Career
Born in Leonard"s Bridge, Connecticut, Rosenbloom was nicknamed "Slapsie Maxie" by a journalist due to his open gloved style of boxing. As a professional boxer, Rosenbloom relied on hitting and moving to score points. He was very difficult to hit cleanly with a power punch and his fights often went the full number of required rounds.
In his boxing matches he suffered thousands of head punches, which eventually led to the deterioration of his motor functions.
In 1937, he accepted a role in a Hollywood film. He became a character actor, portraying comical "big guys," in movies that included Each Dawn I Die.
Slapsy Maxie"s, the first comedy club, opened in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and Maxie retired from boxing permanently in 1939. He continued acting on radio, television, and in a number of films, usually playing comedy roles as a big, clumsy, punch-drunk—but lovable—character.
He appeared in a number of episodes (playing himself) of The Fred Allen Show—including a skit with Marlene Dietrich.
Rosenbloom played an important part in television"s first 90-minute drama, Requiem for a Heavyweight, written by Rod Serling, and starring Jack Palance as a boxer at the end of his career. Rosenbloom played an ex pug, whose life revolved around retelling old boxing stories night after night to other ex-pugs in a down-and-out Barometer lieutenant is the fate that looms for Palance (as "Mountain McClintock") if he cannot adjust to a new life outside the ring.
In The Honeymooners popular episode "television or Not television," Jackie Gleason"s character Ralph Kramden pays homage to Maxie.
He read aloud a television listing from the newspaper, "Fights Of The World: Maxie Rosenbloom versus Kingfish Levinsky." Slapsy Maxie"s, his nightclub, is prominently featured in a 2013 crime film, Gangster Squad, the story of which is set in 1949.
The club, which actually operated in 1939 at 7165 Beverly boulevard and from 1943 to 1947, was located at 5665 Wilshire Boulevard in Los Los Angeles Rosenbloom died of Paget"s disease of bone in 1976 at the age of 68, and was interred in the Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood, California.
Rosenbloom was inducted into the Ring Boxing Hall of Fame in 1972.
In 1984 he was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. In 1929, he had fought with four other Jewish boxers in a benefit at Madison Square Garden to raise relief funds for Palestine. During 1935, he postponed a scheduled fight with Tiger Jack Fox that was scheduled to fall between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur so that they could take place after the Jewish holidays.
Rosenbloom was also inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1985.
In 1993 he was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.