Yo, Sly!
Pay up!
Former heavyweight boxer Chuck Wepner unleashed a
legal roundhouse Wednesday against actor Sylvester
Stallone, claiming the Rocky movie series was
based on Wepner's own career. Now he wants a piece of
the purse.
Wepner, who went nearly 15 punishing rounds in a 1975
loss to Muhammad Ali, claims in a lawsuit filed
Wednesday in state Superior Court in Jersey City that
Stallone repeatedly credits that fight as the
inspiration for the film that won the 1976 Academy Award
for best picture.
But when it came time for sharing the riches that
followed, Wepner claims, Stallone treated him like just
another bum from the neighborhood.
"Stallone has been using Chuck's name - and
continues to this day - in promoting the Rocky
franchise without any permission or compensation,"
said Wepner's attorney, Anthony Mango. "They're
doing that to add an element of authenticity to the sale
of these products."
Mango estimates the five Rocky films and
associated products have brought in over $1 billion.
Wepner is entitled to part of that, he added.
"It's one thing to base a movie on someone,
which you can do," Mango said. "It's another
to continually harp on the name for selling and
promoting without any permission or compensation, which
you can't do."
Stallone's publicist, Michelle Vega, declined comment
on the suit.
Rocky was the story of a down-and-out club
fighter from Philadelphia who got a longshot chance at
boxing's heavyweight title when reigning champ Apollo
Creed was looking for a patsy for his Bicentennial
fight. Stallone played Rocky Balboa, who worked at a
meat-cutting plant and nearly dethroned the champ.
Wepner was a New Jersey club fighter who ran up a
string of victories and eventually caught the eye of
boxing promoter Don King. Wepner was nicknamed "The
Bayonne Bleeder" for the punishment he was prone to
receive even while winning.
After Wepner knocked out Terry Henke in the 11th
round of a 1974 fight in Salt Lake City, Utah, King
offered him a title shot against George Foreman, who was
the reigning heavyweight champ. But when Ali defeated
Foreman, Wepner got the match with Ali.
On March 24, 1975, the two fought in Richfield, Ohio,
and Wepner knocked Ali down in the ninth round. Ali
eventually scored a 15th-round technical knockout of
Wepner with 19 seconds remaining in the fight.
The lawsuit claims Stallone made several promises to
Wepner that he would be financially compensated over the
years, but no payments were made, Mango said.
Wepner now lives in Bayonne, and works as a liquor
salesman.