Jackie Mason Talks About Finding Myself Againtts0

American comedian

Jackie Mason
JackieMasonOct06.jpg

Bricklayer in 2006

Birth name Yacov Moshe Maza
Born (1928-06-09)June 9, 1928
Sheboygan, Wisconsin, U.S.
Died July 24, 2021(2021-07-24) (aged 93)
Manhattan, New York Metropolis, U.S.
Medium Stand-upwards
Television
Film
Radio
Nationality American
Alma mater City College of New York (B.A.), Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem Lower East Side, NYC
Years active 1955–2021[1]
Genres Political satire
Observational comedy
Improvisational comedy
Subject(s) American politics
International relations
Current events
Race relations
Antisemitism
Jewish culture
American culture
Spouse

Jyll Rosenfeld

(m. 1991)

Notable works and roles The World According to Me! and Jackie Mason on Broadway
Website Jackie Stonemason website

Jackie Bricklayer (built-in Yacov Moshe Maza; June 9, 1928 – July 24, 2021) was an American stand-upward comedian and film and television actor.

His 1986 one-man evidence The World Co-ordinate to Me! won a Special Tony Honour, an Outer Critics Circle Laurels, an Ace Award, an Emmy Award, and earned a Grammy nomination. Afterward, his 1988 special Jackie Mason on Broadway won another Emmy Award (for outstanding writing) and another Ace Accolade, and his 1991 voice-over of Rabbi Hyman Krustofski in The Simpsons episode "Like Male parent, Like Clown" won Stonemason a third Emmy Award. He wrote and performed 6 ane-man shows on Broadway.[ane]

Known for his delivery and voice, also as his use of innuendo and pun, Mason'south often culturally grounded humor was described equally irreverent and sometimes politically incorrect.[2] [3] A critic for Time magazine wrote that, throughout his career, Mason spoke to audiences: "... with the Yiddish locutions of an immigrant who but completed a form in English language. By mail."[4]

Early life [edit]

Jackie Mason was built-in Yacov Moshe Maza on June 9, 1928 (according to the 1940 NYC census), in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, the fourth and last son (and but son born in the Us) in a family of six children of strict Orthodox Jews.[iii] [5] [vi] [seven] [viii] Mason came from a long line of rabbis, which included his father, his grandfather, his peachy-grandfather, and his great-great grandfather.[2] [three] [iv] [9]

His male parent Eli Maza and his mother, Belle (Gitlin), were born in Minsk, and immigrated to the U.S. in the 1920s with the balance of Mason'south family; his father died in 1959.[x] [vi] [eleven] A Jewish refugee organization helped his father find a position in Sheboygan, as it needed a rabbi.[12] When Mason was five years old, his family unit moved to the Lower Eastward Side of Manhattan in New York Urban center, largely so that he and his siblings could pursue a yeshiva teaching, where he grew upwards on Henry Street, Rutgers Street, and Norfolk Street.[3] [5] [6] [12] There, his parents and their friends all spoke Yiddish.[12]

Every bit a teenager, Stonemason worked as a busboy at resorts in the Borscht Belt in New York's Catskill Mountains.[three] He recalled: "20 minutes, at the Pearl Lake Hotel. I bankrupt all the dishes. They fabricated me a lifeguard. 'Merely I can't swim', I told the possessor. 'Don't tell the guests', he says."[v]

In 1953 Mason graduated with a Available of Arts degree in his double major of English language and sociology from the City College of New York.[four] [thirteen] At age eighteen he became a cantor, and at age 25[xiv] he received semikhah from Rabbi Moshe Feinstein[15] and was ordained a rabbi (as his three brothers, father, grandfather, and dandy-grandpa had been).[3] [viii] [16] He led congregations in Weldon, North Carolina, and at Beth Israel Congregation in Latrobe, Pennsylvania.[17] [eighteen] He said that in synagogue, "I started telling more and more than jokes, and after a while, a lot of gentiles would come up to the congregation just to hear the sermons."[eight] 3 years subsequently, after his male parent died, he resigned from his chore as a rabbi in a synagogue to become a comedian because, he said, "Somebody in the family had to make a living."[5] [14]

Career [edit]

Early years [edit]

