Pinstripes
Yankees
Alumni Newsletter |
Teresa
Wright
by Marty Appel
Any Yankee fan worth his (or
her) salt who hasn’t seen Gary Cooper
in Pride of the Yankees at least 15 times, hasn’t really passed
the test of true belief. Sure the dialogue seems primitive, and yes,
it doesn’t run on TV that much anymore, but you still weep when
Coop does his Lou Gehrig farewell speech, and you still feel good for
the big lug when he finds romance with a fast Chicago girl named Eleanor
Twitchell.
When Eleanor was still coming
to Yankee Stadium regularly and I was the team’s PR Director, I would call her to arrange for a car service.
And sometimes I’d tease her, saying “I saw your movie last
night on Channel 9!”
And she’d giggle and say, “oh,
if only I really looked like that Teresa Wright.”
A lot of people had a thing for
Teresa Wright. It made her one of the most popular Hollywood actresses
in
the ‘40s, and an Oscar winner
as Best Supporting Actress for Mrs. Miniver in 1942, the same year in
which she was also nominated as Best Actress for her role as Eleanor
Gehrig in Pride. But her wholesome picture on the Pride of the Yankees
movie poster (it was presented as the great American love story), and
her loving portrayal of the woman who stole Lou’s heart, made her,
for baseball people, a part of our world.
Current PR-director Rick Cerrone
was slick enough to rediscover the 79-year old Ms. Wright in Connecticut
in 1978,
and to invite her to throw
out a first pitch. It turned out that getting a phone call from the Yankees
was the last thing she ever expected in her life. Not only was she no
baseball fan, she did no publicity with the team for the movie’s
release, and simply went on her way to other films after wrapping up
production.
But the simple first pitch ceremony
lit a fire in her. Or maybe it was the kiss and the flowers from Tino
Martinez
on the day of her big
pitch.. In any case, she was a Yankee fan waiting to happen. Now retired
from movies (her last was 1997’s The Rainmaker), she occupies much
of her time by avidly following the Yankees, making up for the six decades
between the movie and today, when she paid no attention at all, managing
to miss two dozen pennants in the process.
“I think it’s the best theater I’ve ever seen,” she
told the Stamford Advocate recently. “A baseball game starts off
with fans enjoying themselves and you never know where the players are
going to take things next.”
Looking back to Game 7 of last
year’s World Series, she says, “If
you wrote it in a script, nobody would believe it.”
Pride of the Yankees featured
Babe Ruth and Bill Dickey, as themselves, but Teresa, just beginning
her great
career, was not that interested
in the celebrated ballplayers. “To tell you the truth,” she
said, “I don’t remember whether I was on the set the day
their parts were shot. I guess I knew who Babe Ruth was, but surely not
Bill Dickey.”
Now, she can tell you David Wells’ stats (she claims to have
cried when he was traded) and all about Bernie Williams, who “has
a presence,” she says. This from a woman who co-starred with Gary
Cooper and Matt Damon. Nice compliment, Bernie.
Sharp of mind and full of strong
political thoughts, the slight woman has the same pretty face that
captivated
movie goers but now finds great
joy following her Yankees. When she calls Cerrone now to talk about a
recent game or concluding home stand, he can’t help but think that
after all this time, the team has a fan with a special tie to the team
that it can be proud of. Sort of the Pride of the Yankees, all over again.
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