Remembering Cigar, Geoffrey Holder, Vic Braden, Dorothy Tyler, Saturday Morning Cartoons
He
Beat The Best The World Has To Offer And Even
Mother Nature, Too
INCOMPARABLE, A WONDERFUL
VOICE, A
GREAT COACH, UNDONE BY THE RULES, AND THAT’S ALL FOLKS
Cigar was one of the great racehorses in
American racing.
Finishing first in 19 of 33 races overall, he won nearly $
10 million and was undefeated in
1995.
Geoffrey Holder was the
Trinidadian actor, dancer, and voice-over artist, best known for his portrayal of the villain
Baron Samedi in
Live and Let Die (
1973).
Vic Braden was the legendary tennis coach who revolutionized coaching with his methods.
Dorothy Tyler was the great
British high jumper, who met
Hitler at the
1936 Berlin Olympics and lost out on the
Gold Medal twice due to changes in the rules.
Saturday morning cartoons, once a staple of children’s television viewing, are now a thing of the past.
Cigar (
April 18,
1990 – October 7, 2014), was an American
Thoroughbred racehorse who, in 1995 and
1996, became the first American racehorse racing against top-class competition to win 16 consecutive races since
Triple Crown winner
Citation did so in 1948 and
1950.[1] Cigar retired as the leading money earner in
Thoroughbred racing history and was later inducted into the
National Museum of
Racing and
Hall of Fame.
Cigar again defeated
Devil His Due and Concern, running a very fast 1:53 3/5. The winning streak stood at seven.[3] This race was followed by the
Massachusetts Handicap at
Suffolk Downs north of
Boston at 1⅛ miles; Cigar won again, in 1:48 3/5.
Many great horses from the east, such as
Kelso and
Seattle Slew, suffered losses on the faster, harder
California racing surfaces. The
Hollywood Gold Cup at
Hollywood Park thus posed a particular challenge; the California track also assembled one of the greatest fields in the race's history, including
Santa Anita Handicap and
Pacific Classic Stakes winner and
Kentucky Derby runner-up
Best Pal, Pacific Classic Stakes winner Tinner's Way, Santa Anita Handicap winner
Urgent Request, and Concern, who won the
Gold Cup's major preparatory race, the
Californian Stakes. Nonetheless,
Cigar then went to
Belmont Park for two preparatory races and the year-end championship race, the
Breeders' Cup Classic. He won them all: the
Woodward Stakes at 1⅛ miles, the
Jockey Club Gold Cup at 1¼ miles and the Breeders' Cup Classic at 1¼ miles in a stakes record time of 1:59.58.[4] He had completed a perfect season, 10 for 10, with earnings of $4,819,800.
Geoffrey Lamont Holder
Holder began his movie career in the 1962
British film All Night Long, a modern remake of
Shakespeare's Othello. He followed that with
Doctor Dolittle (
1967) as
Willie Shakespeare, leader of the natives of Sea-Star
Island. In
1972, he was cast as the
Sorcerer in
Everything You
Always Wanted to Know About Sex*.
The following year he was a henchman – Baron Samedi – in the
Bond movie Live and Let Die;[9] He contributed to the film's choreography. In addition to his movie appearances, Holder became a spokesman for the
1970s 7 Up soft drink "uncola" advertising campaign.[10][11]
In
1975 Holder won two
Tony Awards for direction and costume design of
The Wiz, the all-black musical version of
The Wizard of Oz. Holder was the first black man to be nominated in either category.[1]
Dorothy Jennifer Beatrice Tyler,
MBE (née Odam; 14
March 1920 -
25 September 2014) was a British athlete who competed mainly in the high jump. She was born in
Stockwell,
London.[1]
Odam competed for
Great Britain in the
1936 Summer Olympics held in
Berlin, Germany where she won the silver medal behind
Ibolya Csák. She jumped the highest and was the first to clear 1.60 meters, and would have won under modern countback rules, but under the 1936 rulebook a jump-off was called for, and Csák won the gold. [2]
In
1939 she broke the world record in the high jump with 1.66m, but
Germany's
Dora Ratjen broke her record quickly. [3] Odam was suspicious of Ratjen and, according to Odam, "They wrote to me telling me I didn't hold the record, so I wrote to them saying, 'She's not a woman, she's a man'. They did some research and found 'her' serving as a waiter called
Hermann Ratjen. So I got my world record back." [4] Odam's world record was formally recognized by the sport's world governing body, the
IAAF, in
1957. [5]
She won the silver medal again in the
1948 Summer Olympics in London, making her the only woman to win
Olympic athletics medals before and after the war.[6] Her 1936 win also made her the first British woman to win an individual
Olympic medal in athletics. [7]
Odam was also twice a gold medallist at the
British Empire Games, winning at
Sydney in
1938 and
Auckland in 1950. In Sydney she was the only
Englishwoman to win athletics gold, setting a
Games record of 5ft 3in, which is the same as 1.60 meters.