Sunday, July 21, 2019

AVA'S "FAST EDDIE" PARKER

Article Topic: Fast Eddie Parker, Ava Missouri, Benton Township, Douglas County, Missouri, Billiards.

The Original Fast Eddie Parker

Photo essay compiled by Ken W. Brown, Springfield, Missouri

Preface by Ken W. Brown: Eddie Parker graduated from Ava (MO) High School in 1949.  He was the son of C.W. Parker, Ava Superintendent of Schools in the 1940s and 1950s.  Eddie not only loved pool and was its ambassador worldwide, but he loved Ava High School and his former classmates.  In 2005 or 2006, the following press release was loaned by Eddie’s widow, Patty or “Peg” (Berry) Parker, to his friend high school friend, Jack Singleton, who in turn asked me, Ken Brown, to transcribe it and scan several photos about Eddie.  Below is a my transcription of that press release plus some of the photos, and the entry for Eddie on Wikipedia.com.

PART 1: Press Release: The Original Fast Eddie

Fast Eddie was born in Springfield, Missouri, in 1931. He began playing pool at age nine. He attended school at Ava, Missouri, and he was graduated from high school in 1949. While he was still a teenager, he moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where he was tutored by the late, great Benny Allen, a six-time World Champion; and it was during that time that Fast Eddie became a money player. In 1952, Fast Eddie joined the Navy and moved to California. After a tour of duty in the Navy, he continued playing pool throughout the country in the 1950's and 1960's. He has taught pocket billiards to hundreds of students, and although Fast Eddie was a money player, he won a number of tournaments, including the “California 14.1 Straight” pool tournament in the1950's.

It was when Fast Eddie was playing pool down South, in Kentucky, in the early 1950's that he became acquainted with a young man who had helped pay his way through college by working in a pool hall. That young man, Walter Tevis, wrote a book in 1959 entitled "The Hustler", of which a motion picture was made in 1961, starring Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason, Piper Laurie, and George C. Scott. Being a money player, Fast Eddie would sometimes use assumed names. As well as Eddie Ezzell, Eddie Santee, Terry McKee, he used the name Eddie Felsen, and it was the latter that the author changed the spelling to Felson and used in his novel. Fast Eddie's real name is Eddie Parker. 


According to Fast Eddie, only about thirty percent of the novel is based on fact. The remainder is fiction. For example, Fast Eddie had told Tevis about Rudolph Wanderone, also known as "New York Fats." Tevis changed the name to "Minnesota Fats" in his novel. Fast Eddie also related a few of his own experiences while on the road, such as the finger breaking incident and the big money match with the wealthy Kentuckian, which was played in the Kentuckian's home. Tevis changed the events slightly. Instead of Fast Eddie getting his two thumbs broken, as depicted in the movie, in reality his right forefinger was broken during the incident.

The big money match with the wealthy Kentuckian was described accurately, except the match was played close to Lexington, Kentucky, instead of in Louisville, Kentucky as suggested in the movie.  And Fast Eddie and his stakehorse (financial backer) won $30,000, instead of $12,000 as depicted in the novel and in the movie. The error was that Fast Eddie's percentage of the $30,000 was $12,000, the stakehorse received the remaining $18,000.

The famous pool hall "Bensinger's" was changed to "Bennington's" in the novel, and to "Ames" in the motion picture.  Fast Eddie attended Missouri University and the University of Tennessee for one year each.  He had many newspaper and magazine articles written about him; he made television commercials; he was on television talk shows; and he had his own television show, "Shooting Stars With Fast Eddie" and "The Fast Eddie Show."

In 1980 he set a yet unbroken record by pocketing twenty-two balls in one legal stroke (the old record of twenty-one balls was, reportedly, set by Paul Gerni). In 1982 Fast Eddie toured Europe for the Department of Defense. During that tour, he performed in West Germany, Greece, Italy and Spain.

In 1987 he formed a partnership with a large Japanese company for the purpose of creating an instructional video tape; he spent nine days in Japan performing exhibitions and creating the instructional video tape. He was the author of a pocket billiards workbook entitled  "What You've Always Wanted To Know About Pocket Billiards, But Were Afraid To Ask."  The workbook has been used by colleges and universities as an instructional tool. The workbook and an earlier video tape by him was in the possession of actor, Paul Newman, before filming "The Color of Money." Fast Eddie received a letter of thanks from the actor and from the casting director, Gretchen Rennell, before filming began.

Because his real identity was kept secret by himself and by the author, Walter Tevis, in 1987, a newspaper reporter asked Fast Eddie if he would consent to take a polygraph test to prove or to disprove his claim to have inspired Walter Tevis to write "The Hustler."  In September of that year, a lie detector test was administered to Fast Eddie. The results proved that, indeed, Fast Eddie had told the truth and that his claims are accurate and truthful.

Since coming out of retirement in 1980, Fast Eddie performed more than two hundred shows per year, and he even completed a novel himself. As reported by a newspaper reporter, Fast Eddie is, indeed, "One of the last of a vanishing breed".






"Fast Eddie" Parker (born c. 1932 [s/b 1931], Springfield, Missouri – died February 2, 2001, Brownsville, Texas) was an American pool player, claimed by many to have been the inspiration for the character "Fast Eddie" Felson in the 1959 Walter Tevis novel The Hustler.[1][2][3] In both the 1961 film adaptation and the 1986 sequel, Felson was played by Paul Newman.
Parker started playing pool at the age of nine when his father, a school superintendent, bought a used pool table.[1] In high school, he acquired the nickname "Fast Eddie" for his speed in football and basketball.[1]
In Kansas City, he met six-time world champion Bennie Allen, who became the teenager's mentor.[1][2] Parker later said, "I never had any idea I was going to turn professional and shoot for money until I started studying with Benny Allen."[2] He made a living from the game, but did not get rich. According to him, his biggest win was $30,000 playing three-cushion billiards sometime in the 1950s,[2] but his backer got $18,000 of that.[3]
During his travels, in Louisville he befriended Walter Tevis, then a young man working his way through college.[3] Parker stated, "When the [1961] movie came out, I didn't want to be associated with it. The movie would've blown my cover by the time I got to the next town."[1]
Parker retired either in the early 1970s[1] or in 1980.[3]
He died of a heart attack while attending the US Classic Billiards Eight-Ball Showdown tournament near Brownsville, Texas. He was survived by Peg, his wife of 50 years, and two children.
References[edit]
1.    Jump up to:a b c d e f Adam Bernstein (February 5, 2001). "'Fast' Eddie Parker Dies at 69"The Washington Post.
2.    Jump up to:a b c d "'Fast Eddie' Parker dies at 69"Associated Press. November 19, 2003.
3.    Jump up to:a b c d "'Fast Eddie' Parker"The Guardian. February 8, 2001.

PART 3: Photos from Eddie Parker's Ava (MO) High School Days.