Allan Sherntan's 'A Gilt of Laughter Allan Sherman can make people laugh. He also writes interestingly, and his autobiography, entitled "A Gift of Laughter," published by Atheneum (162 E. 38th, NY 16), has all the qualities that provide entertainment in reading as much as on stage. Here is a volume packed full of interesting episodes. The story about Harpo Marx has great merit and is a classic: Similarly, Sherman's account of how he secured a football for his grandmother — at great in- convenience and sacrifice to himself — only to learn that what the elder lady wanted was a fruit bowl, is a masterpiece. And the description: Chapter 5 In Which I Go to New York to Seek Fame and Fortune and I Marry the Girl I Love and I De- clare War on the Lincoln Hotel and If I Tell You Any More You Won't Need to Read This Chapter Altogether . . . this invites rather than repels reading. Such is the style throughout the book: it possesses an excellence that elevates Sherman to a po- sition that often stimulates inclu- sion in a best seller list. Yet, one must stop and wonder why he, like so many others, find it necessary to poke fun at their parents and grandparents. For in- stance: about his grandmother, he has this to say: "Although my Grandma loved me and I loved her, it wasn't in her nature to be motherly. She was a swinger, like my mother. She was, in her day, a hot number. I remember her son, my Uncle Maury, describing his memories of how peddlers or door- to-door salesmen would come knocking at the door, selling one thing or another, and wind up talking with Grandma. Of course, it's hard to think of your grandparents in terms of lust and passion, and when I knew her she looked like a sweet, wholesome, silver-haired Jewish grandmother. But she wasn't..Every afternoon she went to horseparlors and bet on the races. In the evening she played poker. And Grandma cheated whenever she could. She cheated because it was a much Harry Thomas Fine Clothes for Over 30 Yrs. ANNIVERSARY SALE SATURDAY & SUNDAY (10 to 7) (11 to 4) Selling the finest of Nationally Advertised Hand Tailored Suits, Topcoats & Overcoats $95 to $150 Values $ 695°-$895° SPORT COATS NEWEST STYLES AND COLORS $60 to $95 Values $3950_$595 S LAX $25 to $35 Values $175°-$225° HOW DOES HARRY THOMAS DO IT? Harry Thomas 15200 W. 7 MILE RD. 3 blocks East of Greenfield Open Daily 'tit 6 Thurs. to 9, Sun. 11 to 4 nc more scientific and surer way of win- ning than trusting to luck. "Once she was playing poker with a group of old ladies and they needed another hand, so she got my Uncle Maury into the game. The first hand he picked up, he saw she had dealt him four king's. She was a very slick second-dealer—what they call a 'me- chanic' in Las Vegas—and Maury knew his mother had slipped him the four kings, and he was embarrassed, so he went out of the Pot. Next time it was her deal, she dealt him four kings again. He went out again. She kept on dealing him the same four kings. hoping to make him win, and he kept going out. Finally she went into the kitchen for a glass of water, and he followed her and said, 'Listen, Ma, please stop dealing me four kings. Please. I don't want to win like that with four kings.' So the next hand she dealt him three kings. "In those days the phone company nut nickel pay phones in private dwell- ings. Grandma had a pay phone in her flat. She figured out many ingenious ways to crook the phone company. Like she'd put in a nickel, make a call, and then get the operator and scream, 'Onerator, you cott me opp!' She meant the operator had cut her off, and so she got her nickel back. Every month a man came to open the coin box and collect the nickels. Grandma played Casino (she called it 'Kereseno') with him for the nickels, and won them all back, every month." It's funny, indeed, it is. Yet one wonders whether he subjects him- self to being called "a prude" for questioning some proprieties. And there is this added example of the Sherman humor about his kinfolk: come from a typical Jewish back- ground. My father was a typical Jew. His name was Percy Copelon. He came from Birmingham; Alabama. He was a stock-car racer and an expert automo- Has Mitch Merit . . . and Defections bile mechanic. He had the Chicago agency for Auburn, Essex, Hudson, Nash and Cord. At one time he owned the largest garage in the Windy City. He had a rasping voice with a thick Southern accent. He was a generous man: I had a cellar full of toys when I was a kid. He was a reckless, free- spending, high-living, dangerous-living man. He flew airplanes at