Re: Bennie Georgino Has Died
nnie Georgino, a hall of fame boxing manager, promoter and bail bondsman who was said to personify the folk culture of Los Angeles' golden era of boxing, has died.
Georgino, a son of Neapolitan immigrants was a boxer and later an oddsmaker. He took over managing Danny "Little Red" Lopez, a former featherweight champion, after Lopez's manager, Howie Steindler, was found mysteriously beaten and suffocated in 1977. Georgino also managed former super-bantamweight world champion Jaime Garza.
He died Feb. 2, in Sun City, Calif., said his daughter, Susan Georgino. He was 95.
Steindler, owner of a divey but celebrated downtown L.A. boxing haunt, was said to be the inspiration for the Burgess Meredith character in the "Rocky" movies. But in a case of life imitating art, it was his successor, Georgino, whom Times columnist John Hall described as "probably the exact face you would come up with if asked to draw a composite portrait of a movie fight manager."
Writing about Georgino a few years later, Times columnist Jim Murray concurred: "Not exactly a throwback, but Central Casting would have found him perfectly acceptable" as a fight manager type.
He was round, and bald. "All the Georginos had no hair," his daughter said. And he took to the role of manager as if born to it. He traveled widely and accompanied his boxers in the ring, urging them on. "This is the fight of your life! Keep pushing!" he told a flagging Lopez in 1980.
Murray once asked Georgino why his bantamweight fighter Alberto Davila had lost several matches and was delighted when Georgino delivered, straight-faced, the exact line he had anticipated: "I wuz robbed."
Bennie Dominic Georgino was born April 13, 1920, in Tyler, Pa., one of eight children — seven boys and a girl — born to Cosmo and Asunta Georgino, Italian immigrants who later moved to California.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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