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Reuters
Reuters
Business
Jonathan Stempel

Bill Murray film's use of famed U.S. horse racing phrase draws lawsuit

FILE PHOTO: Cast member Bill Murray arrives for the premiere of the film "St. Vincent" in New York, October 6, 2014. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. horse racing announcer Dave Johnson, who called Triple Crown races for ABC television for two decades, on Wednesday sued the makers of Bill Murray’s 2014 film "St. Vincent" for using his signature phrase "and down the stretch they come" without permission.

Johnson, 77, a Manhattan resident, accused the film’s distributor Weinstein Co, the producers Chernin Entertainment and Crescendo Productions and other defendants of infringing his 2012 trademark in the phrase, one of the most recognizable in American sports.

FILE PHOTO: Actor Bill Murray recites his words during a performance with cellist Jan Vogler from their new album New Worlds, at the Southbank Centre in London, Britain June 4, 2018. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls

The lawsuit does not name Murray as a defendant.

Murray’s character Vincent MacKenna, a grumpy retiree who drank and gambled, used the phrase "in the context of a race and in a clear attempt to imitate" Johnson, the complaint said.

Johnson said this would likely confuse the public, tarnishing his rights to a phrase "inextricably linked" with him.

"I’ve spent my whole life calling races, and that's something I wanted to protect," Johnson said in a phone interview from New Orleans, where he is attending Saturday's Louisiana Derby. "It's obviously mine. That's my phrase."

The lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court seeks unspecified damages, which Johnson said he would donate to charities associated with horse racing, including for disabled jockeys.

"St. Vincent" grossed $54.8 million worldwide, according to BoxOfficeMojo.com.

A lawyer for the defendants did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

"'And down the stretch they come' embodies all that is good about thoroughbred racing," Johnson's lawyer Andrew Mollica said in a phone interview.

Johnson’s use of the phrase involves emphasizing the word "down" as horses turn into the homestretch of a race.

He told Reuters that he began using the phrase in the 1960s, and gave it more of a "rumble" when calling races at Santa Anita Park in California so the crowd could hear him on its decades-old sound system.

"People started to say it back to me," he said.

The lawsuit references other trademarked signature sports phrases, including late baseball broadcaster Harry Caray's "Holy Cow!", basketball broadcaster Dick Vitale's "awesome baby" and boxing and wrestling announcer Michael Buffer's "Let's get ready to rumble!"

Johnson stopped calling the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness and the Belmont Stakes for ABC Television when the races moved to NBC in 2001.

Asked why he did not sue over "St. Vincent" sooner, Johnson said he was not a big movie watcher. "My next-door neighbor told me about it," he said.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Lisa Shumaker)

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