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Mickey Rose
Mickey Rose
from Wikipedia

Michael "Mickey" Rose (May 20, 1935 – April 7, 2013) was an American comedy writer, screenwriter and film director.

Key Information

Life and career

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Rose was born in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, and spent his childhood there and in Crown Heights in the same borough of New York City,[1] and was raised by a single mother, Sylvia Subin, his father having deserted the family by the time he was born.[2] He and Woody Allen, then known as Allan Stewart Königsberg, first met at their high school, and became close friends, frequently skipping school, and playing jazz and baseball together. They matriculated at New York University, from which Rose earned a bachelor's degree in film, although Allen dropped out. The two remained friends for the remainder of Rose's life.[2]

Rose's earliest material was for the ventriloquist Shari Lewis in her act with the sock-puppet Lamb Chop.[3] After Allen had become a stand-up comedian, Rose co-wrote "The Moose" routine with him.[4] Around this time, they collaborated with others on the English adaptation of a Japanese spy film, which was turned into What's Up, Tiger Lily? (1966), Allen's first film as director.

Later the two men collaborated on Allen's comedies Take the Money and Run (1969) and Bananas.[2] After early work with Allen, Rose was a TV comedy writer, working for comedians such as Johnny Carson, while he was the host of The Tonight Show, Dean Martin (The Dean Martin Show, 1973) and Sid Caesar (1963). He also wrote for the Smothers Brothers and All in the Family.[5] His other screenplays for films were for I Wonder Who's Killing Her Now? (1975) and Student Bodies (1981); he also directed the latter.[3]

Rose was married to Judith “Judy” Wolf from 1963 until her death in 2003; they were introduced by Allen and his first wife, Harlene Rosen. Allen was Rose's best man at the couple's wedding.[4] Rose, with his wife and children, had relocated to the West Coast, settling in Southern California in 1970.[2] Rose died on 7 April 2013 at his home in Beverly Hills, California from colon cancer.[1] He was survived by a daughter, son, and two grandchildren.

His son Quincy Rose is also a writer and filmmaker.[6]

References

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from Grokipedia
Mickey Rose (May 20, 1935 – April 7, 2013) was an American comedy writer and screenwriter known for his close collaborations with Woody Allen on the early films What's Up, Tiger Lily? (1966), Take the Money and Run (1969), and Bananas (1971). He contributed to television comedy through work on variety shows and sitcoms, including material for Sid Caesar, Johnny Carson, the Smothers Brothers, All in the Family, and The Odd Couple. Born in Brooklyn, New York, Rose grew up with Woody Allen and began his writing career in the 1950s, providing jokes and sketches for prominent entertainers and shows. His partnership with Allen extended from their childhood friendship into professional collaborations that helped shape Allen's early directorial style in comedy. Beyond film, Rose's television credits included contributions to series such as the Dean Martin Show and later sitcoms, showcasing his versatility in the genre. In addition to writing, Rose directed the 1981 horror comedy parody Student Bodies. He remained active in comedy writing until his death on April 7, 2013, in Beverly Hills, California. His work left a lasting impact on American film and television comedy through his sharp wit and long-standing ties to influential figures in the industry.

Early life

Birth and background

Mickey Rose was born Michael Rose on May 20, 1935, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, New York. He grew up in Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant and nearby Crown Heights neighborhoods during the tail end of the Great Depression and through World War II. The son of single mother Sylvia Subin after his father left the family, Rose was raised in a modest household amid the city's dense urban environment. As a child in Brooklyn, Rose formed a close friendship with fellow aspiring comedian Woody Allen (then Allan Konigsberg), with whom he spent time watching films and writing comedy routines together, fostering his early interest in humor. Living in New York during this period immersed him in the local entertainment culture, including radio comedy shows and the lingering influence of vaudeville, which helped shape his developing comedic sensibility. Without formal higher education in writing, he was self-taught through close observation of comedians and comedic material available in the era's media and performances. This early exposure fostered an interest in comedy that would lead to his first writing attempts in his late teens.

Entry into comedy writing

Mickey Rose began his career in comedy writing in the mid-1950s, with his earliest professional material created for ventriloquist Shari Lewis and her sock-puppet character Lamb Chop. This initial work involved jotting jokes for Lewis's act, marking his entry into crafting comedic content for performance-based entertainment. Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, Rose's background provided him with an authentic ear for dialogue that would characterize his humor. His early contributions focused on material for smaller-scale variety performances, including Lewis's puppet routines, before transitioning to staff writing positions in television. By 1960, he served as a staff writer on The Shari Lewis Show, which aired from 1960 to 1963, representing his shift from freelance joke writing in New York to more structured opportunities in TV comedy. This period laid the foundation for his development of quick-witted, character-driven humor rooted in relatable scenarios.