a time when only lion-heated lunatics flew planes. He flew a pursuit plane in World War I. He loved machinery. He loved ma- chinery that made you move fast. After the Armistice lie flew in air circuses for a few years, doing Im- melmann turns and flying upside down at carnivals and county fairs. Around 1922 he became a small-time Alabama bootlegger, and later he smuggled car- goes of booze into Illinois from Canada. His real love was machines. He once invented a coal-mining ma- chine that was widely used in south- ern Illinois and Kentucky. He adapted automobile gears to a machine that could chew into rock and bite out coal. saving labor. "My daddy had a brother-in-law, a dentist, who was a convert to nudism. He had a whole philosophy he had in- vented Ith-neself. It was about the benefits of eating uncooked vegetables and living on fruits and nuts, and what he called 'naturalism,' which meant you had to go around naked all the time. His wife would answer the doorbell without a stitch of clothing on her. The doorbell was ringing at her house all day long. She was one of the most popular housewives in the neighborhood. "My daddy had a most interesting family of eccentrics, but I do not know them as intimately as I know my mother's family, because when my father abandoned her he also abandoned me. When I became a celebrity, his family discovered me again. I have many nieces and neph- ews and cousins throughout the South. "My daddy did not like the garage business. He loved flying airplanes. And inventing. In 1928 he invented a new type of amphibian plane. He built News Brevities An art exhibit STEPHEN MANES, pianist, will by Edith Silver-. appear in recital 8:30 p.m. today man will be open in the Gold Room of Oakland Uni- versity. This will be the artist's to the public un- only appearance in the area, the til Nov. 30 at performance presented under spon- M e t r opoli- sorship of the Edgar M. Leventritt tan Hospital. Her Foundation. The American born 65 works of art artist has appeared with over 30 are in man y major symphony orchestras since media, from col- age 9. Among his many awards . lege to oils and are a Fulbright grant to Vienna for Mrs. Silverman water colors. • * * the 1963-64 season, Leventritt final- ist awards both in 1962 and 1965 A proclamation was issued by and Michaels Competition citation Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh pro- in 1962. Single tickets are avail- claiming Nov. 14-25 as NATIONAL able at Oakland University, 338- RETARDED CHILDREN'S WEEK 7211. in Detroit. Citing mental retarda- * * * tion as a "vast problem" affecting The DETROIT ARTS WOOD- 5,000 citizens of Detroit, the Mayor WIND QUINTET—five members urged all to turn their attention of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra to the problem during the specified —will present Haydn's Divertimen- time and learn how they can help to and two modern works in their overcome this handicap. concert 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the * * Engineering Society of Detroit Au- Sales of new individual life in- ditorium. The group will perform surance by the DETROIT-GOLD the Detroit premiere of Quintet by AGENCY of the Massachusetts Vauclaz Trojan. The concert is the Mutual life Insurance Co. during fourth in the Rackham Educational October amounted to $2,061,775 Memorial Concert Series .spon- and ranked the local agency sixth sored by the University Center for among the company's 119 general Adult Education. For ticket infor- agencies in prodUction of indi- mation, call the Center, 831-4310. vidual life insurance. * * * * * The second semiannual FLEA Mrs. Lee Franklin Weinstock, MARKETS will be held 1-10 p.m. president of the DETROIT AREA Sunday at East Detroit Roma Hall, ALUMNI CLUB OF THE STATE and Nov. 28 at Livonia Roma Hall. UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO, N.Y., Attractive inexpensive items, has invited alumni and friends to possibly bone china cups and a Potluck Harvest dinner-meeting saucers, old vases, figurines, prim- 4 p.m. Sunday at the home of vice itives, and collector's items such president John A. Nelson, 18304 as button hooks, - campaign buttons, Santa Barbara. For information, post cards, stereo cards and valen- call Mrs. Weinstock, 342-9198. tines will be there, along with an- * * * tiques, art glass, cut glass, jewel- ANTONIO AND THE BALLETS ry and other items. There will be DE MADRID, the Spanish ballet continuous buffet and snacks. company which traveled from coast Nominal admission charge. to coast during its