Babe Ruth (1998) is an inspiring and powerful sports biopic that brings to life the journey of one of baseball’s most legendary figures. Directed by Mark Tinker and starring Stephen Lang, the film captures the rise, fall, and redemption of George Herman “Babe” Ruth — from troubled youth to American icon. Packed with emotional storytelling, stirring performances, and iconic baseball moments, this film is a must-watch for sports fans and lovers of true stories.
⏱️ Timestamps:
 00:00 – Opening: introduction and early life of George Herman “Babe” Ruth
 05:00 – Archival footage: youth baseball years and Catholic school
 10:00 – Red Sox career: rise as a power hitter and early fame
 15:00 – Key interviews
 20:00 – 1927 season focus: Ruth setting home run records
 25:00 – “Called Shot” controversy and myth‑debunking
 30:00 – Personal life: marriages, Helen Ruth’s death, Claire Hodgson marriage
 35:00 – Stories of the “hospital promise” game and off‑field antics
 40:00 – Media scrutiny, public persona vs. private struggles
 45:00 – Testimonies: family, historians and personal acquaintances
 50:00 – Legacy discussion: impact on baseball and popular culture
 55:00 – Closing montage: reflections on myth and the man
 59:00 – End credits
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♪ ♪ Donald Honig:
 If Babe Ruth had not existed, it would’ve been
 impossible to invent him. He was the 4th of July,
 a brass band, and New Year’s Eve
 all rolled into one. Studs Terkel:
 He was bigger
 in his dissipations, bigger in his volatility, bigger
 in his unpredictability. He was eccentricity
 and total excellence wrapped up
 in one person. Robert Creamer:
 He made the world
 more fun to be in, and everybody who was
 in his orbit felt more alive
 because of Ruth. Julia Ruth Stevens:
 He’s my father. He was
 the only father I ever knew. He was such a lot of fun. I enjoyed
 every minute of it. Terkel:
 He was celebrated for being
 the mythical figure he was, who, at the same time,
 was flesh and blood. And because
 he was flesh and blood, he gave us that feeling of something
 larger than life of which we are a part. (crowd cheering)
 ♪ ♪ Jean Shepherd:
 He would get up to the plate, he would kick
 the dirt a little bit, take his stance… and then smile
 down at the pitcher. He’d take the bat,
 and he’d point it out like that. Ben Bentley:
 And you saw people
 standing up, just applauding. He hasn’t done
 anything yet, but there he is.
 They’re applauding. Creamer:
 He swung
 and missed once, you know,
 that tremendous swing, he swung around,
 he’s looking up
 into the stands, and he was looking right at me,
 as far as I was concerned. “Just look, there’s Babe Ruth
 looking at me. Wow.” Bill Mazer:
 And what are
 you waiting to see? “Hit a home run, Babe.” Waiting for the pitch,
 there was a sense of a great coiled spring, and when he swung… -Bam!
 -Boom! -Boom!
 -Bam! There it went. It was so frightening.
 They all ducked. All of a sudden,
 you see that ball go. Up, up, up, up, up. 150 feet high
 as it passed first base. and it just floated, floated,
 floated and went forever. Like a homing pigeon,
 it would choose direction
 and leave town. That ball had to travel
 at least 600 feet on the fly. Over the fence, the parking lot,
 the restaurant next door, and four blocks
 down the street. And then, very suddenly, from this moment
 of immense power
 and the ball flying out… {an8}Terkel: He ran
 with little mincing steps– thin legs,
 these delicate ankles– and he minced his way,
 as though he were a dancer. Gleason:
 Doffing his cap left and right, bowing and waving
 to everybody. ♪ ♪ And disappeared
 into the dugout. (bell tolling) Liev Schreiber narrating:
 At Babe Ruth’s massive
 funeral in 1948, a puzzled drama critic
 asked a sports writer “What did this man Ruth do, “what did he have
 to merit this?” History tells us
 that Babe Ruth was
 the greatest player in an era when baseball stood
 alone as a national pastime. His talents were
 beyond unique, first, as a brilliant pitcher
 with the Boston Red Sox, then a thunderous slugger
 with the New York Yankees. But was it just
 Ruth’s astounding ability that allowed him
 to sit among the gods? How did the Babe’s life pass
 from that of an ordinary
 human being… to star, to legend, and finally into myth? ♪ ♪ Ruth was far from perfect. He could be loud, and abrasive,
 and impossibly immature. He was a perfect fit
 for the times. A man of mighty appetites
 and unrestrained desires, the Babe was a metaphor
 for the big, broadening
 shoulders of America. (cheering)
 (bat cracks) Schreiber:
 Ruth himself once said, “I like to live
 as big as I can.” In an era when our country
 was burgeoning with power, no one hit the ball
 farther and louder than Babe Ruth. {an8}Honig: No novelist
 or Hollywood screenwriter, {an8}at the furthest extremes
 of their imagination {an8}would have dared invent
 somebody like this. (crowd cheering) This was science fiction. {an8}It’s another dimension.
 Exponential is the word. {an8}The leap is
 wild and crazy, {an8}something Einsteinian. {an8}(chattering)
 Wagenheim:
 You had scientists {an8}coming and examining Ruth, {an8}and all kinds of strange,
 bizarre articles {an8}in the press about Ruth
 having superhuman vision {an8}or superhuman coordination. It was as though someone
 had come from another planet. (crowd cheering)
 Schreiber:
 The Babe’s mammoth swing transformed baseball.
