Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Jackie Mason dies at age 93

- By Mark Kennedy Kennedy writes for the Associated Press.

The rabbi-turned comedian perfected the art of amused outrage.

Jackie Mason, a rabbiturne­d-comedian whose feisty brand of stand-up comedy led him to Catskills nightclubs, West Coast talk shows and Broadway stages, has died. He was 93.

Mason died Saturday at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan after being hospitaliz­ed for over two weeks, the celebrity lawyer Raoul Felder told the Associated Press.

The irascible Mason was known for his sharp wit and piercing social commentary, often about being Jewish, men and women and his own inadequaci­es. His typical style was amused outrage.

“Eighty percent of married men cheat in America. The rest cheat in Europe,” he once joked. Another Mason line was: “Politics doesn’t make strange bedfellows, marriage does.” About himself, he once said: “I was so self-conscious, every time football players went into a huddle, I thought they were talking about me.”

His death was mourned far and wide, from fellow comedian Gilbert Gottfried, who called him “one of the best,” to Fox News Channel personalit­y Sean Hannity, who hailed Mason as “irreverent, iconoclast­ic, funny, smart and a great American patriot.”

Mason was born Jacob Maza, the son of a rabbi. His three brothers became rabbis. So did Mason, who at one time had congregati­ons in Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina. Comedy eventually proved to be a more persistent calling than God.

“A person has to feel emotionall­y barren or empty or frustrated in order to become a comedian,” he told the Associated Press in 1987. “I don’t think people who feel comfortabl­e or happy are motivated to become comedians. You’re searching for something and you’re willing to pay a high price to get that attention.”

Mason started in show business as a social director at a resort in the Catskills.

He was the guy who got everybody up to play Simon Says, quiz games or shuffleboa­rd. He told jokes, too. After one season, he was playing clubs throughout the Catskills for better money.

“Nobody else knew me, but in the mountains, I was a hit,” Mason recalled.

In 1961, the pint-size comic got a big break, an appearance on Steve Allen’s weekly television variety show. His success brought him to “The Ed Sullivan Show” and other programs.

He was banned for two years from the “Sullivan” show when he allegedly gave the host the finger when Sullivan signaled to him to wrap up his act during an appearance on Oct. 18, 1964.

Mason’s act even carried him to Broadway, where he put on several one-man shows, including “Freshly Squeezed” in 2005, “Love Thy Neighbor” in 1996 and “The World According to Me” in 1988, for which he received a special Tony Award.

“I feel like Ronald Reagan tonight,” Mason joked on Tony night. “He was an actor all his life, knew nothing about politics and became president of the United States. I’m an ex-rabbi who knew nothing about acting and I’m getting a Tony Award.”

Mason called himself an observer who watched people and learned. From those observatio­ns, he said, he got his jokes and then tried them out on friends. “I’d rather make a fool of myself in front of two people for nothing than a thousand people who paid for a ticket,” he told the AP.

His humor could leap from computers and designer coffee to then-Sen. John Kerry, former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Donald Trump. He was able to articulate the average Joe’s anger, making the indignitie­s of life seem funny and maybe just a little bit more bearable.

“I very rarely write anything down. I just think about life a lot and try to put it into phrases that will get a joke,” he said. “I never do a joke that has a point that I don’t believe in. To me, the message and the joke is the same.”

On TV, Mason was a reliable presence, usually with a cameo on such shows as “30 Rock” or “The Simpsons” or as a reliable guest on latenight chat shows. He performed in front of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, and his show “Fearless” played London’s West End in 2012.

He portrayed a Jewish ex-pajama salesman in love with an Irish-Catholic widow portrayed by Lynn Redgrave in a series called “Chicken Soup” in 1989, but it didn’t last.

During the O.J. Simpson murder trial, the British Broadcasti­ng Corp.’s Scottish service hired Mason as a weekly commentato­r.

Mason’s humor sometimes went too far, as when he touched off a controvers­y in New York while campaignin­g for GOP mayoral candidate Rudolph Giuliani against Democrat David Dinkins, who was Black. Mason had to apologize after saying, among other things, that Jews would vote for Dinkins out of guilt.

Felder, his longtime friend, told the AP that Mason had a Talmudic outlook on life: “That whatever you would say to him, he would start an argument with you.”

He is survived by his wife, producer Jyll Rosenfeld, and a daughter, Sheba.

 ?? Associated Press ?? SHARP WIT AND PIERCING COMMENTARY
Jackie Mason stands beside a bus promoting his TV show in 1992. Mason started out as a rabbi, but comedy proved to be a more persistent calling than God.
Associated Press SHARP WIT AND PIERCING COMMENTARY Jackie Mason stands beside a bus promoting his TV show in 1992. Mason started out as a rabbi, but comedy proved to be a more persistent calling than God.

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