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Tuesday 28 June 2016

RIP Benoîte Groult (1920-2016)

Benoîte Groult in April 1993.
Christopher Long in Normandy kindly alerted me to an obituary in The Times of London for French journalist, writer and feminist activist Benoîte Groult, who died in Hyères a week ago, aged 96.
Born in Paris on January 31, 1920, Groult co-wrote three books with her younger sister Flora (see photos below, sharing a Hermes 3000 portable typewriter) before branching out on her own as an author in 1972.
Benoîte published 20 novels and many essays on feminism.
The New York Times also ran an obituary, written by Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura. Here is an edited version:
Benoîte Groult became a leading French feminist and writer in the second half of her life, drawing wide attention with a sexually daring novel that explored an unlikely love affair between a Parisian intellectual and an uneducated Breton fisherman. Groult’s novel Les Vaisseaux du Cœur (Salt on Our Skin), published in 1988, was branded pornographic in some literary circles because of its vivid depictions of an extramarital affair and female sexuality. The book, set in France in the 1960s, examines the complex emotional dynamics of the couple’s relationship in which their raw desire for each other cannot overcome the wide social divide between them. They each end up marrying someone from a similar background yet they continue their affair for four decades. In 1992 the novel was made into a film, directed by Andrew Birkin and starring Greta Scacchi and Vincent D’Onofrio. It was released in the United States as Desire.
Some feminists criticised the novel, but many readers viewed the protagonist’s sexual escapades as an expression of a liberated modern woman. It sold hundreds of thousands of copies worldwide and was translated into 27 languages. “It’s unacceptable to tell yourself that during 50 years - half a lifetime or longer - you won’t begin a love affair, you won’t live out the first minutes of desire or deny yourself an exciting sexual encounter in a train or on a plane,” Groult said in an interview that was included as a chapter in her 2008 autobiography, My Escape. (The title, she said, was a nod to her emancipation from the constraints of marriage and social conventions driven by men.)
Michel Piccoli as Pierre Bérard and Romy Schneider as Hélène Haltig in a scene from The Things of Life, a 1970 French film directed by Claude Sautet and based on Paul Guimard's 1967 novel. Guimard was Groult's fourth and last husband.
By her own account Groult was a late bloomer, as both an author and a feminist. Having taught Latin and worked in radio while raising children, she was in her 40s when she began a writing career and in her 50s when she embraced feminism. But once she took up those pursuits, she went all out, proving to be a prolific writer and an ardent activist, campaigning against female genital mutilation and other abuses. She was 55 when her book Ainsi Soit-Elle (loosely translated as As She Is) was published in 1975. It became an instant best seller in France (it was never published in English) and sealed Groult’s reputation as a leading feminist. The book explored the history of women’s rights as well as misogyny and violence against women, including sexual mutilation, which she wrote about after encountering it on a visit to Burkina Faso, then called Upper Volta. She went on to write Salt on Our Skin when she was 65; her last book, Ainsi Soit Olympe de Gouges, was published when she was 93. That last book explored women’s rights during the French Revolution, centring on the early French feminist Olympe de Gouges, who was guillotined in 1793 for challenging male authority. In 1791 de Gouges had published, as a pamphlet, a declaration of women’s rights (Déclaration Des droits de la Femme et de la Citoyenne).
Groult published more than 20 novels as well as many essays on feminism. She also helped found a short-lived feminist monthly, F magazine. She was made an officer of the French Légion d’Honneur, the highest French order for military and civil excellence, this year.
Groult attributed her belated awakening to feminism to her “bluestocking” Roman Catholic upbringing, which she said had given her few female role models. “I discovered that freedom isn’t just picked up naturally,” she wrote in her autobiography. “It’s something you have to learn, day after day, and very often painfully.” For that “apprenticeship,” she added, “I needed other women, those models who had been carefully hidden from me during the course of my education.”
Married women, Groult wrote, were in a particularly poor position to lead an effective fight for equality. “When the ‘oppressor’ is your lover and the father of your children and often the principal purveyor of the funds, freedom becomes a complex and risky undertaking,” she wrote in her autobiography. “So much so that many women prefer security, even under supervision, to the hazards of freedom.” In a interview with the newspaper Ouest-France, Groult reflected on her novel about Olympe de Gouges. She was asked what advice that feminist would have for women today. “She would have said: ‘Don’t get married, it’s not worth divorcing. Stay free and write what you want, in words that are yours,’” she replied. But many women, she added, would find that advice difficult to follow,  even today. Olympe de Gouges could have avoided the guillotine and chosen a safer but oppressed life, Groult said. Yet she “braved all the conventions, and God knows that was hard.”
