Rudolf Wanderone
Rudolf "Minnesota Fats" Wanderone, Jr. | |
---|---|
Born | January 19, 1913 New York City, New York, U.S. |
Died | January 15, 1996 Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. | (aged 82)
Nationality | American |
Other names | Minnesota Fats New York Fats Broadway Fats Chicago Fats Double-Smart Triple-Smart Fats |
Occupation | Pool hustler |
Rudolf Walter Wanderone, Jr. (January 19, 1913 – January 15, 1996; originally spelled Wanderon)[1][2] was an American professional pocket billiards player, also known as "Minnesota Fats". Though he never won a major pool tournament as "Fats", he was perhaps the most publicly recognized pool player in the United States – not only as a player, but also as an entertainer.[3] Wanderone was inducted in 1984 into the Billiard Congress of America Hall of Fame for his decades-long public promotion of pool.
Wanderone began playing at a young age in New York City. As a teenager, he became a traveling pool hustler. Later in his 30s, he moved to southern Illinois where he met and married his first wife, Evelyn. During World War II, he hustled servicemen in Norfolk, Virginia. With the end of the war, Wanderone returned to Illinois and entered semi-retirement.
Wanderone adopted the nickname "Minnesota Fats" from a character in the 1961 film The Hustler, claiming that the character was based upon him. He parlayed the association with the film into his own book deals and television appearances, including a series of matches with rival Willie Mosconi. Later in life, Wanderone divorced Evelyn and moved to Nashville, Tennessee where he married his second wife, Theresa, with whom he remained until his death.
Early life and career
Rudolf Walter Wanderon, Jr. was born in New York City to Rosa and Rudolf Wanderon, Swiss immigrants.[2][4] He was born in 1913[5] but sometimes hinted he was born earlier, even as early as 1900.[6] The surname was later changed to Wanderone.
Known as "Rudy" to friends and family,[3] Wanderone started playing pool as a child while living in Washington Heights, Manhattan. In 1923, he traveled to Europe with his father where he received training from German balkline billiards champion, Erich Hagenlocher. His first prominent match was in 1926 when he competed against former nine-ball champion, "Cowboy" Weston (Wanderone won, handily).[7] Wanderone left school in the eighth grade,[6] and became a traveling pool hustler, spending much of the 1920s playing at a pool hall called Cranfield's in New York City. It was there that Wanderone received his first nickname after beating another hustler known as "Smart Henry". The intensity of their competition led Wanderone's friend, Titanic Thompson, to dub Wanderone "Double-Smart".[8] By the mid-1930s, during the Great Depression, Wanderone had become a manager of a pool hall, owned by a friend, in Anacostia, southeast Washington, D.C.[9] He had acquired more notoriety and nicknames, including "Triple-Smart Fats", "New York Fats", "Broadway Fats", and "Chicago Fats",[10] attracting action from other hustlers, including the then unknown Luther "Wimpy" Lassiter.[11]
In 1941, Wanderone and friend, Jimmy Castras, arrived in a region of southern Illinois known as Little Egypt (Little Egypt was later recognized as a major hustling center on a fast-track to televised tournament play). Wanderone settled in Du Quoin, Illinois where he continued hustling.[12] Eventually he met Evelyn Inez Graff; they married two months to the day later, on May 7, 1941.[13][14] Following their marriage, the Wanderones settled in Dowell, Illinois.
In 1942, the couple moved to Norfolk, Virginia. Norfolk had become a key mustering point for US soldiers, as well as a shipbuilding center. The growing population led to an enormous interest in gambling; and Wanderone, in partnership with fellow hustler Lassiter, quickly recognized the financial possibilities.[15] The action "dried up" soon though, following World War II, and the Wanderones returned to Little Egypt.[16] For a period throughout the 1950s, Wanderone entered semi-retirement, making only occasional hustling trips to New York City.
