And
then there were eight. The field has been cut in half,
some of history’s finest boozers have fallen to
the wayside like so many winos, and a few long shots have
heroically double-shotted their way into the quarter finals.
Last month we witnessed William Faulkner strike out Babe
Ruth with his corn liquor fastball, while Humphrey Bogart
cruelly ousted fellow Rat Packer Dean Martin.
This
month we pit dark horse Dorothy Parker against booze juggernaut
Ernest Hemingway, and feature a monolithic clash between
hooch titans Jackie Gleason and W.C. Fields.
Table
Side Announcers: Howard Cosell and Sir Laurence Olivier
Ref: Bill “The Fox” Foster
Quarter
Finals 
Ernest
“Who’s Your Papa?”
Hemingway
Vs.
Dorothy
“The Algonquin Assassin”
Parker
(Odds: 8 to 1 in favor of Hemingway)
Tale
of the Tab
Hemingway
No one was shocked when Ernest crushed his first
opponent, Edgar Allen Poe. The phrase ‘unstoppable
steamroller’ pops
up a lot when his name is mentioned, and unless someone
mounts a truly heroic effort, Hemingway will continue to
steamroll right into the finals.
Parker
The tournament wags have been buzzing since Parker dispatched
an overconfident Orson Welles in the first round. Though
weighing in at a slight 120 pounds, she possesses a disorientating
wit and keen eye for weakness. If her opponent has
a soft spot, she will find it and attack without mercy.
The
Build Up
Howard Cosell: This is interesting: Hemingway
has eschewed the older incarnation that allowed him to
lay Poe so low and has shown up as a dashing 22 year old.
Perhaps he intends to charm his way past the lady.
Laurence Olivier: I’m as surprised as you are,
Howard. The fifty-year-old, much heavier, much more experienced version
is practically unstoppable, yet he has given up those advantages for a
more attractive facade. Is it vanity that spurred his decision, or are
his motives more devious?
HC: I don’t know, but I do know a groan went up
among the bettors when he showed up. They seem to think it was a poor
decision. Let’s see how it works out for him.
LO: Yes, let’s.
(Parker
wins the coin toss.)
Round
One
Parker orders two Beefeater Gin martinis.
LO: Parker comes out with her tried and true martini
jab. They clink glasses and Hem turns on a boyish smile. I do believe
he is attempting to charm the lady.
HC: They casually sip and exchange pleasantries. Hem
may be onto something, when it comes to attractive men, Parker is known
as pushover.
Round
Two
Hemingway orders two Gordon’s Gin and
tonics with a splash of bitters.
HC: No surprises from Hem, either.
These two have drank together before, in New York, and
I don’t think they’re going
to need to feel each other out.
LO: I sit here wondering what manner of trick Parker
is going to pull. She cannot attack his palette, as she did so effectively
with Welles, and she surely cannot outdrink him. I just had a rather odd
thought.
HC: So did I. Bitters, isn’t that thought to have
aphrodisiac qualities?
LO: We are of like minds. Then, again, he did enjoy bitters
in many of his cocktails. Perhaps we’re reading too much into it.
They drink these a bit faster and continue their polite conversation.
Round
Three
Parker orders two Beefeater Gin martinis.
HC: I’m at a loss. Parker should be playing every
wild card in her deck, it’s her only chance.
LO: Instead she remains conservative in her choice of
drink. If you recall, Poe was somewhat successful with his ‘shotgun
attack’
on Hemingway’s psyche.
HC: I get the feeling if the older Hemingway
was sitting across the table from her, she would have
picked up where Poe left off. Her corner was very excited
when the younger Ernest showed up, but they’re
frowning now.
LO: Parker seemed very excited too, but for apparently
different reasons.
HC: I agree. Instead of attacking his psyche, she’s
assaulting his jokes with girlish giggles.
Round
Four
Hemingway orders two shots of Fernet-Branca.
