Sid Caesar

American comedian
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Also known as: Isaac Sidney Caesar
Quick Facts
Byname of:
Isaac Sidney Caesar
Born:
September 8, 1922, Yonkers, New York, U.S.
Died:
February 12, 2014, Beverly Hills, California
Also Known As:
Isaac Sidney Caesar
Awards And Honors:
Emmy Award (1952)

Sid Caesar (born September 8, 1922, Yonkers, New York, U.S.—died February 12, 2014, Beverly Hills, California) was an American comedian who pioneered the television variety show format with the programs Your Show of Shows (1950–54) and Caesar’s Hour (1954–57).

Caesar was the son of European immigrants. He took saxophone lessons as a boy and played in small bands to make money during the Great Depression. As a young man, he performed anywhere he could, including hotel resorts in the Catskill Mountains of New York (the so-called borscht belt), where he also wrote and performed material with local comics. Caesar was drafted into the U.S. Coast Guard in 1942 and was stationed in Brooklyn. There he met songwriter Vernon Duke, with whom he crafted the musical revue Six On, Twelve Off. A second revue, Tars and Spars, created when Caesar was reassigned to Florida, was made into a film in 1946, with Caesar re-creating his comic routines for the cameras.

In 1947 Caesar developed a nightclub act and starred in the stage production Make Mine Manhattan on Broadway. Two years later, working with producer Max Liebman, Caesar created The Admiral Broadway Revue, a 90-minute live television variety show with an emphasis on Caesar’s comedy routines. Although the show was canceled after 17 weeks, most of the elements of The Admiral Broadway Revue were resurrected in Your Show of Shows, which debuted the following year.

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Your Show of Shows aired on Saturday nights and, in addition to Caesar, featured a small cast of comedians that included Imogene Coca, Howard Morris, and Carl Reiner. They performed in skits, spoofs, and extended sketches, many of which showed off Caesar’s finely tuned sense of the absurd and his skills in both pantomime and double-talk (gibberish that mimicked the sound and cadence of various foreign languages). Caesar oversaw the writing staff, which also included Reiner and newcomer Mel Brooks, both of whom went on to become filmmakers. The show soon became an enormous hit and won the Emmy Award for best variety program in 1952 and 1953. Caesar also won the Emmy for best actor in 1952 for his work on the show. Your Show of Shows was restructured as Caesar’s Hour in 1954, by which time the writing staff had grown to include such later luminaries as Neil Simon, Woody Allen, and Larry Gelbart; it garnered Caesar another performing Emmy in 1957. Caesar’s Hour lasted until 1958.

Though Caesar spent many years battling substance abuse—which he wrote about in his autobiography, Where Have I Been? (1982)—he continued to perform in films, on television, and onstage. In 1967 he reunited with Coca, Reiner, and Morris for an Emmy Award-winning television special, and in 1973 he helped compile the theatrical film Ten from Your Show of Shows. Over the years, Caesar also starred in several plays by his former collaborator Simon, including Little Me and Last of the Red Hot Lovers. Some of his more-notable film appearances include comic turns in Stanley Kramer’s epic slapstick comedy It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) and Brooks’s films Silent Movie (1976) and History of the World: Part I (1981).

Caesar was the recipient of numerous honours. In 1985 he was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame. In 2006, at age 83, he received a Pioneer Award from the TV Land cable network and fittingly gave his acceptance speech in mock foreign-language double-talk.

John Vincent Brennan