Earlier
this month, Total Rocky.com was priviledged enough to
conduct an interview with Jimmy Gambina, Hollywood's
legendary boxing choreographer and one of the original cast
members of Rocky.
As you'll remember, Jimmy
portrayed Mickey Goldmill's right-hand man "Mike"
and shared several scenes with Sylvester Stallone, perhaps
most memorably the encounter in which Mike explains to Rocky
that his gym locker has been given away to another fighter,
Dipper Brown. Later in the film, he can be spotted as
one of the corner men shouting commands to Balboa during the
climactic Apollo Creed fight.
Mr. Gambina, who made a
return to the role of Mike in Rocky V, boasts a
string of impressive movie credits that include Raging
Bull (1980), The Champ (1979) and Saturday
Night Fever (1977). In 2004, he worked as fight
coordinator on Rick Schroder's boxing film Black Cloud,
the story of a Navajo youth who struggles with his
mixed-heritage background and finds answers to his emotional
conflicts within the ring.
Total Rocky: Tell us
about your background – how did you get involved in boxing
and then make the transition to films?
Jimmy Gambina:
I was born and raised in boxing. My father was a boxing
manager with over 200 fighters. I had an amateur fight when
I was 8 years old.
TR: Rocky
naturally must hold a special place in your film career,
what other films have been landmarks for you?
JG: Saturday
Night Fever with John Travolta, Raging Bull with
Robert DeNiro, The Champ with Jon Voight.
TR: How did you
initially get involved in the Rocky project? Were you
first hired as Technical Adviser and were then naturally
suited for the role of Mike?
JG: I was hired to
train Stallone. That led me to my profession today as a
Boxing Choreographer.
TR: How long did you
train with Sylvester Stallone before production began?
JG: We started
training five months prior to the film, and the first fight
scene.
TR: In your
professional opinion, was Stallone talented enough to make
good as a real boxer?
JG: It takes a
unique type of person, to be good at boxing professionally.
TR: Do you recommend
raw egg breakfasts for up and coming contenders?
JG: No, it’s
actually bad for you.
TR: Where was the
real location for the interior of Mickey’s Gym?
JG: The old Main
Street Gym in downtown Los Angeles.
TR: Several members
of the cast have described the low-budget nature of the
movie, was your role in the production at all affected by
the lack of money?
JG: It’s in the
taste of the individual, there is no Small Rate.
TR: Were you allowed
to put together your own onscreen wardrobe?
JG: Yes, all the
kids in Philly that I met dressed me specifically for the
sweeping outside the gym.
TR: Just before the
fight, Rocky and Apollo are each shown as their trainers
force a small bottle in their nostrils. What’s in the
bottle and why is it used before a fight? Did the bottles
used on the actors actually contain whatever that liquid is?
JG:
Imitation.
TR: Was the shooting
of the final fight sequence difficult due to having to stop
down for makeup changes between each round?
JG: No, not at all .
. . no problems.
TR: When Rocky says,
"Cut me, Mick", can you explain how the effect of
his eye being cut was performed? Also, is this something
that is a common occurrence in boxing?
JG: Dramatic license
to use, which shows the difficulty of being cut. Not at all.
TR: Was anyone
injured during the fight?
JG: No.
TR: Do you have any
interesting stories about working with the rest of the cast?
JG: Like family.
TR: Do you think
that Rocky set a trend in how boxing is depicted in
films today?
JG: Absolutely.
TR: Did you attend
the premiere in 1976 and if so, what was that evening like
for you?
JG: Yes, what a
great evening. The director John [Avildsen] received an
Oscar and thanked me for 10 minutes.
TR: How did you
happen to make a return to the Rocky series in 1990’s
Rocky V?
JG: Stallone asked
me to teach his son. It was an amazing experience to be
there when his son was born.
TR: Have you heard
any buzz about a possible Rocky
VI?
JG: Yes. Stallone
asked me to work on it last summer, I said "If you want
to do it big, do it with class."
TR: Tell us about
your work on Black Cloud – and also, what are you
doing currently?
JG: Black Cloud
is very close to my heart.
TR: Is there
anything else you’d like to share with fans of the Rocky
series?
JG: Check out my
website.
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