Who
is the greatest boozer of all time?
I
can tell you who isn’t.
Last month we saw an overconfident Jackie Gleason nearly
bungle his eighth round victory over an unhinged Lord Byron,
and witnessed W.C. Fields employ questionable tactics to
demolish a disgracefully unprepared F. Scott Fitzgerald.
This month three storied British boozers and a L.A. wino
mix it up: Fellow poets Charlie “The Battlin’ Barfly” Bukowski
and Dylan “18 and Out” Thomas try to write each
other out of the tournament, while thespian Richard “Double
Bourbon” Burton attempts to upstage and outdrink veteran
bar battler Winston “The English Booze Dog”
Churchill.
Table Side Announcers: Howard
Cosell and Sir Laurence Olivier
Ref: Bill “The Fox” Foster
Bout
#5

Charlie
“The Battlin’ Barfly”
Bukowski
Vs.
Dylan
“18 and Out”
Thomas
(Odds: Dead Even)
Tale
of the Tab
Bukowski
His is a Cinderella story—late in life he fought
his way up from the the tough skid row bars of L.A. to
seize international recognition as one of the finest hooch
hounds of his generation. He couldn’t afford the
best drinks to train with, but he did well with what he
could beg, borrow and steal. There isn’t a hungrier
or thirstier fighter in the tournament. His only weakness
is his glass stomach: while he can hold his own with any
man, he has the proclivity to vomit at any particular moment.
Thomas
When this Welshman toured the States in the 1950’s,
he burned down drinking records at every stop he made — right
up to his eighteen-whiskey knockout at the White Horse
Tavern in NYC. His capacity is immense, his tastes wide,
but he has been known to go mad late in the session, sometimes
attacking and even biting his drinking companions.
The
Build Up
Howard Cosell: As you know, Larry,
Bukowski’s camp
protested the vomit disqualification rule when the tournament was announced.
Laurence Olivier: Naturally, Howard. They contended that
vomiting is a natural part of the drinking process and their boy doesn’t
even get warmed up until he’s given up lunch.
HC: We can expect Dylan to attack that weakness with
some sweet drinks, perhaps even some exotic brandies. Bukowski is not
known for drinking exotic or expensive liquors and they may disorient
him.
LO: Bukowski on the other hand will probably try to prod
Dylan into his “mad dog” mode. Once Dylan lays a hand on Buk,
he will be disqualified. It has to be Bukowski’s best chance for
victory.
(Bukowski wins the coin
toss.)
Round
One
Bukowski orders two glasses of Veuve Clicquot Gold Vintage Liebfraumilch
Reserve 1987.
LO: That’s rather unexpected.
HC: I disagree. While Bukowski cut his teeth on street
wines, in his latter, more monied years he switched to the good stuff.
LO: Maybe he’s attempting to keep things civilized.
Or perhaps he’s trying to attack Dylan’s preference for hard
liquor.
HC: Dylan makes quick work of his, as is is style. He’s
definitely a sprinter, while Bukowski is known for his long marathon bouts
of drinking. Buk levels his glass on the seven count while Dylan impatiently
waits. He wants to get down to business.
Round
Two
Thomas orders two pints of Bullmastiff Son of A Bitch Ales.
LO: And his business is drinking beer and cursing. I
believe he ordered those just so he could curse freely.
HC: “I’m just glad you didn’t order
the Mother Fucker Stout,” Bukowski jokes and the men share a laugh.
Characteristically, Dylan tips his down in under a minute and Bukowski
is right there with him.
LO: I’ll wager this Welsh ale is something Bukowski
hasn’t had before.
HC: Not that it matters. I bet he’d drink furniture
polish if he thought there was alcohol in it.
Round
Three
Bukowski orders two double well scotch and waters.
HC: .Doubles.
LO: Surprises me as well, Howard. You
would think Buk would be interested in pacing himself,
considering Dylan’s reputation
as a bull rusher.
HC: I’m beginning to suspect he is in awe of his
opponent. Bukowski is known to be a great fan of the Welsh poet.
LO: And doesn’t wish to appear lightweight in the
eyes of his idol.
HC: That respect might cost him the match. If he let’s
Dylan dictate the pace, he’s in for a fast, rough ride.
Round
Four
Thomas orders two pitchers of Budweiser.
LO: Well, that’s something.