 He practically invented
 the home run. In 1920, he hit 54. a total no other team
 in the league could match. And he did it
 with an exhilarating presence
 and unmatched muscle that had never
 been seen before. {an8}John Kennelly:
 John McGraw may have been {an8}the best inside
 baseball manager {an8}that ever came over the Pike. This guy was
 the Baltimore chop, the bunt,
 move the runner along, work for one run
 at a time. Ruth came along
 and started breaking up
 ball games with one swing. Game announcer:
 There it goes! McGraw hated him! Here he’d been,
 30 years, managing
 and working for one run. This guy wrecked
 the whole afternoon
 with one swipe. Shepherd:
 Pitchers were afraid of him. {an8}They’d lie at night, {an8}knowing that the next day
 they’re facing Ruth, {an8}and they would toss
 in their sleep. Bill Werber:
 I was on first base,
 and Ruth hit a home run. I ran around second,
 hitting a pretty good clip, {an8}Art Fletcher was at third base,
 saying, “Whoa! Whoa!” {an8}’Cause the ball was way up
 in the right-field stands. {an8}I kept on going, you know,
 and I came and sat down. And when he came
 into the dugout, he reached over,
 patted me on top
 of the head and said, “You don’t need
 to run like that, son, when the Babe hits one.” Honig:
 He was doing it
 with such joy and simplicity, almost as if he didn’t know
 what he was doing. He just went up and did it. Creamer:
 His hitting was
 just unprecedented. No one had ever
 done that before, and that thrilled people.
 It excited people. {an8}It gave you a vicarious sense
 of accomplishment {an8}to see Ruth hit home runs. {an8}It became an exciting thing. Schreiber:
 For baseball, the timing
 of Ruth’s accomplishments was perfect. At the beginning of the decade,
 a dark cloud of deceit had threatened the game. Accused of throwing
 the 1919 World Series, several Chicago White Sox
 players were tossed
 out of baseball. Disenchanted fans stayed away, until they were lured back by the game’s
 two new powers. Newsreel announcer:
 In move to clean up game, team owners in 1920 made
 Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis high commissioner
 of national pastime, and he brought baseball back. But Babe Ruth, too,
 was a big help to the commissioner
 with his spindle legs, beaming face,
 and booming bat. Even when the Bambino
 hit a single, thousands cheered,
 and thousands more fought
 to see him play the game. Honig:
 The home team is in
 seventh place, going nowhere. On a weekday afternoon,
 we’d draw maybe 2,000
 or 3,000 people. The Yankees came into town. {an8}The crowds suddenly were
 getting larger. (chattering) Honig:
 Every seat was full
 on a hot Wednesday afternoon, and there was
 only one reason for that. Bentley:
 “Hey, the Babe is playing. “Hey, this is somebody big,
 somebody we can root for.” Honig:
 Their beloved game
 was embodied in this man, and they would
 sell out the house. People wanted
 to see this guy. ♪ ♪ Schreiber: In 1923,
 the Yankees took advantage
 of Ruth’s popularity by building a brand-new
 $2.5 million stadium. It held 65,000 fans, and because so many of them
 were there to see the Babe, it was quickly christened
 the House that Ruth built. Hayward Hale Broun:
 His existence enlarges us just by looking at him,
 thinking about him. It was because
 you saw perfection, and it’s so glorious
 that it’s almost painful. And when you were
 at the ballpark and Babe took
 that big swing, and the ball didn’t
 fall down at the end– {an8}it whacked against a seat
 in the bleachers– {an8}you thought, “I saw this.
 I was here. “I was in the presence
 of greatness.” And to be in the presence
 of greatness means that some tiny fleck of it is attached to you. Honig:
 The most exciting thing
 in baseball was watching
 Babe Ruth hit a home run. And the second
 most exciting thing was watching
 Babe Ruth strike out. One of the few quotable lines
 from Lou Gehrig– he said, “I batted
 after him, and it never
 mattered what I did, “’cause they were
 always talking about
 what he had just done,” even if he had
 done nothing. (piano music playing) Schreiber:
 More than any other athlete
 during sports’ golden age, Babe Ruth’s appeal
 ranged far beyond the man-made limits
 of the great ballparks
 he played in. (chattering)
 By the mid-’20s, Ruth was everywhere. Pushed along by the explosion
 of tabloid journalism, he would eventually become
 an inescapable part of popular American culture. In the eyes of the press,
 the Babe was a dream subject. {an8}He was made for them– {an8}just as Al Capone was
 made for them {an8}or Charles Lindbergh
 was made for them– {an8}because of the way he looked
 and because of what he did. Bentley:
 When he would
 come to Chicago, one of the Chicago
 papers just had “Ruth in Chicago!”
 with an exclamation point. “Ruth Home Run Wins Game.” That kind of stuff
 got into every paper
 across the country. Every man had it
 with his breakfast coffee. ♪ ♪ “‘Ruth Home Run.’
 Jeez, he hit another one?” Hamill:
 The sports writers played
 a crucial part of it, and the photographers, ’cause he was
 enough of a ham. He’d lend himself
 to publicity stunts. ♪ ♪ Honig:
 Put a beard on him,
 pose him with a monkey– he was
 a photographer’s dream. Hamill:
 He was a quote machine.
 He was not some remote guy. He sat, talked,
 and drank beer with them, and they cherished him
 for that. He made their job easier. Shepherd:
 So the media
 really built Babe Ruth. Every reporter
 who covered Ruth had the illusion
 that he was a great friend
 of Ruth, personally. And so, the minute he started
 to write about Ruth, he was always writing
 about what he considered
 his friend. ♪ ♪ And you can’t
 forget that face. He had the face
 of a happy catcher’s mitt. He had a face
 that looked like a horse
 had stepped on it. That helped. Broun:
 He was as easy to recognize as the King of Siam’s
 white elephant. Honig:
 The face seemed
 to fit Babe Ruth. I can’t imagine
 a handsome Babe Ruth. {an8}Bill Gleason:
 Who has ever looked like him {an8}since Babe Ruth? {an8}Try to think of somebody
 who has looked like him. It’s like he was
 created for this role
 that he was given, and he played it
 to the hilt. Creamer:
 The name helped, “Babe Ruth.” I mean, gee, if his name was
 Harold Thompson, I don’t think
 he would’ve had
 the same impact. But “Babe Ruth”?
 (cheering) Many Italian immigrants
 in New York, instead of saying,
 “How’d the Babe do?” They’d say,
 “How’d the Bambino
 do yesterday?” And so,
 “Bambino” became his name. and the “Bam!” sound
 fitted in there. “Bam! Hits one.”
 Everything fit. You didn’t forget him.
 He was indelible. ♪ ♪ And everybody who saw him
 had a story about him. remembered something about him.