Mason wrote almost of his own material.[iv] A sampling of his humor is his commentary on doctors: "That's a great profession, a md. Where else can you ask a adult female to get undressed then transport the bill to her married man?"[8] And his commentary on what is important in life: "Money is not of import. Love is of import. Fortunately, I love coin."[19] Likewise as his ruminations on pleasing people: "Y'all can't please everyone. I have a girlfriend. I call back she's the most wonderful person in the world. That's to me. Just to my wife ..."[twenty] [21] And on trust: "My grandfather ever said that I shouldn't watch my money. That I should spotter my health. So while I was watching my wellness, someone stole my money. Information technology was my grandfather."[21] And on allegiance: "Fourscore percent of married men cheat in America. The rest crook in Europe."[21]

He was a comedian at the Fieldston Hotel in Swan Lake, New York, in the summertime of 1955.[22] Mason was allow go because his act was considered too far ahead of its time. The patrons had non been exposed to a comic who seemed to be ridiculing them. A few years afterward, Don Rickles came along, but at that bespeak audiences had get open up to this type of humor throughout the Borscht Belt. He adopted his stage name subsequently appearing on the Barry Gray radio testify.[7] He performed at New York City nightclubs (where he was earning as much as $10,000 ($87,000 in current dollar terms) a calendar week), and on The Steve Allen Bear witness, his first national TV appearance, in 1962, and the Tonight Show with Steve Allen, equally well as on The Perry Como Show, The Dean Martin Prove, and The Garry Moore Show.[2] [4] The William Morris Bureau advised him in 1962 to take elocution lessons so that he could shed his heavy Yiddish accent, only he refused.[7] [8] [19]

Stonemason fabricated several appearances equally a guest on The Ed Sullivan Show during the 1960s.[3] He claimed to have been on the episode which featured the American tv set debut of the Beatles, although research does not behave this fact out.[23] Mason revealed during his appearance on the BBC prove Desert Isle Discs, in March 2012, that at the time he did not call back much of the group, referring to them equally "4 kids in search of a vocalism who needed haircuts".[24] In 1962 he came out with his initial LP record, a all-time-seller entitled I'thou the Greatest Comedian in the Globe, Only Nobody Knows It Yet, followed by I Want to Exit Y'all with the Words of a Great Comedian.[vii] [25]

In the Desert Island Discs interview, he also related how Frank Sinatra and a group of others once came to his show in Las Vegas and Sinatra started heckling his act. Mason made uncomplimentary comments to Sinatra until he "and his whole group" left. When asked whether he idea it was naïve to practise that, given Sinatra's connections with "the Mob", Mason said, "No, I said to myself...what could they do me?" He went on to describe how shots were later fired into his room which cracked all the windows. The police did not pursue an investigation.[26]

"Middle finger" incident (1964) [edit]

On October 18, 1964, in an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Prove, Bricklayer allegedly gave host Ed Sullivan the finger on air. Footage of the incident shows Mason in the heart of doing his stand-up comedy human activity and then looking toward Sullivan, who had placed himself directly behind the camera, commenting that Sullivan was signaling him.[4] [8] Sullivan was reportedly letting Mason know (by property up two fingers) that he had simply two minutes left, and to cut his human action curt, as the program was near to cut abroad due to having been partly pre-empted by an impromptu speech by President Lyndon B. Johnson that the show carried.[4] [5]

Bricklayer began working his own fingers into his act to brand fun of the situation and pointed toward Sullivan with an index finger, a thumb, but not, as Sullivan mistakenly believed, his middle finger.[4] Sullivan was infuriated by this, and banned Mason from hereafter appearances on the show, canceling Mason's six-appearance contract worth $45,000 (equivalent to $393,000 in 2021).[four] [viii] Mason denied knowingly giving Sullivan the middle finger; he later said that he had not heard of the middle finger gesture at that time.[5]

To clear his name, Mason filed a libel suit on the grounds that Sullivan had defamed him at the New York Supreme Court. That court dismissed most of Bricklayer'southward complaint. Both Mason and Sullivan appealed to the New York Supreme Court Appellate Division (which reinstated three additional causes of action against Sullivan) in June 1966.[two] [27] [28]

Stonemason was nevertheless banned from the prove for a menstruation of time. Sullivan asserted that Mason was unpredictable and could non be trusted. Because of Sullivan's influence, he was branded every bit unreliable, volatile, and obscene, and he failed to get substantial television piece of work for the next two decades.[two] [4] [v] [half-dozen]

