Speed Vogal - 27 East

Speed Vogal

icon 1 Photo

author on Apr 22, 2008

Irving “Speed” Vogel, who was co-author with Joseph Heller of the best-selling book “No Laughing Matter,” died on April 14 at his home in Sag Harbor of natural causes. He was 90.

Born in New York City on March 3, 1918, to Rose and Julius Vogel, his given name was Irving but he was dubbed “Speed” by a camp councilor when he was four years old after taking a long time to tie his shoes. The name quickly became permanent, so much so that when he was eleven and a friend knocked on the family’s apartment door asking for “Irving,” his father turned the boy away saying “Nobody here by that name.”

A history graduate of the University of West Virginia, Mr. Vogel worked in the textile business in Manhattan with his first wife, Ria Herlinger, although he more frequently found himself at his unheated sculpting studio on 28th Street in the flower district. His sculptures were of fanciful subjects—a roller coaster ride, kids climbing a backyard fence, a balloon man, even Tevye from “Fiddler on the Roof”—and most were made of found metal that he welded, with the addition of colored glass. He also painted in oil, did pen-and-ink drawings and created collages from paint chips.

One of his fellow 28th Street denizens, Zero Mostel, a devoted painter and eater, was one day overcome by delicious smells emanating from another artist’s studio. He knocked on Mr. Vogel’s door and then another until he found Ngoot Lee, who began cooking for Mr. Mostel and Mr. Vogel. Soon others followed, and thus what the men laughingly called “The Gourmet Club” was formed. The club was an assemblage of writers, artists and show business people that included Mel Brooks, Zero Mostel, Mario Puzo, Carl Reiner, David Z. Goodman, the writer of “Straw Dogs,” Joseph Stein the writer of “Fiddler on the Roof,” Julie Green, a diamond merchant, and author George Mandel, among others.

A gifted raconteur with almost encyclopedic knowledge of jokes and their origins—Mr. Brooks once called him “Huck Finn on his raft in Manhattan.”—Mr. Vogel honed this talent as a charter member of the group. The men would meet weekly to eat, mostly at Chinese restaurants, and talk. At the end of the meals, the group climbed into cars, headed for Little Italy for ices, and, if the weather was cold, scavenged for wood to bring back to Mr. Vogel’s studio where they continue their talks.

Both between marriages, Mr. Brooks and Mr. Vogel, were roommates in Manhattan for a short time and in the 1960s, Mr. Vogel worked with Charles Gwathmey in the early days of Gwathmey Siegel Associates. Later in the early 1980s, while Mr. Vogel was helping his friend, Joseph Heller, recover from Guillain-Barré Syndrome, he wrote an article for The New York Times, entitled, “How to Beat the High Cost of Living in the Hamptons.” A book contract with Putnam ensued.

He went on to co-author “No Laughing Matter,” which chronicled Mr. Heller’s bout with Guillain-Barré Syndrome. This sudden-onset neurological disease caused Mr. Heller to be paralyzed and spend months in a hospital’s intensive care unit and then many additional months in rehabilitation at Rusk Institute. During this time, Mr. Vogel tended to Mr. Heller. Mr. Heller wrote the serious parts of the book while Mr. Vogel was his comic foil. In The New York Times, Christopher Lehmann-Haupt called the book “positively cheering. . .richly amusing. . .curiously uplifting.”

In 1986, Mr. Vogel married author Lou Ann Walker aboard a friend’s sailing yacht, “The Sumurun,” in the Firth of Clyde, Scotland. The couple then bought their home in Sag Harbor.

In the late 1980s, after Mr. Heller had moved to East Hampton, Mr. Vogel to Sag Harbor, Mr. Green to Southampton, and Mr. Brooks part-time to the Hamptons, the Gourmet Club was reconstituted as the South Fork chapter of the Gourmet Club, meeting regularly at Barrister’s Restaurant after a gym workout.

