Showing posts with label Dies at 90. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dies at 90. Show all posts

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Don Rickles, the personification of insult comedy, dies at 90

Don Rickles, the personification of insult comedy, dies at 90



egendary insult comic Don Rickles has died at the age of 90.
Variety reports that the standup comedian, whose claims to fame include numerous feistylate-night TV appearances and acting in films ranging from Toy Story to Casino, died at his Los Angeles home from kidney failure Thursday morning.
Ironically nicknamed “Mr. Warmth,” Rickles epitomized the comedic tactic of jovially insulting people to their faces. In many ways, over a career that began in the late 1940s and lasted until his death, Rickles personified America’s growing postwar cynicism and increasing turn toward ironic entertainment.

Rickles’s calling card was the direct insult

Rickles was the original insult comic — the standup who makes a sport of heckling the audience for a change.
But this trick didn’t come naturally. Rickles actually struggled in the entertainment industry for nearly a decade — first as a dramatic actor, and then as a nightclub comic, a role that would remain a lifelong gig — before finding his stride.

Born in 1926 to a Yiddish-speaking Jewish family in Queens, Rickles served in the Navy during World War II before graduating from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts at the age of 22. After failing to find work as a dramatic actor and suffering what he called “rejection, rejection, rejection,” Rickles moved into comedy, where he endured years of heckling from nightclub audiences. It wasn’t until he started heckling back — referring to unruly audience members as “hockey pucks” — that his career began to ascend.
One of Rickles’s most famous insults was also the one that initially boosted his career. In 1957, Frank Sinatra walked into a Los Angeles nightclub where Rickles was performing. “Make yourself at home, Frank — hit somebody,” Rickles snarked, referencing the performer’s known penchant for violence.
Instead of being offended, Sinatra became one of Rickles’s best friends, and Rickles’s reputation as a master of the insult was born.

Rickles would go on to make his mark in the entertainment world in a number of other ways. He was a longtime performer in Las Vegas, beginning in the ’60s alongside his friend Sinatra and other Rat Pack members. He also starred in the cult TV hit CPO Sharkey, a sitcom recalling his days in the Navy, and began appearing in films as early as 1958.
He made perhaps his biggest mark on the film world starring in Martin Scorsese’s 1995 mobster masterpiece Casino, where he played the loyal right-hand man to Robert DeNiro’s casino owner.
“For me,” Scorsese told the New York Times in 1996, “Don Rickles is one of the great comedians”:
There's something truly artful about his delivery -- many other comedians who practice insult humor are either way too broad or they hide behind a character, but Rickles keeps this balance between levity and relentlessness. And it's all improvised, which is really the hardest thing to do, and he makes it look like the easiest, most graceful thing in the world.'

Rickles’s approach to the comic insult was head on — for better and worse

Throughout a career that included popular appearances on Late Night With David Letterman and The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson, Rickles was direct about the role insults played in his work. This was evident perhaps most of all in his chosen intro music: the famous matador anthem “La Virgen de la Macarena.” In a 2006 interview, Rickles outlined the song’s connection to his work.
“I always pictured myself as the New York kid that stood in front of the audience and went, ‘El Toro,’“ he said, “which I do say, fighting the audience, so to speak.”
But that combative approach wasn’t always welcome. In his later years, Rickles’s humor occasionally sparked controversy, particularly in 2012, when he made a racist joke about President Barack Obama while performing at a tribute for actress Shirley MacLaine.
“I shouldn’t make fun of the blacks,” Rickles stated while onstage. “President Obama is a personal friend of mine. He was over to the house yesterday, but the mop broke.” As chronicled in the 2007 documentary Mr. Warmth, Rickles’s comedy was frequently basedon racist, homophobic, and ethnic stereotypes — some of which were layered with irony. Speaking to Esquire in 2007, Rickles described an appearance on The Tonight Show in which he told Carson to pan the audience:
One time I did Carson and I made a joke about a black guy in the audience, and Carson stopped me and said, "Show me a black guy." The camera panned the audience, and there was no black guy. And I said to Johnny, "Did they laugh?" The answer was yes. And that's all that matters.
But if the laughter was uncomfortable, Rickles — whose offstage personality was affably sweet — seemed aware of that as well.
“I always rib people, but nobody ever gives me a hard time,” he went on to say. “I don't know why. Maybe they're afraid of what I might say. There's probably a lesson in that somewhere, but I don't know what it is.”
http://www.vox.com/2017/4/6/15209162/don-rickles-insult-comedian-dies-at-90
http://www.vox.com/

