Rocky Bust Available

Harvey AbramsPresident of the International Institute for Sport and Olympic History sent me the following press release


The IISOH has the statue of ROCKY, famous from the movie ROCKY III, listed on ebay for $5 million in its first major fundraising event.

What is not listed on ebay — yet — is another artwork — the ROCKY BUST, a full-size figure of the head of the famous statue listed for sale at only $22,000 (twenty-two thousand dollars).

The BUST can be seen at
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com

The IISOH is a non-profit educational, literary and research corporation that is organized to operate a Library and Museum devoted to the History of Sport, Physical Education, Recreation, Dance, Sport in Art and the Olympic Games.

The group is planning to construct a large campus facility in central Pennsylvania with a Library, Museum and Theatre surrounded by vast outdoor sculpture gardens, sports facilities and a restaurant/cafe.


– Craig Zablo

Stallone toys with comedy in ‘Spy Kids 3-D’

Stallone toys with comedy in ‘Spy Kids 3-D’
By Andy Seiler, USA TODAY [June 19, 2003]

Sylvester Stallone admits his is not the first name that comes to mind when you think of children’s comedy.

But here he comes in Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over, opening July 25. Stallone plays The Toymaker, the latest villain up against the young hero and heroine of the popular big-screen series. As an added appeal, this final chapter in the series is shot in high-definition 3-D.

In Game Over, Stallone will not just be smashing preconceptions; he’ll be doing it several times over. The Toymaker, you see, has multiple personalities.

“This is a man who’s having all these struggles in his own brain,” Stallone says. “I’m stretching the emotional rubber band. Part of him is The Dictator, this hellbent, military, crush-them-all guy. I do a little takeoff of George C. Scott, but perhaps under the influence of a gallon of espresso. One of them is The Scientist. And one of them is The Hippie, the peace-and-love and why-can’t-we-get-along-and-let’s-join-hands-and-we-are-the-world kind of guy. He’s definitely a throwback to Haight Ashbury.”

The Toymaker also impersonates a “news reporter, kind of a Mortimer Snerd/TV-commentator type,” Stallone says.

The Toymaker has been banished to cyberspace, where he attempts to lure the unsuspecting to join him.

“And once they’re there,” Stallone says, “they’re never going back.”

Stallone knows what that feels like. After writing and starring in Rocky, the 1976 Oscar winner for best picture, he became one of the top stars in Hollywood. But a series of flops had him floundering. His most recent hit was the 1998 computer-animated Antz, for which he provided the voice of a tough worker ant. Three of his most recent movies, D-Tox, Avenging Angelo and Shade— went directly to video.

“That happens when you get involved with certain projects that become a shadow of their original conception,” says Stallone, who turns 57 on July 7. “You have to learn to roll with those punches. If you do take it personally, it’s a stigma that can stifle you in going any further with your life.”

So Stallone is grateful that innovative writer/director Robert Rodriguez has handed him a plum role in a successful series. And it’s a comedy part, which Stallone hasn’t had the chance to try (Antz aside) in more than a decade.

“It’s something that I’m never presented with,” he says frankly. “You are perceived in a certain way. People feel comfortable, and I’m no exception, in going with the safe route.” Stallone made eight movies featuring his two iconic figures, Rocky and Rambo.

Now he is taking a different road, and he’s well aware of potential pitfalls.

“I tell my friends when you’re watching Biography, always turn it off before the last half-hour,” Stallone says. “It always turns out to be a nightmare ride through career hell. That’s the part you try to edit out of your life.”


– Craig Zablo

Sly Shines On

From Andy Seiler‘s article for USA Today, June 19, 2003, which profiles Sally Field, Demi Moore, and Sylvester Stallone who all appear in big summer movies.

Sylvester Stallone

Birth name: Michael Enzio Stallone
Role: The Toymaker, evil genius banished to cyberspace in “Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over” which opens July 25
Notable Awards: Starred in “Rocky” [1976], which won best picture. Several Razzie Awards for worst actor, as well as worst actor of the [20th] century.
Gumption, grit, and moxie factor: Like Rocky, Stallone‘s whole life has been a million-to-one shot.
Future Potential Based on this role: 100-to-1 shot, not bad,compared with that million-to-one shot.

“His career reminds one of Burt Reynolds,” author Boze Hadleigh says. “He was making too many movies and not paying attention to the quality. He ended up with the option of not working or working in something very alien or something schlocky. When it comes to multiple roles, I don’t think he’s exactly Peter Sellers, but at least he’s trying.” Adds Sternbergh: “It’s hard to imagine him enjoying a late career renaissance. but if he’s charming in the movie, which is not impossible, it could lead to other similar things. I think that he’s probably looking at interesting cameos.”