 Everyplace he went, he sort of left a trail. Schreiber:
 As baseball’s biggest draw, Ruth made a fortune
 criss-crossing the country. No town was
 too small or too far away. If the Babe’s fans
 couldn’t get to a game, he would get to them. Major league baseball
 ended at the Mississippi River, where the St. Louis
 Cardinals were. Babe Ruth went
 on barnstorming tours after the season. He was spreading
 baseball across the country. (train whistle blares) Honig: People would be
 standing along the tracks
 or out in the meadows, because they had heard
 that Babe Ruth was
 on that train. They were hoping to get
 a half-second glimpse of him. He would wave at them.
 He would show them his cards, saying, “I’ve got
 a great hand.” Gleason:
 And the Babe being
 on the back platform, and kids running
 from all over the place and jumping up on the train
 to get his autograph, to touch him,
 to look at him. (people cheering)
 (kids shouting) Honig:
 You read about them
 and you heard about them, but suddenly to see
 these big-league ballplayers on your local sandlots–
 and you’re talking about
 the best players, like Gehrig, Lefty Grove. There, in the middle
 of it all, was Babe Ruth. Moby Dick
 in a goldfish bowl. Did you ever see
 one of his movies? (piano music playing)
 Schreiber:
 At the top of his chosen game, the Babe even tried acting, although his flair
 for the dramatic didn’t
 come through on-screen. Ruth’s movies were
 far from an artistic
 or financial hit, but that didn’t seem
 to hurt his popularity. ♪ ♪ Hamill:
 More people knew about Ruth
 than knew about the president in this country,
 and a lot more cared. Broun:
 He transcended sport
 in the sense that people who didn’t care
 about sport knew who he was. He went outside
 the limits of sport culture. ♪ ♪ (chattering) Moe Berg shared
 a suite with Babe. Babe was
 in the bedroom with–
 What shall I call it? –multiple feminine
 companionship, and the phone rang.
 Moe thought it was for Babe, he didn’t pick it up,
 and Babe came in in some deshabille–
 with his pants down–
 and said, (whispering)
 “You’re Babe Ruth. “He’s Father Flanagan. “Tell him
 you’ll be right down.” Moe–
 “Hello, Father. “This is Babe.
 I’ll be right down.” Later he said to Babe,
 “Why couldn’t you
 have said that?” And Babe said, “Me,
 with what I was doing, “talk to a priest? Never.” Honig:
 Ruth was a complex mix. He was crude,
 and rough, uncultured. Werber:
 I was under the shower, and I had my face
 to the wall and the warm water
 coming down on me, and I was lathering
 my face, and my chest, and under my arms with soap. And all of a sudden,
 I felt something a little hotter than the water
 from the shower. And I turned around,
 and here was Ruth standing outside the shower, using the middle
 of my back for a urinal. And he laughed, guffawed. He thought that was
 real funny, you know? Honig:
 But at the same time,
 he was a very good man. He loved children.
 He loved making people happy. He loved
 doing things for them, far beyond what
 you would expect
 from a man of his stature. {an8}When we went on road trips,
 he always made certain {an8}that I got to mass
 on a Sunday morning. (bell ringing)
 So we pray… Kelly:
 If nobody else got to mass, He made sure that
 I got to mass with him. Perfect gentleman,
 like a father to me. ♪ ♪
 Schreiber:
 Babe Ruth could be both crude and kind. His personality
 was a paradox, shaped by two compelling
 and conflicting forces. Early in his childhood,
 George Herman Ruth learned
 the way of the streets, growing up an incorrigible kid
 in a tough neighborhood along Baltimore’s
 seedy waterfront. The son of a saloon keeper, wherever Ruth went,
 trouble followed. Creamer:
 When he was a little kid, he would drink things
 in the bar. He used to
 throw things at the cops
 and at the truckers. He stole. A real
 pain-in-the-neck little kid. the kind you could admire,
 maybe if you weren’t
 in charge of him, but he was a real nuisance
 to his parents. Schreiber:
 When he was eight, Ruth’s parents had him
 committed to St. Mary’s, a reform school for boys. Showered with tough love, he experienced kindness
 and compassion for the first time. The resulting inner struggle
 between right and wrong provided an interesting
 contradiction which would define
 Ruth’s behavior throughout his personal
 and professional life. Thomas Foley:
 He had grown up a bad boy, and he didn’t want
 any of us to go through
 what he went through, and he used to lecture us
 along those lines. {an8}”Do what your mother
 tells you to do, {an8}”and do what your father
 tells you to do.” He’d hear a kid swearing,
 and he’d yell out, “God damn it!
 Stop that goddamn
 swearing over there!” ♪ ♪ Kennelly:
 He had trouble
 managing a family, didn’t seem to much give
 a damn about that. He was a paradox. Schreiber:
 Ruth had become
 a major leaguer at 19. Just months
 after he joined the Red Sox, Babe married
 his first wife, Helen, herself a babe–
 barely 16. ♪ ♪
 (chattering) It was typically impulsive, and Ruth quickly tired
 of the commitment. Even after adopting a child– rumor had him fathering
 by way of a maid– the Babe
 abandoned his family, apparently uncaring
 of his actions. For a man
 of Ruth’s background, the temptations
 that fame and fortune brought were too great to ignore. Broun:
 If you’ve been a poor kid,
 and he had been a poor kid, what you want
 more than anything is more to eat,
 more to drink, more to enjoy than you ever had
 in those times when
 your pleasures were in the dribs and drabs
 of an extra piece of bread or a bed next to the wall. Here’s a kid who grew up
 in an orphanage and probably had
 more animal appetites
 than 14 animals. He devoured food.
