’s back with blades.
At the end of the sixth, Liston sat down on his stool and stayed there. He quit. Ali smiled as he watched his younger self dancing around the ring, shouting “I’m the king of the world! King of the world!” and climbing the ring ropes and pointing down at all the sportswriters: “Eat your words! Eat your words!” The next day, Clay would announce that he was not merely the heavyweight champion, but a member of the Nation of Islam. Within a few weeks he would have a new name. And within a couple of years, he would make out of himself, a fast and funny kid from Louisville, Kentucky, one of the most compelling and electric American figures of the age. He became so famous that in his travels around the world Ali could gaze out of airplane windows—down at Lagos and L.A., down at Paris and Madras—and be assured that almost everyone alive knew who he was. He’d fantasize about hitching around the world, knowing that everyone would take him in, feed him, adore him. In those early days, as Cassius Clay, he was often reviled in the press and elsewhere, but with time those voices were barely audible. He hit people for a living, and yet by middle age he would be a symbol not merely of courage, but of love, of decency, even a kind of wisdom.
A cleaning woman walked into the room, put aside her vacuum cleaner, and sat down to watch the screen. Cassius Clay was still screaming “King of the world!”
“Ain’t I pretty!”
“Oh, Ali,” she said, “you had a big mouth then.”
“I know,” he said, smiling. “But wasn’t I pretty? I was twenty … twenty what? Twenty-two. Now I’m fifty-four. Fifty-four.” He said nothing for a minute or so. Then he said, “Time flies. Flies. Flies. It flies away.”