HC: It’s a little known fact
Dylan drank quite a bit of Bud on his American tour.
The pitchers makes sense.
LO: Yes, but Buk drinks cheap American
lager by the case. It won’t make much of a dent. One of them needs to take control
of this match or we’ll be here all night.
Rounds
Five through Ten
Bukowski orders three
pitchers of MGD, Thomas orders three pitchers of Budweiser.
LO: We may well be here all night.
HC: It’s turning into a beer bust. They’ve
traded pitchers for seven rounds and neither seems willing to stop.
LO: They’re getting a little too cozy if you ask
me. Dylan thinks he’s at his local pub and Bukowski seems to content
to bask in his hero’s light.
HC: Here’s some movement! Dylan gets to his feet
to deliver a soliloquy: “I like the taste of beer. It’s live,
white lather, its brass bright depth. The sudden world through the wet
brown walls of the glass, the tilted rush to the lips and the slow swallowing
down to the lapping belly, the salt on the tongue, the foam on the corners.”
LO: He’s right about the tilted rush but lies about
the slow swallowing as he tips his pitcher down.
HC: And Bukowski’s pitcher hasn’t been touched!
His corner howls at Buk, trying to wake him from his reverie!
LO: The crafty Welshman hypnotized his admirer and left
him in a pickle indeed!
HC: Bukowski snaps out of it and starts to chug, but
he’s already on the five count!
LO: Six! Seven! He’s only half done!
HC: If he comes up for air he’s finished. Nine
and—
LO: The last drop slides down his neck and the ref says
he made the count. That’s as close as I’ve seen it!
LO: Buk wipes his mouth and you can tell he—
HC: Dylan’s treachery has awoken the beast in Bukowski.
The kid gloves are off.
Round
Eleven
Bukowski orders two glasses of Night Train Fortified Wine.
LO: Bukowski returns to his skid row roots.
HC: His wino style attack has leveled
many opponents. If the high alcohol content doesn’t
get them—
LO: The horrid taste will. Dylan, drink
in hand, rises to make another proclamation: “I hold
a beast, an angel, and a madman in me, and my enquiry is
as to their working, and my problem is their subjugation
and victory, downthrow and upheaval, and my effort is their
self-expression.”
HC: And this time it’s Bukowski who slams his drink
in the middle of the speech and Dylan who must play catch up!
LO: He tips on the six count and finishes on the nine.
HC: That was very disrespectful of Bukowski. Dylan was
trying to explain his previous bad behavior and—
LO: Not as disrespectful as what Buk says next: “You
mean a bastard, an asshole and motherfucker don’t you?”
HC: Dylan is livid! He flexes his hands, I believe he
wants them around Buk’s neck.
Round
Twelve
Thomas orders two double Swn y Mor Blended Whiskies.
HC: And again Dylan rises to his feet to make
another florid speech. The man loves his speeches.
LO: I suspect he’s trying to lull
Bukowski back into complacency.
HC: This time Bukowski gets to his feet
and cuts him off, saying: “Genius is the the ability to say a profound thing
in a simple way. Which makes you an idiot.” He downs his Welsh whisky,
puts his glass on the table and remains standing, fists clenched, ready
to brawl!
LO: Dylan downs his, tosses his glass to the side, runs
a hand through his hair and tries to contain himself. “You pup,”
he growls, “You sheep in sheep’s clothing.”
HC: They’re trying to incite each
other into disqualification! Whoever strikes the first
blow is out!”
LO: Buk lets loose another verbal barrage,
saying, “I
outlived you, I out-fucked you, and, by God, I out-drank you!”
HC: Dylan draws back as if to lunge. Then—what’s
he doing?
LO: He’s unbuttoning his fly. Good God, he’s
taking out his member!
HC: And pissing in Bukowski’s glass! “Drink
that!” Dylan bellows and the ref steps in! He’s disqualifying
Dylan! A controversial finish!
Bukowski wins by disqualification.
Post
Fight Interview:
Thomas: “That pretender wasn’t
fit to drink my piss, and I proved it.”
Bukowski: “I’ve seen that
trick before.”
Bout
#6

Richard
“Double Bourbon”
Burton
Vs.
