Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Mr. Warmth’ dies

Don Rickles, the legendary comic with a gift for the insult, has died at the age of 90.

- By Lynn Elber

Don Rickles, the bigmouthed, bald-headed comedian whose verbal assaults endeared him to audiences and peers and made him the acknowledg­ed grandmaste­r of insult comedy, died Thursday. He was 90.

Mr. Rickles, who would have been 91 on May 8, suffered kidney failure and died Thursday morning at his home in Los Angeles, said Paul Shefrin, his longtime publicist and friend.

For more than half a century, Mr. Rickles headlined casinos and nightclubs from Las Vegas to Atlantic City, New Jersey, and livened up late-night talk shows. No one was exempt from Mr. Rickles’ insults, not fans or presidents or such fellow celebritie­s as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Johnny Carson.

Despite jokes that from other comics might have inspired boycotts, he was one of the most beloved people in show business, idolized by everyone from Joan Rivers and Louis CK to Chris Rock and Sarah Silverman.

James Caan once said that Mr. Rickles helped inspire the blustering Sonny Corleone of “The Godfather.” Carl Reiner would say he knew he had made it in Hollywood when Mr. Rickles made fun of him.

Mr. Rickles patented a confrontat­ional style that stand-up performers still emulate, but one that kept him on the right side of trouble. He emerged in the late 1950s, a time when comics such as Lenny Bruce and Mort Sahl were taking greater risks, becoming more politicize­d and more introspect­ive.

Mr. Rickles managed to shock his audiences without cutting social commentary or truly personal selfcritic­ism. He operated under a code as old the Borscht Belt: Go far — ethnic jokes, sex jokes, ribbing Carson for his many marriages — but make sure everyone knows it’s for fun.

“I think the reason that [my act] caught on and gave me a wonderful career is that I was never mean-spirited,” he once said. “Not that you had to like it, but you had to be under a rock somewhere not to get it.”

In 2008, he won the Emmy for best individual performanc­e in a variety show for the HBO film, “Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project.” In 2012, he received the Johnny Carson Award for Comedic Excellence, a fitting tribute for a man whose big breakthrou­gh came on “The Tonight Show” more than 40 years earlier.

Mr. Rickles was a stage comic and occasional movie actor when he sat down on the couch next to Carson’s desk and muttered, “Hello, dummy.” The studio audience was initially startled, but when the host began laughing uncontroll­ably, so did everyone else. He would appear countless more times, haranguing Carson about not being invited more often or mocking his own love life.

“My wife just lays there, saying, ‘Help me with my jewelry,‘” was a typical joke.

For his standup act, Mr. Rickles would begin a show by charging on stage and berating the people sitting down front. To an elderly lady he might say, “What are you doing up, Mom? Go lie down.” After kissing a woman’s hand: “What’d you have for dinner? Fish?”

His bald head shining, he would gleefully croon his theme song, “I’m a Nice Guy,” and make fun of blacks and gays, the Irish and the Italians, with special attention for his own people, the Jews. A favorite epithet was the nonsensica­l “hockey puck,” as in, “You’re a real hockey puck.”

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