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Saturday, January 20, 2007
Art Buchwald goes – in his inimitable style
Art Buchwald, 81, world-famous newspaper columnist, died of kidney failure on Wednesday at his son's home in Washington, the United States, his family announced on Friday.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning Buchwald punched the high and mighty, tinged with humour, in his enormously famous and popular column, which he wrote for over half a century.

At one point, Buchwald's column was syndicated to over 550 newspapers worldwide. He also published more than 30 books.

The year 2006 was bad for him. Kidney and vascular problems forced doctors to amputate one of his legs just below the knee in January. Buchwald refused to have dialysis.

In February 2006, he entered Washington Home and Community Hospices, which he described as "a place where you go when you want to go."

But by July, despite his physicians' predictions, Buchwald left the hospice. "Instead of going straight upstairs, I am going to Martha's Vineyard," he had written.

He finished his last book, Too Soon to Say Goodbye, there, and it was published in November, 2006.

Buchwald kept his sense of humor until he slipped into coma just before he died, said his long-time friend and Washington Post Vice-President at-Large Benjamin Bradlee.

"I just don't want to die the same day Castro dies," Buchwald had told his friends, Bradlee said.

The celebrated political satirist, even in death, was his humorous self: "Hi, I'm Art Buchwald and I just died," he announced with a grin, in a video posted on The New York Times website.

Buchwald had recorded this eerie video interview last summer, to be shown after his death.

Death and dying became fodder for the column that he continued to write through 2006, dwelling on the topic as regularly as politicians, scandals and news of the day.

Before death and dying became part of his columns, politics was his pet point. He said his favorite US President was Richard Nixon, "whose delusions made for rich satirical material." "I worship the very quicksand he walks on," Buchwald had quipped.

Buchwald also wrote about his bouts with mental disorders with a candidness that won him new fans around the United States. He had been hospitalised for clinical depression in 1963 and for manic depression in 1987.

Both episodes nearly drove him to suicide, he said. He joked to friends that if he had a third bout of depression, "I will be inducted in the Bipolar Hall of Fame."

Art Buchwald is survived by three children – Joel Buchwald, Connie Marks and Jennifer Buchwald – and two sisters and five grandchildren.

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