From: Terry Kafka
To: Philip Kafka < >, Jeffery Edwards leevacation®gmail.cotn>
Subject: Fwd: This unlikely Brooklyn block spawned 4 superstars
Date: Fri, 03 Aug 2018 17:56:35 +0000
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From: Wendy Solomon
Date: August 3, 2018 at 10:44:07 AM PDT
To: Terry
Subject: Fwd: This unlikely Brooklyn block spawned 4 superstars
This unlikely Brooklyn block spawned 4
superstars
By Suzy Weiss
By Sizy Weiss August 2, 2018 I 1:05am
Brooklyn's Borough Park Brian Zak/NY Post
From Jay-Z to Ruth Bader Ginsburg, it's no secret that Brooklynites can — and do
— rise to fame.
But one block in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn may be the ultimate
kingmaker. In that part of Kings County — known for its observant Jewish
communities — 48th Street between 15th and 16th avenues contains the childhood
homes of three boldface names: Alan Dershowitz, the Harvard scholar and lawyer of
O.J. Simpson fame; Borscht Belt favorite comedian Jackie Mason; and baseball Hall
of Famer Sandy Koufax.
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"My parents managed to scrimp together $6,200 for the mortgage," says Dershowitz,
79, who grew up in a three-family house with aunts and uncles — as well as a cousin
who inhabited an illegal basement apartment — at 1558 48th St. (It's now a
condominium.)
"We were all poor, but the currency of the street was humor. If you were funny, you
were the top of the heap," adds Dershowitz, who recalls that sewers and parked cars
served as the bases for a made-up game called punchball. "[If you could punch the
ball] one sewer, you were a wimp. Two sewers was pretty good; three sewers, you
were a fantastic athlete. I never made it three sewers, but I did make it over two."
Down the street from Dershowitz was 87-year-old funnyman Mason — then known
by his birth name, Yakov Maza — and Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher
Koufax, now 82, whose family moved to the block from Bensonhurst. Academy
Award-nominated actor Elliott Gould, known for roles in "M*A*S*H," "Oceans 11"
and "Friends," among other hits, lived a few blocks away at 1644 49th St.
(Clockwise from top left) Alan Dershowitz, Sandy Koufax, Elliott Gould and Jackie Mason were Brooklyn neighbors.Donna
Ward/Wirelmage; David Banks/Getty Images; Bobby Bank/Wirelmage; Shutterstock
"I didn't have my own bedroom in Borough Park." Gould, 79, tells The Post. "We
lived on the second floor of a two-story home that we rented. ... Between the living
room, the kitchen and my parents' bedroom was a little alcove where I had a bed."
Despite the cramped conditions, Gould adds, "It was nice. I had a good few years
there."
For his part, Mason remembers Dershowitz. "I came across Alan Dershowitz a
couple of times in the street. This was before he became such a big sensation on
television, before he was a lawyer, just when he was an unemployed kid," Mason
says. "So he looked at me like I was nothing and I looked at him the same way. We
would pass each other on the street, just two egomaniacs with no place to go."
The 48th Street block was renamed Bubover Promenade in the 1990s after a Hasidic
sect. Many of its members still call Borough Park home; there's even a yeshiva on
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the street. Back in the '50s, though, Dershowitz remembers, "There was only one
Hasidic family, and we called them `Chicago.' "
Why? He chuckles: "They wore white socks."
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