LO: Our suspicions are confirmed!
HC: I would say. Fernet Branca has a long-standing reputation
as an aphrodisiac. His game is plain now.
LO: He raises his glass, his eyes twinkling, and says,
“Here’s to a night of new experiences.”
HC:They clink glasses and down them and did that charming
sonuvabitch just proposition the lady?
LO: It sounded like a proposition to me. And by her
girlish smile, I think she bought it. Amazing!
Rounds
Five Through Ten
Parker orders three rounds of Beefeater martinis, Hemingway orders
three rounds of Fernet-Branca.
HC: They’re having a swell time.
LO: You’d think they were drinking brandy on a
romantic picnic. She is positively glowing with amour.
HC: Hemingway is glowing a little himself. This younger
Ernest seems a tad drunk where the older Ernest would have just started
warming up. Hem winks at her slyly and says, “I believe you once
said that after four martinis you’re under the host. Well, you’ve
had five.”
LO: They raise their glasses and this time it’s
Parker who offers a toast: “By the time you swear you’re his,
shivering and sighing, And he vows his passion is infinite, undying; Lady,
make a note of this: one of you is lying.”
HC: Good God! Suddenly our giggling teenager has transformed
into a hard-hearted harpy! Hemingway is shocked!
LO: Examine her countenance! Pathos has assassinated
pleasure!
HC: I believe she is about to spring a trap.
LO: Parker slings her Fernet toward her liver then brings
the glass down with a resounding clunk! Hemingway stares at her for an
instant, then sinks his. He sets it down quietly. His romantic
house of cards has collapsed!
Round
Eleven
Parker orders double shots of Cynar Liqueur.
LO: A bitter pill indeed, Cynar. Dorothy
wraps her hand around her glass and stares at it morosely,
unwilling to meet her opponent’s
eyes. Hemingway leans back in his chair and gazes at her, his face inscrutable.
HC: Now I’m wondering this: was this a premeditated
trap, or did Hemingway’s “under the host” comment sour
her disposition?
LO: I would say neither, Howard. What we are witnessing
is an encapsulation of Parker’s entire love life. It’s said
she subconsciously sabotaged every relationship she was ever in.
HC: Parker murmurs, “They sicken of the calm who
know the storm,” and breaks the calm by suddenly snatching up her
double and downing it.
LO: Taking his time, Hemingway leans forward and drinks
his slowly, finishing on the eight count.
Round
Twelve
Hemingway orders Isle of Skye Scotch on the rocks.
LO: A mellow, melancholy choice. The picnic has turned
into a wake and a pall has fallen over the match. Hemingway appears nearly
as depressed as Parker.
HC: He should be. He gambled one hell of a lot on charming
his way to the finish line, and now he finds himself trapped in an inferior
machine.
LO: Parker’s corner seems to think so too. They
know her moods, when she’s under the black cloud she can drink all
night. Stripped of facades and stratagems, it’s anybody’s
game now.
Round Thirteen
Parker orders absinthe cockails.
LO: Don't know what she's after here--Hemingway
can drink those all day.
HC: She seems to be in her own world,
she's looking right through him.
LO: She seems rather misty. A darkness
has settled in. If she indeed has sickened of the calm,
the high-proof absinthe will certainly hasten
the storm.
Round
Fourteen
Hemingway orders banana daiquiris.
HC: With umbrellas in them! “To shield us from
the storm,” Hemingway tells her.
LO: He’s obviously attempting to brighten the mood.
HC: Parker eyes the the gaily appointed cocktail and laughs
darkly. “Only you would invite a clown to a funeral,” she
says, having a taste.
LO: And Hem responds, “Guns aren’t lawful;
nooses give; gas smells awful, so you might as well live.” I do
believe that’s one of Dorothy’s quotes.
HC: They clink and drink, both smiling a little. And,
as expected, Parker’s corner grimaces.
Round
Fifteen
Parker orders Blue Hawaiis.