"Minnesota Fats"
In 1961, the film version of Walter Tevis's novel The Hustler was released. The film tells the story of a pool shark named "Fast Eddie" Felson and his quest to beat the greatest pool player in America, "Minnesota Fats". World Champion Willie Mosconi served as a technical advisor and trick shot stunt man for the film. During a promotional interview, Mosconi stated that the character of Minnesota Fats was based on Wanderone. Wanderone almost immediately dropped his "New York Fats" nickname, adopted the name "Minnesota Fats" and began spreading the story that the character was based on him. Tevis denied this for the rest of his life.[17]
Wanderone's notoriety as "Minnesota Fats" led to a job as executive vice-president of billiard table manufacturer Rozel Industries, playing exhibition matches and giving demonstrations. Rozel, in 1965, published Wanderone's first book: Minnesota "Fats" Book of Billiards. On January 17 of that year, Wanderone appeared on the television game show What's My Line, successfully stumping the panel.[18]
In 1966, he wrote his autobiography, The Bank Shot, and Other Great Robberies, with Sports Illustrated journalist, Tom Fox.[14] Wanderone's first TV game show, Minnesota Fats Hustles the Pros, debuted in 1967, featuring "Fats" playing against other pro players.[19] In 1967 he completed and published an instructional paperback, Minnesota Fats on Pool, which was reprinted through 1976 in large-quantity editions, then reissued as a hardcover in 1993, and remains to this day commonly available.[20]
The next year, on January 24, 1968, Wanderone was a guest on The Joey Bishop Show.[21] By 1970, Celebrity Billiards with Minnesota Fats, another short-lived TV game show series, featured Wanderone playing against celebrity guests such as Sid Caesar.[22][23] In a feature film, The Player (produced in December 1970, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana), Wanderone played himself as "Minnesota Fats" and was featured prominently on the promotional poster.[24][25] The movie was written and directed by Thomas DeMartini, also starred pool pro Jack Colavita, and had a very limited release in 1971 by International Cinema.[26] That same year Wanderone was a guest on both the Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (September 21, 1971), on which he hustled Carson out of US$1,[27] and the British David Frost Show (October 13, 1971).[21] His fame as "Fats" had already made it difficult for Wanderone to hustle effectively, so he relied more and more on exhibition games for income.[24]
By 1979, Wanderone was well-known enough to be playing himself as a celebrity guest star on a Season 2 episode of the popular TV detective drama Vega$. Titled "the Usurper",[21][28] the episode featured "Fats" and pro Jimmy Mataya playing one another in a game of pool. In 1980, while visiting a one-mile stretch of St. Louis, Wanderone had to double his order of autographed pictures after he was stopped thirty-seven times.[29]
Rivalry with Willie Mosconi
Wanderone enjoyed promoting a feud with world champion Mosconi over how to present pool – either as a rough-and-tumble gambling game (Wanderone) or as a genteel pastime and art form (Mosconi).[30] Mosconi's widow, Flora, has said of the rivalry, "My husband hated Minnesota Fats because he felt that [Wanderone] was always hurting the image of the game instead of helping it."[31] Wanderone would state smugly, "I may have 'given away' a few games to deserving competitors, but I have never lost a real money game since I was old enough to spell 'Weeli Mesconi'."[32] The two played on Valentine's Day 1978 in a televised match on ABC's Wide World of Sports. With almost 11 million viewers, the game was the second-highest rated episode of the show for that year, behind only the Muhammad Ali vs. Leon Spinks rematch. The game was held at New York's Waldorf Astoria Hotel, and was announced by Howard Cosell.[33] Although Wanderone lost the game, he won the audience with his banter, and with his joking manner. Mosconi on the other hand was reportedly perceived as cold.[33][34]
"Fats" lost a number of rematches to Mosconi in the following years.[35] However, in the nationally-broadcast Resorts International Shoot-Out of October 1984 – Wanderone's last notable TV appearance – he finally turned the tables on his rival. The event began with a trick shot competition between four players: Wanderone, Mosconi, Steve Mizerak, and Allen Hopkins. Next, Hopkins and Fats played against Mosconi and Mizerak in doubles seven-ball, then nine-ball. Wanderone and Mosconi ultimately played a one-on-one game of seven-ball; Wanderone won the match. During the exhibition, a very quiet and genteel Mosconi blocked Wanderone's rough-and-tumble banter by wearing ear plugs; yet that failed to stop Wanderone from putting on a show for his fans.[36] In an interview, Wanderone was asked about his strategy to defeat Mosconi, and replied that he had thought to himself, "I'll make [the 7 ball] on the break and end it...then I'll help carry Willie out on a stretcher."[37]
Later life
The Billiard Congress of America in 1984 inducted Wanderone into its Hall of Fame for "Meritorious Service" in recognition of his contributions to helping popularize the game of pool.[38] Also in 1984, Wanderone left his wife, Evelyn; they divorced a year later.[39]