Winston
“The British Booze Dog”
Churchill
(Odds: 6 to 1 in favor of Churchill)
Tale
of the Tab
Burton
Known to drink up to four bottles of vodka a day, this
accomplished boozer can take the hard stuff in waves. Kept
in fine drinking shape by his hard-drinking wife Liz Taylor,
Burton can drink a pub full of miners under the table then
recite Hamlet word for word. Like fellow Welshman Dylan
Thomas, however, his temper grows shorter as his bar tab
grows longer.
Churchill
This iconoclastic inebriate not only beat the Blitz, he
managed to beat up on more than a thousand bottles of
hooch during the same time period. Rumored to have stayed
drunk for the entire war, he can take whatever his opponents
throw at him: wine, bubbly, whiskey, gin, vodka, you
name it, he drinks it. Possessed of remarkable wit, an
iron will and and a stomach to match, he’s one
of the odds-on favorite to take the tournament.
The
Build Up
LO: Burton showed up fifteen minutes late, but to his
credit he came in with a drink in his hand.
HC: He was a big believer of having a few before going
on stage. Surely he can’t be underestimating Churchill.
LO: Winston seems to thinks so. “If this were war
time and you were a general, sir,” he says, “I would sack
you on the spot.”
HC: “If this were war time,” Burton fires
back,
“I’d be dive- bombing your house.”
LO: What a pity. With so much in common,
I thought they’d
be civil.
(Churchill wins the coin
toss.)
Round
One
Churchill orders two extra dry Plymouth Gin martinis.
LO: Sir Winston starts off true to form with his
trademark libation, made by pouring the gin and nodding
in the direction of France in place of using vermouth.
A habit he picked up during the war, when the Nazis were
hogging all the French liqueurs.
HC: Burton prefers his martinis with vodka
and his vodka with tonic, but he doesn’t seem to
mind too much.
LO: They sip them like gentlemen and one has to think
this will be a very long affair. Neither has any weaknesses, they both
drink anything and everything.
HC: And in vast amounts. It’s a case of the bottomless
glass versus the infinite bottle. Either one of these men could have easily
advanced to the next round, had they not been matched up.
Round
Two
Burton orders two Cristall Vodka and tonics.
HC: Burton doesn’t offer up any surprises either, sticking
with his standby.
LO: Churchill seems scandalized. “So far you have
at least one thing in common with Josef Stalin,” he quips, having
a taste.
HC: Burton responds with some tangled Shakespeare: “Come,
come, good vodka is a good familiar creature if it be well used: exclaim
no more against it.”
LO: Then knocks back his familiar creature.
HC: “That’s another thing you have in common
with Stalin,” replies Churchill in a tone drier than his martini,
then finishes his on the seven count.
Round
Three
Churchill orders two Johnny Walker Blacks and waters.
LO: That’s mother’s milk for Churchill.
I think they both realize it’s going to be a long
bitter fight, the drinking equivalent of trench warfare,
so they’re choosing old comfortable weapons.
HC: Churchill has a sip while Burton insolently
drinks his glass dry. Churchill makes a hurumphing sound,
then puts his down shortly after. “Where gentlemen sip,” Churchill announces, “savages
guzzle.”
LO: “Your brilliant, dry wit parched me,” Burton
replies, rather disingenuously.
HC: An ironic curtain has descended between these men,
and I suspect it’s going to get worse.
Rounds
Four Through Nineteen
Burton orders eight rounds of Cristall and tonics, Churchill
orders eight rounds of Johnny Walker Blacks and waters.
LO: What a titanic and grim struggle. Have we
heard crueler wits cross swords in the
tournament?
HC: I would say no. It brings to mind two Goliaths beating
each other over the head with clubs, both believing they can wear the
other down with might.
LO: Yet neither has even so much as raised a bump on
the other’s head.
HC: Someone’s skull is going to have to crack sooner
or later.
Round
Twenty
Burton orders two glasses of Schloss Schoenborn Rhine Wine.
HC: Finally, a breakthrough! Burton leaps out of his trench
and attempts to maneuver around Churchill’s formidable defenses.
LO: The fact that the wine is from Germany is no mere
coincidence, I think.
HC: Neither thinks Churchill, who comments, “Too
bad you weren’t born earlier. Hitler had work for men of your tastes.”
LO: “He kept you employed,” Burton replies,
reminding the former Prime Minister of his dismissal by peacetime Britain.
HC: “There is nothing more exhilarating than to
be shot at without effect,” Churchill snipes then downs the wine.
Burton follows, his expression unsettled. He knows he’s in for a
fight.
