Brother Donald Jay Rickles passed away today at the age of 90. He died in his Los Angeles home of kidney failure. He is survived by Barbara, his loving wife of 52 years.
Brother Rickles was raised on June 6, 1953 and remained a member of what is today Service City Geba Lodge 1009, which meets in the Anchor Astoria Temple on 30th Avenue in Astoria, New York (the lodge has been through several consolidations, and I haven't been able to find out which of them was his original one). My understanding is that he hadn't attended his Mother Lodge for almost three decades, but still faithfully mailed in his dues check each year.
To mark his passing, I include a Youtube link above to his 1968 album, "Hello, Dummy," which I feel is only appropriate for my site. For those who live their lives in a perennial state of indignance and offense, I suspect his brand of comedy will be positively horrific in this day and age. That's too bad, because he packed audiences full of folks of every race, creed, ethnicity, and persuasion who were only too delighted to be on the receiving end of his "insults" for over half a century. He spared no one, and by doing so, made us all laugh at each other and ourselves as a result. Meanwhile, offstage, he was known as one of the kindest and most generous people in show business. Not a bad legacy, that.
His column is broken and his brethren mourn.
UPDATE 4/14/17:
Brother Bil Vassily in New York got curious about Brother Don's original lodge, and passed along the following bit of detective work:
UPDATE 4/14/17:
Brother Bil Vassily in New York got curious about Brother Don's original lodge, and passed along the following bit of detective work:
Doing some research I find the following.
Don Rickles was born and brought up in Jackson Heights, Queens.Geba Lodge #954 was located in Elmhurst which is just north of Jackson Heights.
I lived in Rego Park during the early 60s that was just south of both.
Service Lodge #1009 was located in Flushing, Queens which was quite a distance east of that area of Queens.
Going by a Grand Lodge Proceedings dated 1954 lists the two lodges as separate. Geba #954 and Service #1009.
My bet is on Geba #954.Bil was ultimately correct: their Secretary confirmed it was indeed Geba Lodge 954.
I had the honor of addressing Service City Geba Lodge #1009 last fall, and the Secretary told me that Brother Rickles was indeed a member there.
ReplyDeleteThanks Brother Chris...well spoken!
ReplyDeleteHis tools where wit and timing, and the world is much more grim for them to have fallen silent.
ReplyDeleteBrother don rickles was a wonderful human being who made everybody happy. May the grand architect of the universe bless him and his family!
ReplyDeleteThank you for remembering Brother Don Rickles.
ReplyDeleteFor the sake of accuracy, I would like to respectfully clarify one point in the Masonic record. Brother Don Rickles was not raised in what later became Service City Geba Lodge No. 1009. Rather, he was Raised a Master Mason in Geba Lodge No. 954 on June 9, 1953, not June 6, 1953.
Service City Geba Lodge No. 1009 was created much later through consolidation, and Brother Rickles remained affiliated through that line of succession. Today that lineage continues in Advance Service Mizpah Lodge No. 586 in Astoria, Queens.
Brother Rickles’s father, Max Rickles, was also a member of Geba Lodge, making Don’s Masonic membership part of a family tradition.
For anyone interested in the documented history, including the actual Geba Lodge member register entries for both Don and Max Rickles, please see our Lodge article here:
https://www.astoriamasons.org/articles/don-rickles-geba-lodge-954-jackson-heights
From the Histprian of Advance Service Mizpah Lodge No. 586