Mason was given a unmarried comeback appearance on Sullivan'southward television plan two years later, and Sullivan publicly apologized to him, but the damage was done.[4] At that time, Stonemason opened his monologue by maxim, "Information technology is a swell thrill ... and a fantastic opportunity to see me in person over again."[27] Stonemason afterwards appeared on the prove five times: April 23, 1967; Feb 25, 1968; November 24, 1968; July 22, 1969; and Baronial 31, 1969. Stonemason later said: "It took xx years to overcome what happened in one minute".[4]

1965–1985 [edit]

In 1969, Mason fabricated his Broadway theater debut as Jewish widower Nat Weiss in the one-act play A Teaspoon Every Four Hours, which he wrote with Mike Mortman.[1] Information technology held the Broadway record of 97 previews and closed after its official opening operation (a preview record succeeded by Spider-Human being: Turn Off the Nighttime with its 182 previews prior to opening). He too appeared in the films The Jerk (1979) and History of the Earth, Part I (1981).[29]

1986–2011 [edit]

In 1986, Stonemason made a triumphant return to Broadway in the two-year run of The Globe According to Me! which ran for 367 performances in its offset run and 203 performances in its second run at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre, his first of several i-man theatrical shows.[v] [30] It was well received both by critics and the public; Frank Rich, the sometimes harsh reviewer of The New York Times, wrote: "So sue me ... Mason was very, very funny".[seven] It won a Special Tony Award, an Outer Critics Circle Award, an Ace Honor, an Emmy Accolade, and a Grammy nomination.[31] [32] His special Jackie Mason on Broadway won an Emmy Honor for outstanding writing and an Ace Award.[31] [32]

Mason starred in the movie Caddyshack Two (1988), where his grapheme had the same surname, Hartounian, equally his character in The Jerk.[29] In 1990 and 1991, Stonemason again was on Broadway, this time with his successful two-human action bear witness Brand New, which ran for 216 performances at the Neil Simon Theatre, and won him his 2nd Outer Critics Circle Honor.[7] [xxx] [33] Critic Clive Barnes of the New York Postal service praised the "brilliant" comic and his "totally new from top to tuchis" humor.[30] Critic Mel Gussow of The New York Times remarked on the "exact meeting" between operation and material in which Mason engaged in a comic assail on everyone, including himself, cutting them all downwards to size.[30]

In 1992, Mason won a Primetime Emmy Laurels for Outstanding Vox-Over Performance for his voice-over of Rabbi Hyman Krustofski in The Simpsons episode "Like Father, Like Clown",[34] making him the outset invitee star to win an Emmy for his function. Mason as well appeared in The Simpsons episodes "Today I Am a Clown", "Once Upon a Fourth dimension in Springfield", "The 10-Per-Cent Solution", "At Long Last Exit", and "Clown in the Dumps"; the last episode focuses upon Rabbi Krustofski's death and its effects on his son, Krusty the Clown.[35] The character would appear iii more times in fantasy sequences/flashbacks in "The Nightmare After Krustmas", "Flemish region' Ladder" and "Woo-Hoo Dunnit? which was his final appearance in the series and final interim performance earlier his death in 2021."

I of his Broadway shows, his ii-act Politically Incorrect (1994–95) ran for 347 performances at Broadway'south John Golden Theater.[ii] [30] Critic John Simon of Fourth dimension wrote: "His method is hyperbole and reductio ad absurdum, simply always informed by bitter reason. His irony is a spotlight illuminating our absurdities; his zingers are scalpels laying blank the sickness under the skin. In that location is a unifying thrust, a focus, a structure: an set on on both liberal hypocrisy and conservative apathy, and on the climate of political correctness that makes information technology impossible to attack anyone but WASPs. ... Mason is a truthful satirist in the mold of ... Mark Twain . ... "[36] It was performed during the same period that Neb Maher's late-dark, half-hour political TV talk show Politically Wrong was on the air.[2] [30] Maher brought a lawsuit against Bricklayer's product, which was dismissed as frivolous. Mason was able to use this show title, and it is one of his nearly successful road productions. Betwixt these shows, Mason played the lead in a short-lived tv set interfaith sitcom called Craven Soup aslope Lynn Redgrave.[4]