He is survived by his wife, Lou Ann Walker of Sag Harbor, a professor at Stony Brook Southampton; two sons, Matthew Vogel of Bridgehampton and Peter Vogel of Fire Island; three daughters, Katherine Walker Vogel of Sag Harbor, Karen Vogel of California and Julie Browner of California and New York; two step-daughters, Miranda Hentoff of Manhattan and Jessica Hentoff of Missouri.

A memorial service was held on April 17 at Yardley & Pino Funeral Home in Sag Harbor.

In lieu of flowers, donations to East End Hospice, P.O. Box 1048, Westhampton Beach, NY 11978 or Memorial Sloan Kettering, c/o Dr. Stephen Nimer’s research, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021 would be appreciated by the family.

You May Also Like:

Rob Coburn Announces He Will Run for Southampton Village Board Seat

Longtime Southampton Village resident Rob Coburn announced on April 17 that he will run for ... 25 Apr 2025 by Cailin Riley

Parrish Art Museum Loses Over $140,000 in Federal Grant Funding Cuts

In the wake of cuts that downsized the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the ... by Michelle Trauring

Jerald R. Bolmarcich of Westhampton Dies April 13

Jerald R. Bolmarcich (“Jerry”), 92, died peacefully at home on Sunday, April 13, 2025, surrounded ... 24 Apr 2025 by Staff Writer

DoJ: Bridgehampton Man Charged With Immigration Fraud for Concealing Role as Perpetrator of Rwandan Genocide

A 65-year-old Bridgehampton resident has been charged with lying on his green card application by concealing his role as a leader in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, the U.S. Department of Justice announced. The Department of Justice stated that, according to court documents, Faustin Nsabumukunzi was a local leader with the title of “Sector Counselor” in Rwanda when the genocide began. “An estimated 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed during the three-month genocide,” the Department of Justice stated. The indictment handed up on Tuesday, April 22, by a federal grand jury in Central Islip was unsealed today, Thursday, ... by Staff Writer

Saving Species for the Health of the Planet | 27Speaks Podcast

On Saturday, April 26, the South Fork Natural History Museum (SOFO) and its Young Environmentalist ... by 27Speaks

ARB Approves Demo of Jobs Lane Courtyard and Shops

The 1970s courtyard and surrounding shops on Jobs Lane in Southampton Village are poised to ... by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Southampton DWI Arrests for the Week of April 24

Dylan Flores, 25, of Hampton Bays was arrested at about 10:30 p.m. on April 17 and charged with misdemeanor DWI after Southampton Town Police responded to the scene of a multi-car accident at the intersection of Tuckahoe Road and County Road 39 in Southampton and a breath alcohol test indicated he had been drinking more than the legal limit. Flores was taken to Stony Brook University Hospital for evaluation, and once released, taken to Southampton Town Police headquarters in Hampton Bays for further processing. Luis Patzan Ajvix, 24, of Flanders was arrested at about 7:30 p.m. on April 20 and ... 23 Apr 2025 by Staff Writer

Southampton Police Reports for the Week of April 24

SOUTHAMPTON VILLAGE — A resident reported to Southampton Village Police this week that he had recently noticed that someone cashed a check from his Suffolk Credit Union account for $5,700 that he had not written or authorized. He told police that when notified of the fraud, the bank refunded the money to his account but wanted a police report to be filed. SOUTHAMPTON VILLAGE — An employee of the 7-Eleven convenience store on North Sea Road reported to Southampton Village Police on April 22 that he observed a man take a Red Bull energy drink and a toothbrush off the ... by Staff Writer

Richard John Forrestal of Hampton Bays Dies April 20

Richard John Forrestal passed peacefully in his sleep from this world to the next on ... by Staff Writer

Shining Examples

A glimpse back in time to the 19th century would reveal, in most of the East End’s hamlets and villages, small general stores, often containing a local post office, where people living in the neighborhood could purchase groceries and necessary supplies — and, later on, gasoline for a growing number of automobiles. Over the years, many of those general stores disappeared, making way for larger business districts and developments, especially as the South Fork grew into a flourishing tourist destination. Big-box stores eventually arrived, challenging even those downtown shopping destinations. But it was those general stores, mixed with a thriving ... by Editorial Board