First off, there was San Francisco resident Rabbi Lawrence W. Raphael, who passed away on March 17 at age 74. As Janet Rudolph recalls in Mystery Fanfare, Rabbi Raphael—who, in 2003, “became the ninth senior rabbi of Sherith Israel in San Francisco, where he served until 2016”—“played a vital role in the admission, education, and professional training of over a thousand Reform rabbis, cantors, and educators. He was instrumental in the founding and supervision of the Soup Kitchen, which has fed over 150,000 guests since its inception over 30 years ago, and implemented educational initiatives, using the latest computer technologies and the newly emerging Internet, for students, faculty, and alumni.”
Raphael was also the editor of Mystery Midrash: An Anthology of Jewish Mystery & Detective Fiction (1999), a fine book about which I wrote, in one of the earliest versions of The Rap Sheet:
Remember when Harry Kemelman’s Rabbi Small tales were about all there was of Jewish crime fiction? No longer, as editor Lawrence W. Raphael makes clear in Mystery Midrash: An Anthology of Jewish Mystery and Detective Fiction (Jewish Lights Publishing).Raphael published a sequel in 2001: Criminal Kabbalah: An Intriguing Anthology of Jewish Mystery & Detective Fiction.
Some familiar wordsmiths and characters are to be found in these pages, from Stuart M. Kaminsky (whose Chicago detective, Abe Lieberman, here takes a confession from a lapsed and irate Jew) to Ronald Levitsky (contributing a story in which civil-liberties lawyer Nate Rosen faces a truly unique First Amendment case) and Howard Engel (providing P.I. Benny Cooperman with a light-hearted locked-room puzzle). Although Raphael’s selections often deal with Jewish issues, fans of this book will likely stretch across the religious spectrum.
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Gone as well is American film producer and screenwriter Larry Cohen, who died on March 23 in Los Angeles. He was 77 years old.Britain’s Guardian newspaper notes that Cohen “was a key figure in exploitation movie circles in the ’70s and ’80s, as well as writing scripts and storylines for TV shows such as The Fugitive and Columbo, before staging a feature film comeback with the script for the Colin Farrell thriller Phone Booth in 2002. … Cohen then came up with another phone-oriented thriller, Cellular, that became a vehicle for Kim Basinger. Cohen’s second coming eventually tailed off, but he appeared in the 2017 documentary tribute King Cohen, in which he defended his film-making habits: ‘I don’t know what exploitation means. Every movie is exploitation. So what?’”
I have to admit, I didn’t connect significantly with Cohen as a director or producer. My memories of his career relate to his small-screen escapades. In addition to his work on Columbo and The Fugitive, Cohen crafted scripts for Checkmate, The Defenders, and NYPD Blue. He also created the Robert Goulet espionage series Blue Light, the Western drama Branded, Roy Thinnes’ alien-invasion show, The Invaders, and one of the NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie series, Cool Million, starring James Farentino. Several years ago, I tried hard to contact Larry Cohen via e-mail, hoping to ask him some questions about that Farentino program, but I never heard a word back.
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Finally, The Gumshoe Site reports the demise, at age 90, of Majorie Weinman Sharmat. Blogger Jiro Kimura writes:
One of America’s most prolific authors of children’s books, [Sharmat] had two dreams as a child—to be a detective and to be a writer, and the wish of hers came true when she created Nate the Great. Nate is a boy detective with a Sherlock Holmes deerstalker who catches culprits with the help of his dog, Sludge. The Nate the Great series started with Nate the Great (Putnam, 1972) and ended with Nate the Great and the Missing Birthday Snake (Delacorte, 2017; with Andrew Sharmat, her son). Nate has a cousin Olivia Sharp, a girl detective, who appears in four novels, starting with The Pizza Monster (1989) and ending with The Green Toenails Gang (1991, all from Delacorte, with Mitchell Sharmat, her husband). She wrote more than 130 books for children and young adults, and three of them were written as by Wendy Andrews: The Supergirl Storybook (1984), Vacation Fever! (1984), and Are We There Yet? (1985, all from Putnam).Sharmat, who lived in Munster, Indiana, was taken by respiratory failure on March 12.
READ MORE: “The Late Great Larry Cohen,” by Terence Towles Canote (A Shroud of Thoughts).
2 comments:
I loved Checkmate. I wonder if it would hold up today.
Nate the Great was a wonderful series for reluctant third and fourth grader readers. They learned the joys of following a character through many adventures. Thereby getting hooked on reading. She made a wonderful contribution to children’s literacy. RIP.
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