LO: Good heavens! With all the foliage
in that glass, Hemingway will think he’s back
in the jungles of Africa.
HC: He seems happy to be there. Parker’s
mood has taken a 360 degree turn. She is giggling again
and —
LO: Hemingway sinks his Hawaii, fishes out the large
piece of pineapple, puts it in his mouth and says, “Guess who I
am?”
HC: Laughing, Parker says, “Let me guess —
you’re the poet Wallace Stevens after you knocked
his teeth out!”
LO: “No,” he says. “I’m
Ernest Hemingway with a pineapple in his mouth.”
HC: Parker laughs uproariously. She stands up and pounds
on the table, quaking with laughter, and —
LO: The referee counts seven! Eight!
HC: She suddenly snaps out of her reverie
and stares at a grinning Hemingway. “You tricky son of a bitch!” she
says.
LO: — and ten! She’s been counted out!
HC: Hemingway grins wider and Parker starts laughing
again.
LO: That’s as pleasant an ending as we could have
expected.
HC: She’s taking it extremely well. Hemingway tilts
his head, and she comes around the table and takes his extended arm. And
off they go.
Hemingway
wins by TPO.
Post
Fight Interview:
Hemingway: “We’re going back to her hotel to
finish up the match. If she’s under the host at four,
who knows what she’s capable of after ten?”
Parker: “I hope that’s not the only trick he
knows.”
Quarter
Finals 
W.C.
“Tore
Up From The Floor Up”
Fields
Vs.
Jackie
“The Jolly Juicer”
Gleason
(Odds: Dead Even)
Tale
of the Tab
Gleason
Jackie is akin to a beer truck driven by a hyperactive
child: while he possesses an immense amount of drinking
power, his steering can be extremely erratic. If he can
stay on course, he is very nearly unbeatable.
Fields
Fields is the full package. He can wear down his opponents
with his fabled marathon drinking ability, or he can
score a quick knockout with a flurry of double rums,
as evidenced in his brutal four-round demolition of F.
Scott Fitzgerald.
The
Build Up
LO: Do you notice how hushed the room is? The audience
appears to be in complete awe. The tension is palpable.
HC: It’s like watching two locomotives facing each
other on the same track, both getting up to steam. Both can booze until
the sun comes up, then order a gallon of whiskey for breakfast. On the
other hand, they’re both supreme tricksters, and I’m sure
they each brought a full bag.
LO: Jackie’s clowning around nearly cost him the
match against Byron, but that was because he didn’t take the nobleman
seriously. Certainly he has to take Fields seriously.
HC: He’d better. Fields is as crafty as the Great
One and he’s likely to turn any ruse right back on him.
(Gleason
wins the coin toss.)
Round
One
Gleason orders Stoli screwdrivers.
HC: And so it begins. Nothing tricky about that drink.
LO: Gleason showed up hungover for his last match. He
certainly seems bushy-tailed today.
HC: He knows who he’s up against. Gleason drains
his cocktail, Fields follows on the five count.
Round
Two
Fields orders two glasses of Rosso de Torgiano.
HC:“A wonderful drink, wine,” Fields says,
examining his glass. “Did you ever hear of an Italian grape crusher
with athlete’s foot?”
LO: Jackie has a taste and retorts, “Yes, and apparently
he’s employed by this winery.” Jackie tips his down and Fields
follows suit.
Round
Three
Gleason orders two double well scotches, neat.
LO: This time Jackie comes out of his corner swinging.
HC: But it’s like beating on a
brick wall.
LO: “Mmmmmmm boy!” Gleason exclaims, knocking the
awful stuff back. He bugs his eyes with mock horror and gasps, “Mmmmm,
that’s good booze!”
HC: “Only an outright dipsomaniac would savor such
a drink,” Fields says, downing his. “Let’s have another.”
Round Four
Fields orders two double well scotches, neat.
