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Tuscaloosa, Ala. –The highly anticipated new book, “How
About That! The Life of Mel Allen,” about the former University
of Alabama alumnus, will be introduced by the author on April 27
from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the W.S.
Hoole Special Collections Library located at 500 Hackberry
Lane on campus.
Stephen Borelli, author of “How About That! The Life of
Mel Allen,” will discuss his new book, which looks at the
incredible life of Mel Allen. Borelli, an assistant news director
at USAToday.com, has written extensively on baseball and
sports. His book is the first biography ever written on perhaps
the most famous sports broadcaster in American history.
The book will be available for purchase and signing by the author
at the event which is free and open to the public. The schedule
of activities follows:
- 4:30-5:15 p.m. Open House/reception/book signing
- 5:15-6:15 p.m. Talk by Stephen Borelli
- 6:15-6:30 p.m. Additional book signing opportunity
Mel Allen was born Melvin Avrom Israel in Birmingham in 1913
to Russian Jewish immigrant parents. He lived in Johns, Ala., before
entering UA as a freshman at the age of 15. Earning both undergraduate
and law degrees at UA, he began what was to be a stellar broadcasting
career on the UA campus. Before moving to New York in 1937 to begin
his radio career at CBS, he was a play-by-play announcer on Birmingham
radio station WBRC in 1933.
Allen is perhaps best known by his moniker, “the Voice
of the New York Yankees,” a position he held until 1964,
and where he coined such famous phrases as “It’s going,
going, gone!” A legend in sports and in broadcasting, he
is a member of both the National Baseball Hall of Fame and the
Radio Hall of Fame.
The biography traces the announcer from tiny towns in Alabama
to the glares of Yankee Stadium and the Rose Bowl. Readers will
brush shoulders with legendary college football coach Bear Bryant,
famous radio host Ralph Edwards, and a lineup of New York Yankees
legends that includes Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey
Mantle, Yogi Berra and Casey Stengel. They will also experience
baseball’s glorious radio days, when announcers like Allen
and Red Barber gave listeners sight and sound and their depictions
made ball players seem larger than life.
Allen’s folksy words follow a Yankees dynasty at its height.
Readers will learn about his fade from the national eye after the
Yankees mysteriously dismissed him in 1964 and his second broadcasting
life in the 1970s - 1990s as host of the groundbreaking television
show “This Week in Baseball.” During this period, a
unique friendship with George Steinbrenner allowed Allen to call
one last no-hitter as he became the voice of baseball again.
Borelli conducted extensive research for his book at the W.S.
Hoole Special Collections Library, which houses the Mel Allen Papers.
Borelli received first-hand help with his research from Allen’s
brother and longtime assistant Larry Allen.
An exhibition from the holdings of the Mel Allen Collection will
be on display at the Hoole Library in conjunction with the event.
The exhibit, curated by Donnelly Lancaster and Jessica Lacher-Feldman
from the Hoole Library, will feature unique and exciting materials
that reflect Mel Allen’s career as a sports and broadcasting
legend.
Among Allen’s many achievements are his place in the Baseball
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown New York, the National Broadcasting
Hall of Fame, and UA’s College of Communication and Information
Sciences Hall of Fame. He is the cousin of fellow CC&IS Hall
of Fame member and broadcast giant Elmo Ellis.
The exhibition will be on display at the Hoole Library through
Sept. 30. Baseball fans, UA sports fans, and anyone interested
in American popular culture will enjoy the exhibition, which offers
visitors a glimpse into a slice of true Americana – the great
American pastime - baseball.
For more information, please visit http://www.lib.ua.edu/libraries/hoole/ or
contact Jessica Lacher-Feldman at jlfeldma@bama.ua.edu or
205/348-0500.
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