 He devoured sex. He devoured fun. He was always
 reaching out for something
 of enjoyment. {an8}Babe Ruth is the only guy {an8}that ever lived up
 to his reputation. He was a monster
 off the ball field. {an8}Charles Devens:
 We left the Back Bay Station {an8}here in Boston, {an8}went down to New York, {an8}and he got off
 at 125th Street, {an8}and in that time… {an8}I saw him drink {an8}a quart of scotch. He was perfectly okay,
 wasn’t drunk or anything. When he got off the train,
 he was just very genial. ♪ ♪ Heinrich:
 White Sox got a great idea. They were gonna
 take the Babe out. They were gonna
 make a night of it. They took him out. (chattering) He gets up there,
 “Here we go!” (mumbles)
 Told the bartender, “Charlie, mix me up
 one of those things.” (mimics mixing) Poured the thing in there,
 the Babe lifted that up… (mimics drinking) He went all the way, ice cubes included. For Pete’s sakes,
 that guy’s got a throat like a trombone. Three minutes
 before the ballgame,
 here comes the Babe. (cheering)
 Miller Huggins looks
 and says, “Look at him. “He ain’t even been
 in bed all night.” He says, “That guy’s
 gonna play today.” Okay, he played. He butchered
 the White Sox, okay? ♪ ♪ The game is over,
 Babe hurries up the steps to get to the White Sox
 before they disappear. “Hey, where we going tonight?” (laughs) Broun:
 Then of course, he ate god knows
 how many hot dogs. {an8}He had drawn me back
 into the dressing room
 during a game, to get a couple of hot dogs
 and a bottle of soda pop. I’d go back two,
 three, four times
 during a ballgame. Hot mustard,
 relish, sauerkraut– he had the works. Creamer:
 Oh good lord. Oh my. (chuckles)
 Yes, he ate. He was hungry, and he had an appetite
 for everything. He wanted to taste everything.
 He chased women. ♪ ♪ He used to go out
 with the kind of women everybody would like
 to go out with if they could– the chorus girls,
 Broadway cuties, Kennelly:
 What Ruth liked
 more than anything else was lying on his stomach and having a geisha
 walk on his spine from top to bottom
 and back again. {an8}Ruth thought that was
 beyond belief. {an8}I do believe the geisha
 was naked at the time. {an8}(chuckles)
 I don’t know about Ruth. (cheering)
 Werber:
 Women looked for him, and he used to like
 to have his visitations in the morning
 before ballgames. {an8}He was exhausted {an8}and didn’t really have room
 in his schedule, {an8}he still would allow one
 into his bedroom {an8}and do his duty. Devens:
 Called me up one day and said, “Devens,
 could I use your room?” I said, “Who’s this?”
 “Babe,” he said. “Why yes, sir,”
 I said. ♪ ♪
 Shepherd: This guy was
 the king of the world. Imagine being Babe Ruth. That’d be a ball,
 wouldn’t it? Schreiber:
 There were times
 when even Ruth took excess
 to the extreme. He missed two months
 of the ’25 season with a mysterious illness the writers called
 “the bellyache heard
 round the world,” although others
 hinted that syphilis was
 the more likely cause. ♪ ♪ There was even
 one time his insatiable
 appetite for women nearly led
 to his demise. Werber:
 He had this Latin girl in Ybor City in Tampa. He told her that
 the relationship had to end, because he was going
 into spring training. In reality, he had found
 something that he liked
 somewhat better. And this Latin girl
 came in the front entrance
 to the dining room, she looked
 around the dining room and saw Ruth
 and this other woman
 over there. And as she was
 coming toward him, she reached
 into her pocketbook, and she pulled out
 this revolver and kept on coming.
 This woman fired… (gunshot)
 And Lazzeri said,
 “Did she hit you?” He said, “Yeah.
 It didn’t amount to nothing.” He says,
 “There it is, right there.” And he showed
 the calf of his leg where the bullet had gone
 right through, and the scar was there, They laughed about it
 and talked about it. He did everything
 to excess– the bad things and all
 of the good things, too. Schreiber:
 The two sides
 of Ruth’s personality were markedly different, yet equally compelling. At times egotistical
 and selfish, the Babe could also be
 thoughtful and considerate. He was extremely generous
 with his time and money, especially with kids. ♪ ♪ Ruth reveled
 in the smile of a child. In their eyes
 he saw himself. He enjoyed the innocence
 and spontaneity of adolescence.
 (shouting) Forsaken by his parents, the Babe wanted
 kids to experience
 the love and affection he felt
 he never really had. Honig:
 Ruth’s relationship
 with children was remarkable. It was genuine. He made children
 feel comfortable, He made them feel happy. (laughs) You see these pictures,
 he’s surrounded by
 hundreds of kids. There’s always
 a smiling, relaxed face, so happily
 in his element. And there is Ruth
 with this big, happy smile, spreading his joy, and doing it
 with a naturalness. It was so genuine,
 that it just flowed into them. ♪ ♪ Foley:
 Almost every weekend, Babe Ruth would
 come in and help us
 bagging peanuts. He’d work for a couple
 of hours with us then he’d throw a $10
 or a $20 bill on the table where we were working.
 “Take care of the kids.” He’d walk out. Mary Smith Macklin:
 Had to have an operation. My father, who worked
 at Yankee Stadium almost all his life,
 was a very hard-working man, but they didn’t have
 that kind of money. {an8}Dr. Smith, he was
 the head of the hospital, {an8}said because my name
 was Mary Smith, {an8}said we had to be related,
 and I wouldn’t have to pay. But I was told later
 from another doctor
 that wasn’t true. It was paid for
 by the Babe, and they told me he was
 a friend of my father’s. I just kept looking
 at his face, because he had
 such a beautiful smile. ♪ ♪
 Ardith Rutland: We had
 a little orange juice stand. It was right near
 the golf course.
 He was playing golf. He said to me
 his name was Babe Ruth, and I said, “Well,
 where’s your candy bars?” ‘Cause that’s all I knew,
 was Babe Ruth was a candy bar. {an8}Well, they laughed.
 They thought this was {an8}real funny.
 And I put my head down {an8}and sorta started
 to cry, I guess. He patted me on the head
 and said, “Are you going
 to be here tomorrow?” And I said, “Yes.” And so he came back
 the next day, gave us a whole big box
 of Baby Ruth candy bars. He just said,
 “Now, little girl, “don’t you forget
 who I am.” He had
 such beautiful blue eyes. They sparkled. (piano music playing) Schreiber:
 In the roaring, raucous ’20s, when America celebrated
 consumption and excess, no other public figure
 was worshiped like the Babe. Thanks to his friends
 in the press, Ruth’s repulsive behavior
 was never reported, his vulgar side rarely seen. To his adoring fans, Ruth’s indiscretions
 were harmless. He was a humble everyman, a kindred spirit. Gleason:
 He was loved
 because people who had flaws– men and women,
 even children who had
 flaws in their character, knew he had flaws. He was one of them. He was not above them. He was a spiritual force. Creamer:
 They loved him. They liked
 the feeling about him. He was a joy
 to be around. He lifted things up.
