Showing posts with label celebrities in Fort Lauderdale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celebrities in Fort Lauderdale. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2023

Actor Mickey Rourke debuts professional boxing career in Fort Lauderdale

 

Rourke (R), 1991
State Archives of Florida
By Jane Feehan

Among highly publicized events at Fort Lauderdale’s War Memorial Auditorium during its decades-old history was actor Mickey Rourke’s professional boxing debut in 1991. 

In March 1991 Sal Cherch, an entrepreneur and boxing promoter from Lauderhill, spotted Rourke at the Fifth Street Gym in Miami Beach and asked him if he’d like to participate in a match two months later. Rourke, already a well-known actor (and nearly an icon in France) agreed. He had chalked up a number of amateur fights during the 1970s and continued to train, sometimes at the Miami Beach gym. Cherch picked May 23 as the date because he planned to donate event profits to the Vietnam Veterans of America, Chapter 23.

Rourke, 34, would fight part time mechanic Steve Powell, 33, from the Fort Lauderdale area. Powell, a Medfield, MA native, came to South Florida less than a decade before and opened an auto garage in Oakland Park. He was also a boxer. By 1991, he had scored four wins out of eight professional bouts. Powell had just won a match in the Bahamas and was reportedly known for a strong right jab. He was promised $300 for a four-round fight with Rourke.

Thanks to Rourke’s team, the media expected to see a roster of celebrities including Don Johnson and wife Melanie Griffith, Kim Basinger, Sylvester Stallone and Gene Hackman. About 2,400 showed up to watch Rourke, a 168-pound super middle weight, duke it out with the part-time mechanic. Of the spectators about 375 presented press credentials. The event was expected to be a Hollywood story, if not a memorable boxing match.

The celebrity list of those who actually appeared at War Memorial that night was a short one. Counted among the famous was boxing promoter-trainer Angelo Dundee, fighters Leon Spinks and Alexis Arguello, Rourke’s girlfriend actress Carre Otis (Wild Orchid) and Robert Conrad who left “in disgust” after round 3.

Rourke, booed several times, reportedly connected a few questionable jabs to the back of Powell’s head. He also lifted and pushed Powell a few times through the ropes, more befitting a wrestling match rather than a boxing bout.

The four-round fight was called in a decision (no surprise) for Rourke. Two judges scored 38-37, the third judge, 39-37. The real winner was the Vietnam Veterans of America, Chapter 23. As promised, Cherch donated the night’s profits, $8,553 to the group a few weeks later. The match took in $45,846 and costs were assessed at $37,293.

Mickey Rourke grew up in Miami and Miami Beach and attended Nautilus Junior High and Miami Beach High before his boxing and acting days. He went on to fight several more times in other cities after the Fort Lauderdale match. His acting career has captured far more headlines than have his pugilistic pursuits.

A fan of boxing (and of Rourke), I would have attended that match had I been in town, though I’m not sure I would have enjoyed it as much as his Pope of Greenwich Village, a film favorite.

Copyright © 2023. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan

Sources:

Miami Herald, Dec. 30, 1990

Miami Herald, April 8, 1991

South Florida Sun-Sentinel, May 23, 1991

South Florida Sun-Sentinel, May 24, 1991

Miami Herald, June 9, 1991



Tags: Boxing, celebrities in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Lauderdale history, history of Fort Lauderdale, Mickey Rourke, Jane Feehan

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Of Russians, the Splitnick, Inverrary, Jackie Gleason ... and golf


Jackie Gleason circa 1950
State of Florida Archives

By Jane Feehan

All-State Properties was selected to construct an American house for the U.S. Exhibition in Moscow in 1959. Herbert Sadkin, the company’s president, tapped architect Stanley H. Klein to design a home representative of the American middle class. The $13,000 “Splitnik” contained one and a half bathrooms, three bedrooms, two patios and an L-shaped living room. The Russian state news agency, Tass, ridiculed the house, saying it was as typical of the American worker’s house as the Taj Mahal was typical of the Bombay textile worker’s house.

That didn’t stop Sadkin from building the same model on Long Island. There, he discovered the house wasn’t luxurious enough for the American worker. He continued to upgrade. In July, 1959 Sadkin opened his first Florida development on 1,300 acres he purchased for about $1 million near the Sunshine Parkway (now Florida's Turnpike).  Located in Broward County, the new city was chartered as Lauderhill. Sadkin went on to build about 1,000 more homes in the area that also became known for its Inverrary Country Club and golf course.

