Reality took place of dreams
“People say, ‘When you make it to the NBA, don’t forget about me.’ I feel like telling them, ‘Well, if I don’t make it, make sure you don’t forget about me.’ “
— William Gates, in the final scene of “Hoop Dreams”
CHICAGO — The asphalt is still cracked and dried, just as the neighborhood is still cracked and dried. Weeds sprouting from the concrete, muscling up to breathe in the heat of another Cabrini Green summer.
Ten years have passed since one of America’s most dangerous public housing projects became a laboratory for a documentary film director and his crew, who set out to find the essence of athletic hope among black children hypnotized by basketball in the inner city.
“Hoop Dreams,” released in October 1994, chronicled the NBA aspirations of two adolescent boys and their families. Their pursuit unveiled broader themes of struggle and adversity — in a world constantly telling young William Gates and Arthur Agee they were not supposed to make it.
“If you think about it, we were the first reality series,” William Gates, a pastor, said. “We just didn’t bank in like everybody else. Nowadays, even the ‘Survivor’ losers go on TV and get paid.”
The film’s $8 million box-office take made it the highest-grossing documentary to that time.
Viewers first meet Arthur as a doe-eyed 14-year-old on his way to see NBA star Isiah Thomas at a prestigious basketball camp, hosted by a private Catholic high school his parents cannot afford. William soon fills the screen, emerging as his family’s last beacon for pro basketball stardom. Their disparate journeys play out over three unsparing hours. Two teen-aged protagonists use their skills and desire to try to vault over every hurdle of urban blight: teen pregnancy, poverty, crime, crumbling public schools, parental drug use and abandonment.
After the credits rolled, their lives moved on.
William is 32 now. Arthur is 31. They have eight children between them, closets full of sneakers and trophies, unresolved issues about why they didn’t make it and how close they came, and a deep friendship, rekindled at least once a year.
Gates, still self-aware and socially conscious, is a senior pastor at the Living Faith Community Center in Cabrini Green, where he works at the Kids’ Club, sometimes nurturing third-graders who cannot yet read and other times telling a young genius she tested in the top 3 percent nationally.
He came back to the neighborhood begrudgingly, after he was out of work for a time and his brother was gunned down in the street.
Remember Curtis Gates? He was the former playground king who gained weight, lost self-esteem and lived vicariously through his younger brother — “All my dreams are in him now,” he said in the film. He was murdered almost three years ago at age 36.
Arthur is still an infectious dreamer. His sole income is derived from launching a “Hoop Dreams” clothing line (slogan: Control Your Destiny). He has partnered with MTV’s Rock the Vote for a 50-city tour that he hopes will help promote the line.
“We’re talking about writing $60 million in orders,” said Agee.
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In one of the film’s most powerful scenes, Arthur’s father, Bo, wandered off the court to complete a drug deal, steps from where his son played. Viewers peer inside the Agees’ darkened apartment after the electric bill could not be paid.
The maternal struggle of two women trying to keep their families together is another central theme.
You can almost smell Emma Gates’ chicken crackle and pop in her fryer, and feel the longing in William’s mother when she says: “I really thought Curtis was going to make it, so I just wanted this one to make it. I want him to make it so bad, I don’t know what I’m going to do.”
And the suburban Catholic high school, plucking talented children from the playground and playing God with their lives — keeping one enrolled, discarding the other.
You see Sheila Agee as she extricates herself from welfare and enrolls in a nursing class. She finishes with the highest grade-point average. “I didn’t think I could do it,” she says, crying. “And people told me I wasn’t going to be anything.”
“You thought everybody else was crying when they saw that scene, I ‘bout lost it,” Arthur said. “To this day, everybody that comes up to me, asks, ‘How’s your Mom doing?’ “
The filmmakers also captured the day Arthur plays his father one-on-one. By then, Bo Agee’s crack addiction had put the family through hell. He had spent seven months in jail for burglary. He had physically abused his wife, Sheila.
Bo got religion and asked for forgiveness, and his family took him back. But his son never forgot.
They dueled shirtless on the asphalt, in the humidity of a Chicago summer, until Arthur began taking it to his father, who at one point tried to rearrange the score to his liking. Bo was laughing. His son was not.
“Ain’t no con game going on anymore, Dad,” he says before he reels off a string of moves and shots to beat his father. “I’m older now.”
“We called it ‘The Great Santini’ scene,” Steve James, the director, said. “We thought it was going to be poignant — boy plays dad before he goes off to college. And then it suddenly exploded into this thing about Arthur’s anger and resentment.”
After James and his partners had paid their bills, he split the profits with the families, which he estimates totaled $175,000 to $200,000.
Arthur’s family pooled their shares, and eventually moved out of the West Garfield Park housing projects and into the neighboring suburb of Berwyn, where they now reside. William estimated he received about $150,000, but concedes he “wasted some, gave a lot of money away and gave above and beyond to the church.
