Throughout generations, Brooklyn has seen numerous budding talents take root and sprout into theatrical legends. None had germination as perfectly metaphoric as that of six-year-old David Daniel Kaminsky, who made his stage debut as a watermelon seed in a pageant at P.S.149 at 700 Sutter Avenue. Having forgotten to cover his ears, which protruded under a mess of red hair, the greasepainted tot, who would endear himself to the world as Danny Kaye, attracted the first of countless laughs, thus propelling a comic dynamo toward his multi-media career.
Every year during the holiday season, millions of people are reminded of Danny’s spectacular comedic, vocal and dancing talents while viewing the holiday classic “White Christmas,” in which he teamed with Bing Crosby, Vera-Ellen, and Rosemary Clooney to perform old and new Irving Berlin compositions. This perennial favorite is one among many enormously popular Kaye films that displayed his brilliance throughout a long movie career, such as gems like “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” “The Inspector General,” “Hans Christian Andersen,” “Knock on Wood,” “The Court Jester” and “Merry Andrew.”
Those who wish to further explore all facets of Danny’s illustrious legacy should visit the “Danny Kaye and Sylvia Fine Collection” at the Library of Congress (LOC), where manuscripts, scores, scripts, photographs, sound recordings and video clips are available online, courtesy of Danny’s wife Sylvia and their daughter, Dena Kaye. This archive serves as a major source for this chronicle of Danny’s history in the borough.
The Kid from Brooklyn
Danny’s ancestral home was the small Jewish Ukrainian town of Ekaterinoslav, from which, in 1906, Danny’s father, horse dealer Jacob Kaminsky, fled with his wife Clara to escape the rising persecutions of the pogroms. They made their way to Kyiv and, after the birth of Larry and Mac Jacob, sailed to America, landing in Philadelphia. He quickly…
Read the full article here