 He was alive. ♪ ♪
 (people chattering) Bud Greenspan:
 I saw him a couple of times
 with Jack Dempsey, when Jack Dempsey had
 the restaurant on Broadway
 and 48th Street. They used to
 sit in the window
 together and talk, and you’d have crowds,
 hundreds of them looking
 in the window. “There’s Babe Ruth!
 There’s Jack Dempsey!” (people chattering) {an8}He relished the whole idea
 of being part of the scene, {an8}as opposed to others
 who could come in and come out, {an8}and no one would
 even know they were there. When he came into a room,
 he was loud, and positive, and where he was
 was the place to be. Broun:
 A professional
 barbershop quartet was singing as part
 of the entertainment, and suddenly a husky
 and uncertain voice
 joined them. ♪ Strike two ♪
 And even though
 he was a lousy singer, everybody was very happy
 that he did it. (bat cracks)
 ♪ It’s a home run ♪ Mazer:
 You know how an aura exudes? {an8}There was a quality about Ruth {an8}that just invited you in. In. (bat cracks)
 Hey, Red. Henrich:
 They didn’t care a whole lot
 about exhibition games. By and large, you played
 half a game and that’s it. but the guys
 are complaining, saying, “Jesus Christ,
 let’s get out of here.” The Babe said,
 “You wanna get out of here?” He says, “I’ll stop
 the game next inning.” Next inning,
 some young kid ran out for his autograph… and the Babe… he signs for him.
 Well, another kid comes out, and first thing you know,
 center field was filled up
 with kids. (chattering)
 That’s the end
 of the ballgame. Will you sign
 my autograph?
 Why sure. Werber:
 He’d stand there for an hour
 and sign those autographs. Now Gehrig, by contrast, and Grove, by contrast, they didn’t want
 to be bothered with people
 or bothered with kids, and they’d come out
 under the same circumstances, and they’d wade through ’em. ♪ ♪ Honig:
 The instrument they used
 was a fountain pen, and fountain pens had
 a tendency to leak and squirt. Splashed with ink
 on his suit or on his face, he never minded.
 He never complained. They would ask him,
 “Why did you sit “for so many hours, Babe,
 just signing autographs?” And he said,
 “I like to make
 everybody happy.” ♪ ♪ {an8}He happened to see me
 over there in the corner, {an8}and he came over and says,
 “What’s your kid’s name?” He said, “Let me get you
 a ball for your kid.” And I said,
 “Well, I don’t have any kids. “In fact,
 I’m not even married.” He said,
 “Well, we can fix that.” So he took a ball,
 and he wrote something on it. And when I looked at it,
 he had on there, “Hello to be.
 From Babe Ruth.” He says, “When your kid
 comes along, “tell him Babe Ruth
 had something for him.” So this now is
 a very treasured possession
 of my daughter. Mazer:
 But if you took Ruth
 for more than what he was, you were kidding yourself.
 ♪ ♪ You wouldn’t walk up
 to Ruth and say to him, “Babe, “what do you think
 of Einstein?” He’d probably say,
 “What’s he hitting?” ♪ ♪ Tommy Heinrich:
 A friend of Ruth’s sees him at the station,
 and they get off the train. {an8}”Hey, Babe, did you hear
 about Waite? Waite Hoyt?” {an8}”No, what about him?” {an8}He says, “He’s got
 a case of amnesia.” And Babe says, “He has? “You tell him to save me
 one of those bottles.” Werber:
 He came out to the dugout and complained to Doc Painter,
 who was the trainer. He said, “Doc, my eyes feel
 a little cloudy today. “My vision’s
 not too good anymore.” Doc Payter said, “Well,
 why don’t you go down
 and get some of that… “Visine– that Eyelo.” And Babe gave his eyes
 a good washing with that Eyelo, and I think he got
 two for four or three
 for four that day, and he attributed it
 to the Eyelo. So the next day
 when he came out,
 his eyes were all right, but he used
 the Eyelo again. {an8}Lazzeri, a day or two later,
 sneaked out there, {an8}and he took the Eyelo bottle, {an8}and poured all
 the Eyelo out {an8}and filled it with water, {an8}and put it back in
 the medicine case. Ruth came out
 and started to use the Eyelo, then Lazzeri yanked it
 out of his hands and says, “Let me have
 some of that stuff.” And when he got the Eyelo
 from out of Babe’s hands, he drank it all. Babe is slapping
 his big ol’ thighs and says, “Look at the dago, “drinking the Baby’s Eyelo.” And Lazzeri got
 two or three hits. So then, Ruth,
 following that, started bathing his eyes
 and drinking it, too. (moos)
 ♪ ♪ {an8}He could never remember
 anybody’s name, {an8}and the people he played with,
 played side by side. He called everybody “keed.”
 “There’s my keed.” Keed. K-double E-D.
 “Hey, keed.” “Hiya, keed.”
 He’d say that to a guy
 who was 92 years old. Werber:
 Lazzeri said, “I’m gonna have
 a little fun with the Babe.” So he called Myles Thomas,
 who was some distance away. Now Myles was
 a relief pitcher
 on the Yankees and had been with the Yankees
 for some three or four years. He called Myles over,
 and he said to Babe, “I want to introduce
 Charlie Devens, “who’s just showed up
 from Harvard and gonna be
 with us a while.” Ruth stuck out
 that great, big meat hand and said,
 “Nice to see you, keed. “Welcome to the Yankees.” And Thomas had
 been on the ball club
 for three or four years. (laughs)
 Ruth didn’t appear
 to know that, but he was glad
 to see him nonetheless. ♪ ♪ Broun:
 He did what he wanted to do. If it got him in trouble,
 he was always startled. Who’s the heavyweight champion?