Wanderone moved into the Hermitage Hotel in downtown Nashville, Tennessee in 1985, remaining there for the next several years. In 1992, while undergoing surgery for a knee injury, he suffered a massive heart attack, but survived. In 1993, he met and married his second wife, Theresa Ward Bell. He lived in Bell's Nashville house until his death on January 15, 1996, just four days shy of his 83rd birthday[5][40] (although some sources, including the New York Times, erroneously placed his death on January 18).[6]
Wanderone had no known children. Singer Etta James said that she believed he was her father, having been told this by her mother, as well as by others who knew her mother and whom James describes as "people who were there and should know".[41] However, there is no published evidence of such a relationship. James and Wanderone are only known to have met once, in 1987.[42] In her autobiography, Rage to Survive, James recounted their meeting, writing that Wanderone neither confirmed nor denied his paternity. According to James, he told her that he did not recall the details of his life at the time of her conception well enough to know whether he could have been the father.[41]
The epitaph on his tombstone reads: "Beat every living creature on Earth. 'St. Peter, rack 'em up. – Fats'".[1][27]
Personal character
Wanderone was known for ostentation, self-aggrandizement, tall tales, fast-talk, and entertaining banter. He was even publicly recognized by famed boaster Muhammad Ali as better at boasting.[27] His critical biographer, R. A. Dyer, documents that Wanderone completely fabricated a "here-by-fate" tale about a car wreck which brought the player to Little Egypt; it was a tale that Wanderone encouraged to spread and further embellished in his autobiography, to lend an air of the mystical to his public persona.[43] Wanderone also made false claims about beating Willie Mosconi so frequently that Mosconi filed a slander lawsuit (to little avail).[44] According to biographer Dyer, "Fats" was notorious for non-stop chatter on subjects about which he knew little, or stories about himself.[43] At the beginning of his first TV match against Mosconi, Wanderone claimed "I've never lost [a game] for money in my life; beat everyone that ever lived."[33] Yet, as Dyer concedes, "Pool hustlers are, by nature, liars. And by this measure, Minnesota Fats was just a very, very good pool hustler."[9]
Wanderone was a lover of animals, and was reported to have had dozens of cats and dogs simultaneously, and to have devoted a lot of time to finding homes for strays. "I'm crazy about every living creature," he wrote in The Bank Shot.[14][27] "It doesn't matter what it happens to be. I even love insects; in fact, I wouldn't swat a fly or a mosquito for a whole barrel of gold."
Remembered well for his turns of phrase and puns, Wanderone once wrote, "If you happened to drive from Mobile to Dowell [Illinois] with a carload of pool hustlers, you would get bit so hard and so often that you would need a malaria vaccine and a new bankroll as well", a reference not only to the area's notorious mosquitos but also the predatory nature of hustlers.[14][27] Wanderone is remembered for saying on his way out a pool room door, "Boys, the only difference between me and everybody else is that everybody else drives around in a Volkswagen, and Minnesota Fats drives around in a Duesenberg."[45] Wanderone would go anywhere to help the game, and he was a crowd-pleaser.[46]
The flamboyant Wanderone once toured the country in a colorful Lincoln limousine – his elongated nickname painted along the side panels in translucent paint and changing colors as it moved with the reflections from the sun: "Minnesota Fats, King of Pool".[47]
Minnesota Fats also owned a black 1980 Cadillac Fleetwood Limousine. It was in the Nashville auto museum until the museum closed due to lack of profit. It was one of several Cadillac Limousines owned by Minnesota Fats. The current location of the car is in Paducah KY.[48] Wanderone was notorious for his spontaneous wit. When he was named the "uncrowned king" of pool because he never got actively involved in tournament circles (due to being too busy hustling), his reply: "You judge a king by the size of his wallet and his palace. You can leave the crown in the toilet."[49]
See also
- Minnesota Fats: Pool Legend (a video game featuring a virtual version of Wanderone)
- Steve "Romford Slim" Davis
William Mosconi never claimed that the character "Minnesota Fats" in the movie "The Hustler" was based on Wanderone. Years later, author Tevis told Flora Mosconi, Willie's wife, that the character had been loosely based on Willie Mosconi[citation needed].
Notes
- ^ a b "'Rudolf W. Wanderon' Waymark". Waymarking.com. Seattle, WA: Groundspeak. January 26, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-24. Includes three photos of his grave marker; provides birth and death dates, and legal surname spelling.
- ^ a b 1920 United States Federal Census ("Rudolph Wanderon" entry in New York City (the only one there) ed.). Washington, D.C.: US Census Bureau. 1920. Retrieved 2008-08-19. Provides surname spelling without the terminal "e", name with "Jr.", age of 7 as of 1920, mother's name as "Rosa" or "Rose", New York City residence. Copy is poor; data columns verified by comparison to legible blank 1920 census form. Census-taker's handwriting poor as well, but "e" clearly absent. Note: Full details of search results, including scan of document, only available to site subscribers, but original document on file in US National Archives.
- ^ a b Dyer, R. A. (September 2008). "Fats Family Breakthrough". Billiards Digest ("Untold Stories" column ed.). Chicago, IL: Luby Publishing: 46–9.
