Santa Fe New Mexican

Boxer ‘Raging Bull’ in and out of ring

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would get a title shot). He also fought four draws. He captured the middleweig­ht championsh­ip in June 1949, stopping the titleholde­r, Marcel Cerdan, at Briggs Stadium in Detroit, and was knocked down only once in his 106 fights.

Scorsese made his film long after LaMotta had squandered his money — he said he made $1 million in the ring — and had gone through a series of stormy marriages, been sent to prison once more and ballooned into obesity.

“I would think that Jake thinks it’s a movie about himself,” Scorsese told The New York Times shortly after Raging Bull was released. “But those who think it’s a boxing picture would be out of their minds. It’s brutal, sure, but it’s a brutality that could take place not only in the boxing ring but in the bedroom or in an office. Jake is an elemental man.”

LaMotta boxed more than 1,000 rounds with De Niro, tutoring him for a role that brought him the Oscar for best actor. Cathy Moriarty, in her profession­al acting debut, played LaMotta’s second wife, Vikki, a beautiful blonde who endured a chaotic marriage, and was nominated for a supporting actress Oscar.

LaMotta had mixed feelings about the film. “I kind of look bad in it,” he told The Times. “Then I realized it was true. That’s the way it was. I was a nogood bastard. It’s not the way I am now, but the way I was then.”

Giacobbe LaMotta was born on the Lower East Side of Manhattan on July 10, 1922, one of five children.

He recalled that his father, a Sicilian immigrant who peddled fruits and vegetables, frequently beat his wife, a daughter of Italian immigrants, and their children.

The family moved to Philadelph­ia and then to the Bronx, where they lived in a rat-infested tenement. LaMotta attacked bullying schoolmate­s with an ice pick, and he beat a neighborho­od bookie into unconsciou­sness with a lead pipe while robbing him.

He emerged as a leading middleweig­ht in the early 1940s, having been rejected from World War II military service because a childhood mastoid operation had affected his hearing.

In February 1943, he dealt Robinson the first loss of his career in Robinson’s 41st fight, winning a 10-round decision after knocking him through the ropes. Robinson won their other five fights, but LaMotta also defeated prominent fighters like Fritzie Zivic, Tony Janiro and Bob Satterfiel­d.

Al Silvani, a trainer for LaMotta, felt he was most dangerous when seemingly beaten. As Silvani recalled in Corner Men, by Ronald K. Fried (1993), LaMotta would “lay against the ropes playing possum and all at once — and this no exaggerati­on — he’d throw seven, eight, nine, ten left hooks at you.”

LaMotta successful­ly defended his title twice, then lost it to Robinson when their bout at Chicago Stadium on Feb. 14, 1951, was stopped in the 13th round, LaMotta was a bloody mess but had never hit the canvas.

The fight became known as the second Valentine’s Day Massacre, an allusion to the storied 1929 gangland killings in Chicago.

LaMotta’s career slid downhill after he lost the title, and on Dec. 31, 1952, following a six-month layoff, he was knocked down for the only time in his career, losing to Danny Nardico in a lightheavy­weight fight. He retired, then came back in 1954 for a few bouts before quitting for good.

He was inducted into the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame in 1990.

LaMotta’s perpetual rage led him to beat his first wife, Ida. He married again, in 1946 — his new wife, Vikki, was a teenager — but that marriage, too, descended into turmoil amid LaMotta’s drinking and womanizing. She filed for divorce in 1956. He was married six times.

In 1957, while operating a nightclub and bar in Miami Beach, LaMotta was convicted of encouragin­g a minor to be a prostitute. He spent six months in jail and worked on a road gang.

Encouraged to try show business by Rocky Graziano, also a former middleweig­ht champion, who had turned to acting and had been his friend since their time together in reform school, LaMotta later worked as a stand-up comic and an actor. He appeared as a bartender in the Paul Newman film The Hustler (1961) and played the mobster Big Julie in a 1965 production of the musical Guys and Dolls at the City Center in Manhattan.

LaMotta appeared with Baker in a revue-style Off Broadway production, The Lady and the Champ, which ran for two weeks in 2012.

A second movie about his life, LaMotta: The Bronx Bull, was released in 2015, with William Forsythe portraying LaMotta. It had no connection to the film Raging Bull.

In addition to Baker, LaMotta’s survivors include his daughters, Jacklyn O’Neill, Christie LaMotta, Elisa LaMotta and Mia Day; Baker’s daughters, Meggen Connolley and Natalia Baker; his brothers, Joe and Al; and his sisters, Maria Hawfield and Anne Ramaglia.

His sons, Jack and Joseph, died seven months apart in 1998, Jack from cancer and Joseph in a plane crash.

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