Isaac Sidney "Sid" Caesar (born
September 8,
1922) is an
Emmy Award-winning
American comic actor and writer known as the leading man on the 1950s television series
Your Show of Shows and
Caesar's Hour, and to younger generations as Coach Calhoun in
Grease and
Grease 2.
Biography
Early life
Caesar was born in
Yonkers,
New York, the son of
Jewish immigrants Ida (
née Raphael) and Max Caesar, who ran a twenty-four-hour luncheonette.
[Sid Caesar | St. James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture | Find Articles at BNET][Sid Caesar Biography (1922-)] Caesar would help his parents by waiting on tables and it was during this time that Sid learned to mimic many of the accents he would use throughout his long career. He first tried his
double-talk with a group of Italians, his head barely reaching above the table. They enjoyed it so much, they sent him over to a group of Poles to repeat it in Polish, and so on with Russians, Hungarians, Frenchmen, Spaniards, Lithuanians, and Bulgarians. Despite his apparent fluency in many languages, in reality Caesar can only speak English and Yiddish. The Caesars were a funny family and Sid's older brother Dave was his comic mentor and 'one-man cheering section'. They created their earliest family sketches from then current movies like
Test Pilot and
Wings.
At fourteen, Caesar first went to the
Catskills as a
saxophonist with Mike Cifficello's Swingtime Six and would also occasionally perform in sketches. After graduating from high school in 1939, Caesar's family was still reeling from the
Great Depression and he moved out, intent on a musical career. He arrived in
New York City penniless and tried to join the musician's union (later he audited classes at the famed
Juilliard School of Music). That first summer on his own, he played at the Vacationland Hotel in Swan Lake in the
Catskills. There under the tutelage of Don Appel, the resort's social director, Caesar played in the band and learned to perform comedy, doing three shows a week.