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Authors: Mickey Podell-Raber

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My father, Mack Gray, Dick Stabile, Dean Martin, and Jerry Lewis pose with the chefs in the kitchen. Gray worked for Dean while Stabile was the musical director for Martin and Lewis.

Prom Season

One of the highlights every year was prom season at the Copa. It soon became a tradition; the hip place to go after your school prom was the Copa. Teenagers would line the streets in order to make sure they could get a table for their special night. The way to impress any girl on a date was to take her to the Copa after the prom. One evening during prom season I stopped by the club—of course the lines were around the block—to see my father. I obviously did not have on a prom dress and was not there with a date; I was by myself. I usually knew the bouncer at the front door, but this night it was a new person, and he stopped me as I was heading into the club. I explained to him that I was not crashing the line and was not there as part of any prom group. He said, “No, go to the end of the line like everyone else.” I said, “Excuse me, my father is Mr. Podell.” So he looked at me, laughed, and said, “Sure he is.” Now, you can imagine, the kids in line started heckling me and told me to get in line like everyone else. I finally told the doorman to go ask Raymond, the captain, to come to the front door and verify that I was Mr. Podell's daughter. After a few minutes, Raymond appeared and set the man straight. That night, my father fired the bouncer. Afterward, I felt bad about the entire incident and would always use the back entrance of the club to avoid something like this happening again.

In the early 1960s, Chubby Checker released a song called “The Twist” and the single along with the dance became a hit with teenagers around the country. Around this time I was planning my prom party and my father said, “It's your prom and you can have anyone you want to perform,” so I said, “I want Chubby Checker.” Dad looked puzzled, as Chubby had never appeared at the Copa, and he had never even
heard of him or the twist. I dragged my mother to the Peppermint Lounge to see Chubby's act. Mom enjoyed the show and told Dad, who, in turn, contacted Chubby's people to let him know I had requested him to perform for my prom party. This would be the first of Chubby's many appearances at the Copa. It was a very exciting night and the prom kids loved his show; I'm not sure it was Father's cup of tea, but he saw the crowd reaction and hired Chubby to work again at the Copa many more times as a headliner.

Another shot taken outside the club during prom season.

Comedian Rip Taylor said, “I was booked during prom season several times at the Copa and I would change my act because there were high school kids in the audience. Not that I worked dirty but I would tailor the jokes for the students. One night I told a joke about an Indian that drinks too much tea and the punch line was ‘he gets caught in his tea pee.' I heard Mr. Podell tap his ring on the table after that
line. Once I finished my act, Mr. Podell flew back and said, ‘I don't want no filth in the Copa.' I explained that it was an innocent play on words, but he insisted it was risqué and filthy and not appropriate for his club. Jules Podell was very meticulous about clean material and naturally I obeyed him. I still don't think the line is dirty!”

A group of high school seniors, after their prom, inside the Copa attending a performance by Paul Anka. Anka was a huge draw, especially, for the younger set.

“As a performer, be it a singer, dancer, comic, musician, you name it, working at the Copacabana was the pinnacle of everyone's desire as a star—there's no doubt about it. The Copa was glamorous, had great entertainment and was a wonderful place to spend an evening. The food was also excellent because Jules Podell supervised everything that went on in the kitchen; that is where he spent most of his time each night. I don't believe anyone ever complained about the food or service at the club. I look back on my days at the Copa and it was the happiest and most exciting time of my life. The celebrities I met and worked with were wonderful and I met my husband, Danny, there…it was a great time!” says Lynn Kessler.

An ad for one of the many appearances at the Copacabana by Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Without question, the duo was one of the most popular comedy teams of all time.

My father's inner sanctum consisted of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Sammy Davis Jr., Joe E. Lewis, and Jimmy Durante, mainly because they were the big money-makers for the club. Many celebrities would come to our house over the years; they would wait for my father and then go behind closed doors in his den.

Dean Martin came together with Jerry Lewis, or they would come over separately. My father liked Dean better than Jerry; Jerry could be loud and obnoxious. I didn't think Jerry was funny; I thought he was mean and didn't really like kids. Dean, on the other hand, was always nice to me and I had a crush on him because he was so handsome. My father got
along with most of the entertainers who played the Copa through the years. Frank Sinatra, I would have to say, was his favorite singer and performer. I remember Sinatra as more of a man's man; when he came to our house he would talk mostly with my dad about business or they told jokes to each other. Jimmy Durante and Joe E. Lewis were probably my father's best show-business friends; they were the ones who came over to the house the most often. I don't think my father ever socialized with anyone who was not in one way or another associated with the Copacabana.