Friday, April 9, 2010

Anatoly F. Dobrynin, Longtime Soviet Ambassador to the U.S., Dies at 90





Anatoly F. Dobrynin, the Soviet ambassador to Washington from 1962 to 1986, whose behind-the-scenes diplomacy was credited by many historians with helping to resolve the Cuban missile crisis and ease tensions in the cold war era, has died, the Kremlin announced Thursday. He was 90.
Known to American colleagues as Doby, he served six Soviet leaders: Nikita S. Khrushchev, Alexei N. Kosygin, Leonid I. Brezhnev, Yuri V. Andropov, Konstantin U. Chernenko and Mikhail S. Gorbachev. In his 24 years in Washington — the most by far of any Soviet ambassador — he became dean of the diplomatic corps and worked with six American presidents and seven secretaries of state.
In later years, Mr. Dobrynin’s diplomacy covered much of the cold war: American and Soviet roles in Vietnam, strategic arms control talks, wars in the Middle East, summit meetings, Soviet invasions of Czechoslovakia in 1968 and Afghanistan in 1979, the downing of a Korean jetliner by Soviet warplanes in 1983, and other flash points.
Anatoly F. Dobrynin, the Soviet ambassador to Washington from 1962 to
1986, whose behind-the-scenes diplomacy was credited by many historians
with helping to resolve the Cuban missile crisis and ease tensions in
the cold war era, has died, the Kremlin announced Thursday. He was 90.
His tenure began in 1962 with the most dangerous confrontation of the
nuclear age. Khrushchev, gambling for strategic advantage, had set up
missile bases in Cuba, and President John F. Kennedy had blockaded
Soviet ships that were carrying missiles. As pressure on Kennedy to bomb
or invade Cuba mounted, his brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy,
met secretly three times with Mr. Dobrynin in October.
Those meetings were critical, enabling President Kennedy and Khrushchev
to communicate freely. After each, Mr. Dobrynin cabled Khrushchev, and
the attorney general briefed the president. Robert Kennedy later
disclosed that Mr. Dobrynin had remained calm through the crisis,
analyzing options and speaking carefully.
The solution to the crisis had two parts: a public American pledge not
to invade Cuba in exchange for withdrawal of the Soviet missiles, and a
private Kennedy agreement to withdraw obsolete missiles from Turkey and
Italy. Historians say that the latter was a face-saving device for
Khrushchev, and that the president wanted it private so that it would
not seem a concession to nuclear blackmail.
Anatoly Dobrynin, a Soviet diplomat who represented Moscow during the Cuban missile crisis and later in key superpower negotiations to curb the growth of nuclear arsenals, has died at age 90,
Anatoly Dobrynin, Soviet diplomat at centre of Cuban missile crisis, dead at 90
Anatoly F. Dobrynin, whose diplomacy is credited by many as having helped to resolve the Cuban missile crisis and subdue Cold War era tensions, died at the age of 90 on Thursday. He served as the Soviet ambassador to Washington from 1962 to 1986. Dobrynin was the singular channel for Soviet-American relations. Known to Americans as Doby, he served six Soviet leaders, spent 24 years in Washington, and became dean of the diplomatic corps while working with six American presidents and seven...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20100408/eu-obit-anatoly-dobrynin/
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/index?loc=interstitialskip
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatoly_Dobrynin
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/09/world/europe/09dobrynin.html
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.obituaries/msg/3f975ad2779575ff