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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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81
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81.47
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1992-09-25
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June 8, 1981MILESTONES
DIED, George Jessel, 83, comedian, singer and showman whose
ubiquity as an afterdinner speaker earned him the title of
American's Toastmaster General: of a heart attack; in Los
Angeles. The New York City-born Jessel became a vaudeville
headliner with a routine in which he held a telephone
conversation with his mother. In 1925 he won fame on Broadway
in The Jazz Singer, only to lose the film role--and a place in
movie history--to Al Jolson. He went on to produce a string of
Hollywood movie musicals before hitting his stride as a master
of ceremonies and fund raiser. A superpatriot who liked to wear
a ribbon-bedecked U.S.O. "uniform" of his own devising. Jessel
boasted friendships with five Presidents and took credit for
inventing two American institution: the celebrity "roast" and
the Bloody Mary cocktail. A fixture at three decades of
Hollywood funerals (he delivered eulogies), he left behind his
own epitaph: "I tell you here from the shade, it is all
worthwhile."