Mason as well put on the Broadway one-man shows Dear thy Neighbour (1996–97) which ran for 225 performances at the Booth Theatre (critic Lawrence Van Gelder of The New York Times described Mason's routines as "roaringly funny"), Much Ado Virtually Everything (1999–2000) which was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for Best Entertainment for its run in London) and ran for 183 performances at the John Golden Theatre (in this effort Van Gelder described Bricklayer every bit "convulsing audiences"), Clip Danish (2002; nominated for a Tony Honour for Best Special Theatrical Event), Jackie Mason: Freshly Squeezed (2005; for which he was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Solo Operation), and The Ultimate Jew (2008).[four] [30] [33] [37] [38]

In a 2005 poll to discover the Comedian'south Comedian, Stonemason was voted #43 among the top-l one-act acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.[32] He was also ranked #63 in "Comedy Key Presents: 100 Greatest Stand up-Ups of All Time".[39] He holds the record for the longest-running one-man show in Broadway history and the longest-running stand-up show in the history of London's W End.[xl]

His full-length courtroom dramedy film One Angry Man was released in 2010 throughout the United states and Canada. Stonemason'due south virtually recent flick Jackie Goldberg: Private Dick (2011) was a direct-to-DVD production, released by FilmWorks Amusement.[41]

Political views [edit]

A longtime Democrat, Bricklayer was a registered Republican by 2007.[4] : 48–49 He had spoken out in defense of Donald Trump.[42]

Mason was an admirer of Rabbi Meir Kahane.[43] He openly endorsed Kahane's program to pay Israeli Arabs unwilling to accept Israeli sovereignty to emigrate. He also served equally the honored speaker at a fundraising event for a yeshiva founded by Kahane.[44]

In January 2001, Mason co-founded the organisation One Jerusalem in response to the Oslo peace agreement. Its stated cause is "Maintaining a united Jerusalem equally the united nations-divided capital of State of israel."[45]

Controversies [edit]

In 1991, Stonemason was criticized by African-American organizations such as the NAACP when he called New York City mayor David Dinkins "a fancy shvartze with a moustache";[46] Bricklayer later apologized.[4] In 2009, Mason referred to Barack Obama as a shvartze during one of his stand-upwardly routines, which prompted members of the audience to walk out.[47]

In 2003, Mason co-wrote an article that advised Israeli leaders to threaten the expulsion of Palestinians from State of israel, the West Bank, and Gaza Strip.[48] Mason and Raoul Felder wrote, "We accept paralyzed ourselves by our sickening fear of World Opinion, which is why we observe it impossible to confront 1 simple fact: Nosotros will never win this war unless we immediately threaten to drive every Arab out of Israel if the killing doesn't stop."[48]

On 2006, Mason filed a lawsuit confronting the group Jews for Jesus for using his likeness in a pamphlet.[49] His paradigm was used adjacent to the tagline "Jackie Mason ... a Jew for Jesus!?" Mason said in court papers filed in New York: "While I have the utmost respect for people who practice the Christian faith, the fact is, as everyone knows, I am every bit Jewish every bit a Matzah ball or kosher salami." Mason asserted that the group was using his epitome and fame to gain attention and converts. The group responded to the suit by proverb, "Shame on him for getting so upset about this."[49] The lawsuit was settled in 2006, with Jews for Jesus apologizing.[50]

In 2012, Bricklayer said that a friend at the time, Kaoru Suzuki-McMullen, attacked him while leaving his apartment on Due west 57th Street in Manhattan. Suzuki-McMullen said she was attacked by Stonemason, but she was arrested.[51] Both sides agreed to drib the matter and all charges were dropped against Suzuki-McMullen.[52]

Personal life [edit]

On Baronial 14, 1991, Mason married his then-37-year-old manager Jyll Rosenfeld.[53]

Sheba Mason, born in 1985, is the daughter of Jackie Mason.[54] She is besides a comedian.[55] [56] [57] [58]

Expiry [edit]

Mason died on July 24, 2021, at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan after being hospitalized for over two weeks.[59] [60] [61]

Many celebrities and other notable figures mourned Mason's expiry. Gilbert Gottfried called him "ane of the best."[threescore] [62] Fox News personality Sean Hannity remarked that he was "irreverent, iconoclastic, funny, smart and a cracking American patriot."[60] Actor Henry Winkler tweeted that Bricklayer put on "truly one of the funniest shows I take ever seen .. ever .. thank you Jackie and now you become to make sky laugh."[60] [63]

