Comedian was First Ever âKing of Brooklynâ
The Brooklyn-born actor and comedian Dom DeLuise has died at the age of 75. The large and lovable actor passed away in his sleep in a hospital in Los Angeles, according to published reports.
DeLuise was born on Aug. 1, 1933, in Brooklyn, the son of John and Vincenza DeLuise. His father worked for the New York Sanitation Department. His childhood was spent in the Bensonhurst neighborhood, though he graduated from the High School of Performing Arts in Manhattan.
Domâs first paying acting job was the role of âBernie the Dogâ with a childrenâs theater group in âBernieâs Christmas Wish.â In his early days he spent his summers at the Cleveland Playhouse, appearing in productions like Kiss Me Kate, Guys and Dolls and Hamlet.
Dom briefly considered becoming a high school biology teacher before landing parts in the Off-Broadway productions The Jackass and Little Mary Sunshine. Dom met his wife, actress Carol Arthur, while appearing in a summer production of Summer and Smirk in Provincetown, Massachusetts. Eight off-Broadway shows followed and then he starred in the 1968 Broadway production of Neil Simonâs Last of the Red Hot Lovers. Soon after, Broadway roles in Hereâs Love and The Student Gypsy followed.
On television his first appearance was as âDominick the Great,â the ham-handed magician on the Garry Moore Show, teamed with Ruth Buzzi. Countless guest star appearances on variety shows followed before he became a regular on âThe Entertainersâ with Carol Burnett and Bob Newhart. Dom enjoyed 12 years on the âDean Martin Show.â In 1968, he found himself hosting his own show on CBS, âThe Dom DeLuise Variety Show,â under the guiding hand of Jackie Gleason. Another show of his own on ABC, âDom DeLuise and Friends,â was televised from 1983 to 1990.
Domâs motion picture debut was in 1964 in Sydney Lumetâs Fail Safe. Subsequent films included The Glass Bottom Boat, The Busybody, Whatâs So Bad About Feeling Good?, Norwood, and Who is Harry Kellerman? After Domâs hilarious role in The Twelve Chairs, Mel Brooks included Dom in some of his best comedies including Blazing Saddles, Silent Movie, History of the World â Part 1, Spaceballs and Robin Hood: Men in Tights. He was also in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Cannonball Run, and The Muppet Movie.
In 1982 he appeared on the TV special âBaryshnikov in Hollywood.â In 1983 he played an unusual dramatic role in the TV movie âHappyâ as a down-on-his-luck TV comic who puts his family in jeopardy as he tries to find his partnerâs killer. Dom appeared in Die Fledermaus with the Metropolitan Opera from 1990 to 1997. He has performed at the White House, entertaining Presidents Ford, Reagan, Bush and Clinton. Also Dom was a best-selling author, writing two âEat Thisâ cookbooks, as well as several childrenâs books.
Dom DeLuise was named the very first âWelcome Back to Brooklynâ King in 1984 with a place of honor on the Brooklyn Celebrity Path in Brooklyn Botanic Garden.
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