Sam Levenson
Sam Levenson | |
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Born | December 28, 1911 |
Died |
August 27, 1980 68) Brooklyn, New York | (aged
Sam Levenson (December 28, 1911 – August 27, 1980) was an American humorist, writer, teacher, television host, and journalist.
Personal life
Born Samuel Levenson, he grew up in a large Jewish immigrant family in Brooklyn, New York. He graduated from Brooklyn College in 1934. He married Esther Levine (1910–1999) and had two children, Conrad and Emily. Conrad graduated from Columbia University and is an architect living in New York and has four children.
Career
From 1949 to 1954, Levenson was a panelist on the CBS series This Is Show Business along with playwright George S. Kaufman and Abe Burrows.[1]
In 1950 he and fellow comedian Joe E. Lewis were the first members of the New York Friars' Club to be roasted. The club has roasted a member every year since the inaugural roasting.[2]
In 1956 he hosted the game show Two for the Money, having replaced fellow humorist Herb Shriner. From 1959 to 1964, he hosted The Sam Levenson Show. Over a span of more than a decade, he appeared on Toast of the Town aka The Ed Sullivan Show twenty-one times, in addition to frequently serving as a substitute host on CBS's Arthur Godfrey Time. He was a guest host on The Price Is Right and was a panelist on many other television programs such as Password and What's My Line? Levenson also had a cameo in the film A Face in the Crowd. Levenson also appeared multiple times on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson throughout the 1970s. Levenson wrote the well-known poem "Time Tested Beauty Tips" for his grandchild, which has become falsely attributed to Audrey Hepburn.[3]
Sam Levenson was originally a Spanish teacher at Samuel Tilden High School in Brooklyn. He was an author and wrote Everything But Money (1966), the bestseller Sex and the Single Child (1969), In One Era And Out The Other (1973), and You Can Say That Again, Sam! (1975). Levenson appeared frequently in the "Borscht Belt" hotels of the Catskill Mountains. Among his brothers was Michael Lenson (1903-1971), a realist painter who was director of WPA mural projects for the state of New Jersey during the 1930s.
The 150-seat Sam Levenson Recital Hall at Brooklyn College was named after him in 1988 in gratitude for his donations over the years to the Performing Arts Center. A glazed porcelain bust of him graces the hall's rear wall. The library of Franklin K. Lane High School, from which he graduated in 1930, is named for him, and a large portrait painting of him hangs on the north wall of the library. During Lane High School's rededication ceremony in the fall of 1976, Levenson was an honored guest and gave a humorous speech about his days as a student.
Levenson died of a heart attack in Long Island College Hospital on August 27, 1980. He was 68.[4]
References
- ↑ Alex McNeil, Total Television, p. 832
- ↑ Slade, Anthony (2012). The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville. University Press of Mississippi. pp. 197–198. ISBN 978-1617032493.
- ↑ "Time Tested Beauty Tips" by Sam Levenson
- ↑ Rome News-Tribune – August 28, 1980
External links
- Media related to Sam Levenson at Wikimedia Commons
- Quotations related to Sam Levenson at Wikiquote
- Catskills Institute Report on Sam Levenson
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