“A man’s hatred of his own condition no more helps to improve it than hatred of other people tends to improve them.” —Spanish-born American philosopher, essayist and poet George Santayana (1863-1952), Reason in Common Sense (Vol. 1 of “The Life of Reason”) (1905)
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Friday, April 26, 2024
This Day in Yankee History (Peterson, Chambliss Swapped in ‘Friday Night Massacre’)
Apr. 26, 1974—In a multi-player trade derided at the time as “The Friday Night Massacre,” the New York Yankees sent a former All-Star pitcher who had deeply embarrassed the club to the Cleveland Indians for a quiet first baseman who helped return them to glory after 12 years away from the postseason.
The reports two weeks ago that Fritz Peterson
died last October reminded me of the scandal that engulfed the pitcher a
half-century ago—then, after a few minutes’ reflection, of the subsequent trade
involving him that became one of the building blocks in the revived Yankee
dynasty of the Seventies.
If you thought you saw a pun in the headline for this
post, you are correct. The Bronx Bombers
had sat stony and red-faced when veteran lefty Peterson and younger starter
Mike Kekich admitted in separate March 1973 press conferences that they had
swapped wives and children the prior summer.
Three months after the scandal exploded, the Yankees
had no compunctions in unloading Kekich, who had seldom mastered the requisite
control to go with his fastball. But it was another matter for Peterson, who
won 20 games in 1970 and, if he could overcome a back injury incurred in spring
training in 1974, could have returned to form.
In a 2015 interview for the “Bleeding Yankee Blue” blog, Peterson recalled that he had told Yankee President and General Manager
Gabe Paul that he wouldn’t mind if he ended up being traded, as long as it
wasn’t to the Philadelphia Phillies or the Cleveland Indians. The executive
assured him he had nothing to worry about.
So much for promises, especially those made in
baseball’s pre-free agent era.
Paul wound up dealing Peterson to the Indians along
with righthanded starter Steve Kline and relievers Fred Beene and Tom Buskey.
In return, the Yankees received righthanders Cecil Upshaw and Dick Tidrow, as
well as the trade's linchpin, Chris Chambliss (pictured).
(Perhaps Paul's only concession to Peterson's feelings was that the trade occurred one month after Cleveland bid goodbye to Kekich, which meant that any clubhouse awkwardness with the onetime great friends would be eliminated.)
No matter how much about Peterson’s role in the
wife-swapping scandal may have angered the Yankee brass, he remained a favorite
in the clubhouse, which valued his on-field pinpoint control and delighted in
his off-field pranks.
Most of all, teammates like Thurman Munson, Bobby
Murcer, and Mel Stottlemyre wondered publicly about the wisdom of getting rid
of 40% of the pitching staff during a transition year for the team—its first
since 1964 without manager Ralph Houk.
With Richard Nixon’s abrupt firing of Watergate
special prosecutor Archibald Cox still on the minds of many, the farewell to
Peterson and the three other Yankee pitchers inevitably became known as “The
Friday Night Massacre.”
The 1971 American League Rookie of the Year, Chambliss had followed up with a combined .281 his next two seasons.
But, with a subpar
.243 BA with the Yankees in that first season after the trade—and with Buskey
performing creditably coming out of the Indians’ bullpen—it looked like the Yankees
had gotten the worst of the transaction. There was no telling how long he’d
last with impulsive owner George Steinbrenner calling the shots.
Within a couple of years, all these concerns would
fall by the wayside. If the trade wasn’t as lopsided as, say, the St. Louis
Cardinals receiving Lou Brock for Ernie Broglio, it still, in the long run, decisively
benefited the Yankees.
After two seasons with the Indians, Peterson would be
traded to Texas in 1976, then retire. The careers of Kline and Beene would also
flame out.
As their stars fell, the long-term advantage of the
deal for the Yankees became more apparent. Although Upshaw would be traded
after his 1-5 season, Tidrow—whose nickname “Dirt” mirrored his blue-collar
grit—became a dependable long reliever and spot starter.
Chambliss was even better, rebounding in 1975 with a
.304 batting average. Through the end of the 1970s, he proved a model of consistency,
with his BA ranging from .274 to .293.
Although Reggie Jackson, the slugger who replaced
Chambliss in the cleanup role in 1977, may have been the self-styled “straw
that stirs the drink” for the Yankees, Chambliss helped cement the team being
cobbled together by Paul.
In the field, Chambliss was smooth, earning a Gold Glove in 1978. At the plate, if he did not hit prodigious home runs in batches, he rarely slumped, laying off bad pitches enough to wear down opposing pitchers and easing the way for the rest of the lineup. (He would successfully preach the same gospel of plate discipline as the Yankees’ hitting coach in the 1990s.)
