Prof. IRWIN COREY





"The World's Foremost Authority"
www.irwincorey.org
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The program can be
viewed in its entirety by clicking the you tube link below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYVc1oJ8e4Y
- Prof. IRWIN COREY
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More about: Prof.
IRWIN COREY
Personal life
Irwin Corey was
born in 1914 in
Brooklyn,
New York.
Born into a poverty-stricken household, his parents were forced
to place him and his five siblings in the
Hebrew Orphan
Asylum of New York, where Corey remained until the
age of 13, when he rode the rails out to California. During the
Great
Depression, he worked for the
Civilian
Conservation Corps, and while working his way back
East, he became a featherweight Golden Gloves boxing champion.
Corey has always
supported
left-wing
politics, and has appeared in support of Cuban
children,
Mumia
Abu-Jamal, and the
American
Communist Party, which resulted in his eventual
Hollywood
blacklisting
in the 1950s, the effects of which he says still linger on to
this day. (Corey never returned to
Late Night
with David Letterman after his first appearance in
1982, which he claimed was a result of the
blacklist
still being in effect.[2]) During
the
1960 election,
Corey campaigned for president on
Hugh Hefner's
Playboy ticket.[3]
He accepted the
National Book
Award Fiction Citation on behalf of
Thomas Pynchon
for
Gravity's
Rainbow in 1974. He is also briefly mentioned in
Chapter 22 of the
Robert A.
Heinlein novel
Friday,
but as "the World's Greatest Authority."
Professor Corey
resides in the
Murray Hill
neighborhood of New York City.
Career
Comedy
In 1938, Corey
was back in New York, where he got a job writing and performing
in
Pins and
Needles, a musical comedy revue about a
union
organizer in the garment trade in New York. He was
fired from this job (he has said) for his union organizing
activities—the irony of which was not lost on him. Five years
later, he was working on another revue, New Faces of 1943 and
appearing at the
Village
Vanguard, doing his stand-up comedy routine. He was
drafted during
World War II,
but was discharged after six months, after (according to Corey)
convincing an Army psychiatrist that he was a homosexual.
From the late
1940s he cultivated his "Professor" character. Dressed in seedy
formal wear and sneakers, with his bushy hair sprouting in all
directions, Corey would amble on stage in a preoccupied manner,
then begin his
monologue
with "However..." He created a new style of
doublespeak
comedy; instead of making up nonsense words like "krelman" and
"trilloweg," like other comics[who?]
the professor would season his speech with many long and florid,
but authentic, words. The professor would then launch into
nonsensical observations about anything under the sun, but
seldom actually making sense. Changing topics suddenly, he would
wander around the stage, pontificating all the while. His very
quick wit allowed him to hold his own against the most stubborn
straight man,
heckler
or interviewer.
One notable fan
of Corey's comedy was
Ayn Rand,[4]
and influential theatre critic
Kenneth Tynan
once wrote of the Professor in
The New Yorker,
“Corey is a cultural clown, a parody of literacy, a travesty of
all that our civilization holds dear, and one of the funniest
grotesques in America. He is
Chaplin’s
tramp with a college education”.[5]
As of 2008, at 93
years old, the Professor still performs his stand-up routine.
Film and Television
Corey appeared
occasionally in 1950s television as a
character
actor. He is memorable in an episode of
The Phil
Silvers Show titled "Bilko's Grand Hotel," in which
Corey plays an unkempt Bowery bum being passed off as a hotelier
by Sgt. Bilko. The Professor was a frequent guest comic on
variety shows
and a guest panelist on
game shows
during the 1960s and 1970s.
Corey became so
synonymous with comic
erudition
that, when a
Rhode Island
TV station wanted a spokesman to explain changes in network
affiliations, Corey got the job. Lecturing with pointer in hand,
Corey manipulated magnetic signs to demonstrate how TV schedules
would be disrupted. By the end of the announcement, the visual
aids were in shambles and the professor, as usual, had meandered
from his original point.
Corey often
appeared on
Steve Allen's
late night show, syndicated by Westinghouse,
The Steve
Allen Show (1962-64), whereon he would end his
rambling stand-up routine with Allen literally chasing him off
the stage.
"Professor" Irwin
Corey's stage persona bears some similarities to that of
"Professor"
Stanley Unwin.
Corey has
appeared in Shakespearean theater; he was one of the
gravediggers in a production of
Hamlet.
He is seldom seen on stage today, something he attributes to
lasting effects of his 1950s
blacklisting.
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Irwin Corey
From Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia
ree encyclopedia
|
“Professor” Irwin Corey |
|
Born |
July 29, 1914(1914-07-29)
Brooklyn, New
York |
|
Medium |
stand-up,
film,
television |
|
Nationality |
American |
|
Years active |
1938 - present |
|
Genres |
Wit/Word
play,
Improvisational
comedy,
Satire,
Character comedy |
|
Influences |
Charlie Chaplin,
The Marx
Brothers |
|
Influenced |
Lenny Bruce,
Mort Sahl,
Shelley Berman,
Jonathan Winters,
Bob Newhart,
Tom Smothers[1] |
|
Spouse |
Fran (1940? - present) |
|
Website |
www.irwincorey.org |
'Professor' Irwin Corey
(born
July 29,
1914, in
Brooklyn,
New York) is
an
American
comic,
film
actor and
left-wing
political activist,
who is often billed as 'The World's Foremost Authority'. He
is credited with inventing his unscripted,
improvisational
style of
stand-up comedy
at
Enrico Banducci's
San Francisco
club the
hungry i.
