Professor Irwin Corey, “the world’s foremost authority”, has passed away. He was 102.
One of Mr. Corey’s best-remembered routines was staged not in a club or broadcast studio but at Alice Tully Hall in Manhattan, at the National Book Awards ceremony in 1974. That year the fiction prize was shared by Isaac Bashevis Singer and Thomas Pynchon. No one in the crowd had any idea what the reclusive Mr. Pynchon looked like, and when Mr. Corey arrived to accept the award for him (the novelist had approved the stunt), many people thought they were getting their first look at Mr. Pynchon.
For the record, Richard Hatch: NYT. A/V Club.
This entry was posted on Wednesday, February 8th, 2017 at 9:08 am and is filed under 1970s, Books, Movies, Obits, Pynchon, Theatre, TV. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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