{{cite journal}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ Dyer (2003), p. 9
- ^ a b "U.S. Social Security Death Index search 322-42-2372". MyFamily.com Inc. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
- ^ a b c Thomas (Jr.), Robert McG. (January 19, 1996). "Minnesota Fats, a Real Hustler With a Pool Cue, Is Dead". New York Times, ibid. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 13
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 16
- ^ a b Dyer (2003), p. 35
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 13, 122–23
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 34–7
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 52
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 61
- ^ a b c d "Minnesota Fats" (2006) [1966]. The Bank Shot and Other Great Robberies: The Uncrowned Champion of Pocket Billiards Describes His Game and How It's Played (rev. ed.). Guilford, CT: Lyons Pr. ISBN 1592287018.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Dyer (2003), p. 71
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 88
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 122–28
- ^ "What's My Line? episode #747". TV.com. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
- ^ "1967, May–June". Broadcasting. 72. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan: 70. 1993.
- ^ "Fats, Minnesota" (1967). Minnesota Fats on Pool: The Complete Book for the Pool Enthusiast Including the How to of Shotmaking and All Game Rules. Billiard Library Co. ISBN 9990395950.
- ^ a b c Rudolf Wanderone Jr. at IMDb
- ^ Dyer, R. A. (2005). Billiards: The Official Rules and Records Book. Globe Pequot. p. 154. ISBN 1592287441.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Celebrity Billiards at IMDb
- ^ a b "[untitled column]". Time. New York, NY: Time Warner. December 28, 1970. Retrieved 2008-05-25.
- ^ The Player promotional poster (1971). USA: International Cinema. See illustration in article.
- ^ Mitchell, Darren (2002–2006 [copyright date]). "Billiard Movie Gallery". BilliardBoys.com. Seattle, WA: Billiard Boys LLC. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
{{cite web}}
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(help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) - ^ a b c d e "True Animal Stories by Pool Hustler Rudolph Wanderone". EgyptianAAA.org. Egyptian Area Agency on Aging, Inc. [a reference to the Little Egypt area of Illinois, not Egypt]. 1996–2008 [copyright dates]. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|year=
(help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: year (link) - ^ "Vega$: "The Usurper" (1979)" at IMDb
- ^ "photocaption". National Billiard News: 22. 1980.
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ignored (help) - ^ Dyer, R. A. (2007). The Hustler & The Champ: Willie Mosconi, Minnesota Fats, and the Rivalry that Defined Pool. Lyons Pr. ISBN 1592288839.
- ^ "Willie Mosconi, 80, Who Ruled the World of Billiards with Style". New York Times ("Obituaries" section ed.). New York, NY: New York Times Company. 1993-09-18. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
- ^ "Minnesota Fats vs. Everybody". National Billiards News: 22. April 1980.
- ^ a b c Dyer (2003), p. 212
- ^ Dyer, R. A. "TV Fiasco Spawned Mosconi–Fats Duel". BilliardsDigest.com. Luby Publishing, op. cit. Retrieved 2008-04-29.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Dyer (2003), p. 123
- ^ "Stars of Resort Shoot-Out". National Billiards News: 21. 1984.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Shootout on the Boardwalk". National Billiards News: 11. 1984.
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:|access-date=
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ignored (help) - ^ "BCA Hall of Fame Inductees". BCA-Pool.com. Billiard Congress of America. Archived from the original on January 7, 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-02.
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 219
- ^ Dyer (2003), pp. 220–21
- ^ a b James, Etta and David Ritz. Rage to Survive, (New York: Villard Books, 1995) ISBN 0679423281
- ^ Quan, Denise (September 19, 2002). "A Life Singing the Blues". CNN.com. CNN. Retrieved 2008-04-21.
- ^ a b Dyer (2003), pp. 49–56
- ^ Dyer (2003), p. 122
- ^ "Fatty". InsidePOOL Magazine: 8. April 2006.
- ^ "PPPA World Tournament". National Billiard News: 8. September 1976.
- ^ "Louisville Open Cages". Washington Post. 1980-05-02. pp. (fee-based retrieval). Retrieved 2008-11-16.
- ^ Holly Edwards (April 8, 2003). "Chance To Buy The Stars' Cars Lures Fans To Sale". The Tennessean. Retrieved Feb. 13, 2009.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ Stutz, Ellen (February 1982). "Legends of Pocket Billiard Stars Tournament". National Billiard News: 11.
References
- Dyer, R. A. (2003) Hustler Days: Minnesota Fats, Wimpy Lassiter, Jersey Red, and America's Great Age of Pool. New York, MJF Books. ISBN 156731807X.
External links