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Rodney Dangerfield Advance Ordering COMEDY Tickets
COMEDY Tickets
EVENTS->COMEDY
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Rodney Dangerfield Tickets
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For Rodney Dangerfield Advance Ordering Schedule or Rodney Dangerfield Advance Ordering tickets availability click above link
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Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy Rodney Dangerfield Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy Rodney Dangerfield COMEDY tickets or to Buy Rodney Dangerfield COMEDY tickets at our online store.
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Advanced ordering for the Rodney Dangerfield before the event goes
on sale is available. A fan may call to order for an event before it goes on
sale to the public. We can guarantee getting our Customers the seats they are
looking for. We do not Guarantee a row but we can guarantee an area. For the
Rodney Dangerfield advanced ordering, a fifty percent deposit is required in
advance of the general public on sale. Call one of our sales associates
today at 281-447-1579 and place your Rodney Dangerfield advanced order
today. There are no refunds for deposits once a deposit is placed. You may
request an up grade at any point and we can make every effort to accomadate
you. Rodney Dangerfield advance ordering is the best way to lock in your
seats before the event sells out thru the general on sale. Its really the
best way to get the best seats for a premium.
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Rodney Dangerfield (November 22, 1921 – October 5, 2004), born Jacob Cohen, was an American comedian and actor, best known for the line "I don't get no respect" and his monologues on that theme.//He was born in the Long Island, New York town of Babylon, the son of vaudevillian Phil Roy (Philip Cohen). Rodney would later say that his father "was never home — he was out looking to make other kids," and that his mother "brought him up all wrong." As a teenager, he got his start writing jokes for standup comics; he became one himself at 19 under the name Jack Roy. He struggled financially for nine years, at one point performing as a singing waiter (he was fired), before giving up show business to take a job selling aluminum siding to support his wife and family. He later said that he was so little known then that, "When I quit, I was the only one who knew that I quit!"It is sometimes said that Rodney resented this early rejection by audiences, but he would later state in his typical fashion that they were absolutely right — he was terrible. In the early 1960s he started down what would be a long road toward rehabilitating his career, still working as a salesman by day. He came to realize that what he lacked was an "image" — a well-defined on-stage persona that audiences could relate to and that would distinguish him from similar comics. He took the name Rodney Dangerfield, a pseudonym which had been used by Ricky Nelson on the TV program The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. He once said that when a friend first saw his new name, he said, "Rodney Dangerfield???" and Rodney responded, "Hey, if you're going to change your name, change it!" However, Jack Roy remained his legal name, as he mentioned from time to time.His trademark line was inspired by the 1972 film The Godfather, with its memorable depiction of Mafia bosses who place tremendous value on being treated with "respect." Rodney saw that the reverse — a character who got no respect from anyone at all — would be seen by audiences as funny and sympathetic
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