The Times of London obituary:

Wednesday 22 June 2016

STAX II: Meeting Typewriter Technician Warren Ingrey

A little bit of typewriter art that Warren Ingrey quickly typed up
 at yesterday's STAX meeting in Sydney
Meet Warren Frederick Ingrey, who on Tuesday, December 15, 1953, having just attained the minimum school leaving age of 15, started work as an apprentice typewriter technician at Chartres-Remington at the corner of Nithsdale and Liverpool streets in Sydney.
Yes, folks, that's almost 63 years ago, and Warren, at 77, is just as nimble at a manual typewriter keyboard today as he was back then. Sat at a Remington 17 at yesterday's weekly gathering of the Sydney Typewriter Appreciation Exchange, Warren instantly tapped out a nice little piece of typewriter art - a sergeant-major at the head of a line of eight foot soldiers. I guess in time the quorum of a STAX meeting will rise to nine, but in the meantime I have taken the liberty of filling a few gaps with the names of those who were there yesterday in spirit only. But we all are, in flesh and bone or otherwise, marching forward together in the cause of the Typewriter Revolution.
From left, Phil Card, Philip Chapman, Warren Ingrey, host Richard Amery and Terry Cooksley were among those who attended yesterday's weekly STAX meeting in Sydney.
Warren's typewriter technician career extended to 42 years. By the time Remington Rand had moved to 3 Park Road, Alexandria, in Sydney, he had risen through the ranks to be the typewriter division's superintendent. He left Remington in 1982 to join Adler Business Machines on the corner of Waterloo and Lane Cove roads, North Ryde, where he remained for another four years. Then in 1987 Warren went to work for the Commonwealth Bank of Australia at its Sydney headquarters on the corner of Pitt Street and Martin Place, Sydney.  He was given his own workshop to service the CBA's manual typewriters - mostly Olivettis and Adlers - and stayed with the bank for eight years, until 1995.
Warren joined Chartres at a time when it was pushing the same model of Remington standard manual typewriter that he so adeptly used at yesterday's meeting.
This ad is from The Sydney Morning Herald.
Meeting host Richard Amery had loaned this Remington 17 to a Sydney film company. When the company gave it back to him, he found that, without consulting him, it had painted the machine black from a light green - some gratitude!
When Warren joined the CBA, he found the man who had previously held the job there had used a tub of kerosene and a vaccum cleaner to clean out typewriters. Warren promptly got in some proper equipment, such as a typewriter washing machine and a lathe. Although Warren serviced typewriters from all CBA branches, by the early 90s the workload was starting to lessen because of the advance of "new technology". "I'll never forget the words one manager used one day," Warren recalled yesterday. "He came to me and said, 'Warren, we don't know what you do, but we do know you do it very well!'"
Warren was born into a typewriter technician family, in Marrickville in Sydney in late 1938. Two of his uncles, Jack and Fred Ingrey, were in the industry, and Warren himself had been "playing around with typewriters" long before he started working for Chartres. These days, however, he prefers a game of lawn bowls to working with typewriters. Still, he very clearly hasn't lost one iota of his touch with the Wondering Writing Machine.
Phil Card and myself in the process of trying to find the elusive "jewel" in a Smith-Corona Galaxie II escapement wheel. You will have to get the next ETCetera magazine to find out all about it.
When I posted on my first visit to these weekly gatherings in Sydney, a month ago, I expressed a doubt that I'd be able to get back there on a regular basis, as much fun as they undoubtedly are. Richard Polt commented on the post by saying he hoped I'd manage at least a monthly return. Well, that's how it has turned out - so far at least. A week or so ago I wasn't expecting to be back at Richard Amery's home again so soon, but the prospect of meeting Warren Ingrey for the first time was a great incentive. And it turned out to be well worth the effort.
It was yet another fantastic experience. The minutes of last month's gathering were accepted as correct as per the ozTypewriter blog post. On the agenda at yesterday's four-hour meeting were such matters as:
* If a keychopper asks for forgiveness and to be allowed to convert back to the good side, can she ever be fully redeemed for her sins against the machine? Shall we admit her to the fold? There was considerable discussion on this rather vexing and pressing matter.