Lenny Bruce
once described Corey as "one of the most brilliant comedians
of all time".
Personal life
Irwin Corey was born in 1914 in
Brooklyn,
New York.
Born into a poverty-stricken household, his parents were
forced to place him and his five siblings in the
Hebrew Orphan Asylum of
New York, where Corey remained until the age of
13, when he rode the rails out to California. During the
Great Depression,
he worked for the
Civilian Conservation
Corps, and while working his way back East, he
became a featherweight Golden Gloves boxing champion.
Corey has always supported
left-wing politics,
and has appeared in support of Cuban children,
Mumia Abu-Jamal,
and the
American Communist Party,
which resulted in his eventual Hollywood
blacklisting
in the 1950s, the effects of which he says still linger on
to this day. (Corey never returned to
Late Night with David
Letterman after his first appearance in 1982,
which he claimed was a result of the
blacklist
still being in effect.[2])
During the
1960 election,
Corey campaigned for president on
Hugh Hefner's
Playboy ticket.[3]
He accepted the
National Book Award
Fiction Citation on behalf of
Thomas Pynchon
for
Gravity's Rainbow
in 1974. He is also briefly mentioned in Chapter 22 of the
Robert A. Heinlein
novel
Friday, but
as "the World's Greatest Authority."
Professor Corey resides in the
Murray Hill
neighborhood of New York City.
Careerdy
In 1938, Corey was back in New York, where he got a job
writing and performing in
Pins and Needles,
a musical comedy revue about a
union organizer
in the garment trade in New York. He was fired from this job
(he has said) for his union organizing activities—the irony
of which was not lost on him. Five years later, he was
working on another revue, New Faces of 1943 and appearing at
the
Village Vanguard,
doing his stand-up comedy routine. He was drafted during
World War II,
but was discharged after six months, after (according to
Corey) convincing an Army psychiatrist that he was a
homosexual.
From the late 1940s he cultivated his "Professor" character.
Dressed in seedy formal wear and sneakers, with his bushy
hair sprouting in all directions, Corey would amble on stage
in a preoccupied manner, then begin his
monologue
with "However..." He created a new style of
doublespeak
comedy; instead of making up nonsense words like "krelman"
and "trilloweg," like other comics[who?]
the professor would season his speech with many long and
florid, but authentic, words. The professor would then
launch into nonsensical observations about anything under
the sun, but seldom actually making sense. Changing topics
suddenly, he would wander around the stage, pontificating
all the while. His very quick wit allowed him to hold his
own against the most stubborn
straight man,
heckler or
interviewer.
One notable fan of Corey's comedy was
Ayn Rand,[4]
and influential theatre critic
Kenneth Tynan
once wrote of the Professor in
The New Yorker,
“Corey is a cultural clown, a parody of literacy, a travesty
of all that our civilization holds dear, and one of the
funniest grotesques in America. He is
Chaplin’s tramp
with a college education”.[5]
As of 2008, at 93 years old, the Professor still performs
his stand-up routine
and Tevision
Corey appeared occasionally in 1950s television as a
character actor.
He is memorable in an episode of
The Phil Silvers Show
titled "Bilko's Grand Hotel," in which Corey plays an
unkempt Bowery bum being passed off as a hotelier by Sgt.
Bilko. The Professor was a frequent guest comic on
variety shows
and a guest panelist on
game shows
during the 1960s and 1970s.
Corey became so synonymous with comic
erudition
that, when a
Rhode Island
TV station wanted a spokesman to explain changes in network
affiliations, Corey got the job. Lecturing with pointer in
hand, Corey manipulated magnetic signs to demonstrate how TV
schedules would be disrupted. By the end of the
announcement, the visual aids were in shambles and the
professor, as usual, had meandered from his original point.
Corey often appeared on
Steve Allen's
late night show, syndicated by Westinghouse,
The Steve Allen Show
(1962-64), whereon he would end his rambling stand-up
routine with Allen literally chasing him off the stage.
"Professor" Irwin Corey's stage persona bears some
similarities to that of "Professor"
Stanley Unwin.
Corey has appeared in Shakespearean theater; he was one of
the gravediggers in a production of
Hamlet. He is
seldom seen on stage today, something he attributes to
lasting effects of his 1950s
blacklisting.
Filmography
References
-
^
Jerry Jazz Musician.
Tom Smothers Interview. Jerry Jazz Musician, 2002.
-
^
Knipfel, Jim. Who Am
the World‘s Foremost Authority?. New York Press, 2001.
-
^
Kilgannon, Corey. A
Distinguished Professor With a Ph.D. in Nonsense.
The New York Times,
2008.
-
^
Sures, Charles and
Mary Ann. Facets of Ayn Rand. Ayn Rand Institute, 2001.
-
^
The Official
Biography of Professor Irwin Corey. irwincorey.org,
2001.
External links