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Eddie Fisher, from shul choirboy to Jewish Sinatra

September 28, 2010 10:14
Fisher and Elizabeth Taylor on their wedding day in 1959. He was as famous for his wives as for his singing

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

3 min read

To those who remember him at all, Eddie Fisher was the husband of Debbie Reynolds who left her for Elizabeth Taylor and went on to have a sex life that made him more headlines than his career ever did as a singer.

On the other hand, to Jews of a certain age, particularly in America, he was the young, clean-cut man who had a voice that was so perfect they called him the "Jewish Frank Sinatra". They heard him sing Sunrise, Sunset, and the women swooned and the men kvelled.

Fisher, who died last week after hip surgery at the age of 82, was one of the last products of that nursery of Jewish entertainers who had their big breaks in the "Borscht Belt" - the hotels in the Catskill Mountains near New York - following in the footsteps of Eddie Cantor, Danny Kaye, Zero Mostel, Mel Brooks and Jerry Lewis .

Unlike them, however, he was never a performer who believed that to please the customers - who ate more corned (salt) beef in a week's holiday than the whole of the rest of the year - he needed to go on stage and wow them till they virtually collapsed. He sang "nice 'n' easy", as they used to say in the business, "a regular crooner" as some of those guests were heard to comment.