Craig Zablo

Rocky Statue Up For Bid

Image courtesy and © Schomberg Studios.

Harvey AbramsPresident of the International Institute for Sport and Olympic History sent me the following press release


YO!

ROCKY can be yours!

The bronze statue of Rocky Balboa, the boxer made famous in the Sylvester Stallone movies ROCKY III and ROCKY V, is available to any benefactor who is willing to donate at least $5 million ($5,000,000) to a Pennsylvania non-profit corporation by June 18, 2003.

Don’t bother bringing your moving van to Philadelphia, though. The statue that stands in front of the First Union Spectrum isn’t the one available. It’s the other one that’s available. Actually — it’s ROCKY # 3 that’s available.

The monumental bronze statue of ROCKY is world famous and once stood atop the 72 steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The statue was made in 1982 for the Sylvester Stallone movie ROCKY III. After the filming was over, Stallone graciously donated the statue to the City of Philadelphia. What followed was a firestorm of debate.

The Art Museum didn’t want the statue on their steps because they claimed it wasn’t art, but rather just a movie prop. The media and public jumped into the debate. In the end, the statue was moved. The Philadelphia Art Commission, the people responsible for public art in the city, moved the 1,500-pound statue to a new location. Today it stands in front of the First Union Spectrum in South Philadelphia, where other sports art can also be found.

But in State College, Pennsylvania — the hometown of Penn State University — a new organization was seeking sports art from around the world to decorate its planned sports museum. The International Institute for Sport and Olympic History (IISOH) was planning to open a Library and Museum devoted to the History of Sport, Physical Education, Recreation, Dance, Sport in Art and the Olympic Games.
The IISOH, a non-profit educational, literary and research corporation, originally was planning to purchase a 25,000-square-foot building to begin operations in 2005.

But plans changed. Now the group is planning to build a 25,000-square-foot library, 100,000-square-foot museum and a theatre/auditorium, restaurant/cafe, outdoor sculpture gardens, and lots of sports fields and facilities on a campus up to 300 acres in order to enhance its educational mission.

Then along came ROCKY #2 and ROCKY # 3. The president of the IISOHHarvey Abrams, found that the artist had actually made the ROCKY statue in a limited edition of three. So the IISOH signed a contract to buy the remaining statues that have been in storage for 20 years. In fact — they are not even statues — they are still only in the original mold and would be cast in bronze as ROCKY #2/3 and ROCKY #3/3.
The Institute decided that ROCKY # 2 will grace its museum in central Pennsylvania and ROCKY # 3 will be given away as a gift to a major donor. The benefactor has to donate a minimum of $5 million dollars. The IISOHis raising money for the Institute‘s Boxing endowment and Operating Fund. The benefactor is donating money to the non-profit Institute and will eligible for a tax write-off less the actual cost of the statue which will only be revealed after the donation. IRS rules prevail, of course!

The bronze statue is the creation of artist A. Thomas Schomberg, whose monumental bronzes grace museums and estates worldwide. Schomberg created ROCKY in 1982 for Sylvester Stallone and the movie ROCKY III. The statue has been used in other films such as MANNIQUIN (Andrew McCarthy) and PHILADELPHIA (Tom Hanks) as a backdrop. It was used again in ROCKY V and for that film the statue was moved to the Art Museum for filming, then returned to the Spectrum permanently.

Why does the benefactor have until June 18? Well — according to Abrams — a donation of $5 million creates the Boxing Endowment and will also allow the Institute to make the land acquisition and start the design process with architects. Hey — what’s $5 million these days? The IISOH still has to work on the larger $25 million donations that will endow the Library, the Museum and the Theatre.

So — boxing fans — ROCKY can grace your estate if you have the money.
Then after you get it you can build 72 steps so you can run and jump to your heart’s content.

Contact Information:

International Institute for Sport and Olympic History
PO Box 175
State College, PA 16804
tel: (814) 237-8331
fax: (814) 237-8332

Harvey Abrams, President
Bruce Lorich, Treasurer

email: Olympicbks@aol.com
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com/press1.html
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com/501c3directory.html
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com/Rocky.html
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com/501c3board.html

The International Institute for Sport and Olympic History is a Pennsylvania non-profit educational, literary and research corporation under section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code. The IISOH is organized to operate a Library and Museum devoted to the History of Sport, Physical Education, Recreation, Dance, Sport in Art and the Olympic Games.


I wonder if anyone will make a donation.

– Craig Zablo