* The typewriter trade in Sydney as it once was, including the rebuilding of typewriters.
* Early uses of the @ and other keyboard symbols.
* Where is the jewel on a Smith-Corona Galaxie II? Read the next edition of ETCetera to find out. Phil Card and Terry Cooksley exposed the bejeweled truth in the Galaxie's escapement wheel and loose dog as they demonstrated the machine's inner workings.
* Is there really life after typewriters? And how truly miserable can it be?
* How to fix the platen turning mechanisms on Torpedo/Blue Bird Series 15, Remington Noiseless and Olivetti ICO MP1 portable typewriters, courtesy of that mechanical genius Phil Card.
* Does a Depression Era Royal Junior have two paper fingers or just one? And if the answer is two, where can one find a replacement, please?
* When is a Royal flatbed 5 not a Royal flatbed 5? (And no, the answer's not when it's a Standard 1)
* Is this really the margin release key on a Danish keyboard Triumph Durabel sold in Stuttgart and serviced in Copenhagen?
* Has this Underwood 5 been (at least partially) repainted? And if so, by whom?
* Why is a red Corona 3 Special cause to break out the cupcakes?
* Did anyone ever truly believe Richard Amery only collected and used Imperial Good Companions? Not a chance!
* And how do you type a line of eight soldiers holding rifles?
Sadly, all too soon, the sun set on Sydney - and STAX, at least for this week. When will I be able to return?:
Up the Revolution!

Thursday 16 June 2016

Madigan – The Man Who Fought Ali Twice, and Lived to Tell the Tale

Antony Madigan was an Australian rugby player who went the distance with both Ali  and Our ‘Enry, and beat up the Black Assassin
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lobally, in boxing, Muhammad Ali has been and probably always will be the yardstick for greatness.  Down Under, it’s Tony Madigan, whose two bouts with Ali continue to fill lovers of the Sweet Science with awe. What Australians have unfortunately forgotten, however, is that Madigan also fought Sir Henry Cooper, came back from a devastating car crash in Germany to train under Cus D’Amato with Floyd Patterson and José Torres at Stillman’s, was guided by Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney, inspired a great Australian novel and was challenged by Rocky Marciano and Archie Moore. And he once challenged Ali to a professional fight.
         However, when Ali and Madigan did meet for a third and last time, in the Doncaster Hotel in London on December 8, 1980, it was merely to shake hands, exchange compliments and shape up to one another – Ali was 38 and Madigan 50. “Damn! Tony Madigan!” Ali declared, admiring the Australian for still looking to be in good enough condition to go another three gruelling rounds.
The death of Ali gave Australians the opportunity to reflect on the fact that one of their own was one of only 10 men to have faced The Greatest of All Time, post age 16, in the ring more than once (only two, Joe Frazier and Ken Norton, fought Ali three times). Indeed, Tony Madigan was one of only five fighters to have gone, as it were, “the distance” with Ali – though in Madigan’s case, admittedly, this was in three-round light-heavyweight amateur bouts, when Ali was still a Louisville teenager. Madigan forced close decisions - when Ali was known as Cassius Marcellus Clay – in both the Golden Gloves intercity match between New York and Chicago in Chicago on March 25, 1959, and less than 18 months later in the Rome Olympic Games semi-final on September 3, 1960 (Ali went on to claim the gold medal). 
With Bing Crosby rooting for Ali in one corner and Sydney sportswriter Ernie Christensen seconding for Madigan in the other, the judges gave the fight 60-57 to Ali, but the hooting of the crowd at the announcement of the decision showed that few others in the Palazzo della Sport agreed with them. And Christensen wasn’t the only journalist to feel Madigan had been robbed.
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utside the ring, Madigan’s great sporting passion was rugby union. In Sydney he had played the game at Christian Brothers College, Waverley, for the famous clubs Randwick (14 first-grade matches, two tries, 1950) and Eastern Suburbs (1951, 1957 and 1963), in London for the Harlequins in 1953 and in New York from 1960-62 for the Westchester club.