Cut forward to 1972. Actor-comedian Jackie Gleason (1916-1987), a resident of the country club in Lauderhill, kicked off the first Inverrary Classic bearing his name. Those were the glory days of golf legends Tom WeiskopfLee Trevino, Jack Nicklaus, and Johnny Miller; they each played the Jackie Gleason Inverrary Classic. Gleason’s involvement ended in 1980 when CBS-TV cut the Inverrary Classic from the event list for the 1982 broadcast season. Tournament officials sought a big-money corporate sponsor and planned to ease Gleason aside.

“I’m not going to have my name associated with some car company,” said Gleason who died at his Inverrary home a few years later. “The only reason I wanted to be involved in the first place was to raise money for charity.” Gleason’s name attracted celebs to play in the pro-am. He and President Gerald Ford were golfing friends. He had planned to invite President-elect Ronald Reagan to play in 1981 but decided against it given the circumstances.

Today we know the golf tournament as the Honda Classic, now played at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens. The Inverrary Country Club and its golf courses in Lauderhill closed June, 2020. And Sadkin, a Fort Lauderdale resident, went on to build Bonaventure and other South Florida projects before he died in 1972. Copyright © 2012 2020 All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.



Sources:
Miami News, July 14, 1959
Palm Beach Post, Nov. 1980
New York Times, Feb. 18, 1989
http://www.jackiegleason.com/bio.html



Tags: Lauderhill history, Jackie Gleason, Russians, Fort Lauderdale in the 1960s, celebrities in South Florida, Fort Lauderdale history

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Trailblazing Jolly Roger Hotel, Jayne Mansfield and an adventure


Jolly Roger, now Sea Club



By Jane Feehan

Builder-turned-hotelier George “Bob” Gill developed six properties during the 1940s, 50s and 60s along Fort Lauderdale beach including the iconic Jolly Roger.

The Jolly Roger Hotel (now the Sea Club), designed by Miami architect Tony Sherman, opened in 1953. It reportedly was first in the area to “offer in-room air conditioning.”

Actress Jayne Mansfield* and husband Mickey Hargitay (mother and father of today’s Law and Order: Special Victims unit Mariska Hargitay) stayed at the Jolly Roger in February, 1962 when other hotels were booked. Mansfield, who was 28 then, obliged the press with a photo session at the hotel pool deck before their ill-fated trip to the Bahamas. 

They were briefly shipwrecked on a small island when their boat, piloted by Gill’s public relations man Jack Drury, broke down. Rescued the next morning, the trio made headlines worldwide over their lost-at-sea adventure.

The Jolly Roger drew tourists – and college students – for decades. And who among the locals could resist claiming the pirate’s skull and bones flag waving to us from the roof? Today, as the Sea Club, it remains a favorite beach hotel with European tourists. In 2009, the hotel was granted historic status by the Fort Lauderdale Historical Society.
Jolly Roger now Sea Club

Mansfield and Hargitay divorced in 1963. She married director Matt Cimber in '64 and had another child. Mansfield was killed in an auto accident in 1967 on her way to an appearance in Biloxi. Her three children, including Mariska Hargitay, were with her and survived.

Copyright © 2020. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.
Sources:

Sun-Sentinel, Jan. 29, 2009
Sun-Sentinel, Feb. 26, 2009
Drury, Jack. Fort Lauderdale, Playground of the Stars (Charleston: Arcadia Publishing, 2008).

Tags: Jolly Roger Hotel, Fort Lauderdale in the 1950s, Bob Gill, Gill Hotels, Fort Lauderdale history, Mariska Hargitay, Jack Drury, film industry researcher

Monday, February 4, 2019

Fort Lauderdale 1970s: Celebrities flock to Le Club International

Lloyd Bridges at Le Club 1973
 State of Florida Archives


Le Club International Yacht and Tennis Club
Once located at 2900 NE 9 St., Fort Lauderdale



By Jane Feehan

Le Club, as we called it then, opened early in 1969 and took off like its sponsored Formula 1 car that was to race in a Monaco Grand Prix.  

Once site of the Everglades Yacht and Tennis Club, just south of the Sunrise bridge, the property underwent a $175,000 renovation in 1968 as a venture of Atlanta hotelier and Miami resident, Carling Dinkler. The renovation was considered the first phase of a project that was to eventually include a 17-story condominium.