 Man: Max Schmeling. Hey, what’s the idea? (laughter) He was totally spontaneous. {an8}I was the captain
 of the high school golf team. {an8}So, Babe liked to play golf, {an8}so he said, “Would you like
 to play golf with Babe Ruth?” Now any kid would love
 something like that. And I helped him
 on several holes, ’cause we were partners.
 He won maybe $50 to $100. Next day at the high school, I was in class,
 about 12:30 to 1:00. “Babe Ruth down the hallway,
 looking for you “to go play golf
 for the day.” I said, “What?”
 I couldn’t believe it. I was the most surprised kid
 you ever seen when he walked
 into that classroom, and the principal
 was right with him. “Babe’s here to take you
 to the golf course.
 It’s okay to go.” So I jumped up
 and went with him. ♪ ♪ Werber:
 He never had any serious
 thoughts in his head, really. But you’d have liked him.
 (laughs) He wasn’t a bad fella. (chattering) Creamer:
 Everybody has
 a story on Ruth, and stories
 piled on stories
 become legends. And of course,
 the classic one is… The 1932 World Series and the so-called
 called shot. Some extremely
 bad feelings had arisen between
 the two contending teams, the Yankees
 and the Chicago Cubs. And they’re yelling at him
 from the Cub dugout the most obscene things, and he’s yelling back. Creamer:
 He was riding the Chicago bench
 from the batters box. Honig:
 And the pitcher, Charley Root, throws across strike one,
 throws across strike two, and here comes
 baseball’s fabled moment. He suddenly stopped… {an8}Kelly:
 And I vividly heard him
 yell out to Charley Root, {an8}”It only takes one!” {an8}And then he elevated
 his arm… {an8}”This one’s going out!” {an8}Pointing to
 the center-field bleachers. {an8}And by god, the next ball, {an8}he hit right where
 he had pointed. I don’t think
 he could’ve done it
 in a million other times, but he did do it,
 and I saw it. Kelly: I asked him.
 I said, “You called that shot,
 didn’t you, Babe?” “Why? Don’t you think I did? “That’s where I pointed.
 and that’s where it went.” Schreiber:
 Others, however,
 weren’t so sure. In home movies
 of the at-bat, Ruth appears
 to be gesturing
 at something, but at what
 remains inconclusive. (cheering) The next day
 in the papers, there was barely a mention
 of Ruth’s declaration, just straightforward
 reporting of the home run. But as time passed,
 the notion caught on, and soon took
 a life of its own. Newsreel accounts
 unashamedly showed Ruth’s gesture as fact, and Hollywood later took
 the myth to epic proportions. Don’t forget Johnny! {an8}(crowd roars) Radio announcer:
 He pointed to the flagpole
 in the center-field bleachers, plainly indicating
 that’s where he means to park that next pitch. (crowd roars) Shepherd:
 It’s a harmless little myth. {an8}Hell, a lot of people
 believe in Santa Claus. {an8}Nothing wrong with it.
 (chuckles) Terkel:
 Babe was part
 of that old American folklore of the braggarts,
 the big ones– Mike Fink, Pecos Pete,
 Paul Bunyan and the blue ox. {an8}Broun:
 It doesn’t matter whether
 it is based in reality, {an8}because a thing is what it is {an8}because we wish it to be. Napoleon said once
 that history is the myth
 that men choose to believe. Honig:
 Whether he actually called it,
 it’s irrelevant, because reality evaporates, and the myth
 becomes the truth. I want you all to remember
 what I said about smoking– it’ll stunt your growth! Look what it did to him. (kids laughing) Schreiber:
 A great deal
 of the Ruth legend is just… well, legend, half-truths
 that became myth. Ruth frequently
 visited hospitals, so his home-run promise
 to a dying kid might
 have been true. But he couldn’t possibly
 have taken a dog
 to the hospital in uniform before a game. Could he?
 Where’s your operating room? Why over there,
 but you can’t go in there. Get your best doctors
 in there in a hurry.
 I’ve got a sick dog. Creamer:
 I think he’s
 a tremendous mythic figure, but I think the history is
 as big or bigger than the myth. The myth diminishes
 what he really was. and establishes
 a sort of false Ruth. It’s big,
 but it’s not the truth, and I think the truth is
 bigger than the myth. Schreiber:
 The true Ruth
 started out as a pitcher. maybe the best left-hander
 in Boston Red Sox history. In just five seasons, the Babe won
 close to 90 games and helped the Sox
 win the World Series in 1916 and again in 1918 by throwing 29 consecutive
 scoreless innings. He was on his way
 to the hall of fame
 as a pitcher until he picked up his bat
 and rewrote the record book. Creamer:
 For the last six weeks
 of the 1918 season, he pitched one day, then played the outfield
 the next three days, then pitched again,
 then played the outfield
 for the rest of the season. So here’s a man pitching
 and playing the outfield, playing every day and hitting
 at the same time. It’s one of the most
 extraordinary things
 in baseball history. ♪ ♪ Schreiber: Ruth’s trade
 from Boston to the New York
 Yankees in 1920 was the catalyst for sports’
 most renowned dynasty. For the next nine seasons, the Yanks played
 in six World Series, winning three,
 including 1927, with Ruth the cornerstone
 of one of history’s
 greatest teams. Announcer:
 The Yankee’s
 hard-hitting quartet– Lou Gehrig, Combs,
 Lazzeri and Babe Ruth. Creamer: He was
 a fabulous, beautifully-
 coordinated athlete. They all look at him,
 and they call him fat. He stole home! He was fast,
 he had a good arm. There was nothing
 about baseball he couldn’t do. (cheering) Mazer:
 You know about
 his year in 1921? .378, hit 59 home runs, scored 178 runs, drove in 171 runs, got over 40 doubles,
 16 triples, stole 16 bases. That was Babe Ruth. Announcer:
 Babe Ruth batting. Wow! There goes one
 into right field. {an8}He had six of the most
 extraordinary seasons, {an8}from 1926 to 1932, {an8}that any ballplayer
 has ever had. He averaged over 50 home runs
 a year for six years. It’s so hard to imagine.
 He was so far ahead, and hit twice
 as many as the others. 56 homers,
 58 homers, 60 homers. ♪ ♪ Henrich:
 Slugging average is .690. You believe that?
