Pancho Part 4                   A Film By Gino Tanasescu

In 1971 something remarkable happened. Pancho Gonzales, then age 41, announced that he was retiring from professional tennis. The Howard Hughes Open in Las Vegas--then considered a kind of unofficial world pro championship in the days before Open tennis--would be his last tournament.

A young film maker named Gino Tanasescu seized the opportunity to create what he assumed would be a final, amazing portrait of this supreme athlete and competitor. But even Gino was not prepared for what actually happened in Las Vegas.

His film "Pancho" has been for over 30 years now a cult classic among those who truly love the game, and especially it's shadowy history. Despite the fact that he disappeared from the world amateur circuit to play most of his career on the traveling professional tour, there are those who consider Pancho Gonzales to have been the greatest player of all time.

And now here is an incredible piece of documentary evidence that will allow every tennis fan to evaluate the merits of that claim. What happened whenPancho traveled to Vegas with his wife and 3 daughters to face off against legendary players including John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall, and Arthur Ashe--all a decade or more younger?

If you are looking for a detailed technical study of Pancho's strokes, you will be disappointed. But if you are interested a candid study of this fascinating champion, whose place in the history of the game has been obscured by historical circumstance, you'll love "Pancho." His intelligence, passion, wit, rage, elegance, and love for the game and his family are all there. We are delighted to present this film in a slightly abridged and annotated fashion on Tennisplayer.net .

This month in Part 4 the amazing conclusion of the tournament including the shocking final between Pancho and a young Arthur Ashe.



Gino Tanasescu is an Emmy award winner writer, director and producer, based in Los Angeles, California. (Click Here.) As a young film maker, he was uniquely qualified to direct "Pancho." The film is informed by his sensibility as an elite American junior player, and a member of a national collegiate championship team at UCLA -- where Gino also received his bachelor degree in the fine arts. "Pancho" captures the character of this great champion with an experimental quality that borders on film noir, and equals many of the great films in that genre.


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