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'42' brings Jackie RobinsonRalph Branca friendship to silver screen
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Newsday: Westchester County Edition (NY) April 11, 2013 Browse Issues Author/Byline: RYAN CHATELAIN,
[email protected] Section: Westchester Readability: 1012 grade level (Lexile: 1190)
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After Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier in 1947, angry fans tossed watermelon and cotton onto stadium fields. Philadelphia Phillies manager Ben Chapman would mock him by asking for shoeshines from the dugout. Robinson's own teammates circulated a petition threatening a boycott if he played.
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But Ralph Branca, a straightlaced, 21yearold pitcher from Mount Vernon, was one of the few Brooklyn Dodgers who welcomed Robinson.
'42' hits home
Branca, 87, is one of the characters depicted in the Jackie Robinson bio film "42," which opens in theaters Friday. "When he walked in the locker room [for the first time], I walked over and shook his hand and said, 'Welcome aboard,' and just sized him up and said, 'I just hope he can help us win the pennant and help us get to the World Series,' " Branca said in a phone interview from his home in Rye. "I didn't care about the color of his skin." Branca credited his Mount Vernon upbringing for his openmindedness toward Robinson. He described his neighborhood as the "United Nations," with families of all backgrounds living there. "I lived on a block that had four black families," said the threetime AllStar. "One lived right next door to me. They were in my house. I was in their house. We played together. So I never considered the color of [Robinson's] skin." "42" focuses on Robinson's struggles during the 1947 season and his relationship with Dodgers president Branch Rickey, played by Harrison Ford. The role of Branca is played by Hamish Linklater, best known as Matthew on the sitcom "The New Adventures of Old Christine."
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Although Branca is not a central character in the film, he is prominent in a few poignant scenes, including his and Quick Links teammate Gene Hermanski's lockerroom handshakes with Robinson. Branca is also shown charging the pitcher's mound Find more articles by RYAN after Robinson was struck in the head by a pitch and encouraging Robinson to shower with the rest of the team, instead of CHATELAIN, waiting until the white players were done.
[email protected] "He said the thing that Jackie had that other people didn't have was guts," Linklater said in a phone interview Wednesday. "And I think it takes a helluva guy to be able to appreciate someone with guts like that." Branca served as a consultant for the film. He also met with Linklater in Rye, where the actor's research included learning how Branca gripped his fastball, curveball and 126 splitter. Linklater said he also wanted to learn more firsthand about Branca's personality, including his sense of humor. That didn't take long. "I get there. He comes around the corner and sees me and says, 'You're not handsome enough to play me,' " Linklater said. After seeing "42" at a Tuesday night screening at Yankee Stadium, Branca said the film was a worthy tribute to Robinson. "I think people are going to understand how tough it was in the first year," Branca said, adding, "Jackie and I were close, and I think it came across that way" in the film. Branca, of course, is best ed as the pitcher who surrendered Bobby Thomson's "Shot Heard 'Round the World" in 1951. The home run at the Polo Grounds in Manhattan propelled the Giants past the Dodgers for the National League pennant. The play, however, has been the source of controversy for generations. Sal Yvars, the late Giants catcher and a longtime Westchester County resident, itted he was stealing pitch signals for his team. Thomson, however, went to his grave in 2010 denying that he used the sign stealing to his advantage. John Thorn, the official historian for Major League Baseball, said parallels can be drawn between Branca's character in 1947 and after the Thomson home run. "I can say that Ralph Branca was universally regarded as a good guy, and the fact that he would be sympathetic or empathic to Robinson's very tough situation is not surprising given all that we've seen over the years because this is a guy who endured his own crisis in 1951 and endured it with exceedingly good grace," Thorn said. Linklater agreed.
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"Ralph knew about [the sign stealing] three years later, and he kept quiet about it because he didn't want to look like sour survey Tell us what you think of our interface! Other Products View History My Collection Help Customer Service grapes and because he respected the game so much," Linklater said. "And he lived for 50 years with everybody thinking he was the goat when in fact he knew the truth." Caption: Photo credit: Warner Bros./Getty Images | Hamish Linklater, playing the role of Ralph Branca, and Chadwick Boseman, who plays Jackie Robinson, appear in this still image from the movie "42." At right is the reallife Branca. Chadwick Boseman stars as Jackie Robinson in the '42' trailer Harrison Ford and Chadwick Boseman talk about new Harrison Ford on new movie '42' Chadwick Boseman stars as Jackie Robinson in Warner Jackie Robinson biopic '42' Brooklyn Dodgers Jackie Robinson poses in this 1952 Jackie Robinson 12. quot;Major Leaguequot; (1989) Neil Best's top 12 baseball movies ever Marist band and cheerleaders react as Marist's Hudson Valley Home Stand blog Record: 1347cfedc94052bd6d0b997cf88c0a31e1676e8 Copyright: Copyright (c) 2013 Newsday, Inc.
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