concerts last * * * season, will give Detroiters another The board of directors of BANK opportunity to witness its fiery per- OF THE COMMONWEALTH de- formance when it appears on the clared a regular quarterly dividend stage of Masonic Auditorium, of 50 cents per share for the fourth Dec. 3. * * quarter of 1965, it has been an- nounced by George W. Miller, pres- The 17TH DISTRICT YOUNG ident. The dividend is payable Jan. DEMOCRATS will hold an autumn 4 to shareholders of record Dec. party and dance 4 p.m. Sunday 17, 1965. at the Motorama Motel, Ferndale. * * The public is invited. For infor- RUDOLF SERKIN, one of the mation on the Young Democrats greatest pianists of his generation, and its year-round schedule of will appear in a single perform- political, social, and educational , ance at Detroit's Masonic Audi- activities, call Sol Plafkin, TE. t torium Saturday night. 1-1723. it right in this immense garage he op- erated. It was so big, the plane, that when it was finished he couldn't re- move it from the garage. He would have to wreck the garage if he wanted to get his plane out. He couldn't af- ford to build a new garage, so the plane remained there, unflown, until my father went busted. For all I know, it's still sitting there. "Daddy waas a tough, hard-driving, hard-living, hard-drinking man. He drank bourbon whiskey by the glass like some Jews drink seltzer. Only he didn't drink seltzer. He was about as different from what we think of as a Jewish type as an American Jew could be back in 1924 when I was born in the Lutheran Deconess Hospital on November 30th—and there's a typical Jewish Hospital for you, huh?" His description of his first and only experience with anti-Semitism and his realization that he was Jewish is not too enlightening and while he had gone through prepa- rations for confirmation one won- ders whether he really acquired a good Jewish education in a home that certainly was Jewish. Nevertheless, his attitudes on the whole cannot be called nega- tive, and very much of his humor is not only entertaining but whole- some. So—"A Gift of Laughter" is quite a good book. side Hollywood" favorite, staging his own kind of satirical song re- citals at Hollywood parties. As a result of being heard one night at a party, Warner Bros. recorded ohim. To that sensational album have been added "My Son, the Celebrity," 'My Son, the Nut" and "The Real Allan Sherman." These last albums have sold over two million copies. He was born in Chicago ; in 1924. At the University of Illinois he studied journalism, wrote books and lyrics, starred in and directed variety shows. About this time World War II began and the Army, well aware of Sherman's unbridled ferocity, stationed him for the duration of the war deep in the heart of Texas. Upon dis- charge, he set out for show busi- ness. He created special material, mostly of the nightclub variety, for such performers as Jerry Lester, Joe E. Lewis, Jackie Gleason and many others. In 1951, with partner Howard Merrill, he had the idea for a television panel show and the long-running "I've Got A Se- cret" was born. For its first six years Sherman produced the show for which he won two Look Awards. He has also written and produced a number of television and radio shows. The title of his book is from the opening line of Scaramouche: "He was born with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad." And, too, ex- plains the Sherman approach to THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS the matters quoted, Sherman had long been an "in- 14—Friday, November 19, 1965 GEM SALES Presents ... HOLIDAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS For Everyday Needs, For All Occasions, Name Brands, Nationally Advertised . We Solicit Your Inquiries About Items Not Listed For Better Selections, and to Assure Holiday Delivery—ORDER EARLY APPLIANCES BICYCLES BILLFOLDS BLANKETS CAMERAS CARVING SETS CH I NAWARE CLOCKS COOKWARE COSTUME JEWELRY CUTLERY SETS DIAMONDS DINETTE SETS DINNERWARE FLATWARE GAMES HAIR DRYERS KNIFE SETS MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS PIPES LIGHTERS LAMPS LUGGAGE LEATHER GOODS HANDBAGS JEWELRY PENS & DESK SETS PERFUME SETS PHONOGRAPHS RELIGIOUS GOODS RADIOS RINGS SHAVERS, ELECTRIC SPORT SHIRTS TAPE RECORDS TELEVISION TOOLS TOYS TYPEWRITERS UMBRELLAS WALLETS, LEATHER WATCHES We stock a complete line of name brand, nationally advertised merchandise for the premium promotion. Gifts, incentive awards, sales contests or retail buyers. 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