Development
Mickey may be based on Charley Goldman. Both were bantamweights, Jewish, and had similar-sounding names. In addition, Goldman was the boxing trainer ofFictional biography
According to his memorial plaque, Mickey Goldmill was born on April 7, 1905, to a Jewish family. He boxed professionally from 1922 until 1947 and achieved great athletic success but never gained any measure of fame or material success. Mickey recalled that he once knocked his opponent, Ginny Russell, out of the ring the same day that Luis Firpo did the same to''Rocky''
In the first film, Mickey manages his gym. One of the regulars in his gym is''Rocky II''
''Rocky II'' picks up directly after the first film. Apollo challenges Rocky to a rematch while the two are still in the hospital; Mickey states that there will be no rematch and that, despite the decision of the judges, Balboa won the match. Eventually, after Apollo's efforts at publicly goading and embarrassing Rocky into a fight, Mickey again becomes his trainer for the rematch. For the second fight with a now-determined Apollo, he utilizes unique training methods (such as chasing and attempting to catch a chicken) to help Rocky gain speed. He also converts him from a left-handed fighting style to a right-handed style, in an effort to both confuse Apollo and to protect his right eye in which had suffered a detached retina during the previous match. The rematch takes place and, after a brutal fight that leaves both men exhausted, knocked down and clinging to the ropes in an effort to stand back up, Rocky wins the title.''Rocky III''
By the start of ''Rocky III'', set almost five years after Rocky won the championship, Mickey has trained Rocky to a series of ten successful title defenses, before both men decide that it is time for them to retire (Mickey, now living with the Balboas in a mansion outside of Philadelphia, is suffering heart problems by this time, though he keeps this hidden from Rocky). As the announcement of Rocky's retirement is made, the brutal challenger James "Clubber" Lang accuses the two of avoiding him, publicly taunting Rocky and making lascivious remarks to his wife Adrian. Finally, Rocky agrees to face Clubber in a match which he figures will be his last title defense. Mickey tells him that he will have to do it alone if he decides to have a match against Clubber, later admitting that all of his challengers were hand-picked, "good fighters" but not "killers" like Clubber. He states that Rocky, when he fought Apollo, was "supernatural", "hard", "nasty" and had a "cast-iron jaw", but has now gotten "civilized" and lost the hunger that allowed him to win. Upon this reveal, Rocky's confidence in himself is damaged greatly, making him even more eager to accept the challenge in order to prove his worth; he convinces Mickey to train him anyway, with the promise that this would be their last match. The matchup is set for August 15, 1981. Rocky, much to Mickey's frustration, does not take his training seriously, allowing fans to watch him train in a crowded hotel ballroom instead of training in Mighty Mick's. Shortly before the match, Rocky and Clubber's entourages erupt into a pandemonium free-for-all backstage; Mickey, trying to break it up, is shoved against a wall by Clubber, and goes into cardiac arrest. Rocky attempts to call off the match due to Mickey's condition, but he refuses to allow Rocky to cancel the fight. His condition worsens as the match goes on, but Mickey refuses to go to the hospital until the match is over, so the aides begin to keep him on life-support. Rocky, still distraught over Mickey's condition, is not fully focused on the match, is quickly overpowered and takes a merciless beating from his opponent. The fight only lasts two rounds before Clubber knocks him out. Eventually, Rocky returns to the dressing room to check on Mickey's condition. Rocky tells his trainer that the fight ended in a second-round knockout but does not tell Mickey that he lost. Rocky then tries to convince him that they need to go to the hospital, but instead he keeps talking, some of his last words being "I love you, kid", and dies. He is interred in a Jewish mausoleum outside of Philadelphia, the private service attended by Rocky, his wife Adrian, his brother-in-law Paulie and Goldmill's longtime friend and cornerman Al Silvani. Rocky, after having finished grieving Mickey, later defeats Clubber in a rematch with the help of his former nemesis Apollo Creed and Apollo's trainer Tony "Duke" Evers.''Rocky V''
Meredith reprises the role of Mickey Goldmill in the fifth installment, in a flashback to before Rocky's second fight with Apollo, where he gives Rocky one last motivational speech before the match. He also gives Rocky a cufflink that belonged to Rocky Marciano as a gesture of gratitude for giving him newfound purpose and promises he'll always be with him when he dies and, should Rocky get hurt, use his words to motivate himself to get back up. It is revealed that in his will, Mickey left his gym to Rocky's son, Robert Balboa Jr. When Rocky loses his fortune because of a tax discrepancy the gym remains the only asset they retain and, to earn income, Rocky opens the gym once again. Before this Rocky explores the abandoned gym and tearfully remembers Mickey's motivation speech feeling immense guilt to have lost everything he fought for feeling he let Mickey down. When Rocky gets into a street fight with his former protégé Tommy Gunn he hallucinates Mickey telling him to get up motivating Rocky to win the fight against Tommy. At the film's climax Rocky gives his son the same cufflink Mickey gave him. This was the last time Burgess Meredith appeared without the use of archival footage, as he died on September 9, 1997.Video games
Mickey appears in the video gamesReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Goldmill, Mickey Rocky (franchise) characters Fictional professional boxers Fictional sports coaches Fictional characters from Philadelphia Fictional characters from the 20th century Fictional American Jews Film characters introduced in 1976 Fictional martial arts trainers