offstOWASW, 4 ,4 . The many faces of Sammy Davis Jr. toward blacks and ews to become one of the greatest entertainers o Samm y Run? age 18, he performed in military shows. A civilian again, he returned to the stage circuit and traveled with a show starring Mickey Rooney. Celebrity impersonations became part of his act. Befriended by Jewish comedian Eddie Cantor (who gifted him with a mezuza), Davis was invited to appear on Cantor's TV program in the 1950s. Following Davis' performance, Cantor suffered public criticism for wiping the brow of a person of color on live TV. In response to the criticism, Cantor hired Davis to appear on the rest of the season's shows. Performing on Las Vegas stages, Davis, in the 1960s, became part of the famed Rat Pack that included Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop. Besides recording more than 50 albums, Davis starred in such stage musicals as Mr. Wonderful and Stop the World I Want to Get Of Film credits include Porgy and Bess, Sweet Charity, Ocean!s. Eleven and Robin and the Seven Hoods. The talent and personality of Sammy Davis Jr. helped him break through barriers of prejudice for him- self and other entertainers to follow. Starting out in an atmosphere where black entertainers could not frequent the clubs or hotels where they were performing, Davis asserted himself and worked toward integration. "Sammy thought that one day we could all live together in unity, help each other and not fight with each other," Altovise Davis says. "He thought that if we could all learn to live and work together, life would be a better place." In his quest for spirituality, Sammy Davis Jr. turned to Judaism. Born to a Baptist father and Roman Catholic mother, the idea of conversion hit home after he lost an eye in a 1954 car accident and had a conversation with a rabbi, who was the hospital chaplain. The rabbi advised him to do considerable studying before thinking about converting. "These are a swinging bunch of peo- ple," Davis commented about the Jews in his autobiography Yes I Can. "I've heard of persecution, but what they went through is ridiculous. There wasn't anybody who didn't take a shot at 'em. "The whole world kept saying, 'You can't do this' and 'You can't do that,' but they didn't listen! They'd get kicked out of one place so they'd just go on to the next one and keep swing- ing like they wanted to, believing in themselves and in their right to have rights, asking nothing but for people to leave 'em alone and get off their backs and having the guts to fight to get themselves a little peace. "But the great thing is that after thousands of years of waiting and holding on and fighting, they finally made it." Over the years, on the way to con- version and after, Davis counseled with several rabbis. Ruth Nussbaum, the widow of one, recalls the conversion to Judaism of May Britt, Davis' second wife, with whom he had one natural daughter and two adopted sons. Her conversion occurred before their marriage and as a surprise for her then husband-to-be. 2/11 2000 77