Works [edit]

Selected Boob tube, film and radio roles [edit]

Source: [64]

  • The Ed Sullivan Show (1961–1968) – frequent guest appearances[65] [66] [67]
  • Information technology's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World – gas station bellboy[64]
  • Sleeper (1973) – Voice of robot tailor (uncredited)[68] [69]
  • The Stoolie (1974) – Roger Pitman[seventy]
  • The Wiggle (1979) – Harry Hartounian[64]
  • History of the World, Office I (1981) – Jew #ane[64]
  • Caddyshack 2 (1988) – Jack Hartounian[71]
  • Chicken Soup (1989) – Jackie Fisher[72]
  • The Simpsons – Rabbi Hyman Krustofski in ten episodes:
    • "Like Father, Like Clown" (1991)[34]
    • "Today I Am a Clown" (2003)[73]
    • "Once Upon a Time in Springfield" (2009)
    • "Treehouse of Horror XXII" (2011)
    • "The Ten-Per-Cent Solution" (2011)
    • "At Long Last Leave" (2012)
    • "Clown in the Dumps" (2014)
    • "The Nightmare After Krustmas" (2016)
    • "Flanders' Ladder" (2018)
    • "Woo-Hoo Dunnit?" (2019)
  • The Fairly OddParents episode "Beddy Good day/The Grass Is Greener" (2003) – Harvey Sandman a.k.a. The Sandman, a.k.a. The Mattress Male monarch[74]
  • The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy – The Quandary Stage (2005) – The East River Creature[75]
  • The Jackie Bricklayer Prove (2005–xi) – Host (originally aired on CN8: The Comcast Network; repeats currently airing on JLTV)[76]
  • 30 Rock episode "The Drove" (2007) – himself (small-scale guest appearance)[77]
  • The Drinky Crow Evidence episode "Aspire" (2009) – Mort Cooper[78]
  • One Angry Human being (2010) – Jackie Mason[79]
  • Jackie Goldberg: Individual Dick/ Goldberg – P.I. (2011) – Jackie Goldberg[41]
  • Answer Me This! Episode 206 (2012) – Jackie Bricklayer[80]
  • Graham Norton BBC Radio 2 Show (2012) – Jackie Mason[81]
  • When One-act Went to School (2013) – Jackie Stonemason[82]

Television specials [edit]

  • Jackie Mason'south The World According to Me! (1988)[83]
  • An Audience with Jackie Mason (1990)[84]
  • Jackie Mason on Campus (1992)[85]
  • Jackie Mason at the London Palladium (1996)[86]
  • Jackie Stonemason: A Night at the Opera (2002)[87]

1-homo shows [edit]

  • Jackie Stonemason'due south The World According to Me! (1986–1988)[61]
  • Jackie Mason: Make New (1990–1991)[61]
  • Jackie Mason: Politically Incorrect (1994–1995)[61]
  • Love Thy Neighbor (1996–1997)[61]
  • Much Ado About Everything (1999–2000)[61] [88]
  • Jackie Bricklayer: Prune Danish (2002–2003)[89]
  • Jackie Mason: Freshly Squeezed (2005–2006)[61] [90]
  • Jackie Stonemason: The Ultimate Jew (2008)[61] [91]
  • Jackie Stonemason: Fearless (2012)[92]

Books [edit]

  • Jackie Stonemason. Jackie Bricklayer's America. Carol Publishing Grouping, 1983.[93]
  • Jackie Mason. Jackie, Oy!: The Frank, Outrageously Funny Autobiography of Jackie Stonemason. Robson, 1988.[94]
  • Jackie Bricklayer, Ira Berkow. How to Talk Jewish. Macmillan, 1991.[95]
  • Jackie Bricklayer and Raoul Lionel Felder. Schmucks!: Our Favorite Fakes, Frauds, Lowlifes, Liars, the Armed and the Dangerous, and Good Guys Gone Bad. Harper Collins, 2009. ISBN 978-0-06-112612-three[96]

Video blogging [edit]

Bricklayer appeared in over 200 self-written video blog entries on YouTube, in which he gave his opinions on electric current events and politics. He also experimented with podcasting, and in February 2012 appeared on the cult British podcast Respond Me This!, to promote his W Stop stand up-up testify, Fearless.[80]