He generally played as a breakaway or No 8 but in the US was also called on to play flyhalf in 1962. It was as a breakaway that he represented the US’s Eastern Rugby Union against Quebec in Montreal in 1960, when he won Westchester’s Most Valuable Player Trophy (presented to him by the New York Giants wide receiver Kyle Rote). After getting five stitches inserted in his cheek after a bout with Kyogle’s Athol McQueen in 1964, Madigan said, “I’ve been hurt worse playing rugby.”
         Madigan’s life story is far more involved and interesting than other online sources might have us believe. For one thing, no biography mentions he had a critically acclaimed novel written about him. In the rich pugilism-meets-art tradition of Rocky Graziano’s 1955 Somebody Up There Likes Me and Jake LaMotta’s 1970 Raging Bull – if perhaps less gory – Madigan was the protagonist (as a thinly disguised “handsome drifter” Charlie Dangerfield) in T.A.G. Hungerford’s Shake the Golden Bough (1963). He was also a TV star, acting with Peter Graves in the “Australian Western” Whiplash, screened in the US in 1961.
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uite apart from facing Ali twice, he also fought the great British heavyweight Sir Henry Cooper (“Our ’Enry”, who also met Ali twice), was challenged to a professional fight by Archie Moore, trained for three years at Stillman’s in New York with Floyd Patterson and José Torres under Cus D’Amato, and was managed by the legendary Eddie Eagan. Madigan lost his father when was just eight, took up boxing at that age, and fought more than 250 bouts, from Greymouth, New Zealand, to London and New York, from Helsinki to Chicago and Toledo, Ohio, and from Mexico City to Rome and Vancouver.
Madigan boxed for both Australia and England, won an Olympic Games bronze medal, was fifth in two other Olympics, and won two Commonwealth Games gold medals and a Commonwealth Game silver. It was only in the last two years of his boxing career, which ended in 1964, that his success rate fell below 95 per cent. He missed a year in the ring after suffering serious injuries in a car crash which claimed the life of a friend, Helen Stokes-Smith, in Germany in 1955. 
         On top of all this, in March 1963, livewire New Zealand-born promoter Harry Maurice Miller returned to the idea of offering Muhammad Ali $US25,000 and 25 per cent of all film and TV rights to come to Sydney and fight Madigan at The Stadium (built by Hugh D. McIntosh in 1908 to stage the Boxing Day showdown between Jack Johnson and Tommy Burns, from which Johnson emerged as the first African-American world heavyweight champion). Miller had taken over promoting The Stadium and he offered Madigan £6000 (half what Ali was to get) to turn professional. It was not the first time this idea had been floated by Miller – in late 1960, Ali had only just turned pro in the immediate aftermath of the Rome Olympics, and Madigan was still overseas anyway. But the 1963 proposal was the first and only time Madigan was very seriously tempted to fight for money. Bill Faversham, back then a member of Ali’s Louisville Sponsorship Group and Ali’s first manager, looked at the offer and just as promptly knocked it back.
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ntony (not Anthony) Morgan Madigan was born in Sydney, on February 4, 1930, but grew up in Bathurst, where his father, Kendall Morgan Madigan (1908-1938), was the hospitals oral surgeon and his Kalgoorlie-born mother, Elsie Maud (1911-1983, née Loydstrom) a dental student. The couple had married in Sydney on July 16, 1929, and Tony came along seven months later. Maud Madigan moved to live with her in-laws in Mosman, Sydney, in 1935 while her husband continued his dental studies at the University of Alberta, Canada. Mrs Madigan later became a dentist herself, when she and her two sons lived in Ashfield, Sydney in the 1950s and early 60s (when Tony was a car salesman and younger brother Mark drove taxis). The family had moved to West Maitland in October 1936, where Kendall Madigan, now in private practice, became embroiled in a nasty slander court case with the father of a young patient. Madigan and a government medical officer won the case, being awarded £100 each (a tenth of what they had claimed) but at a huge cost. A little more than five weeks after the finding was handed down, a cancer-ridden Kendall Madigan died, aged just 29, in a private hospital at Darlinghurst, on June 3, 1938. Tony was eight. That same year, Tony took up boxing.
Tony Madigan attended his father’s old school, Christian Brothers College, Waverley, and followed his father’s example by excelling there in a range of sports, including boxing and rugby. He was the school’s boxing champion for four years, before leaving in 1948, intending to follow his parents into dentistry.