HC: If Jackie is intimidated by Field’s legendary prowess,
he isn’t letting on.
LO: So far Gleason certainly is dictating the pace of
the contest, and Fields seems content to follow his lead. One gets the
feeling Fields is laying in the weeds, waiting for Gleason to start goofing
around.
HC: Once again, Jackie downs his first.
Fields imitates.
Round
Five
Gleason orders double Glenfiddich Scotch on the
rocks.
HC: Gleason says, “Hey, Rudolph, how’d
that gig with Santa go? Get through the storm okay?”
LO: Fields rubs his famous red nose
and says, “You
got your new dolly, didn’t you?”
HC: “With that honker Santa must’ve thought
he was delivering presents on the sun,” Jackie fires back.
LO: “Drink up, kid, you bother me,” Fields
says, downing his.
HC: Gleason knocks his back, smiling like a shark. He’s
starting to get under Fields’ skin and he knows it.
Round
Six
Fields orders double Bacardi Rums, neat.
HC: Fields comes out strong, bringing his famous double-rum
flurry to bear. It was only a matter of time.
LO: I believe he is getting impatient with Gleason.
Jackie’s kidding seems to have lured him out of the weeds.
HC: After a few flurries, Gleason may wish he left him
there. Both men, pinkies extended, knock them back.
LO: “Excelsior!” Fields exclaims.
HC: “Ambulance!” Jackie clowns, grabbing
his heart.
Round
Seven
Gleason orders triple Glen Moray Scotches, neat.
HC: “I see your double and raise
you a triple,”
Jackie trumpets.
LO: “Are we hooching here or playing hop-scotch?”
Fields says in reference to Jackie’s shifting preference
of scotch.
HC: “If you don’t like the tune that’s
playing,” Jackie retorts, “Try tipping the band.”
LO: “Here,” Fields says, tossing Jackie a
nickel.
“Play ‘Far, Far Away.’ In fact, the
farther the better.”
HC: “How peat it is!” Gleason
says, laying back his single-malt. Scowling, Fields follows.
Rounds
Eight Through Fifteen
Fields orders four double Bacardi Rums, neat,
Gleason orders four double J&B Scotches, neat.
HC: “One of these rounds, Fields,” Gleason
shouts. “Bang! Zoom! Right under the table!”
LO: “Are you still here?” Fields replies. “I
thought you left with the band.”
HC: Gleason appears to be at the top of his game. He’s
weathered Fields rum assault and responded with a few flurries of his
own.
LO: How about a little traveling music?” Gleason
says and takes out, yes, it’s a kazoo. He starts to play. It appears
to be some sort of Dixieland tune.
HC: Fields promptly slams his double scotch and settles
back and Jackie — what the hell?
LO: He’s drinking his J&B with the kazoo!
As if it were a straw! Then continues to play!
Round
Sixteen
Fields orders double Wellington Gin and tonics with double limes.
LO: Fields fishes the limes from his cocktail and inserts
them in his ears! Take that Gleason!
HC: Jackie stops playing and acts hurt. “Did I
hoit the poor widdle man’s ears?”
LO: “Didn’t you once play a deaf and dumb
man in a movie?”
HC: Jackie smiles and says, “Why, yes, in Gigot,
I—”
LO: “Encore!” Fields shouts, cutting Jackie
off. Now I believe Jackie’s feelings really are hurt.
Round
Seventeen
Gleason orders triple well tequilas.
HC: “Maybe this will knock those
limes out of your ears!” Jackie yells.
LO: “What’s that?” Fields says, cupping
an ear. “Milk thistle-mocking mimes are out for our beers?”
HC: “No!” Jackie shouts back. “I said,
‘This triple shot is going to knock you on your
rear!’”
LO: “That’s what I thought you said,”
Fields says, taking the limes out. He examines his shot. “What’s
this? Cat piss?”
HC: “You’re the kind of poet
who shouldn’t
know it,” Jackie says, knocking his back.
