Victor Borge (born January 3, 1909, Copenhagen, Denmark—died December 23, 2000, Greenwich, Connecticut, U.S.) was a Danish-born American pianist and comedian who was known worldwide for his irrepressible humour, which combined deadpan delivery, clever wordplay, satire, irreverence, and physical comedy as well as music.
Borge’s mother began teaching him to play the piano when he was three, and it was soon apparent that he was a prodigy. While in his teens, he received a scholarship to the Copenhagen Music Conservatory, and he later studied in Vienna and Berlin. On the way to becoming a concert pianist, however, Borge discovered his flair for comedy and his ability to respect the music while skewering the pomposity often present in the world of musicians. Borge, who was Jewish, often satirized Adolf Hitler, and he was performing in Stockholm when Germany invaded Denmark in 1940. Later that year he immigrated to the United States. He began performing on radio in 1941 and by 1945 had his own show; his Carnegie Hall debut came that same year. Appearances in nightclubs, on other concert stages, and on television followed, as did his one-man show, Comedy in Music, which ran for 849 performances in 1953–56 and set a Broadway record for a solo show. Borge’s trademark bits included his “phonetic punctuation,” in which he read a story but used a sound for each punctuation mark, and his “inflated language,” in which each number or homonym of a number became the next-higher number (wonderful became twoderful).
In 1963 Borge helped create the Thanks to Scandinavia Foundation, which funded scholarships for Scandinavian students in gratitude for the aid many Scandinavians gave to Jews during the Holocaust. He wrote, with Robert Sherman, My Favorite Intermissions (1971) and Victor Borge’s My Favorite Comedies in Music (1980). During a career that spanned more than 70 years, Borge received numerous awards, including a Kennedy Center Honor in 1999.