Gorilla jones story a virtual knockout - mae west fan pleased to learnabout akron box

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by SLAKKA, Aug 4, 2009.


  1. SLAKKA

    SLAKKA Boxing Addict Full Member

    3,829
    25
    Jun 4, 2009
    GORILLA JONES STORY A VIRTUAL KNOCKOUT - MAE WEST FAN PLEASED TO LEARN
    ABOUT AKRON BOXER'S ROLE IN LIFE OF ACTRESS
    Akron Beacon Journal (OH) - Monday, June 29, 2009
    Author: Mark J. Price, Beacon Journal staff writer

    History never sleeps.

    Here are some interesting updates from the world of This Place, This
    Time:
    GOING WEST
    Hollywood musician Ram Diaz, 47, called to say he loved our story about
    Akron boxer William '' Gorilla '' Jones (1906-1982), a former
    middleweight champion who was posthumously inducted into the
    International Boxing Hall of Fame this month.
    Diaz is a big fan of screen legend Mae West (1892-1980), who employed
    Jones as a bodyguard and chauffeur after he retired from the ring. Jones
    and West were close companions for 40 years and might have been
    romantically involved.
    ''I didn't know much about Gorilla Jones because she was so secretive
    about her men,'' Diaz said. ''Mae West didn't kiss and tell. She might
    have given you a clue here and there.''
    He believes such a clue can be found in West's 1932 movie Night After
    Night, in which George Raft plays an ex-boxer. It was the same year that
    Jones won the middleweight title.
    In one scene, West remarks: ''Hey, Gorilla . Come here.''
    ''She was given full right to rewrite her scenes in that movie,'' he
    said. ''So I know for a fact that she put that name in there.''
    A lifelong collector of memorabilia, Diaz has been enamored with West
    since he saw My Little Chickadee on TV as a boy in the 1960s. He lives
    in a building near the late star's Ravenswood apartment complex.
    ''I can actually see her bedroom window from my bedroom window,'' he
    said.
    Since 1988, Diaz has thrown a Hollywood birthday party in West's honor
    every Aug. 17 on the roof of Gramercy Tower in Hancock Park and in his
    top-floor apartment. The potluck dinner, which is open to the public,
    includes some of West's inner circle of friends, including Kevin Thomas,
    Tim Malachosky and Chris Basinger.
    Not all guests are acquainted with West's work, though.
    ''There's a lot of people that really don't know much about her, but
    they get educated when they arrive,'' Diaz said.
    He praised the Beacon Journal article for teaching him something new.
    ''That's the fascinating thing with Miss West,'' he said. ''There's
    always something new.''
    BEAN COUNTER
    Our recent story about the Summit County Infirmary in West Akron sparked
    a childhood memory for Marjorie Straight, 84, of Cuyahoga Falls.
    She remembers when she and her sister used to ride in the car with their
    parents in Munroe Falls and see the Summit County Home, which replaced
    the infirmary in 1919.
    ''In the summer, every day there were residents sitting outside in the
    front lawn on benches and the picnic table,'' she recalled.
    Elderly residents with canes would stroll along the road. She called it
    ''a sight to behold.''
    ''There was a man sitting there with two jars ? one with navy beans. . .
    . Every car that passed, he would keep count by putting a bean from one
    jar into the other. . . .
    ''We enjoyed seeing him sitting there counting.''
    Straight said she hopes the Beacon Journal will continue to ''tell us
    more of the history of Akron, long forgotten or unknown to people.''
    Memo: This Place, This Time / Local History / Mark J. Price is a Beacon
    Journal copy editor. He can be reached at 330-996-3850 or send e-mail to
    This content is protected
    .
     
  2. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,622
    27,309
    Feb 15, 2006
    Mae West also empleyed Chalky Wright as a chaufer as cover for an afair.

    Her other aledged conquests include James L Corbett, Max Baer and Joe Louis.

    Quite an impresive heavyweight resume.