In the intermediate amateur boxing ranks, he first worked out of Ern McQuillan’s gym in 1949 and won the NSW middleweight title at that level. Madigan made such an early impression that he came under consideration for the 1950 Auckland Empire Games. He was coached by former Australian champion Hughie Dwyer, whose son John had been at Waverley College with Madigan. Hughie Dwyer, seen below right with Madigan, came from Newcastle and was regarded a one of Australia’s finest defensive boxers and was a champion at lightweight, welterweight and middleweight. He retired undefeated from the ring in 1927. Sadly, he did not pass on his defensive skills to Madigan, who in later years regretted not being able to resist a natural impulse to attack in his two clashes with Ali.
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adigan became Australian middleweight champion in Brisbane in 1951 and was selected to represent Australia as a middleweight at the 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games. Madigan was ranked No 5 in the boxing team, however, so was not on the funded list and had to raise the £750 himself to make the trip. Friends and admirers paid the money to guarantee Madigan got to Finland, but to pay it all back Madigan went on barnstorming country tours, holding BBQs and giving exhibitions there, in gyms, at his old school and in the Sydney railway workshops.
The Australian boxers prepared for the Olympics at the famous South African Joe Bloom’s West End Cambridge Gymnasium, close to London’s Piccadilly Circus (Madigan, below, is the overawed young fellow second from right). Given Madigan had only had 15 fights leading into Helsinki, and was about to face boxers with more than 200 bouts under their belts, the short time he spent under Bloom was of limited benefit. As well, Madigan injured his left hand soon after arriving in England, and injured it again when he got to Finland. Floyd Patterson won the middleweight gold in Helsinki and Swede Stig Sjölin, who had eliminated Madigan, took one of the bronzes.
Madigan decided to stay on in Europe. He hitch-hiked back to England, felling trees in Sweden to cover travel expenses. In London, he toyed with returning to dentistry studies, this time at Cambridge, but elected to continue dislodging teeth his normal way. He joined the Fulham Boxing Club while working as a broker for an Australian importing and exporting company in London (seen in his office below left). On April 24, 1953, Madigan lost to Henry Cooper in the British light-heavyweight final at the Wembley Pool. Still, he won Irish and London titles and represented England five times that year, including in a match against Wales in Cardiff, and also represented London in Amsterdam.
In 1954 Madigan became the first Australian to win a British title, taking out the light-heavyweight division at the Royal Albert Hall. The win earned Madigan a nomination for the British team for the Golden Gloves in Chicago and, along with his English base, ensured Madigan was on the funded list for the Australian team to compete at the British Empire and Commonwealth Game in Vancouver in July-August 1954. Madigan was favoured to take gold, but had lost form even before leaving London. In Canada, lumbered at 24 with being captain and coach of the Australian team, in the absence of trainers and seconds, he lost the light-heavyweight final to Johannesburg’s Piet van Vuuren (1931-2008).
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isillusioned by his Vancouver experience, Madigan took a brief look at the US boxing scene in September, and promptly announced he was retiring. Madigan returned to England but at the end of 1954 gave up his London job to work in Germany. He was out of boxing throughout 1955 after surviving serious injuries in a fatal car crash in Bavaria on January 17 that year. He was living in Germany at the time, selling encyclopaedias for a Rhineland publishing company, and was driving a 23-year-old Sydney friend, Helen Stokes-Smith, to the ski fields in the south of the region. Madigan knew Helen through her father, the retired Sydney Stadium fight doctor Kenneth Stokes-Smith, of Darlinghurst, a close friend of the publisher Ezra Norton. Madigan swerved to avoid a truck parked on the icy road, the car slid out of control and Helen was killed.
In 1956 Madigan went back to England and to the ring in London, but suffered a cut eye in an elimination bout in the British light-heavyweight championship. Madigan returned to Sydney to win a place on the Australian team for the Melbourne Olympic Games. A bout of debilitating shingles just before the Games didn’t help his cause, and he lost to Lithuanian Romualdas Murauskas (in action against Madigan above), who went on to take out a bronze medal. Madigan later described the Eastern Bloc boxers he met in both Helsinki and Melbourne as “crude but effective”.
