
a book
Overweight Sensation
Mark Cohen · 2013 · 353 pages
Allan Sherman was the Larry David, the Adam Sandler, the Sacha Baron Cohen of 1963. He led Jewish humor and sensibilities out of ethnic enclaves and into the American mainstream with explosively funny parodies of classic songs that won Sherman extraordinary success and acclaim across the board, from Harpo Marx to President Kennedy. In Overweight Sensation, Mark Cohen argues persuasively for Sherman’s legacy as a touchstone of postwar humor and a turning point in Jewish American cultural history. With exclusive access to Allan Sherman’s estate, Cohen has written the first biography of the manic, bacchanalian, and hugely creative artist who sold three million albums in just twelve months, yet died in obscurity a decade later at the age of forty-nine. Comprehensive, dramatic, stylish, and tragic, Overweight Sensation is destined to become the definitive Sherman biography.
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sourced from public statements

Weird Al
“Allan Sherman [‘Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah’] passed away when I was 13, before I got to meet him. He’s one of my all-time heroes, and on my Mount Rushmore of musical inspirations. This book is a kind of cautionary tale about his rise and fall. He was so popular for a short period of time, then made a lot of really bad decisions. Fame ruined him.”↗