In a clubhouse that became increasingly dominated by large egos, Chambliss presented
an unassuming but necessary contrast.
But this quietest of men became known for one
particularly loud at bat: his dramatic, ninth-inning walk-off homer in the 1976
American League Championship Series off Kansas City Royals reliever Mark
Littell—sending the Yankees on to the World Series for the first time since
1964.
When Paul pulled off another trade that brought rookie
second baseman Willie Randolph to the Yankees from the Pittsburgh Pirates, the
Bombers had solidified the right side of their infield with intelligent, consistent
players who, by rarely making mistakes, contributed mightily to their late
Seventies dynasty.
Quote of the Day (Carl Sandburg, on Poetry As ‘The Opening and Closing of a Door’)
“Poetry is the opening and closing of a door, leaving those who look through to guess about what is seen during a moment.”—Pulitzer Prize-winning American poet and biographer Carl Sandburg (1878-1967), Good Morning America (1928)
TV Quote of the Day (‘I Love Lucy,” After Lucy’s First Driving Lesson)
[Ricky Ricardo staggers away, dazed, after he and Lucy return from her first driving lesson.]
Ethel Mertz
[played by Vivian Vance]: “What's the matter with him?”
Lucy Ricardo
[played by Lucille Ball]: “Oh, he got mad at me while I was driving
through the Holland Tunnel.”
Ethel: “Ricky let you
drive through the Holland Tunnel?”
Lucy: “Well, he didn't
mean to. I got caught in the stream of traffic and I couldn't stop.”
Ethel: “But you drove
all the way through the Holland Tunnel!”
Lucy: “Halfway
through.”
Ethel: “What do you
mean, ‘halfway?’”
Lucy: “Well, Ricky was
late for rehearsal, and I saw an opportunity to... How was I supposed to know
there wasn't room to make a U-turn?”
Ethel [astonished]:
“You made a U-turn in the Holland Tunnel? Oh, brother, that must-a been
somethin'.”
Lucy: “Yeah. The
policeman said the cars were backed up all the way to East Orange, New Jersey.”—I
Love Lucy, Season 4, Episode 11, “Lucy Learns to Drive,” original
air date Jan 3, 1955, teleplay by Jess Oppenheimer, Madelyn Davis, and Bob
Carroll Jr., directed by William Asher
Lucille Ball
died 35 years ago today at age 77. She made two other long-running series in
the 1960s and 1970s, The Lucy Show and Here’s Lucy, but they were
really just variations on I Love Lucy.
Lucy Ricardo might have been a madcap redhead, but the
woman who created her was unbelievably shrewd—as seen in the fact that she
became the first woman to own her own studio as head of Desilu Productions. To
her we owe not just her own much-imitated sitcom, but a sci-fi series she gave
the go-ahead to put into production: Star Trek.
Starting out in RKO Pictures in the late 1930s, Ball
envied the deference with which everyone at the studio regarded Maureen O’Hara.
At that point in her career, Ball had to content herself with being known as
“Queen of the B Movies.”
With her move to television in the early 1950s with
husband Desi Arnaz—and her huge success with their joint vehicle, I Love
Lucy—Ball acquired a new nickname: “The First Lady of Television.”
Thursday, April 25, 2024
Quote of the Day (James Bryant Conant, on Diversity of Opinion in Higher Ed)
“Diversity of opinion is not only basic for the welfare of our universities but for that of the entire nation.” —American chemist, educator and diplomat James Bryant Conant (1893-1978), “Education in a Divided World” (1949), in American Higher Education Transformed, 1940–2005: Documenting the National Discourse, edited by Wilson Smith and Thomas Bender (2008)
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Flashback, April 1924: Merger Sends MGM Roaring
A century ago this month, what became the most structured—and successful—studio in Hollywood’s Golden Age was formed with the merger of Metro Pictures Corp., Goldwyn Pictures and Louis B. Mayer Productions.
Though theater chain magnate Marcus Loew orchestrated
the deal, the prime mover for the next 27 years in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer—MGM for
short—turned out to be a Ukrainian emigrant who not only celebrated American
values onscreen, but even pushed his actual birthdate up to July 4 to coincide
with that of his adopted country.
In his office in Culver City, studio head Louis B. Mayer may not have been the most hated movie mogul (that dishonor probably
goes to Jack L. Warner), but he was the most paternalistic—an executive you
wanted on your side and dreaded to cross.
Those in “L.B.”’s lair might find themselves subject
to shouting (MGM president Nicholas Schenck, who, upon Loew’s death, dealt with
the theater side of the business from New York), groping (young musical star
Judy Garland, who, according to notes for an unpublished memoir, claimed she finally summoned the nerve to tell him to stop), and crying (matinee idol
Robert Taylor, who, after having his boss cry on his shoulders, gave up his
demand for more money).