In 1957 Madigan regained an Australian title, at light-heavyweight, after a gap of six years. He went on to represent Australia at the British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Cardiff in July 1958. A lack of planning and preparation (not to mention competition) had seriously handicapped Australian boxers at previous Games, but this time they found a place to train in a dingy gym above a fruitshop in Cardiff’s markets. Madigan went on to beat Dublin-born Augustine Robert “Ossie” Higgins (1931-2000), an Ipswich Town soccer professional fighting for Wales, in the light-heavyweight final. Madigan was presented with his gold medal by the Duke of Edinburgh.
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n his way back from Cardiff, Madigan won the Diamond Belt as the best individual fighter at an international tournament in Mexico City on August 9, 1958. There he caught the eye of the noted American sportsman Colonel Edward Patrick Francis Eagan (1897-1967), author of Fighting for Fun (1934), a lawyer who had been chairman of the New York State Athletic Commission, which controlled boxing in New York, from 1945-51. (Eagan, left, is seen above with Jake LaMotta, right). Eagan simply asked the Australian, “How would you like to be the light-heavyweight champion of the world?” With that enticing carrot dangled before him, Madigan signed a contract with Eagan, with the plan for the Australian fighter to almost immediately turn professional. Eagan himself had never turned pro, but had sparred with the New Zealand world heavyweight title contender Tom Henney, as well as Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney. Through Eagan, Madigan was to get to know and to be advised by Dempsey and Tunney.
Eagan was familiar with Australia and its boxers. During a world tour in 1926-27 he had visited New Zealand and Australia with his Oxford boxing friend, Scottish nobleman Douglas Douglas-Hamilton (1903-1973), the 14th Duke of Hamilton and 11th Duke of Brandon, a pioneering aviator who styled himself on tour as the Marquis of Clydesdale (right). Douglas-Hamilton was a boxing Blue and Scottish amateur champion. 
In Sydney on July 29, 1926, Eagan gave away five stone and still TKOed the giant 1922-23 Australian heavyweight champion (6ft 11in, 18st), Sydney cheesemaker Julíen Désiré Paul Alexi Brancourt (?-1959). On the same charity night bill was William John McKell (1891-1985) then Minister for Justice and later knighted and Premier of New South Wales and Governor-General of Australia. Eagan met up with McKell again in Sydney in 1944 (McKell, right, is seen below with Eagan in 1944).
 Eagan flattens the Sydney giant Brancourt
Brancourt shows off his size.
Eagan is the only person to win gold medals at both the Summer and Winter Olympic Games in different events, a summer gold in boxing (light-heavyweight, Antwerp 1920) and a winter gold (four-man bobsled, Lake Placid, 1932). Like Madigan, Eddie Eagan was a former British amateur champion who had boxed at more than one Olympics – he also fought as a heavyweight in Paris in 1924. Eagan, a Rhodes Scholar, had studied at Yale and the Harvard Law School before going to Oxford.
Eagan watches the first Ali-Madigan fight in Chicago in 1959
Eagan persuaded Madigan to go to New York instead of home to Australia. The other incentives Eagan offered were to settle Madigan in his home town of Rye, Westchester County, New York, and arrange for him to train at Stillman’s Gymnasium at 919 Eighth Avenue, New York City, under the great Constantine "Cus" D’Amato and alongside world heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson. D'Amato (1908-1985) was an important influence on Madigan. Born to an Italian family in the Bronx, D’Amato, below, had discovered Rocky Graziano and tutored Patterson to be the first Olympic gold medallist to win a professional heavyweight title.
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uring his three years of training at Stillman’s, Madigan would also spar with future International Boxing Hall of Famer José "Chegüi" Torres (1936-2009). Madigan had got to know the Puerto Rican when he represented the US and won a silver medal in the light-middleweight division at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics. Torres was beaten in the final by the legendary Hungarian László Papp, the first boxer to win three Olympic golds. Torres went on to be world light-heavyweight champion. Torres’ literary skills appealed to Madigan: Torres, seen below with Ali, wrote a regular column for El Diario La Prensa and for The Village Voice. He later wrote Sting Like a Bee, a biography of Ali, and Fire and Fear: The Inside Story of Mike Tyson.
