Comic Rodney Dangerfield Dies at Age 82
NewsMax Wires
Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004
LOS ANGELES -- Rodney Dangerfield, the bug-eyed comic whose
self-deprecating one-liners brought him stardom in clubs,
television and movies and made his lament "I don't get no
respect" a catchphrase, died Tuesday. He was 82.
Dangerfield, who fell into a coma after undergoing heart
surgery, died at 1:20 p.m., said publicist Kevin Sasaki.
Dangerfield had a heart valve replaced Aug. 25 at the University of
California, Los Angeles, Medical Center.
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Sasaki said in a statement that Dangerfield suffered a small
stroke after the operation and developed infectious and abdominal
complications. But in the past week he had emerged from the coma,
the publicist said.
"When Rodney emerged, he kissed me, squeezed my hand and smiled
for his doctors," Dangerfield's wife, Joan, said in the statement.
The comic is also survived by two children from a previous
marriage.
As a comic, Dangerfield _ clad in a black suit, red tie and
white shirt with collar that seemed too tight _ convulsed audiences
with lines such as: "When I was born, I was so ugly that the
doctor slapped my mother"; "When I started in show business, I
played one club that was so far out my act was reviewed in Field
and Stream"; and "Every time I get in an elevator, the operator
says the same thing to me: `Basement?"'
In a 1986 interview, he explained the origin of his "respect"
trademark:
"I had this joke: `I played hide and seek; they wouldn't even
look for me.' To make it work better, you look for something to put
in front of it: I was so poor, I was so dumb, so this, so that. I
thought, `Now what fits that joke?' Well, `No one liked me' was all
right. But then I thought, a more profound thing would be, `I get
no respect."'
He tried it at a New York club, and the joke drew a bigger
response than ever. He kept the phrase in the act, and it seemed to
establish a bond with his audience. After hearing him perform years
later, Jack Benny remarked: "Me, I get laughs because I'm cheap
and 39. Your image goes into the soul of everyone."
Flowers were placed on his star on Hollywood Boulevard after
word of his death, and the marquee of The Improv, a comedy club
where Dangerfield often performed, read "Rest In Peace Rodney."
"When you saw Rodney on 'The Tonight Show' sitting on the couch
with Johnny Carson, you didn't want it to go to commercial," comic
Bernie Mac said in a statement. "He always left you wanting more
and I'm going to miss him."
Dangerfield had a strange career in show business. At 19 he
started as a standup comedian. He made only a fair living,
traveling a great deal and appearing in rundown joints. Married at
27, he decided he couldn't support a family on his meager earnings.
He returned to comedy at 42 and began to attract notice. He
appeared on the Ed Sullivan show seven times and on "The Tonight
Show" with Johnny Carson more than 70 times.
After his first major film role in "Caddyshack," he began
starring in his own movies.
Selling Ice Cream
He was born Jacob Cohen on Nov. 22, 1921, on New York's Long
Island. Growing up in the borough of Queens, his mother was
uncaring and his father was absent. As Philip Roy, the father and
his brother toured in vaudeville as a pantomime comedy-juggling
act, Roy and Arthur. Young Jacob's parents divorced, and the mother
struggled to support her daughter and son.
The boy helped bring in money by selling ice cream at the beach
and working for a grocery store. "I found myself going to school
with kids and then in the afternoon I'd be delivering groceries to
their back door," he recalled. "I ended up feeling inferior to
everybody."
He ingratiated himself to his schoolmates by being funny; at 15
he was writing down jokes and storing them in a duffel bag. When he
was 19, he adopted the name Jack Roy and tried out the jokes at a
resort in the Catskills, training ground for Danny Kaye, Jerry
Lewis, Red Button, Sid Caesar and other comedians. The job paid $12
a week plus room and meals.
In New York, he drove a laundry and fish truck, taking time off
to hunt for work as a comedian. The jobs came slowly, but in time
he was averaging $300 a week.
He married Joyce Indig, a singer he met at a New York club. Both
had wearied of the uncertainty of a performer's life.
"We wanted to lead a normal life," he remarked in a 1986
interview. "I wanted a house and a picket fence and kids, and the
heck with show business. Love is more important, you see. When the
show is over, you're alone."
The couple settled in Englewood, N.J., had two children, Brian
and Melanie, and he worked selling paint and siding. But the
idyllic suburban life soured as the pair battled. The couple
divorced in 1962, remarried a year later and again divorced.
In 1993, Dangerfield married Joan Child, a flower importer.
At age 42, he returned to show business as Jack Roy. He
remembered in 1986:
"It was like a need. I had to work. I had to tell jokes. I had
to write them and tell them. It was like a fix. I had the habit."
Even during his domestic years, he continued filling the duffel
bag with jokes. He didn't want to break in his new act with any
notice, so he asked the owner of New York's Inwood Lounge, George
McFadden, not to bill him as Jack Roy. McFadden came up with the
absurd name Rodney Dangerfield. It stuck.
Dangerfield's bookings improved, and he landed television gigs.
After his ex-wife died, he took over the responsibility of raising
his two children. He decided to quit touring and open a New York
nightclub, Dangerfield's, so he could stay close to home. A beer
commercial and the Carson shows brought him national attention.
His film debut came in 1971 with "The Projectionist," which he
described as "the kind of a movie that you went to the location on
the subway." He did better in 1980 with "Caddyshack," in which
he held his own with such comics as Chevy Chase, Ted Knight and
Bill Murray.
Despite his good reviews, Dangerfield claimed he didn't like
movies or TV series: "Too much waiting around, too much
memorizing; I need that immediate feedback of people laughing."
Still, he continued starring in and sometimes writing films such
as "Easy Money," "Back to School," "Moving," "The Scout,"
"Ladybugs" and "Meet Wally Sparks." He turned dramatic as a
sadistic father in Oliver Stone's 1994 "Natural Born Killers."
In 1995, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
rejected Dangerfield's application for membership. A letter from
Roddy McDowall of the actors branch explained that the comedian had
failed to execute "enough of the kinds of roles that allow a
performer to demonstrate the mastery of his craft."
The ultimate rejection, and Dangerfield played it to the hilt.
He had established his own Web site ("I went out and bought an
Apple Computer; it had a worm in it"), and his fans used it to
express their indignation. The public reaction prompted the academy
to reverse itself and offer membership. Dangerfield declined.
"They don't even apologize or nothing," he said. "They give
no respect at all -- pardon the pun -- to comedy."
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