The condo, planned intermittently over the next decade as a 14- or 32-story project, didn’t materialize, but the club thrived. It was known as a celebrity and swinging nouveau riche magnet, thanks to the efforts of country club impresario and consultant Paul Holm. 

Holm and brother Lambert had been involved in country club launches in Georgia and elsewhere before the Fort Lauderdale endeavor.

Paul Holm, then 36-year-old general manager and secretary-treasurer of Le Club, planned to hold a charity event about once a month. He and Lambert (referred to in some accounts as publicist), knew how to line up celebrities. Dinah Shore appeared at their Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic in 1970. That was the year Elke Sommer, Barbara Marx (widow of Harpo), and a host of other Hollywood notables joined in the fun and also discovered Fort Lauderdale. 

The list of celebrities visiting Le Club over the years was a very long one and included Johnny Carson, Ed McMahon, Bobby Riggs, Burt Bacharach, George Peppard, Liza Minelli, Red Buttons, James Franciscus, Charlton Heston, Lloyd Bridges, Bill Cosby, Pat Boone, Kentucky governor and one-time Kentucky Fried Chicken magnate John Y. Brown, jockey Eddie Arcaro and Revlon heir Peter Revson.

Other than high-profile yearly tennis tourneys, high-stakes card games and sponsorship of Formula 1 racing, Le Club was involved in off-shore boat racing and hot air balloon events. Always thinking big, Paul Holm produced the movie, the Great Balloon Race in 1977. He bought the entire first-class section of a 747 jet for club members to attend the movie’s premier at the Canne Film Festival that year.

No doubt Le Club was the place to be for “nouveaus” during the 1970s. The food was excellent, service top-notch and the setting glamorous—if not a bit naughty. A few classified ads pointed to the mindset of the place—and times. Some ads indicated Le Club was looking for an “alert young lady 27-35” to assist an interior design firm at the club. Others stated management was looking for a single, 30-34 social director; others ads were for an “attractive young lady” for another job, etc. One can laugh looking at the ads through today’s lens but knowing the club at that time, many would say the ads seemed perfectly normal.

Tides turned by the end of the 1970s. The club was first sold to John Y. Brown and then in 1981 to Texas oil man James Keenan, also a member, who had plans for renovating the club and building a 14-story condo. Times weren’t right for the project or the club. Tax laws changed during the Reagan administration restricting business write-offs, and it curtailed club business. 

In 1985 the Romani Corporation was listed as owner. They also had big plans for Le Club, but it finally closed February 1986. The building was torn down in 1990. Today, a 16-story condominium, Le Club International, sits there. (No connection to the yacht and tennis club.) 
L to R: Lambert Holm, Carling Dinkler, Paul Holm
State of Floridaa Archives/Florida Memory

Paul Holm moved to Las Vegas, married and had children. He died there in 2007 at age 74 (obituary below) after years contributing his expertise to local charity events. Carling Dinkler, who built Miami’s Palm Bay Club and Tower, died in 2005 in Morgantown, West Virginia, home town of his second wife; he was 85.

The long gone Le Club International will not be forgotten by those who participated in its legacy of well-known, untold, outrageous or sometimes notorious stories.  

More on Paul Holm:
 


Sources:
Atlanta Constitution Journal, July 26, 1965
Fort Lauderdale News, Aug. 8, 1968
Fort Lauderdale News, Aug. 23,1968
Fort Lauderdale News, Sept 22, 1968
Fort Lauderdale News, Nov. 16, 1968
Fort Lauderdale News, May 19, 1969
Fort Lauderdale News, June 10, 1969
Fort Lauderdale News, Aug.31, 1969
Fort Lauderdale News, Feb. 11, 1970
Fort Lauderdale News, July 12, 1970
Fort Lauderdale News, Nov. 13, 1982
Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 4, 1985
South Florida Sun-Sentinel, June 3, 1990
Las Vegas Review, May 30, 2007
Atlanta Constitution Journal, May 25, 2005



Tags: Fort Lauderdale clubs of the 1970s, Fort Lauderdale in the 1970s, Paul Holm, Carling Dinkler, Le Club International tennis tournaments in Fort Lauderdale, Great Balloon Race, Fort Lauderdale history