Madigan, black top, spars with Torres at Stillman's in December 1958
Madigan showed a particular interest in writing and writers. One American sportswriter said Madigan was the first fighter he’d met since Gene Tunney to “admit to even a nodding acquaintance with the written word”. Apart from the great A.J. Liebling, author of the wonderful The Sweet Science, Madigan encountered in New York the West Australian author Thomas Arthur Guy Hungerford (1915-2011), noted for his World War II novel The Ridge and the River. Hungerford was inspired by his friendship with Madigan to write his novel Shake the Golden Bough (1963). Madigan also befriended the brilliant Greek-born columnist Taki Theodoracopulos (1936). Saying of Madigan “what a gentleman he was and is”, Taki wrote in “Sign of the Times” in August 2012: “In 1960 in Rome, I watched my friend Tony Madigan fighting for Australia in the semi-finals against an American with the charming name of Cassius Clay. After three furious rounds we thought Tony had it. ‘It’s going our way,’ said his trainer, ‘at least a split decision.’ But the decision went Clay’s way. Madigan never complained; he just shook hands with Clay and told me afterwards, ‘That’s how sport goes.’ Clay went on to win the gold. You know the rest.”
Madigan, right, spars with world title contender Rory Calhoun.
Madigan retained the Diamond Belt in Mexico City on September 19, 1959, after reaching the quarter-finals of the US national championships in Toledo, Ohio, in early April. All this followed his win in the New York division of the Golden Gloves and representing the city against Chicago. By early March 1959 at least one “deadly serious” New York sportswriter was tipping Madigan as another “Great White Hope”, and capable of dethroning Floyd Patterson as world heavyweight champion. He may well have changed his mind when at the Chicago Stadium on March 25 Madigan met a then 17-year-old Louisville schoolboy called Cassius Marcellus Clay. The eagerly anticipated bout was televised nationally and the fighters won a standing ovation from the crowd of 7261. Madigan, unfortunately, had been suffering from a virus for days leading into the fight. He never complained about the close call, but he knew he hadn’t given it his best shot.
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n the way to winning the New York Golden Gloves title, on February 16, 1959,  Madigan made a terrible mess of one Sigmund Leon Wortherly (1938-), later self-styled “The Black Assassin”.  Calling himself a “Killing Machine”, Wortherly was in later life to write a chilling autobiography, in which he said “very, very few people have the stomach to kill in cold blood. It takes a rare and special person to kill in cold blood. I, Sigmund L. Wortherly, am that rare and special person. I have the ability to kill in cold blood.” Wortherly grew up in a middle-class family in the Sugar Hill section of Harlem and developed a fearsome reputation as a gym fighter and was a sparring partner for Paul Pender and Dick Tiger.
However, he was drawn into a life a deadly crime, admitting to more than 30 contract killings for the Harlem underworld. He did time with such infamous thugs as Crazy Joe Gallo, John Gotti, Harold KO Konigsberg and Nicky Barnes. Wortherly, right, dubbed by police Mr Tough, called himself a “one-man crime spree”. “I never killed anyone who didn’t deserve it … people often ask me how many people I killed, and I tell them I don’t know. I lost count.” He was none too tough for Madigan, though, as a photo prominently run on the pages of newspapers  across America showed. Madigan has knocked Wortherly's mouth guard right out.
To pay the rent in Rye and later at 630 East 14th Street, East Village, Lower Manhattan, Madigan worked as a sales representative for the Australian branch of British cigarette company Rothmans, and found additional income as a male model, posing for $40 an hour for advertising photographer Howard Zieff (1927-2009). Madigan appeared in magazine ads and TV commercials for cigarettes, beer and men’s products. The modelling work was to lead to problems when Madigan was persuaded in May 1960 to return to Australia to try out for the Rome Olympic Games.
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adigan was stunned to find that to get the chance of a rematch with Ali in Rome, he had to face a stern opponent from outside the ring: The Queensland Boxing and Wrestling Union. The Australian selectors had already chosen a Queenslander, Ken Marshall, to fight in the light-heavyweight division at the Olympics, based on the assumption Madigan was not available and would not be returning home to stake a claim for inclusion in the Rome team. Some Australian boxing officials had other ideas, however, believing Madigan was a distinct gold medal chance and should be convinced to return to Australia. Faced with this prospect, the QBWU took desperate action. As Madigan had been registered as a Queensland-based fighter when he was last in Australia, in 1957, the QBWU felt it had the last say on his eligibility. And it declared Madigan was not only residentially unqualified to represent the country, but that his modelling career – for which he’d used images of himself in boxing garb - had violated his amateur status. Even US sports columnists got in on the act, lampooning the QBWU’s stand as taking the definition of amateurism in sport to a ridiculous degree. Sanity eventually prevailed. Madigan arrived in Sydney in late May and nine days later fought Marshall, on June 6 in Sydney, making mincemeat of him. Afterwards, Madigan expressed his sympathy for Marshall, saying officials had placed the Queensland boxer in a humiliating position. Yet Madigan’s return bout with Ali in Rome had come close to being jettisoned by an overzealous, narrow-minded committee of faceless men.