Round
Twenty-One
Churchill orders two Johnny Walker Blacks and waters.
HC: Winston doesn’t take the bait and remains
in his Johnny Walker bunker.
LO: He’s a stubborn brute. And surely he doesn’t
want to give the impression Burton is controlling the course of the contest.
One imagines Burton as the Luftwaffe buzzing around a deeply entrenched
Britain.
HC: It worked for Churchill once, why not again? Burton
drops a Bard buzzbomb on him, saying, “Come, thou monarch of the
vine, plumpy Bacchus with pink eye! Drink like a king!”
LO: “There are those gentlemen,” Churchill
responds, “who climb up on stage, and never again climb down.”
HC: “The next time I’m in a play I’ll
invite you to the premiere,” Burton salvoes back. “Bring a
friend. If you have one.”
LO: “I don’t think I can make the first performance,
but I’ll attend the second,” Churchill says. “If there
is one.”
HC: Ouch.
Round
Twenty-Two
Burton orders two double peppermint schnapps.
HC: That’s not right.
LO: Still working the German angle.
HC: Churchill doesn’t seem happy, but I’m not certain
if it’s the politics or the peppermint.
LO: “If you’re going through hell, keep going,”
Churchill quips, then drops the double down his throat. “Where’s
that wife of yours?” he then inquires. “You
know, the one who drinks you under the table.”
HC: “Shagging your mother, I’d imagine,”
Burton nastily reposts.
LO: It is getting rather nasty.
I’m glad
I’m not sitting at the table.
HC: You’d be under it by now. Burton downs his
schnapps on the eight count. I have to say, they’re both starting
to show their cups now. Churchill’s head is bloating and Burton
is beginning to slur.
Rounds
Twenty-Three Through Thirty
Churchill orders four Johnny Walker Blacks and waters, Burton
orders four double shots of peppermint schnapps
LO: Burton continues with his schnapps blitz against Winston’s
Black bunker and both are bloodied but as yet unbowed.
HC: The schnapps is having an awful affect on Churchill.
His face is flushed, his eyes are watering, he keeps trying to smoke the
wrong end of his cigar.
LO: Burton’s isn’t fairing much better, his
witty repartee has degenerated into muttered remarks about Winston’s
parentage. The next few rounds, I suspect, will decide the contest.
Round
Thirty-One
Churchill orders two glasses of Moet champagne
LO: Finally, thirty-plus rounds in, Churchill abandons
his bunker.
HC: And what a telling choice. Churchill always believed
in the stimulating effects of champagne and he’s in dire need of
stimulation. This may be a last ditch effort to stay afloat.
LO: If he can last a few more rounds, he may yet wring
a victory from the jaws of defeat. It’s sheer will that’s
keeping Burton from taking the inky plunge.
HC: Both men drink their champagne slowly. Churchill
stares at something inches from his eyes, Burton slumps in his chair,
staring through heavily lidded eyes at his opponent.
LO: We’ve witnessed a clash of titans tonight.
Two bloody champions facing each other across a shattered battlefield.
The toll has been terrible, yet they continue. This is what imbibing is
all about.
Round
Thirty-Two
Burton orders two double peppermint schnapps
HC: The terrible onslaught continues.
LO: Burton picks up his drink and rises unsteadily to his feet,
gazing darkly down at Churchill, who fumbles pitifully with his shot glass.
HC: “Surrender your castle, dying king,” Burton
intones in the voice that won him the stage. “You fought like a
lion, but the battle is lost.”
LO: “Never!” Churchill mumbles. “I
will fight you in the pubs, I will fight you in the clubs, I will . .
.”
HC: And his head drops to his chest like a hammer striking
an anvil! Incredible! The British Booze Dog has been put down!
LO: A stunning upset!
HC: Burton salutes his fallen enemy, finishes his schnapps,
then — great God, he’s staggering to the bar for a night cap.
LO: A rank underdog before the match, now one can only
wonder: Who can stand before Richard Burton’s proven might?
Burton wins by PO.
Post
Fight Interview
Churchill: “It was not my finest
happy hour.”
Burton: “I laughed him out of
patience; and ere, in the twelfth hour, I drunk him
to his bed.”--FKR
Next Bouts
Bout
7: William Faulkner Vs. Babe Ruth
Bout 8: Humphrey Bogart Vs. Dean Martin
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