HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033225.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
From: paul krassner [i
Sent: 2/12/2017 12:25:16 AM
To: DANNY GOLDBERG nn Sam/Walli Lett I: Vichae! Simmons
Subject: | don’t know if they’ll publish this:
Importance: — High
From: paul krassner <j >
Subject: Re:"Comedian made an art...," Obituariwa, Feb. 10
Date: February 11, 2017 at 12:56:37 PM PST
To: letters@latimes.com
The obituary of unique comedian Irwin Corey stated, “Over a career that spanned more than 70 years, Corey
performed in vaudeville, radio, television, films, Broadway, nightclubs and Las Vegas showrooms."
In 1983, I was fortunate to be booked as the opening act for Corey in a four-day run at the Julia
Morgan Theater in Berkeley. He revealed his dark side in a room backstage, where we smoked
a joint, and he told me how he used to read Nazi hate literature to get him in the mood to
perform. And there was a certain sense of continuity on his deathbed. The night before he died, he said to a
close friend, James Drougas, “Trump will be assassinated soon.”
“Professor” Corey also had a humanitarian streak. In 1996, in my magazine, The Realist, I published a photo of
him, from a video by his son Richard, presenting Fidel Castro a bag of California-grown pistachio nuts (Castro
said, “California, hmmmm, good climate there for nuts”), a book on the Rosenberg controversy, and a credit-
card-size calculator (Castro said, “T’ll have to use my little pinky to push the buttons”). Dave Channon reported
thatCorey was on a diplomatic mission to lift the embargo on health supplies to Cuba, and he visited a hospital
that was providing sophisticated treatment for the survivors of Chernobyl. Cuban health care provided for more
radiation victims than than did the U..S."
Paul Krassner
Desert Hot Springs
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033225
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033225.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,756 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T17:14:13.093242 |