There are two amazing things about this book. One, someone wrote a biography of the life of Joey Bishop. Two, I actually read a biography of the life of Joey Bishop.
For the bulk of the world who doesn't remember Joey Bishop, he was the sad-faced comedian who probably counted as the lowest ranking member of the Rat Pack, the Superstar ensemble of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr, Peter Lawford, and Joey. These guys essentially created the image of Las Vegas as a place for cool, hip, misogynistic middle-aged men in the very early 1960s. Their shows at the Sands casino were sold out months in advance. Their heist movie Ocean's 11 was one of the top-grossing films of 1961.
The first four men in the Rat Pack were simply at the top of their game. But Joey was a hanger-on who was suddenly thrust into superstardom by his affiliation with these men. And for better or for worse, that sudden fame and success destroyed him.
Bishop was born Joseph Gottlieb in Philadelphia in 1918. In his teens, he started doing comedy in amateur shows with friends, and as they left the act he became a solo. You know how everyone talks about Frank Sinatra's friendship with the Mafia? it was really Joey Bishop who was friends with the Mob, as they ran all the comedy spots in the 1930s through the 1960s. In the late 1940s Joey came to the attention of Frank Sinatra, who was trying to rebuild his career. Bishop struck Ol'Blue Eyes as the perfect opening act -- a comedian who was funny, knew his place, could do a reliable 25 minutes every night, yet who wouldn't be too exhausting for an audience the way Jerry Lewis or Don Rickles could be.
(I've done stand up comedy -- Joey's act is hard to define. He didn't really tell jokes, and he didn't really do observational comedy. He just said funny things, with a permanent deadpan face. The nearest analog I can think of would be Stephen Wright, but Joey Bishop was about 1/3 as funny.)
Bishop's Rat Pack affiliations led television networks to come calling, and before long he was the star of The Joey Bishop Show, a mid-1960s situation comedy. Unfortunately, Joey Bishop was no actor. Joey Bishop could barely learn lines. The Joey Bishop Show -- and its star -- was flailing almost from the moment it got on the air. And as numerous coworkers interviewed for the book will testify, when Joey Bishop is in a panic he is a total 100% prick.
Independently wealthy from a series of wise investments, Joey Bishop never really had to work for a living after his show was canceled in December 1969. He thought that he could continue his future in showbiz on his own terms; he would work only when he wanted to. Unfortunately, Bishop quickly found out that when the world thinks you're an evil miserable prick, you're working only when they let you. And for the last 25 years of his life, that meant working not at all.