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| Morey Amsterdam | |||||||||||
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| Morey Amsterdam on Match Game \'73\' | |||||||||||
| Born | December 14 1908 Chicago, Illinois, USA | ||||||||||
| Died | October 27 1996 (aged 87) Los Angeles, California | ||||||||||
| Occupation | Actor, Comedian | ||||||||||
| Years active | 1922 - 1996 | ||||||||||
| Spouse(s) | Kay Patrick (1942 – 1996 his death) | ||||||||||
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Morey Amsterdam (December 14, 1908 – October 27, 1996) was a veteran American television actor and comedian, renowned for his large, ready supply of jokes.
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Born in Chicago, Illinois, USA, to a Jewish family, he began working in vaudeville in 1922 as the straight man for his brother\'s jokes. He was also a cellist, a skill which he used throughout his career. By 1924, he was working in a speakeasy operated by Al Capone. After being caught in a gunfight, Amsterdam moved to California and sought work writing jokes. His enormous repertoire and ability to come up with a joke on any subject earned him the nickname "The Human Joke Machine." He sometimes performed with an actual machine on his chest, hanging by a neck strap. When he turned a hand crank on the gadget and paper rolled out, he would then read the machine\'s joke -- although the paper was blank.
During the 1930s, Amsterdam hosted a radio show and also wrote songs, including "Why Oh Why Did I Ever Leave Wyoming." He copyrighted the popular "Rum and Coca-Cola," although the song was written by a Trinidadian calypsonian, Lord Invader. Amsterdam lost an eventual copyright suit over the song. In the early 1940s he was a screenwriter, contributing joke dialogue for two East Side Kids films. By 1947, he was performing on three daily radio shows. Beginning in 1948, he appeared on the radio show Stop Me If You\'ve Heard This One.
In 1948 he began hosting his own television show, The Morey Amsterdam Show. In 1950 this was replaced by the comedy-variety show, Broadway Open House, television\'s first late-night entertainment show, on the NBC network. Among his guests was a song-and-dance man named Art Carney. The cigarette girl was future author Jacqueline Susann. Jazz musician Johnny Guarneri led the band. Selected episodes of The Morey Amsterdam Show can be viewed on TV4U.Com.
Amsterdam\'s most famous role is comedy writer Buddy Sorrell on The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961-1966), a role suggested for him by his friend Rose Marie, who also appeared on the show. Amsterdam wrote lyrics for the show\'s theme song, which were never heard on the air but were performed by Dick Van Dyke in concert.
Amsterdam also played "Cappy", owner of the local nightclub, in the Beach Party movies of the 1960s.
Amsterdam and Rose Marie later appeared as panelists on The Hollywood Squares and guest-starred together in a February 1996 episode of the NBC sitcom Caroline in the City. They also co-starred in the 1966 film, "Don\'t Worry, We\'ll Think of a Title", a comedy co-written and co-produced by Amsterdam. (The film also features Richard Deacon, their co-star on "The Dick Van Dyke Show", and a cameo by the show\'s co-producer Danny Thomas.) Amsterdam was an occasional panelist on Match Game during the 1970s. Amsterdam also appeared as a small-time criminal in several episodes of the soap opera The Young and the Restless in the 1990s.
Amsterdam died of a heart attack in Los Angeles in 1996 and was interred in Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery, Los Angeles, California.
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