Random Posts

  • Laszlo Witt, Forgotten Champion
  • Vincenzo Castaldi
  • Postal Chess Nostalgia
  • Capa’s Intuition vs. Houdini and Fritz
  • Good Story on the 2014 Sinquefield Cup
  • My Engine vs. His Engine
  • Jacqueline Piatigorsky
  • Are Chess Players Getting Better?
  • A Real Sacrifice by Spielmann
  • Tartajubow Defense?
  • Wednesday, August 28, 2024

    Humphrey Bogart, A Near Master

    Bogart
        
    Humphrey Bogart was born in New York City on January 23, 1899, but Warner Brothers publicity changed it to December 25, 189. He was the son of a noted Manhattan surgeon and his mother was an illustrator. If anyone is interested, there is a rather lengthy biography of Bogart a New York Times book page HERE.
        Bogart probably learned chess in 1912 when he was taught by his father during their stay at their summer home in Canandaigua Lake, New York. He was known to have visited the chess clubs in New York City the following year. 
        His strength is generally placed at high Expert (2000-2199) or low Master (2200-2399) and he was also a USCF tournament director and an active member of the California State Chess Association. He was friends with several of the top US players of the day. 
         In his biography Bogart and Bacall, Joe Hyams wrote, “After the (stock market) Crash of 1929, Bogart was reduced to making eating money playing chess at the numerous ‘sportlands’ on Sixth Avenue. For a bet of fifty cents a game he played all comers. Bogart was both a good chess player and hungry, and he won more than he lost. He soon landed a job at an arcade, where he sat in the window playing chess for a dollar a game. Most often he had only a doughnut and coffee for lunch.” He was known to have played chess in Times Square in 1933. 

       
    As an act of support for US soldiers stationed overseas during WWII he played postal games, but in 1943 he was visited by the FBI who prevented him from playing any more correspondence chess. The FBI was reading his mail and thought the chess notation was some kind of secret code. One wonders why were they reading Bogart’s mail and it seem that FBI agents would have been able to understand the simple explanation, but apparently that was noit the case. 
        Unlike many so called celebrities of today, in 1918 Bogart enlisted in the US Naval Reserve and was called to active service when World War I was nearly over. After his discharge from the Navy in 1919 he returned to New York City and continued to play chess and eventually got a job as an office clerk at a theater and the rest is history. 
        In 1942, he starred in Casablanca which had several chess playing scenes. All the chess scenes were Bogart's idea because he wanted a character that was a chess player that drank too much. 
        Bogart divorced his wife in May of 1942 and married another chess player…20 year old Lauren Bacall. Bogart and Bacall, appeared on the cover of the June-July, 1945 issue of Chess Review magazine. Bogart was playing another actor, Charles Boyer and Lauren Bacall was looking on. Bogart helped sponsor the 1945 Pan American Chess Congress in Los Angeles and was selected as the Master of Ceremonies. 
        When interviewed by Silver Screen magazine in June of 1945, when asked what things mattered most to him, he replied that chess was one of those things that mattered most to him. He said he played every day between takes when he made movies.
    Reshevsky