 Most of the Hall-of-Famers, they’re very happy with .500. He’s .690. (mutters) {an8}People swim faster
 than Johnny Weissmuller, {an8}people run faster
 than Paavo Nurmi, {an8}but to hit 60 home runs
 and bat .340? The things that he did
 are still remarkable. Kennelly:
 Nobody’s ever come close
 to what he’s done on the field. Name me one other guy who had as many records that could be broken?
 He set them all! Lifetime average over .340, 714 home runs. There was a lot of myth… but there was a hell
 of a lot of mister, too. ♪ ♪ Stevens:
 Daddy loved
 The Lone Ranger, and I loved to listen
 to that with him. We’d always cheer him on. We always had
 a wonderful time. {an8}He was a marvelous dancer, {an8}had perfect timing,
 and he taught me
 how to dance. And I loved
 dancing with Daddy. Schreiber:
 Julia Ruth became
 Babe’s daughter after Ruth married
 her mother, Claire, in 1929, the year
 the stock market crashed. By most accounts,
 Babe handled marriage
 the second time around much better than the first. But just when
 his family life
 seemed settled, his baseball life
 started to come apart. ♪ ♪ (shouting) At first, the crash of ’29
 and the resulting depression had little effect on Ruth
 or the money he was paid. His enormous checks,
 which were often
 10 times greater than any
 of his contemporaries, had reached
 $80,000 in 1931. But at the same time
 the country began to sink
 deeper into economic despair, Ruth’s skills
 began to erode… ♪ ♪ giving Yankee owner
 Jacob Ruppert good reason to cut his salary
 and eventually cut him. After 20 productive
 major league seasons, the Yanks
 no longer needed Ruth. The team that had
 been his for so long now centered
 around Lou Gehrig. Werber:
 Ruth was playing his last year
 with the Yankees in Boston. The ball went
 between his legs
 and went to the wall. The fans in Boston
 booed him unmercifully, and it made me sick. ♪ ♪ Honig:
 Even Ruth in his decline,
 it was monumental. Players would stop
 during pre-game workout and watch him
 struggling in the field,
 running after a fly ball. trying to bend over
 and pick up a ground ball. They couldn’t believe
 what they were seeing. The great statue
 beginning to crack and topple. The god turning human. Stevens:
 Colonel Ruppert sent him
 a contract for a dollar a year. and gave him
 his unconditional release. Ruth:
 I can’t go on forever, but you can bet
 your sweet life that I won’t play
 until I drop, but I’ll play until
 I damn near drop. (laughter)
 Thank you. Schreiber:
 In 1935, Ruth took
 his diminishing skills to the Boston Braves. Ever the showman,
 he defiantly hit three homers in one of his final games. But at age 40,
 the Babe retired as a player and spent three years
 away from the game. Feels good to be back
 in this uniform. That “Dodgers” looks
 pretty good on the front
 of you, don’t it, boy? (crowd cheering) Schreiber:
 In 1938, Ruth happily
 returned to New York as a coach
 for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Oh! Schreiber:
 The Babe had
 been led to believe the Dodgers would
 one day let him manage. In reality, the struggling
 franchise had signed Ruth
 as a gate attraction. Fans did come to see Ruth, but the novelty
 soon wore off. The Babe was let go,
 and the promise never kept. ♪ ♪ Stevens:
 They never had any intentions of making him a manager. They just wanted him
 for his name. It was almost
 like they lied to him. He’d come home
 and he’d ask mother, “Anybody call today?” Of course,
 nobody ever did. And all he wanted to do
 was just be in baseball. He wanted
 to be a part of baseball, because it was
 a part of him. He was so disappointed. He almost went
 into a depression. Ray Robinson:
 They used to say about him, “How could
 he ever manage a team “when he never learned
 to manage himself?” {an8}So, in his post-baseball years, {an8}whenever he went
 to Yankee Stadium, it was always my impression,
 when I sat close enough
 to look at him, that he was
 very morose and sad. He would sit there,
 hunched over, staring at the action. You got
 the feeling about him that he had been
 involuntarily removed
 from his real environment. ♪ ♪ Schreiber:
 The Yankees never
 came calling either, so Ruth went on doing
 what he did best– playing the role
 of the Babe. (cheers, applause) Occasionally, he would
 return to the stage
 he once dominated, happy to display
 his old form. Although the significance
 of his homers had now
 greatly diminished, Ruth still managed
 to thrill his fans. Stevens:
 Even after he’d
 been out of baseball for eight or 10 years, he still attracted crowds. He’d go over
 to the training camp
 and talk with the fellows. (people chattering) People still asked him
 for his autograph. They were
 still showing their love
 and appreciation for him, even though he wasn’t
 playing baseball anymore. (chattering) ♪ ♪
 Schreiber:
 But by 1946, it was becoming
 increasingly clear there was something
 seriously wrong with the Babe. (birds chirping) Stevens:
 I was in New Hampshire, and there was a picture
 of him in the paper. I called Mother,
 I said, “Mother, “what on earth is
 the matter with Daddy?” I said,
 “He looks terrible.” “I really don’t know,”
 she said. “He has
 these terrible headaches.” ♪ ♪ Schreiber:
 That winter, Ruth had
 a throat operation, and the prognosis was grim. Although he wasn’t told
 of his condition, the Babe had cancer. Creamer:
 They kept the fact that
 he had terminal cancer away from him,
 ’cause they thought
 he would jump out a window. Stevens:
 He couldn’t eat.
 He couldn’t swallow. Of course he was
 losing weight like crazy. He just didn’t look
 like Daddy. {an8}He would sit in the chair, {an8}by the hour, and look out
 over the Hudson River. His spirits were very good. He felt that he was
 gonna beat this thing, but the fact that he had
 the scar tissue up
 around his neck made it very difficult
 for him to talk. Schreiber:
 On April 27th, 1947, baseball celebrated
 Ruth’s accomplishments with a day in his name
 at every major league ballpark. Ruth himself
 attended the ceremony
 at Yankee Stadium. ♪ ♪ {an8}I knew how sick he was, {an8}and I guess that’s the reason
 I didn’t go in. And I just stood outside. ♪ ♪
 (cheering) He started to speak… (hoarsely)
 Thank you very much,
 ladies and gentlemen. You know how bad
 my voice sounds. Well, it feels
 just as bad. You know this
 baseball game of ours… Macklin:
 They turned up
 that loudspeaker so everybody outside, blocks around,
 could hear him. The train
 up on the platform, people–
 they just stopped
 in their tracks, listening
 to this great man. And after you’re a boy and grew up
 to know how to play ball, then you come to the boys
 you see representing themselves today in your national pastime. The only real game, I think,
 in the world– baseball. There’s been
 so many lovely things said about me, and I’m glad that I’ve had
 the opportunity to thank everybody. Thank you.
