‘Cooperstown’ movie script preserved at Museum

Written by: Bill Francis

Thirty years ago, a made-for-television movie was centered on the home of baseball. And its sounds still echo through history.

Legendary baseball broadcaster Ernie Harwell’s familiar voice opens the movie, with his play-by-play description of a long-ago game enlivening the grainy black-and white footage that accompanies the opening credits.

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This fictional late-season matchup for the pennant provides an important plot point throughout the made-for-television movie, “Cooperstown,” which first aired on Turner Network Television on Jan. 26, 1993. A copy of the script is part of the collection at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.   

The two-hour film stars Alan Arkin as Harry “The Wing” Willette, an ace hurler of the Chicago Barons from 1947-63, who, as the movie opens, is a present-day big league scout in Florida.

Embittered annually when the National Baseball Hall of Fame announces its newest electees and he’s not among the honored, his anger reaches a crescendo when his former catcher and former best friend, Raymond Maracle, played by Graham Greene, whom he’s held a grudge against for three decades, gets the call from Cooperstown hours before he’s stricken with a fatal heart attack.

With Maracle’s affable ghost beside him in the passenger seat of a Cadillac convertible, Willette takes off for Cooperstown for that year’s induction ceremony while confronting the mistakes of his life along the way.

The baseball fantasy’s tagline: A journey of discovery, understanding and a life redefined.

Arkin, who had a legendary acting career on stage and screen, passed away June 29, 2023, at the age of 89. After capturing a Tony Award for his first lead role on Broadway in “Enter Laughing,” he made a name for himself as a diverse presence on the silver screen in “The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming” (1966), “Inspector Clouseau” (1968), “Catch-22” (1970), “Wait Until Dark” (1967), “The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter” (1968), “The In-Laws” 1979, “Glengarry Glen Ross” (1992), “Grosse Point Blank” (1997), “Little Miss Sunshine” (2006) and “Argo” (2012).

Around the time of the initial airing of “Cooperstown,” Arkin in an interview wanted to make clear the movie wasn’t so much about baseball as it was about self-doubt.

“It’s about our self-worth being tied up with a lot of external baggage that doesn’t really have anything to do with our worth,” said Arkin, who also appeared in the 2014 baseball film “Million Dollar Arm.” “We’re always looking to others for rewards, but they have to come from inside. I think that’s something everybody struggles with.”

A copy of the "Cooperstown" script is preserved at the National Baseball Hall of Fame. (Milo Stewart Jr./National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum)

Saying he preferred tennis to baseball, Arkin admitted in playing Willette: “All I had to do was change over from his passion to mine: acting. Only the terminology was different.

“When I haven’t gotten parts that I felt I should have gotten, when I see other people getting parts that they’re not right for and that I didn’t get because someone’s name was bigger than mine, I know what Harry Willette’s going through.”

In the movie, Willette describes his pitching career, often hurling for mediocre ballclubs, as, “A meal ticket for a team that never made its way past breakfast.”

When he’s on the mound for a game that means a berth in the World Series, he blames Maracle – who after spending seasons together was traded midseason to the team standing between him and the postseason – for supplying one of his new teammates with what to expect in the batter’s box. After giving up a home run and losing the all-important contest thanks to the perceived inside information, Willette never spoke to his best friend again. 

The story ends with Willette finally saying goodbye to his youth and looking toward the rich road before him.

The New York Times, in its review, wrote, “An easygoing movie called Cooperstown … attempts the seemingly impossible: to concoct a baseball story without becoming mired in sentimental sludge. That it largely succeeds, right up to the inevitable final scene of teary uplift, is quite remarkable. A choice cast and the supple direction of Charles Haid help immeasurably, as does a screenplay by the playwright Lee Blessing.”

“Mr. Arkin and Mr. Greene give the kind of effortlessly assured performances that seem to inspire the best from everybody in their immediate vicinities …”

Haid said he made the movie for “everybody’s dad. ‘Cooperstown’ is for my dad. I had four brothers, and my dad would come home from work and he would be out there throwing the ball around. It was wonderful. Everybody’s dad did that. I am a father, too, so I made it for myself.”

Like Arkin’s character, Haid said his father couldn’t adjust to retirement. 

“Guys who retire have a hard time. They go around their whole lives being something to somebody. (The movie) couldn’t have come at a better time because I had seen my father go through a very difficult period, which he is completely over now. He has turned into a great senior citizen guy.”

“Cooperstown” was the third telemovie in a project called “TNT Screenworks,” which began in 1992 with screenplays written by David Mamet and Horton Foote. Arthur Miller wrote a later film. It was the brainchild of Steven Spielberg, who hired playwrights to compose screenplays. Blessing is best known for “A Walk in the Woods” (1988), his play about U.S. and Soviet arms negotiators, but the subject he has written about most often in his career is baseball, including “Oldtimers’ Game” and “Cobb.” “Cooperstown” become his first produced screenplay.

“When Cobb was in his late 60s,” Blessing said at the time, “he would go to Cooperstown every year for the induction ceremonies just to be there and see old friends – well, maybe not friends, but people. One year he drove up with a biographer, and the biographer later commented about how unpleasant it was to drive for a long period of time with Ty Cobb.

“So I liked the idea of an old ballplayer headed to Cooperstown, but I decided to create a new story about someone who wasn’t a member of the Hall of Fame and was going for a different reason,” added Blessing, a native of Minnesota who was 12 when the Washington Senators became the Twins in 1961. 

In a recent telephone interview from his home in Los Angeles, Blessing reflected on the “Cooperstown” experience and his time spent with Arkin.

“I was really making my way as a playwright at the time. They had us all either adapt one of our plays or just writing an original screenplay. So that’s what I did. And they liked it and decided to go ahead with it,” Blessing said. “The idea for ‘Cooperstown’ came about because I was fascinated with the possibility of playing around with somebody who thought he ought to be in the Hall of Fame but was continually frustrated by the writers’ vote.

“I did enjoy the movie. I thought they did a pretty good job. And I was delighted to work with Alan Arkin and Graham Greene who played the two principal roles.”

According to Blessing, Arkin’s involvement in the project was a highlight.

“Early on, I got to go up to his house in in the Hudson Valley,” Blessing said. “He wanted me and the director to drive up and we spent the day there talking to Alan about the role, talking a little bit about other casting, who he was comfortable with and wouldn’t be comfortable with if we cast them. Things like that. The usual things you do to make a star comfortable in a piece. He was just a delight and incredibly entertaining. So I had a very good time meeting him and enjoyed watching his work.

“I thought he was great. I thought the whole cast was great, but he was in almost every frame of that movie. He really captured the whole struggle the character was going through in that role.”

Neither Arkin nor anybody involved in the production set foot in Cooperstown during the production. In a wire service story that appeared in newspapers across the country, Jeff Matteson, a spokesman for TNT, reported the crew never left Los Angeles. The producers recreated Cooperstown and the Hall of Fame in California.

“It was filmed in Los Angeles on sets dressed to look like the Hall of Fame,” Matteson said. “I know the set designers studied photos and did their best to get a real approximation.”

The story later quoted then Hall of Fame Associate Director William Guilfoile, who said he read an early version of the script and relayed some comments to the movie’s producers.

“I think they contacted us out of courtesy, and probably to check some factual content, but actually I don’t have a very good idea of what the final product will be like,” Guilfoile said.


Bill Francis is the senior research and writing associate at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

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