Danny Kaye at 100
The centennial of the entertainer's birth is being celebrated - not just for his classic musical-comedies and his tuneful collaborations with his wife, the composer and lyricist Sylvia Fine, but also for his timeless contributions to humanitarian missions, such as the United Nations International Children's Fund.
The Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., is hosting an exhibition titled, "Danny Kaye and Sylvia Fine: Two Kids From Brooklyn," which charts the course of their lives and stage and screen careers, from "patter songs" to USO Shows, and to Kaye's service as UNICEF's first Goodwill Ambassador.
By CBSNews.com senior producer David Morgan
Danny Kaye
"Up in Arms"
And Hollywood took notice. Kaye appeared in several short films before starring in the 1944 musical-comedy "Up in Arms," playing a hypochondriac GI opposite Dinah Shore.
Fine & Kaye
"With difficulty," Dena replied.
The couple later separated, but never divorced - and together they raised their daughter.
Sylvia Fine
"They're kind of referred to as 'patter songs,' " said Dena of Kaye's most famous ditties. "I call them her 'intellectual tornadoes.' "
"Anatole of Paris"
"I'm Anatole of Paris.
The hats I sell
Make husbands yell
"Is that a hat,
Or a two-room flat?"
"Concerto for Tongue and Orchestra"
Dena and Danny
"I really had a normal childhood," Dena Kaye told Miller. "I mean, yes, Cary Grant came to the house, and yes, I asked Frank Sinatra to come to my graduation party and he showed up and I was thrilled, but I mean, we lived in the same house from 1947 until I sold it in 1991. I'd never been to an Academy Awards. I went to normal schools."
"The Secret Life of Walter Mitty"
"A Song Is Born"
"The Inspector General"
"The Inspector General"
"On the Riviera"
USO Tour
Throughout the 1940s, '50s and '60s, Kaye participated in shows for service members, making trips to Korea, Japan and Vietnam.
Okinawa
"Hans Christian Andersen"
New York City
"Knock on Wood"
London
"White Christmas"
"White Christmas"
UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador
"He didn't become UNICEF's first goodwill ambassador because it was the 'right thing to do,' " said Dena. "He did it 'cause he felt it."
Left: Kaye visits a little boy in a New Delhi hospital during a UNICEF tour in 1954.
In March 1955 Kaye received an honorary Oscar for "his unique talents, his service to the Academy, the motion picture industry, and the American people."
"The Court Jester"
"The pellet with the poison's in the vessel with the pestle, the chalice from the palace has the brew that is true."
"The Court Jester"
"Merry Andrew"
Los Angeles
"My father was a man who had a life outside his career," Dena Kaye said. "He was a pilot. He was a chef. He was an orchestra conductor." In fact, Kaye was that rare orchestra conductor who couldn't read a single note of music.
Conductor
Left: Danny Kaye conducts the Yale Symphony Orchestra, April 24, 1976.
"Me and the Colonel"
Kaye, who won a Golden Globe for "On the Riviera," won his second Golden Globe for "Me and the Colonel." He was nominated three other times - for "Hans Christian Andersen," "The Court Jester," and the 1981 TV film, "Skokie."
"The Five Pennies"
"The Five Pennies"
"On the Double"
"On the Double"
UNICEF
During the mid-1960s, Kaye - an amateur pilot - flew himself to cities across the U.S. to collect donations from children acquired during UNICEF's Halloween drive.
"The Madwoman of Chaillot"
Kaye's later appearances include TV productions of "Peter Pan" and "Pinocchio." In the 1981 TV movie "Skokie," based on true events, Kayed played a Holocaust survivor who leads a protest against Nazi demonstrators in Skokie, Ill.
Peabody Award
Academy Award
After receiving his honorary Oscar from Gregory Peck, Kaye quipped, "I'm so delighted that I find myself, as we say, trembling. If I were any more delighted I think I'd be in an institution."
Carnegie Deli
"The Court Jester"
For more info:
dannykaye.com
U.S. Fund for UNICEF: Danny Kaye
Exhibit: "Danny Kaye and Sylvia Fine: Two Kids From Brooklyn" at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (Through July 27, 2013)
"Danny Kaye: King of Jesters" by David Koenig (Bonaventure Press)
By CBSNews.com senior producer David Morgan