Danny Kaye was an American actor and comedian famous for his dancing, impersonations and improvisations
@Film & Theater Personalities, Birthday and Life
Danny Kaye was an American actor and comedian famous for his dancing, impersonations and improvisations
Danny Kaye born at
Danny Kaye married Sylvia Fine, the daughter of a dentist, in 1940. They were blessed with one daughter in 1946. His wife was an audition pianist.
He became estranged from his wife around 1947 though they never officially divorced. Following his estrangement he became involved in a series of relationships with many women.
He suffered from heart problems during the later years of his life and had quadruple bypass heart surgery in February 1983 during which he contracted hepatitis C from a blood transfusion. He died of heart failure on March 3, 1987, at the age of 76.
He was born as David Daniel Kaminsky to Ukrainian Jewish immigrants in Brooklyn on January 18, 1911. His parents were Jacob and Clara Nemerovsky Kaminsky, and he had two elder brothers.
He received his early education from a public school in Brooklyn before moving to Thomas Jefferson High School. As a school student he loved entertaining his classmates with songs and jokes. He did not graduate from high school.
His mother died when he was in his early teens and soon after his mother’s death, he ran away with a friend to Florida. The two boys eked out their living as street performers for some time before returning home.
His father understood his young son and gave him the chance to discover his abilities instead of forcing him to return to school. David struggled to find a job he liked—he worked in a series of small jobs but was unable to successfully establish himself in any profession.
He received a big break in 1933 when he was selected as a member of the "Three Terpsichoreans", a vaudeville dance act. He adopted the name “Danny Kaye” at this time. The act first toured the United States before travelling to Asia to perform with the show La Vie Paree.
Danny went to the Far East with the troupe in February 1934. While they were in Osaka, Japan, a typhoon hit the city. At the time of the performance, the city was in the grip of the storm and the audience was getting very nervous. There was also no power supply. Yet, he went on stage and tried his best to soothe and calm the audience with his performance.
Working with the troupe and performing in countries where the audience did not understand English led Danny Kaye to develop routines which combined pantomime, gestures, songs, and facial expressions, eventually resulting in his signature style.
Danny Kaye soon ventured into films as well and made his film debut in a comedy short ‘Moon Over Manhattan’, in 1935. Over the next few years he played the stereotypical role of a manic, dark-haired, fast-talking Russian in a series of low-budget films.
During the late 1930s and early 1940s, he along with his new wife Sylvia, performed at La Martinique, a New York City nightclub. He had a successful stint there and his performance got him noticed by the playwright Moss Hart who cast him in his hit Broadway comedy ‘Lady in the Dark’.
He found his breakthrough as a film actor with his role in the musical comedy film ‘On the Riviera’ which was based on the play ‘The Red Cat’ by Rudolph Lothar and Hans Adler. The film was not just a commercial success, but also a critically acclaimed one.
His portrayal of Jewish refugee S. L. Jacobowsky in the film ‘Me and the Colonel’ was another one of his famous roles. He played the character of a man who has to flee from the Nazis during the World War II invasion of France by Nazi Germany.