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he reason Madigan had not initially expressed much interest in the Rome Olympics was because a professional boxing career was still a distinct possibility, based on his 1958 legal contract with Eagan. As well, Madigan was concerned about losing his existing New York income and his “Loco” apartment (four rooms in a row) in East Village. He had managed to get a six-month extension on his US visa, probably helped by him filing a certificate of marriage at Arlington, Virginia, on February 9, 1960, to wed Geraldine Catherine Kelley (1935-2005) of Rye. The marriage apparently never took place. When New York sportswriter George McGann interviewed Madigan for the March 9, 1960, edition of Sir Frank Packer’s Australian Women’s Weekly, he described Madigan as a bachelor.
Madigan did marry a German psychotherapist, Sybille (1940-), straight after the Rome Games, in November 1960, and had a son, Kendall Morgan Madigan (named after Madigan’s father) born in August 1961. (In 1969 Kelley married a Clinton Wesley Rhy, but was known briefly as Geraldine Madigan).
Madigan made a return to the New York Golden Gloves tournament in 1962, reaching the semi-finals. He was offered a tempting though lengthy assignment, being photographed in various tourist spots around the globe, but in mid-year left New York to return to Australia to win selection for the Commonwealth Games in Perth. He was made the Australian team’s flag bearer at the opening ceremony at Perry Lakes Stadium and duly retained his Games title, beating Ghanaian Jojo Miles in the light-heavyweight final (below). In 1964 Miles fought Ali in an exhibition during Ali’s African tour.
There had been a mooted exhibition with Rocky Marciano at the Sydney Stadium in August 1962, when Marciano was in Australia managing a fighter due to appear at the stadium. But Australian official Arthur Tunstall ruled out the Marciano stoush because it would have cost Madigan his amateur status. At the end of March 1963, former world light-heavyweight champion Archie Moore, then 46, announced in San Diego that he would fight Madigan in the Australian’s professional debut at the Sydney Stadium in June of that year. Moore had been KOed in the fourth by Ali (Moore’s former protégé) in Los Angeles just four months previously. Moore, the only man to have faced both Marciano and Ali, did have one fight in 1963, and then announced his retirement. Where he had got the idea of a return to Australia (he had fought seven times here in 1940) is not known, but Madigan’s solicitor Jim Comans knocked back Moore’s offer as insufficiently attractive, without even consulting Madigan (or so Comans claimed). Instead, on August 14, Madigan fought for Australia in a 6-4 amateur Test loss to New Zealand at the Sydney Stadium.
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reymouth’s Army Drill Hall was the venue of Madigan’s only fight in New Zealand, 10 days after he'd won his bout in the Test in Sydney. In Greymouth he came up against farmer Johnny Logan, who at 13st 7lb outweighed Madigan by 8lb, in a six-rounder, which Logan won. Even the locals suspected a “home town decision”.
Madigan, in the right corner, in Greymouth.
In 1964 newspaper magnet Sir Frank Packer sponsored yet another Madigan return to Australia, to make a bid for a record fourth Olympic Games appearance, in Tokyo. Madigan, now a family man concentrating more on his business career as a property consultant, was not in prime condition. He stepped up to the heavyweight division and fought in the NSW championships, but at both this and national level he couldn’t get past first former Canberran Fred Casey and then Athol McQueen of Kyogle, who went on to briefly floor Joe Frazier at the Olympics. Casey also went to Tokyo, as a light-heavyweight. He had beaten Madigan earlier, in the 1962 NSW championships, and became only the second man after Muhammad Ali to beat Madigan twice. Casey turned pro straight after the Olympics. Madigan retired one last time, but did help with the fund-raising effort for the Tokyo team, by sparring on TV.
Where is he now? A week ago his niece said online: “He resides in France.” And by all reports he finished up being a very rich man, still with his body and mind in good shape.