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Joey Bishop, the deadpan comedian who was ABC’s answer to NBC’s late-night talk show king Johnny Carson in the late 1960s and was the last surviving member of Frank Sinatra’s legendary Rat Pack, has died. He was 89.

Mr. Bishop, who had been in failing health for some time, died Wednesday night at his home in Newport Beach, according to his longtime friend, publicist Warren Cowan.

An adept ad-libber with a dry, underplayed sense of humor, Mr. Bishop achieved his greatest fame in the 1960s. He was master of ceremonies for President John Kennedy’s inaugural gala and joined Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr. and Peter Lawford for the Rat Pack’s historic “summit” meetings on stage at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas.

Time magazine referred to Mr. Bishop as that swinging, fun-loving group’s “top banana.”

Jack Benny called him “one of the funniest men I’ve ever seen.”

And Danny Thomas was so impressed with Mr. Bishop, he had a weekly situation comedy built around him.

For four years, 1961 to ’65, Mr. Bishop starred in the situation comedy “The Joey Bishop Show,” whose character, Joey Barnes, was changed from a low-level public-relations man living with his mother the first season to being a married, late-night talk show host.

It was a fitting fictional occupation for the quick-witted Mr. Bishop, who had become nationally known in the late ’50s for his regular late-night appearances on “The Jack Paar Show.” (Paar once likened Mr. Bishop’s dour demeanor to that of “an untipped waiter.”)

Mr. Bishop frequently substituted as host for Paar and later for Carson. In 1967, ABC signed him to host his own 90-minute late-night talk-fest.

“The Joey Bishop Show,” with Regis Philbin as Mr. Bishop’s announcer-sidekick, ran for 2 1/2 years.

In November 1969, with “The Joey Bishop Show” third in the ratings behind Carson and Merv Griffin’s new late-night talk show on CBS, ABC told Mr. Bishop it was canceling his show at the end of December.

A day later, Mr. Bishop shocked his Hollywood studio audience during his opening monologue by saying that he and the network had decided to end the show. After praising his staff, he announced that he was going home to have dinner with his wife. Then he walked off the stage, leaving Philbin to preside over the remainder of the show.

In his 2002 biography of Mr. Bishop, “Mouse in the Rat Pack: The Joey Bishop Story,” New York Post TV columnist Michael Seth Starr painted a picture of a perfectionist who “clashed with his writers, producers, directors and co-stars” on his TV series, among others — a man who in general could be charming one minute and prickly the next.

Born Joseph Abraham Gottlieb in the Bronx, N.Y., on Feb. 3, 1918, he was the youngest of five children of Jewish immigrant parents from central Europe. When he was still an infant, his family moved to South Philadelphia, where his mechanic father opened a bicycle shop. He dropped out of high school at 18 to pursue a career in show business.

After serving in World War II, Mr. Bishop soon gained a reputation as a promising young comic known for his pointed and sarcastic observations.

In 1952, he was earning $1,000 a week at the Latin Quarter in Manhattan, where he caught the eye of Sinatra, who asked him to open for him at a popular New Jersey club.

Mr. Bishop continued to open for Sinatra in New York and occasionally on the road, his relationship with the powerful Sinatra paying big career dividends.

He appeared in 14 films, joining Sinatra and fellow Rat Packers in “Ocean’s 11” and “Sergeants 3,” as well as “Texas Across the River” with Martin.

It was in 1960 while Sinatra, Martin, Davis, Lawford and Mr. Bishop were in Las Vegas filming “Ocean’s 11,” a crime comedy about a scheme to rob five casinos in a single night, that they performed nightly at the Sands in what was dubbed “the summit.”

Theirs was a freewheeling show in which Davis might mash a cake in Mr. Bishop’s face and Martin would lift up Davis and hand him to Sinatra, saying “This is an award that just arrived for you from the NAACP.”

On stage, Mr. Bishop was never at a loss for words.

While opening for Sinatra at the Copacabana in New York in 1954, Mr. Bishop was in the middle of his act when Marilyn Monroe walked in wearing a floor-length, white ermine coat. He waited for her to be seated before saying, “Marilyn, I told you to wait in the truck.”