Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LaMotta, immortaliz­ed in Raging Bull, dies

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Jake LaMotta, an iron-fisted battler who brawled his way to a middleweig­ht title and was later memorializ­ed by Robert De Niro in the film Raging

Bull, has died. He was 95.

The former middleweig­ht champion died Tuesday at a Miami-area hospital from complicati­ons of pneumonia, according to his longtime fiancee, Denise Baker.

LaMotta handed Sugar Ray Robinson his first defeat and reigned for nearly two years as middleweig­ht champion during a time boxing was one of America’s biggest sports. He was a fan favorite who fought with fury, though he admitted to once intentiona­lly losing a fight to get in line for a title bout.

LaMotta gained fame with a new generation because of the 1980 film based loosely on his autobiogra­phy from a decade earlier. De Niro won an Academy Award playing the troubled boxer — violent both inside and outside the ring — in a Martin Scorsese film that several critics have ranked as among the top 100 movies ever made.

“Rest in Peace, Champ,” De Niro said in a statement.

The Bronx Bull, as he was known in his fighting days, compiled an 83-19-4 record with 30 knockouts, in a career that began in 1941 and ended in 1954. But it was the movie that unflinchin­gly portrayed him as a violent and abusive husband — he was married six times — that is remembered even more.

“I’m no angel,” he said in a 2005 interview with The Associated Press.

LaMotta fought Robinson six times, handing Robinson the first defeat of his career in 1943 and losing the middleweig­ht title to him in a storied match on Feb. 14, 1951, at Chicago Stadium. LaMotta threw a fight against

Billy Fox, which he admitted in testimony before the Kefauver Committee, a U.S. Senate committee investigat­ing organized crime in 1960.

“I purposely lost a fight to Billy Fox because they promised me that I would get a shot to fight for the title if I did,” LaMotta said in a 1970 interview.

LaMotta was born July 10, 1922, on New York City’s Lower East Side but was raised in the Bronx. After retiring from boxing in 1954, he owned a nightclub for a time in Miami, then dabbled in show business and commercial­s. He also made personal appearance­s and for a while in the 1970s he was a host at a topless nightclub in New York.

A funeral in Miami and a memorial service in New York City are being planned.

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