LO: “Hummina, hummina, hummina,” clowns Gleason.
HC: Fields drops his down the hatch and makes a face. “That’ll
kill that tapeworm,” he drawls, then pokes at his stomach. “Nope,
he’s still kicking.”
Round
Eighteen
Fields orders triple well tequilas.
HC: Well, he certainly turned that one around on Gleason.
LO: Evidently.
Jackie’s looking at that tapeworm medicine like it’s a tarantula
on his birthday cake. Fields takes the lead now, downing his, and it takes
Jackie two tries to finish his.
HC: He’s starting to show his rounds, all right.
His eyes are getting droopy and he’s beginning to sweat badly. He
won’t last much longer.
LO: Fields, on the other hand, looks as fresh as the
moment he strolled in. Could this be Gleason’s tequila Waterloo?
Round
Nineteen
Gleason orders two pints of Guinness.
LO: “Listen, you’re a betting man,” Jackie
says to Fields.
HC: “I make a wager on occasion,” Fields
drawls.
“So long as the race is fixed.”
LO: “I hear you’re a pretty fair juggler,”
Gleason continues. “I’ll bet you can’t
juggle six pool balls for ten seconds. Whoever wins the
bet walks away the winner of the bout. A gentleman’s
agreement.”
HC: “That’s a bet,” Fields
immediately replies and sends his corner man to gather
the pool balls.
LO: Great
God! Surely Jackie must know Fields is perhaps the greatest juggler of
all time! He used to tour the world with his act!
HC: Maybe he thinks Fields is deep enough in his cups
to flub it. Both men wear confident smiles, but one of them is dead wrong.
LO: Fields is handed the balls. He stands up, asks for
some room, then instructs the ref to keep count. He steadies himself —
then begins! All six balls are in the air! Look at that graceful arc!
Gleason has badly underestimated his opponent!
HC: “We forgot to shake on it,” Jackie says,
extending Fields one hand and downing his drink with the other! What brilliant
treachery!
LO: Fields is in a fix! He seems torn between shaking
Gleason’s hand, juggling the balls and grabbing his drink.
HC: The ref switches to the drink count. Two! Three!
Four!
LO: Astonishing! With six balls whirling above him, Fields
reaches out, shakes Gleason’s hand then snatches up his pint, without
dropping a ball! I’ve never seen anything like it!
HC: He’s juggling six balls with one hand and drinking
with the other! He’s going for the whole ball of wax. Six! Seven!
He’s going to make it!
LO: A ball breaks loose from the arc! Fields tosses
his half finished pint in the air — I can’t believe this —
snatches up the errant ball, then puts it back on course! Here comes
the pint!
HC: He catches the empty pint glass, catches the free-falling
stout in the glass, and tips it to his mouth! Impossible!
LO: There’s too much foam!
HC: And ten! The ref declares Fields out! He was an instant
too late!
Gleason
wins by TPO.
Post
Fight Interview
Gleason: “I’ve certainly heard of gentleman’s
clubs. But I don’t recall ever joining one.”
Fields: “How dare that rat employ such a detestable
con. He’s obviously trying to horn in on my racket.” —FKR
Next Bouts
Quarter
Finals: Richard Burton Vs. Charles Bukowski
Quarter Finals: Humphrey Bogart Vs. William Faulkner
Previous Bouts
Bout 1: Ernest Hemingway Vs. Edgar Allen Poe
Bout 2: Dorothy Parker Vs. Orson Welles
Bout
3: Jackie Gleason Vs. Lord Byron
Bout 4: W.C. Fields Vs. F. Scott Fitzgerald
Bout
5: Charles Bukowski Vs. Dylan Thomas
Bout 6: Richard Burton Vs. Winston Churchill
Bout
7: William Faulkner Vs. Babe Ruth
Bout 8: Humphrey Bogart Vs. Dean Martin