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Joey Faye Joey Faye (July 12, 1909 – April 26, 1997) was an American comedian and actor, born Joseph Antony Palladino in New York City. He gained fame as a comic in vaudeville and claimed he created two of vaudeville's more renowned pieces of business, "Floogle Street" (a.k.a. 〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://abbott-and-costello-whos-on-first.info/bagel-street-aka-susquehannah-hat-company )〕) and "Slowly I Turned".〔("Slowly I Turned": A Piece of America's Pop Culture )〕 In addition to an active career in vaudeville and the legitimate theater, he appeared in many movies and TV shows. ==Broadway== Faye memorably playing (second banana ) (the second-ranking comedian in a show) to Phil Silvers in two Broadway shows, ''High Button Shoes'' and ''Top Banana'' (he also appeared in the 1954 film. In a Broadway career that stretched between the late 1930s and the early Nineties, he appeared in 17 shows altogether, including ''Room Service'' (his Broadway debut), ''The Tender Trap'' (he also appeared in the 1955 movie adaptation), the 1965 revival of ''Guys and Dolls'', and Neil Simon's musical ''Little Me''. He appeared as a guest in many TV shows from 1949 thru 1984 and a series of "Short Subject" films, including ''Mack & Myer for Hire'' (1963), about two bumbling plumbers, who rode around in a motorcycle with a sidecar, attempting repairs, but producing chaos.
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