The “Rat Pack” consisted of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Joey Bishop, and Peter Lawford. The Rat Pack never appeared together as a group onstage at the Copacabana, as they did at the Sands Copa Room in Las Vegas. However, each performer did, at various times, play the Copa. Sinatra, Martin, and Davis eclipsed both Bishop and Lawford and were top attractions whenever they played the club.

Another photo of me and my cousin Natalie with Martin and Lewis during one of their Copa engagements.

Me with my cousins, Jackie and Natalie, pose for a photo with Dean and Jerry in the Copa kitchen with my mother.

Peter Lawford and my father pose with a chef in the Copa kitchen. Besides being a movie star, Lawford would also attempt a career as a nightclub performer; it was short lived.

Me, Peter Lawford, and my friend, Tobey Holzer, pose for a photo in the Copa kitchen.

Sammy Davis Jr., Dad, and Dean Martin. My father liked both Sammy and Dean, as performers and friends.

Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis

Next to Sinatra, the most famous act to play the Copa was Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Today, it is hard to imagine the meteoric rise and popularity of this comedy team. At the time, Laurel and Hardy were all but forgotten, and Abbott and Costello were coasting on their earlier fame. Martin and Lewis filled the void and captured the public's fancy, becoming successful on radio, television, and movies and through personal appearances.

It would be two years after they joined forces that Martin and Lewis would play the Copacabana. Their agent, Abby Greshler, had pitched the duo to Jack Entratter previously and he passed on them, but in 1948 he decided to give them a shot at the club. At first, Martin and Lewis balked, as they would be taking a pay cut and backseat—
opening for the star attraction Vivian Blaine. Abby Greshler convinced Martin and Lewis that if they were a hit at the Copacabana they would be on the road to superstardom. That was all it took—aside from Greshler threatening to quit as their manager—and the comedy team signed to play to Copa for a two-week engagement beginning on April 8, 1948.

Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis do one of their zany comedy routines with their musical director Dick Stabile at the club.

Dean Martin waiting to catch an object being thrown by Jerry Lewis as Dick Stabile cracks up over the duo's antics.

What happened on their opening night at the Copacabana was so surreal it now sounds as if it were scripted. Martin and Lewis were such a smash with the Copa audience that poor Vivian Blaine literally left the stage in tears after the audience kept calling for more of the duo during her act. In between shows, my father informed Martin and Lewis that he was going to make some changes with the billing; they would now be the headliners. When Ms. Blaine was told of the new billing, she abruptly quit, leaving Martin and Lewis as the headline act for the rest of the scheduled engagement.

Variety
summed it up best in their review: “Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis really hit the big-time at their opening last Thursday at the Copa. Both have been around singly and jointly, recently at the Capitol on Broadway, but not until their Copa bow did they truly arrive as potential comedy stars.”

Along with radio and print praise, such was the word of mouth and positive buzz on their act that my father extended Martin and Lewis's two-week engagement to six weeks; he also raised their salary to $5,000 a week. But even that wasn't enough—Dad would keep extending their engagement until they eventually closed eighteen weeks after they first opened. Perhaps the most important patron seeing Martin and Lewis during their run at the Copa was movie producer Hal Wallis. Wallis was so impressed with the comedy team that he eventually signed
them to a production deal with Paramount Pictures and would help turn the duo into bona fide movie stars.

My father with Jerry Lewis, Jimmy Durante, and Dean Martin getting ready to cut a cake that had an image of Durante drawn on it.

Martin and Lewis would play the Copacabana many times during the next eight years and both became friends and guests of Jules Podell at his home. Thus, it was only fitting that when they decided to end their career together as a team, it would be at the Copacabana, the venue where they were first catapulted into superstardom. Their July 1956 engagement was the hottest ticket in town—if not the world. According to Arthur Marx, who recounted the following in his book
Everybody Loves Somebody Sometime
:

Although Dean and Jerry had never been funnier, the bitterness of the impending divorce was apparent. During a roughhouse clowning routine at the chic bistro one night, Dean brought his left heel down on Jerry's foot with the force of a pile driver. Jerry let out a shriek that could be heard as far as Staten Island. Dean claimed absolutely no vindictiveness involved. “It was only an accident,” he told reporters. This infighting, however, didn't prevent them from putting on a “schmaltzy” closing night performance, climaxed by their singing “Pardners” (from their next-to-last picture together) and embracing and kissing affectionately for the benefit of all their misty-eyed well-wishers who were urging them to stay together. But once the phony sentimentality of the occasion had faded away into the past along with the cigarette smoke and the body odor of the prancing Copa Girls, Jerry was suddenly overcome with grave doubts about his ability to face the future without Dean.

BOOK: The Copa
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