“I wish I would have known what a 41 percent tax bracket was back then,” he said, ruefully. William married Catherine Mines, the mother of his infant daughter, Alicia, in the movie. Alicia is now 15. They had three more children — William Jr. 9, Jalon, 6, and 7-month-old Marques — and live in the Austin Community on Chicago’s West Side.
“Oh, it’s still the ‘hood,” he said, laughing. “But it’s a lot safer than Cabrini.”
Bo Agee, Arthur’s father, is now a pastor at the Upper Room Outreach Ministry. He celebrated the church’s third anniversary two weeks ago with Steve James in attendance. Sheila is a private nurse who mostly works with well-to-do families, and William’s mother, Emma, is at the same job, working as a nurse’s assistant. She moved out of Cabrini Green two years ago and now lives five minutes from William.
Arthur has four children, ranging in age from 13 to 7 — two boys and two girls from four mothers.
“They weren’t planned kids, that’s why I know they’re here for a reason,” he said. “They’re here to teach me a lesson about responsibility.”
“Where would I be if ‘Hoop Dreams’ never happened?” he asked. “I don’t know. I’m very, very happy. It helped my family out. Not only financially, but emotionally. It put that love back — it put what was important first.”
Said Gates: “What would have been ideal was for me and Arthur’s family to live happily and that we have enough money to do whatever we need to do. But it didn’t pan out that way. We never caught that next wave.”
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Agee starred in junior college and played two years at Arkansas State. He said his dream flickered when he turned down playing for the CBA’s Connecticut Pride in 1996. He worked out with the team but instead took a small role offered by James in “Passing Glory,” a TNT film about Louisiana’s first interracial basketball game.
“I was going to put another two- or three-year run into trying to get to the NBA, like these guys,” Agee said last month at the league’s annual pre-draft camp in Chicago. “Instead, I made $17,000 for what? Seven weeks. I look at that now and I know I didn’t make a real, 100-percent run. Outside, other social things intrigued me. I lost a little bit of the hunger.
“But it also opened my eyes up to reality: That ball is going to stop bouncing. That knee is going to give out.”
He formed the Arthur Agee Role Model Foundation, which helps inner-city youths strive for a higher education.
Gates committed to giving the game one more try at the outset of 2001. He put his ministry on hold and began working out with Michael Jordan during early preparation for Jordan’s second comeback.
Gates held his own against NBA players, and Jordan promised him a tryout with the Washington Wizards. He was all set to play in the team’s summer league when he fractured a bone in his foot. The youngster in the film whose knee betrayed him was suddenly cursed again.
“That was my NBA dream,” he said. “I never put that uniform on, but I knew I was good enough to play.”
Gates played at Marquette and graduated with a communications degree. He scored well on the LSAT exam, before deciding he did not want to go to law school. He lost his counseling job and was unemployed for much of 2002.
“I was installing bathrooms, doing odd jobs,” he said. “It got so bad at one point I was trying to go to grocery stores and, like, ‘I’ll bag.’ “
He went back to the ministry, and between the Kids’ Club and his own parish, Gates now pulls in about $40,000 a year — “Or $30,000 less than what you’re supposed to for a family of six,” he said, half-smiling.
Will Jr., now 9, wants to see the entire movie, but for now Gates has only shown him the first two years of his high school career, before the knee injury and disenchantment creeps in.
“I’ll show him the rest when he gets into high school,” he said. “Psychologically, he has this image of his dad being successful right now. If he sees the adversity now, I think that could play heavy in his perception of himself. Any time stuff start going wrong, he could think, ‘Well, it’s supposed to be this way.’ … When he starts facing a little adversity, then I can work that in, to show him that I faced it, too.”
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“Hoop Dreams” still brings them celebrity. An intrepid student doing a term paper on the movie got Arthur on the phone a few weeks ago and nearly fainted. “I said, ‘Dude, calm down. I’ll help you out,’ ” Agee said. He got an A-plus.
Recently, William spoke at St. Joseph’s summer basketball camp — just like Isiah Thomas did when he and Arthur attended. One of the campers this year was Will Jr.
At the Kids’ Club in Cabrini Green, Gates arrived for work recently in a pressed cocoa dress shirt and matching slacks, burgundy shoes and a ring of jingling keys on his waistband. He is still the responsible kid who gave $50 of his paycheck to his family in the movie.
Agee joined him an hour later. He wore a platinum rope around his neck, diamond-studded earrings and enough fabric in his baggy jeans and shirts to construct a five-man tent.
“What’s up, A-gee,” William said, affectionately.
“What up, dawg?” They clasped hands, embraced and laughed long and hard.
The family man and the class cut-up, together again.
Later, when Arthur leaves for family court to make sure his child-support payments are current, Gates reflected on his bond with Agee.
“Arthur was always doing the things I wanted to do,” he said. “I think we need each other. I keep his feet on the ground and he keeps mine off of it.”