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| {{Quote|Rabbi, did not a great man say and I quote, "the Jews are a swinging bunch of people. I mean I've heard of persecution, but what they went through is ridiculous! But the great thing is after thousands of years of waiting and holding on and fighting they finally made it." End quote.|[[Bart]]}} | | {{Quote|Rabbi, did not a great man say and I quote, "the Jews are a swinging bunch of people. I mean I've heard of persecution, but what they went through is ridiculous! But the great thing is after thousands of years of waiting and holding on and fighting they finally made it." End quote.|[[Bart]]}} |
− | {{Quote|I never heard the plight of my people phrased so eloquently. Who said that? Was that Rabbi Hillel?|[[Hyman Krustofsky|Rabbi Krustyofsky]]}} | + | {{Quote|I never heard the plight of my people phrased so eloquently. Who said that? Was that Rabbi Hillel?|[[Hyman Krustofsky|Rabbi Krustofsky]]}} |
| {{Quote|Nope.|Bart}} | | {{Quote|Nope.|Bart}} |
− | {{Quote|Judah the Pious? Maimonides? Ooh, I got it! The Dead Sea Scrolls!|Rabbi Krustyofsky}} | + | {{Quote|Judah the Pious? Maimonides? Ooh, I got it! The Dead Sea Scrolls!|Rabbi Krustofsky}} |
− | {{Quote| I'm afraid not, Rabbi. It's from "Yes I Can" by Sammy Davis,Jr. An entertainer, like [[Krusty the Clown|your son]].|Bart}} | + | {{Quote| I'm afraid not, Rabbi. It's from "Yes I Can" by Sammy Davis, Jr. An entertainer, like [[Krusty the Clown|your son]].|Bart}} |
| {{Quote|{{W|The Candy Man#Sammy Davis Jr. version|The Candy Man}}?|Rabbi Krustofsky|Like Father, Like Clown}} | | {{Quote|{{W|The Candy Man#Sammy Davis Jr. version|The Candy Man}}?|Rabbi Krustofsky|Like Father, Like Clown}} |
| {{Character | | {{Character |
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| == History == | | == History == |
− | [[Bart]] and [[Lisa]] were trying to convince [[Krusty]]'s father Rabbi [[Hyman Krustofsky]] to end their estrangement. After several failed attempts, he finally broke up and agreed when he was shocked to learn the quote which had so move him was from Sammy Davis, Jr.'s memoir "Yes I Can," an entertainer just like Krusty and had {{W|converted to Judaism}}. Rabbi Krustofsky called him "The Candy Man" as the song "{{W|The Candy Man#Sammy Davis Jr. version|The Candy Man}}" was Davis' biggest hit.<ref>"[[Like Father, Like Clown]]"</ref> | + | [[Bart]] and [[Lisa]] were trying to convince [[Krusty]]'s father Rabbi [[Hyman Krustofsky]] to end their estrangement. After several failed attempts, he finally broke up and agreed when he was shocked to learn the quote which had so move him was from Sammy Davis, Jr.'s memoir "Yes I Can," an entertainer whohad {{W|converted to Judaism}}. Rabbi Krustofsky called him "The Candy Man" as the song "{{W|The Candy Man#Sammy Davis Jr. version|The Candy Man}}" was Davis' biggest hit.<ref>"[[Like Father, Like Clown]]"</ref> |
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| In the montage of famous kissing scenes (seen when [[Nikki]] performed CPR on [[Bart]]), there was a scene from the "Sammy's Visit" episode of "[[All in the Family]]" where Sammy Davis, Jr. gave an unexpecting [[Archie Bunker]] a kiss.<ref>"[[Stealing First Base]]"</ref> | | In the montage of famous kissing scenes (seen when [[Nikki]] performed CPR on [[Bart]]), there was a scene from the "Sammy's Visit" episode of "[[All in the Family]]" where Sammy Davis, Jr. gave an unexpecting [[Archie Bunker]] a kiss.<ref>"[[Stealing First Base]]"</ref> |
A picture of Sammy Davis, Jr. in his dressing room writing a to-do list was seen.[4]