The Denver Post

Norm crosby, comic mangler of language, dies

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LOS ANGELES » Norm Crosby, the deadpan mangler of the English language who thrived in the 1960s, ’ 70s and ’ 80s as a television, nightclub and casino comedian, has died. He was 93.

Crosby’s daughter- in- law, Maggie Crosby, told The New York Times that the comic died Saturday of heart failure in Los Angeles.

Early in his career, Crosby had realized he needed a gimmick to differenti­ate himself from the burgeoning generation of comedians who were achieving fame on the many network TV variety shows.

“I was looking around for fresh ideas, and I kept hearing people misuse words,” he told an interviewe­r in 1989. “So I started to use it in my act.”

He called the famed baby doctor Benjamin Spock “Dr. Spook.” With straight- faced sincerity, he said people “should have an apathy for one another; they should have rappaport for each other.” Today’s kids, he said, “gotta cut that umbrella cord and split.”

Crosby’s first steady work as a comic came at Blinstrub’s in his native Boston, which led to an engagement in the early 1960s at the prestigiou­s Latin Quarter in New York.

In his widely read newspaper column, Walter Winchell gave the comedian a rave, and offers from Johnny Carson and other TV shows and club dates poured in. Crosby became a favorite at the major Las Vegas and Atlantic City casinos and played theaters, including many times at London’s Palladium, and concert halls. He also was a regular guest on Dean Martin’s celebrity roasts.

Starting in 1978, he starred in a syndicated TV show, “Norm Crosby’s Comedy Shop.” For many years he served as co- host with Jerry Lewis on the Labor Day weekend telethon for muscular dystrophy.

As a public performer, Crosby thrived despite having poor hearing. During World War II, he served aboard a Coast Guard submarine chaser, and concussion from the depth charges damaged his ears. He wore a hearing aid onstage.

“I was never shy about my hearing loss, probably because I got it from military service,” he explained in a 1993 interview. “I got thousands of letters from people who had said they would never get a hearing aid but had changed their minds after they saw me being open about it.”

Crosby was a longtime spokesman for the Better Hearing Institute and hosted an annual golf benefit for the cause.

 ?? Damian Dovarganes, The Associated Press file ?? Norm Crosby, pictured in 2011, said misusing words became part of his act to differenti­ate himself from other comedians.
Damian Dovarganes, The Associated Press file Norm Crosby, pictured in 2011, said misusing words became part of his act to differenti­ate himself from other comedians.

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