
Newspaper stories
can sometimes feel like fish tales.
Like the proverbial fish tale, newspaper yarns often get embellished in the telling, although the stories of newspapers and what went on in the
raucous print newsrooms of yesteryear are usually strong enough to stand on their own without embellishment.
I came to this fish tale analogy while watching this new documentary about Jimmy
Breslin and Pete Hamill -- “Breslin and Hamill: Deadline Artists” -- premiering Monday night on HBO.
It is not meant as a strong criticism to point out that aspects of the world
Breslin and Hamill worked in -- roughly the 1960s to the ’00s -- along with the glories of the style of journalism they practiced feels romanticized here, at least a little.
On the other
hand, the romanticizing stems from the documentary's nostalgia and affection for the era in New York City journalism that Breslin and Hamill represented -- a world that for all intents and purposes is
now gone.
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And it is true that the old newspaper newsrooms were colorful places, and the star columnists were often larger than life, as were many of all the other people who were thrown
together there each day, and long into the night.
The documentary tells the stories of Breslin, who died in 2017 at age 88, and Hamill, now 83, in parallel, since they worked in the same time
frame, competed with each other, befriended each other and even once wrote for the New York Daily News at the same time.
Evidently, much of this documentary was assembled while Breslin
still lived, since he is seen in numerous scenes being interviewed, some of them alongside Hamill.
The film touches on about a half-dozen of the most notorious stories from their careers as
famous “cityside” columnists at various papers. Between them, the papers included the New York Herald Tribune, the News, New York Post and Newsday.
The
stories include the Son of Sam murders from the 1970s, the Bernie Goetz subway shootings of the 1908s and, of course, 9/11 -- plus a few others.
The documentary makes Breslin the more
celebrated of the two, and as some of the interview subjects point out, Breslin was at one time possibly the most famous newspaper journalist in America.
Hamill was no slacker, however, in the
fame department. He was a well-liked and widely read columnist who was also, for a time, a fixture of celebrity gossip columns stemming from the famous women he dated, including Jacqueline Onassis,
Shirley MacLaine and Linda Ronstadt.
The documentary tells a warts-and-all story here, although unfortunately for Breslin, his outsized personality gives his life story more warts than
Hamill's -- at least according to this documentary.
For those of us of a certain age, “Breslin and Hamill” paints a picture of a lost world -- not only of tabloid journalism as it
was once practiced in the era before the Internet, but of an older New York that might not have been as shiny as the one we have today, but was in many ways more poignant.
For those who are
too young to have lived in the Breslin/Hamill era themselves, however, this film is an invaluable document of a time and a world they cannot imagine.
“Breslin and Hamill: Deadline
Artists” premieres Monday (January 28) at 8 p.m. Eastern on HBO.