https://www.newspapers.com/image/1095520578/?match=1&terms=bevacqua%20dangerfield%20rodney
1976
Babe Bavacqua
Anthony "Babe" Bevacqua is best known as the longtime business partner and close friend of legendary comedian Rodney Dangerfield, as well as a former professional musician. He managed and operated Dangerfield's Comedy Club in Manhattan, which was the subject of highly publicized legal battles in the 2000s. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
https://nypost.com/2007/09/05/pal-robbed-rodney-widow/
The business partner of late comic Rodney Dangerfield lifted $500,000 from their comedy club, according to a federal lawsuit filed by the funnyman’s widow yesterday. Joan Child Dangerfield claims that Anthony “Babe” Bevacqua skimmed the money from the nightclub’s parent company, “Rodney Dangerfield Inc.”
She also claims Bevacqua overpaid himself by $155,000.
https://www.newspapers.com/image/1190581098/?match=1&terms=bevacqua%20dangerfield%20rodney
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVZY7JlL-MA
Roseanne on Dangerfield ..
Good stuff startihg at 3:20 ...
SEINFELD - Big break came freom Dangerfield
rom All Movie Guide: Seemingly every struggling standup comic dreams of landing their own television series, but few managed to do so with greater success than Jerry Seinfeld, whose career as a nightclub comedian led to him starring as himself on the show Seinfeld -- arguably the most successful situation comedy of the 1990s. Jerome "Jerry" Seinfeld was born in Brooklyn, NY, on April 29, 1954, to Kalman Seinfeld, a signmaker, and his wife, Betty; Jerry was the second of the couple's two children. The Seinfeld family moved to Long Island when Jerry was a child, and he spent most of his youth there. After graduating from high school, Seinfeld went on to college, first attending the State University of New York at Oswego, and then moving on to Queens College of the City University of New York, where he received a Bachelor's Degree in 1976. Seinfeld developed a keen interest in performing while in college (his degree from Queens was in communications and theater), and after graduation he began working New York comedy clubs, often without pay, while holding down a number of odd jobs. Seinfeld's first big break came when his bright but understated observational humor caught the eye of standup legend Rodney Dangerfield, who featured Seinfeld on a special for HBO. The exposure helped establish Seinfeld on the comedy club circuit, and won him a recurring role on the situation comedy Benson. However, Seinfeld and the show's producers clashed over the character's direction, and he was fired after only four episodes. In 1981, Seinfeld appeared for the first time on The Tonight Show, then hosted by Johnny Carson, and made a strong impression on both the audience and the host; he became a frequent guest on the Carson show, as well as David Letterman's late-night talk show. As Seinfeld's fame began to rise, he starred in several cable TV specials, and was approached to star in several TV series. However, remembering his experience on Benson, Seinfeld opted to avoid episodic television unless he was in a position of greater control (though he did do occasional guest spots on sitcoms and played a small role in Danny De Vito's TV movie The Ratings Game). In the meantime, Seinfeld and his good friend Larry David began working up an idea for a situation comedy to be called The Seinfeld Chronicles. In 1989, NBC took the bait, and a year later the show