Directors might fume at rushed production schedules,
favorite scenes left on the cutting-room floor, or being replaced
mid-production.
But all of these C-suite theatrics produced as many as
50 films a year, including Gone With the Wind, all-star vehicles like
the Oscar-winning Grand Hotel, beloved musicals such as The Wizard of
Oz —and, in 1937, in the midst of the Great Depression, a princely yearly
salary of $1.3 million for Mayer.
The roaring lion appearing at the start of its films
may have been MGM’s most instantly recognizable branding element, but its most
important asset was its stable of actors.
“More Stars Than There Are in Heaven,” the studio’s
advertising slogan went—a boast that held true from the silent era (e.g., Greta
Garbo, Jack Gilbert, Buster Keaton, Lon Chaney) well into the coming of sound
(Clark Gable, Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow, Gene Kelly).
The Culver City complex was a true movie
factory—“scattered over six separate lots, cramped and shedded and separated
from one another by public thoroughfares,” with Lot 1 given over to stages dressing rooms, and offices, according to James Curtis’ 2011 biography of the studio’s most respected actor, Spencer Tracy.
Here, stars were manufactured virtually from whole
cloth (Lana Turner, Ava Gardner), shrewdly redesigned when found to be
imperfect elsewhere (Tracy, Wallace Beery, and Marie Dressler); or imported
from Europe (Garbo and Hedy Lamarr).
It all stemmed from Mayer’s frequently expressed
belief that the movies were the only business where the assets walked out the
gate every night, and Thalberg’s understanding that “without stars, a company
is in the position of starting over every year.”
And, long before Hollywood went endlessly to the well
with the “Star Wars” and Marvel series, MGM milked the commercial value of
multi-film franchises, including:
*The 12 Tarzan movies made by Johnny Weissmuller from
1932 to 1948;
*The six “Thin Man” movies starring William Powell and
Myrna Loy;
*The nine Doctor Kildare movies made by Lew Ayres;
* Mickey Rooney’s 15 “Andy Hardy” films from 1937 to
1946;
*The 10 “Maisie” comedies with Ann Sothern as a
lovable Brooklyn showgirl; and
* The “aqua-musicals” of “America’s Mermaid,” Esther
Williams.
Several Mayer lieutenants were crucial in churning out
all this product:
* Irving Thalberg: Nicknamed
the “Boy Wonder” by the press and “The Last Tycoon” by F. Scott Fitzgerald (who
fictionalized him as the title character of his posthumously published
Hollywood novel), he served as production head of the new studio and a kind of
surrogate son to Mayer, before dying of pneumonia, after a dozen years of
overwork as the epitome of a Hollywood creative producer, at age 37.
* Eddie Mannix:
Installed
as a studio snitch by Nicholas Schenck, he soon went over to Mayer’s side, where,
as general manager, he became LB’s indispensable “fixer”—soothing insecure
stars, along with squelching innumerable scandals involving pregnancies, fatal
auto accidents, abortions, a precursor of Harvey Weinstein's sexual harassment crimes—and, some have argued, the murder of “Three Stooges”
director Ted Healy.
* Howard Strickling: Head
of publicity, the studio exec in charge of communication was, ironically,
afflicted with a communication handicap of his own—stuttering. But, 24/7, he
controlled access to the industry’s greatest assembly of talent, rewarding
reporters who played ball and punishing those who didn’t.
* Howard Dietz: Head
of advertising and publicity at the studio for 30 years, he not only came up
with its famous lion (an idea he borrowed from the mascot of his alma mater, Columbia
University), but also pursued a simultaneous sideline as the lyricist partner
of Arthur Schwartz.
The landmark 1948 Supreme Court case United States v. Paramount effectively ended the quarter century of studio dominance by
outlawing the block-booking system of selling multiple films to a theater as a
unit and by recommending the breakup of studio-theater monopolies.
Three years later, Nicholas Schenck finally resolved his multi-decade clash with Mayer by persuading the studio’s board of directors to replace the mogul with writer-producer Dore Schary, who would suffer the same fate as his predecessor five years later.
By the 1960s, MGM’s onetime ability to achieve profit margins even with handsomely mounted productions had devolved into boom-or-bust blockbusters that left it vulnerable to takeovers. It’s now a subsidiary of Amazon.
Quote of the Day (Christopher Morley, on Conversation Among Three Versus Two)
“Very often conversations are better among three than between two, for the reason that then one of the trio is always, unconsciously, acting as umpire, interposing fair play, recalling wandering wits to the nub of the argument, seeing that the aggressiveness of one does no foul to the reticence of another. Talk in twos may, alas! fall into speaker and listener: talk in threes rarely does so.” — American journalist, novelist, essayist and poet Christopher Morley (1890-1957), “What Men Live By,” in Mince Pie (1919)