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Irving Jacobson

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, United States
Death: December 17, 1978 (80)
Immediate Family:

Son of Joseph Jacobson and Bessie Bayla Shur Jacobson
Husband of Mae Shoenfeld and Ethel Wasserman
Father of Private
Brother of Hymie Jacobson; Henrietta Jacobson and Private

Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Irving Jacobson

Irving Jacobson

  • 1940 United States Federal Census
  • Birth: Circa 1899 - Ohio, USA
  • Residence: 1940 - Second Avenue, A D 8, New York, New York, USA
  • Wife: Mae Jacobson

Irving Jacobson

  • U.S. Social Security Death Index (SSDI)
  • Birth: June 18 1898
  • Death: Dec 1978
  • Last residence: New York, New York 10010, USA

Irving Jacobson

  • Biographical Summaries of Notable People
  • Birth: June 18 1898
  • Death: Dec 17 1978

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irving_Jacobson

Irving Jacobson (June 18, 1898 - December 17, 1978), Yiddish theater star, American stage and film actor. Born in Cincinnati, Ohio[1] to actors Joseph and Bessie Jacobson, his brother was Hymie Jacobson and his sister Henrietta Jacobson, who married Julius Adler.[2] Irving played juvenile roles in Pinkhas Thomashefsky's troupe and later appeared in films by Sidney Goldin. He performed two years with Goldenburg at Philadelphia's Garden Theater and toured Paris and Rumania with May Shoenfeld in 1929.[3] He and his brother Hy Jacobson co-wrote the novelty number A Bisl Fefer, A Bisl Zalts (A little pepper, a little salt), recorded by Pesach Burstein. As the comic character Schnitz'l Putz'l (Scheptzl Schnitzlputzl) he recorded the songs Az men muz, muz men (Az Men Muzsh Muzsh Men) (If you gotta, you gotta) and Zets in Gis Kalet Vaser with Abraham Ellstein's Orchestra. He starred in William Siegel's comedy Don't Worry with Leo Fuchs and Miriam Kressyn.

He left vaudeville to become a well known comic actor on the Yiddish stage. He and his brother Hy owned several Yiddish theaters, including the National Theater and the Second Avenue Theater,[1] in the Yiddish Theater District in New York City.[4] He was star of the Josef Seiden's Yiddish language movie The Great Advisor (1940) with Yetta Zwerling, Mae Schoenfeld, Lazar Freed, and others. Performing in English on Broadway, Jacobson played Sancho Panza in the original Broadway run of Man Of La Mancha. He was the uncle of Bruce Adler and shares a star on the "Yiddish Walk of Fame" on Second Avenue with his brother.[6] He's buried in Mount Hebron Cemetery in Queens, NY.

Filmography

  • Eli, Eli (Yiddish) (1940)
  • The Great Advisor (Yiddish) (1940)
  • The Art of Love (1965)
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Irving Jacobson's Timeline

1898
June 18, 1898
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, United States
1978
December 17, 1978
Age 80