 (cheering) ♪ ♪ Stevens:
 Even when he was so sick, he still wanted
 to be part of baseball. He took a job
 at the Ford Motor Company, traveling
 for the American Legion. {an8}He made personal appearances. {an8}the first year, ’47,
 he made 15 appearances. When I saw him
 get off the airplane, I was shocked.
 He came out puffing… (exhales sharply)
 breathing hard. His color didn’t look good. There he was
 with this white cap and the white and black
 wingtip shoes. Then we went back
 to the ballpark. There was
 like 15,000 people there, most of them kids.
 It was a different man
 that appeared. Here he was, smiling. Don Cameron:
 I think he was happier
 at the ballpark than he was anywhere else. {an8}He didn’t feel that good,
 but the strength {an8}of being
 around those young people {an8}that he was working with
 and imparting knowledge to them, {an8}I really think
 gave him strength. Benish:
 He just seemed to gather
 strength from it. He really was
 crazy about kids,
 and you could see it. As sick as he was
 and as weak as he was, he wanted
 to be with those kids. ♪ ♪ Thomas Hartley Jr.:
 Babe was a very sick man. We had a child in town that was dying of cancer. {an8}Who comes out in the yard,
 but the Babe, {an8}and he spends time
 talking to all of us. “I got something for you. “Here. You look
 like you can catch. “There’s a ball.”
 His attitude, knowing that he was
 close to death, and us knowing
 that our friend was dying and not understanding– it was just so wonderful. Man:
 How you doing, Babe?
 Pretty good. ♪ ♪ Schreiber:
 His health failing, his glory days behind, Ruth continued to make
 public appearances. (cheering)
 On June 13th, 1948, he helped celebrate
 the 25th anniversary of Yankee Stadium, and wore his uniform
 for the final time. Broun:
 I was there when he made his last appearance
 in Yankee Stadium. Even though by that time
 he was wasted away, somehow on that day, he filled the uniform, to be, once more,
 for some last gasp, a heroic figure.
 You had just this moment, which you tried
 to hold and keep. ♪ ♪ Nat Fein:
 I worked
 for the Herald Tribune, and I did
 mostly human interest pictures. {an8}I think it was terrible to know
 that all of this ovation {an8}comes to him and he knows,
 down deep in his heart, {an8}that he isn’t long
 for this world. They lined ’em up there
 in the front– all the photographers
 were in the front. I went around the back. The thing that steered me
 was the #3 being retired. #3 is out.
 The Babe bows out. I said, “It’s unnatural.” (camera flash pops)
 I knew I had something there. ♪ ♪ (chattering) Schreiber:
 Later that summer, Ruth’s health took
 a serious turn for the worse. ♪ ♪
 In July, he entered
 the hospital once more, and this time
 he was made aware
 of what he was facing. Stevens:
 When he went
 into the Sloan Kettering, he saw that it was for cancer
 and allied diseases, and he said,
 “Have I got cancer?” They never told him. If anything
 could’ve saved him, believe me,
 the prayers would have. They’d stand
 outside the hospital. Once in a while,
 he’d go to the window, look out, and wave. He knew that he had
 all their best wishes and that they were
 pulling for him. {an8}Warren Eberhart:
 Here was somebody
 who had been through {an8}an awful lot of pain,
 discomfort {an8}for over a two-year period. He’d had enough of it.
 “I’m tired of all this now.” He was very quiet.
 He awaited the end
 in a dignified way, but it was
 just a terrible thing
 for him to realize what had happened
 to his joy of living. Radio announcer:
 We interrupt this program to bring you
 a special bulletin. New York. Babe Ruth,
 the all-time baseball great, just died
 in Memorial Hospital
 of cancer. ♪ ♪ Schreiber:
 Ruth’s casket was brought
 to Yankee Stadium, a spectacle
 in death as in life. The Babe had come to rest
 where his legend had begun. Stevens:
 The people who came to get
 their last look at him, just absolutely
 was staggering. It amazed me. Hamill:
 We went up
 to the Bronx on the subway, and there were
 people from every race,
 every neighborhood. The line moved very quickly, and looking down at his face,
 he looked exhausted. ♪ ♪ And out past
 where he was lying was the field.
 You could smell
 the odor of it– the sort of loamy, hot earth
 of August in New York. Cameron:
 I walked in there
 to see his memorial, and the hair just stood up
 on the back on my neck and stood up on my arms, because I had finally gotten
 to see where Babe hit ’em all. Chuck Doehler:
 I remember being ushered
 up to the casket. Imagine.
 There was Babe Ruth. {an8}I was handed a ball.
 I had looked at the ball, {an8}and some sensitive person
 had written on this ball {an8}”Safe at home.” I put the ball
 right next to his hand, and I thought, “Wow. “Here he is. He’s home.
 He’s where he belongs.” ♪ ♪ Honig:
 His passing was an event in the lives of many people,
 because he represented so much and he took so much with him. There never was
 a character like that, and there never was
 gonna be one again. But in many ways, he’s never left the game. The standards that he set,
 the legends that he created, are still very much with us. Gleason:
 Babe Ruth will never be gone. He’s still here. He’s always here. He was a living man who became a mythic god, and nothing can change that. Creamer:
 He will be a symbol
 of baseball as long
 as baseball is played. ♪ ♪ Hamill:
 To me, the Babe’s still alive. He truly
 is like Shakespeare. He’ll never die. ♪ ♪ {an8}♪ ♪ {an8}Announcer: This has
 been a presentation of…
 