Mike Donlin

A Rough and Rowdy Life from New York Baseball Idol to Stage and Screen

Steve Steinberg author Lyle Spatz author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Nebraska Press

Published:4th Nov '24

£31.00

Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.

Mike Donlin cover

Mike Donlin was a brash, colorful, and complicated personality. He was the most popular athlete in New York and was a star on the powerful New York Giants teams of 1905 and 1908. Though haunted by tragedy, including the deaths of both of his parents as a boy, Donlin was a charming, engaging, and kind-hearted man who also had successful careers on the stage and in film.

One of the early “bad boys” among professional athletes, Donlin’s temper and combativeness—compounded by alcoholism—led to battles with umpires and fans, numerous suspensions from the game, and even jail time. In 1906, when Donlin married vaudeville actress Mabel Hite, his life changed for the better, and their love story captivated the nation. Donlin left baseball after his sensational comeback for the dramatic 1908 season and joined Mabel on the stage, likely losing a Hall of Fame career. Then in 1912, at the age of twenty-nine, Mabel died of intestinal cancer.

After making a final comeback as a player in 1914, Donlin starred in baseball’s first feature film. He became a drinking buddy of actors John Barrymore and Buster Keaton and married actress Rita Ross. The couple moved to Hollywood, where Donlin became a beloved figure and appeared in roughly one hundred movies, mostly in minor roles. Despite his Hollywood career, Donlin stayed connected to the game he loved and was seeking a coaching job with the Giants when he died of a heart attack in 1933. At the dawn of the celebrity era of sports, Donlin was one of the nation’s first athletes to capture the public’s attention. This biography by Steve Steinberg and Lyle Spatz shows why.
 

"This biography of early 20th century outfielder Mike Donlin is a captivating account of one of the sport's early celebrity athletes, who parlayed his baseball wizardry into a subsequent theatrical career on stage and screen. Steinberg and Spatz brilliantly examine Donlin's life beyond the ballpark to illuminate his heretofore little known, unusual contribution to baseball history."—Bevis Baseball Research blog
"Spatz and Steinberg capture Donlin's colorful personality in a richly detailed, well-researched work. They do a nice job explaining the history of vaudeville and the early years of the movie industry, and their play-by-play of Donlin's glory years in baseball—particularly with the Giants—is well documented."—Bob D’Angelo, Sports Bookie
“‘Turkey Mike’ was the most picturesque, colorful baseball player I ever saw. He had more pure color than that mighty man, George Herman Babe Ruth.”—Damon Runyon, journalist and short-story writer (1880–1946)
“Steve Steinberg and Lyle Spatz have always dug deeper than most baseball biographers into the inner characters of their subjects. In Mike Donlin their digging has struck rich gold. Their crisp narrative takes Donlin from his tragic youth through his wild baseball career to his redemption by the wife who took him away from baseball and led him to a second life as an actor.”—Gabriel Schechter, author of Victory Faust: The Rube Who Saved McGraw’s Giants
“Steve Steinberg and Lyle Spatz have written an engrossing story: the tale of a real-life baseball legend and the vaudeville star he loved that is as incredible as any fiction. . . . Steinberg and Spatz have captured not only the poignancy of [Donlin’s romance with Mabel Hite] but the color, the joy—and the brutality—of the raw, young America.”—Kevin Baker, author of Dreamland and Paradise Alley

ISBN: 9781496238962

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

368 pages