Career

Work on The Jackie Gleason Show

Mickey Rose's television writing career included contributions to a variety of popular comedy programs during the 1960s and 1970s, but there is no documented evidence that he served as a staff writer on The Jackie Gleason Show. His known credits from that era focus on shows such as The Sid Caesar Show, The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, The Dean Martin Comedy Hour, and The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. Although Rose's sharp one-liners and situational humor were hallmarks of his style in other projects, including parodies of classic sketches like those from The Honeymooners in episodes of The Odd Couple that he authored, no sources credit him with material for The Jackie Gleason Show's variety segments, musical numbers, or guest star appearances during its run. Comprehensive reviews of his career in obituaries and professional profiles do not reference any involvement with Jackie Gleason or the program's American Scene Magazine format revival in the early 1960s.

Contributions to The Honeymooners sketches

Mickey Rose is not credited with any contributions to The Honeymooners sketches, including those featured during the 1960s revival of The Jackie Gleason Show or earlier incarnations of the segments. His television writing career centered on staff positions for variety and sketch comedy programs such as The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (where he served as a long-time writer), The Dean Martin Show, The Sid Caesar Show, and The Tim Conway Show, alongside occasional contributions to specials and other series. While Rose occasionally engaged with classic sitcom influences in his work—for example, writing an episode of The Odd Couple that reversed a famous Honeymooners sleepwalking premise—he had no documented role in developing or scripting the Ralph Kramden, Alice Kramden, Ed Norton, or Trixie Norton characters, their working-class marital humor, Ralph's get-rich-quick schemes, or associated dialogue and catchphrases. Comprehensive reviews of his credits show his primary impact in comedy came through collaborations with Woody Allen on films and material for late-night and variety formats rather than classic sitcom revivals.

Other television writing credits

Mickey Rose continued his career as a television comedy writer after his early collaborations, contributing to a variety of programs during the 1960s and 1970s. One of his first professional assignments involved writing jokes for Shari Lewis's puppet act featuring Lamb Chop. He later wrote for The Sid Caesar Show in 1963 and supplied comedy material for Johnny Carson while Carson hosted The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Rose's credits extended to other major variety series, including The Dean Martin Comedy Hour and The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. He also collaborated with Woody Allen on some of Allen's television specials during this period. In addition to variety formats, Rose contributed to sitcoms such as All in the Family and The Odd Couple. His later television involvement included serving as a story editor on the sitcom Taxi. Rose's television output became less frequent in the late 1970s and 1980s amid shifts in television programming styles.

Personal life

Family and later years

Mickey Rose married Judy Wolf, whom he met on a blind date arranged by his longtime friend Woody Allen. Woody Allen served as best man at their wedding. The couple remained married for 40 years until Judy's death in 2003. They had two children together: a son, Quincy Rose, and a daughter, Jennifer Rose, and were also survived by two grandchildren. In 1970, Rose relocated with his family from New York to Los Angeles, settling in Beverly Hills where he lived for the rest of his life. Following his wife's passing in 2003, he continued to reside in Beverly Hills in his later years.

Death

Illness and passing

Mickey Rose was diagnosed with cancer in January 2013. He died from colon cancer on April 7, 2013, at his home in Beverly Hills, California, at the age of 77. His daughter, Jennifer Rose, confirmed the cause of death. The illness was relatively recent at the time of his passing, with no extended public details on prior symptoms or treatments beyond the diagnosis earlier that year. He was survived by his daughter, a son, and two grandchildren. No specific memorials or additional family statements were widely reported at the time.

Legacy in comedy writing

Mickey Rose's legacy in comedy writing is most prominently defined by his early and influential collaboration with Woody Allen, with whom he co-wrote the screenplays for Allen's first three feature films: What's Up, Tiger Lily? (1966), Take the Money and Run (1969), and Bananas (1971). These works helped establish Allen's distinctive comedic voice, blending absurdity, satire, and character-driven humor that became hallmarks of his career. Allen himself described Rose as "one of the funniest humans I know, a true original and a total eccentric." Beyond his film work with Allen, Rose maintained a prolific career in television comedy, contributing scripts to numerous series that shaped American sitcoms in the 1970s and 1980s. His credits include All in the Family, The Odd Couple, Happy Days, Taxi, and Love, American Style, among others, where he participated in the development of character-focused, relatable humor that resonated with broad audiences. Colleagues remembered him as a mentor and uniquely inventive writer who brought irreverence and originality to writers' rooms, including during his time on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Although he received no major industry awards, Rose's contributions to these enduring projects have secured his place as a significant, if underrecognized, figure in mid-20th-century American comedy writing. His work bridged the absurdist style of Allen's early films and the ensemble-driven sitcoms that dominated television, leaving a subtle but lasting imprint on the genre.
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