Mike
Mazurki
McLarnin is now staring at gnarled hands,
which look unnatural outside a pair of gloves. They convey a brief history of the art of
boxing. Jack Dempsey is said to have soaked his fists in salt water to
toughen them; McLarnin's hands look like they were soaked in active
volcanoes. His face is unblemished and he has no cauliflower ear. Jimmy
obeyed only one rule in the ring: never get hit. I've met men who did it
both ways, and Jimmy's way was right. He might get drunk but he is not
punch drunk. As he weaves toward his wife, waiting at the door to take
him home, no one makes a crack. His glare indicates those who only
recognize fighters famous from motion pictures."We were just
talking about you." Sylvia winks at Mike. "Kid wants to write your life
story." "Oh, Jeez," Mike whines at Chissel. "Sylvia knows more about me
than I know about myself. You got any questions, you ask her." "We were
talking about Marilyn Monroe. " "That's more like it.""Sit down and
talk to us, Honey," Sylvia says. Mike obeys, schoolboy style. "Marilyn
was very friendly," he tells Kid, looking at Sylvia to see if that's
enough. (It isn't.) "She was particularly friendly to the members of the
cast. If you made a joke, she'd laugh with you. She'd have lunch with you
or something like that, but at that time she was going with... who's the
guy again?" "Miiiike! Arthur Miller!" Sylvia bends confidentially to Kid
and says, "Mike felt that Miller was very manipulative, and if he couldn't
be the boss he wouldn't play. He wasn't a good sport.""Did you
ever talk to Miller?" Kid asks, sensing an explosive story and grasping
his slim reporter's notebook with hands like grenades. "Are you kidding?"
Mike fires back. "We never talked to him because we knew who he was, and
we knew he was a bastard. Every time he was on the set Marilyn wouldn't
mix with anyone. He'd take her on the set and take her back. This is off
the record, naturally."