
“Mike Tyson: The Undisputed Truth” was directed by Spike Lee, written by Tyson’s wife, Kiki, and attended by Kanye West, 50 Cent, and Bryant Gumbel. Mike Tyson wants to be left alone on stage. Like every serious analysand, Tyson entices us by hovering constantly on the verge of a “breakthrough.” Who else goes live on the “Today” show and affably speculates, in the spirit of breakfast chatter, that his veganism can be traced to a former compulsion to frequent prostitutes? Sonny Liston was a man who wanted to be left alone. In person, it’s mostly his lisping wit, the unpredictable turns of his Woody Allen meets Genghis Khan shtick, that continue to surprise. It is precisely his arena-sized isolation, his painfully live, often apocalyptic solo performances that have made him a person of fascination for two and half decades. His opponents always seemed beside the point. Frazier-Tyson never had a true antagonist. Unlike those fighters whose legacies were carved out in collaboration with rivals-Louis vs.

After watching Mike Tyson’s one-man show on Broadway, it all seems so obvious: his life has always been a one-man show.
