Its theme was something Cramer has addressed before, in the showcase
article from the famed June 1986 special "The American Man: 1946-86"
issue of
Esquire. Cramer's profile of the irascible and
notoriously private baseball star Ted Williams was both revealing and
endearing. Half of Williams' quotes appeared in all capital letters,
emphasising his awkward bellow. Asked how old he was, Williams answered
'WELL HOW DO I LOOK?.. HUH? WHAT DO YOU THINK OF TED WILLIAMS NOW?' That
provided the story its title, but what made it was Cramer's realisation
that what drove Williams' insecurity was the other side of his drive to
be the greatest hitter of all time, the best sport fisherman, the top
fighter pilot. It was deeply American, and it became Cramer's theme: "He
wanted fame, and wanted it with a pure, hot eagerness that would have
been embarrassing in a smaller man. But he could not stand celebrity.
This is a bitch of a line to draw in America's dust."
His own lack
of success in sport drove Cramer to journalism. Born in Rochester, New
York in 1950, he joined his high school newspaper after being cut from
the baseball team. He edited the paper at Johns Hopkins University,
where he took his degree in 1971. He fell in love with Baltimore, but
after failing to land a job with the Baltimore Sun
he took an MA at New York's Columbia School of Journalism, before getting hired on the second attempt by the Sun in 1973. In 1976 he left for the Philadelphia Inquirer, who sent him to Israel, where his reporting from the Middle East won a Pulitzer Prize in 1979.
He went freelance and moved to Maryland's Eastern Shore, writing for
Rolling Stone and
Sports Illustrated as well as
Esquire. His wife Carolyn White was a talented editor who, while he worked on
What It Takes,
gave up her own work to, in the words of one friend, 'become his Maxwell Perkins'. It took Cramer six years to research
and write the book; a heavy smoker and prodigious coffee-drinker, he
suffered health setbacks, including phlebitis, pleurisy, and Bell's
palsy, before finishing it. It was published to coincide with the 1992
elections; the four-year delay was a factor in its cool reception.
Cramer wrote the copy for
The Seasons Of The Kid (1991), a photo-book about Williams based on his article, and with
The Choice (1992) began writing and narrating documentaries for America's Public Boradcasting System, PBS.
The Battle For Citizen Kane (1995), made for their American Experience series, was nominated for an Academy Award. He expanded part of
What It Takes into a 1995 biography of Bob Dole, and in 2001 returned to his theme of the demands of fame with
Joe DiMaggio: The Hero's Life, the first warts-and-all portrait of another American baseball icon.
Cramer returned to the Middle East with
How Israel Lost: Four Questions
(2004), whose thesis, that Israel was a victim of its own victories,
and whose straightforward answers to its four questions, provoked some
predictably contentious reviews. His final book, in 2011, was a return to his 1986
article, but by this time the title,
What Do You Think Of Ted Williams Now, became an invitation to reflect on time passed.
Cramer
died of lung cancer. He is survived by his and White's daughter Ruby, and by his second wife Joan. In a tribute, Vice President Joe Biden recalled
reading about himself in Cramer's book: "It is a powerful thing to read a
book someone has written about you, and to find both the observations
and criticisms so sharp and insightful that you learn something new and
meaningful about yourself. That was my experience with Richard."
Richard
Ben Cramer, journalist: born Rochester, New York 12 June 1950
died Baltimore 7 January 2013.
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