Legacy [edit]

Stonemason received a special Tony Award in 1987 for The World According to Me!.[97]

Mason won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing in a Multifariousness or Music Plan for his 1988 HBO special The World According to Me! (also known every bit Jackie Mason on Broadway). He also won a 1992 Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for his role equally Rabbi Krustofsky on The Simpsons, shared with 5 of the show'south regular cast members.[98] [99]

In DePatie-Freleng Enterprises' animated cartoon series The Ant and the Aardvark, the Aardvark's voice was performed by John Byner every bit an imitation of Mason.[100] [101]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c Thomas S. Hischak (2003), Enter the Players: New York Stage Actors in the Twentieth Century
  2. ^ a b c d e f yard Zeke Jarvis (2015). Make 'em Express mirth! American Humorists of the 20th and 21st Centuries: American Humorists of the 20th and 21st Centuries Brand 'em Laugh! American Humorists of the 20th and 21st Centuries]
  3. ^ a b c d due east f g Norman H. Finkelstein (2010). Jewish Comedy Stars: Archetype to Cutting Edge
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j thousand fifty one thousand n o p Lederhendler, Eli; Finder, Gabriel N., eds. (2016). A Guild of Their Own: Jewish Humorists and the Contemporary Earth. Oxford University Printing. p. 43. ISBN978-0-19-064612-seven.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Ken Gross (February 23, 1987). "Too Much of a Ham to Remain a Rabbi, Broadway's Jackie Mason is Now the Toast of the Boondocks", People
  6. ^ a b c d · Page 359, Los Angeles Times, August 13, 1978
  7. ^ a b c d east f Jackie Stonemason – Biography, Billboard
  8. ^ a b c d eastward f m Karen Heller (January 8, 1987). "A Really Big Broadway Show; Jackie Stonemason`s Striking Buries Ed Sullivan Flap" , The Chicago Tribune
  9. ^ "A Stonemason by any Other Name," Jewish Volume World (2006).
  10. ^ Robert Wiener (October 12, 2006). "1 Jew Talking: Jackie Stonemason heads to Newark", New Jersey Jewish News
  11. ^ Grimes, William (July 24, 2021). "Jackie Mason, 93, Dies; Turned Kvetching Into Comedy Gilded". The New York Times.
  12. ^ a b c Jackie Mason, Ira Berkow (1991). How to Talk Jewish, Macmillan
  13. ^ Joseph Dorinson (2015), Kvetching and Shpritzing: Jewish Humor in American Popular Culture, McFarland
  14. ^ a b "All Virtually ... Jackie Mason", Jackie Mason; The Official Site, Retrieved July 14, 2014
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  17. ^ Murry Frymer (November 12, 1991). "Jackie Mason Finally Reaches Stardom", Deseret News
  18. ^ Adam Reinherz. "Finish of an era; Presently all that will remain will be Beth Israel'south history legacy", The Jewish Chronicle
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  20. ^ Craig R. Whitney (November 23, 2008)."Uk Imports Mason Just for Fun", The New York Times
  21. ^ a b c Aubrey J. Sher, The Stand-Up Comedy Festival: Send In The Clowns
  22. ^ Keith Loria (October xx, 2016)."Howard Theatre welcomes legendary comedian", Fairfax Times
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  35. ^ Snierson, Dan (November x, 2014). "'Simpsons' producer on the surprising Kang and Kodos revelation, 'death' of Ralph Wiggum". Amusement Weekly . Retrieved November 10, 2014.
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  53. ^ Comedian Jackie Bricklayer Ends Bachelor Days At 57 , Orlando Sentinel
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  58. ^ Beckerman, Gal (January five, 2011). "Oy! Jackie Stonemason Has Family Drama". The Jewish Daily Forward . Retrieved Jan 2, 2015.
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External links [edit]

  • Jackie Mason at IMDb
  • Jackie Mason discography at Discogs
  • Official website archived at the Wayback Machine
  • 1987 KCRW Radio interview with Bob Claster
  • 2007 interview (transcription) on Air America Radio
  • 2010 WSLR Radio interview with Doug Miles on YouTube
  • "The Jewish Globe According to Jackie Stonemason" March 2020 Jewish News commodity
  • Jackie Mason at Find a Grave

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_Mason

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