     
        In 1946, Bogart lost a match for $100 (about $1,200 today) to restaurateur Mike Romanoff and later that evening went home then phoned Romanoff to play one more game over the phone for another $100. Romanoff agreed and lost in 20 moves. Former US Champion Herman Steiner just happened to be at Bogart’s home and it was Steiner that Romanoff was actually playing. 
         Romanoff's restaurant on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills was Bogart's hangout. Bogart owned the second booth from the left corner as you entered the restaurant. No one else could sit there. If Mike Romanoff was there, he and Bogart would always play chess at that table. Bogart claimed to be the strongest player among the Hollywood stars. The restaurant closed in 1962. 
        The following game was played in a 70 board simultaneous Reshevksy gave in Los Angeles and, needless to say, he and Bogart were the center of attraction and shared top billing. Their game was not flawless, but it was quite interesting.
      A game that I liked (Fritz 17)
    Samuel ReshevskyHumphrey Bogart½–½C5770 Board Simul, Los AngelesLos Angeles, CA USA1956Stockfish 16
    C57: Two Knights Defense 1.e4 e5 2.f3 c6 3.c4 f6 4.g5 d5 5.exd5 This is white's only option. xd5 Usual is 5...Na5. The text is extremely risky. Albert Pinkus tried to strengthen this move with analysis published in Chess Review in 1943 and 1944. but white gets a strong attack with the safe Lolli Attack (6.d4) which Bobby Fischer recommended. Or, he can play the Fried Liver (or Fegatello) Attack with 6.Nxf7. In either case black's defense will prove difficult. 6.d4 6.xf7 xf7 7.f3+ e6 8.c3 cb4 9.0-0 White has a slightly better position and while black is in no immediate danger he must exercise caution! 6...f6 There is scant theory on this position. What little there is shows black trying a number of moves, but this looks anything but sound. Still, in this game black manages to come out of the opening with a decent position! Best appears to be 6...Nxd4 7.dxe5 fxg5 It's perhaps a bit surprising, but this capture appears to be best. 7...b4+ 8.c3 fxg5 9.xd5 xe5 Horrible. Black had to place either the B or N on e7. 10.cxb4 e7 11.0-0 d7 12.h5+ f7 13.xg5 xg5 14.xf7+ d8 15.xg5+ c8 16.c3 1-0 Bet,J (2131)-Hantke,V Curacao 2002 8.xd5 Capturing with the B seems to give white more activity. xd5 9.xd5 e7 9...b4 10.e4 e7 11.c3 c6 12.e3 e6 13.0-0 White is better. Chappe,P-Battin,R (2095) Jakarta 1997 10.0-0 Somewhat better would have been 10.Be3 10.xc6+ This looks better because it leaves black's Ps wrecked, but Reshevsky realized (and Stockfish agrees() that in return he would enjoy the possession of two active Bs on the open board. bxc6 11.d2 a5 12.0-0 g4 13.e1 0-0 14.e4 b8 15.b3 f5 with full equality. 10...f5 11.c3 Moves the P out of danger and prevents ...Nd4 xe5 This is not really bad, but safer would have been 11...O-O 12.xb7 As bad as black's 6th move may have looked, he has emerged with a reasonably decent position. Here white picks up a little material for the price of neglected development. 12.d2 A developing move, but it gives black the upper hand. 0-0-0 13.b3 f6 14.c4 d3 and white is under some pressure. 12...d8 12...b8 is more appropriate. 13.d5 c6 14.b3 d3 15.e3 a5 with an active position. 13.e1 13.f4 c5+ 14.h1 0-0 and black is better anfter, say, 15.Nd2 Mg4, but it's a disaster if he plays... 15.fxe5 e4 16.xf8+ xf8 17.d2 xb7 18.h3 f2 and black is winning. 13...0-0 14.d2 f6 15.e4 White has strong initiative. xe4 15...d3 is also a reasonable try. 16.d1 xc1 17.xf6+ gxf6 18.axc1 16.xe4 h6 Here is where Bogart really goes astray. This move is a grave loss of time! 16...d3 would set more problems for white, considering the state of his development. 17.xd3 xd3 18.e3 a5 19.a4 b8 20.e2 Of course white is better, but black at least has some play. 17.e3 a5 18.c5 fe8 19.ad1 h8 20.xd8 xd8 21.f1 A slip that should have let black back into the game. 21.d4 c4 22.b3 xd4 23.cxd4 b6 24.g6 Of course the P on d4 is immune because of the mate threat. g8 25.e6 and black is badly tied up. 21...g4 This is where Bogart finally loses the game. 21...c4 is his best chance. White;s best line appears to be... 22.c2 xb2 23.d4 c4 24.e6 xd4 25.cxd4 g8 26.c6 a3 27.b3+ f8 28.xc7 xd4 29.f7+ e8 30.xg7 with a clear advantage, but the win is a long way off. 22.h3 e5 23.e2 It was reported that during the game several onlookers criticized this move, but one Master claimed that it's one of the strongest continuations because it saves his two Bs and gets ready for actlon on the Q-side.The engine's top choice is 23.Bc2 which pretty much does the same thing. c4 24.d1 True, this was an exhibition against 70 opponents and Reshevsky only had a few seconds per move so perfection can hardly be expected. With this move Reshevsky throws away all his advantage. 24.b3 White achieves the win in this position by because he has shifted play to the Q-side and this move save the extra P. d6 25.d3 e8+ 26.e3 xc3 27.c1 b4 28.xc7 with a technically won ending. Here's the engine's mai n line... Stockfish dev-20240803-ae9e55cf: e4 29.xe4 xe4 30.d3 e8 31.d7 h7 32.g4 c8 33.d4 g8 34.b7 g6 35.c7 a3 36.c4 b4 37.d7 h5 38.d5 c8+ 39.d3 f8 40.e3 e7 41.xa5 etc. 24...xd1 25.xd1 xb2+ 26.c2 a4 27.d4 xd4 A mistake that Reshevsky does not take advantage of. After this white has a considerable advantage with a B vs N and the better K position. 27...c5 would hold the draw. 28.b3 cxd4 29.xa4 dxc3 30.xa5 and black can hold the draw...with accurate play, of course. 28.cxd4 Here a generous, or probably tired (!), Reshevsky offered the draw which was accepted. In Shootouts from this position white scored +4 -0 =1,but the wins took some time. Here is the continuation at 19 plies. 28.cxd4 g8 29.d3 b6 30.d5 f8 31.d4 e7 32.c5 a4+ 33.c6 c3 34.d3 d8 35.a3 d1 36.f3 c3 37.d6 cxd6 38.xd6 d1 39.c6 e7 40.b5 d6 41.xa5 c5 42.a6 c3 43.g4 d5 44.b7 c3 45.c8 d5 46.d7 g6 47.e8 e3 48.f7 and wins. ½–½

    No comments:

    Post a Comment