Source:
World Bridge
Obituary
reprinted from The Bridge World
Edgar
Kaplan, one of the major figures
in the history of bridge and
Editor and Publisher of The
Bridge World for more
than 30 years, died of cancer on
September seventh. For several
years, he had battled against the
disease with remarkable optimism,
resolution, intelligence and
courage. Edgar never surrendered
to this fearsome enemy and
maintained his usual schedule of
tournament attendance and
participation until the end. He
won a national championship (his
twenty-eighth) earlier this year,
and competed in the Spingold and
other events at the Summer
Nationals a few weeks before his
death.
Edgar was
born in Manhattan and, with the
exception of attendance at
college and military service
during World War II, lived there
throughout his life. From 1960
on, he and his beloved wife,
Betty, who died in 1985, resided
in the brownstone house on West
94th Street that also houses The
Bridge World.
He is survived by his
sister-in-law, Sylvia Kaplan; a
niece, Beth; and a nephew,
Michael.
Edgar
Kaplan participated in organized
bridge in virtually every
possible way, filled a wide
variety of roles, made major
contributions in important areas,
and inspired several generations
of participants through his
standards of behavior and
achievement. He was one of the
most successful American players,
representing the United States 8
times in world championships
(twice finishing second in world
team events), winning 16 major
national team championships, and
garnering innumerable lesser
titles including, in the one year
that he set out to win it, the
then-called McKenney Trophy for
the most master points in one
year. His partnership with Norman
Kay was one of the strongest and
longest-lasting expert pairings
ever. For more than 30 years,
Edgar regularly held official and
unofficial positions as captain,
assistant captain, coach or
advisor to American international
teams. Most recently, he was
captain of the 1995 Bermuda Bowl
champion team.
A highly
effective teacher and lecturer,
Edgar was a co-founder of The
Card School in New York. The
combination of his teaching style
and outstanding writing skills
led to a series of successful
books: "Winning Contract
Bridge Complete," and
"Competitive Bidding in
Modern Bridge," have been in
print for more than 30 years.
Also still available,
"Kaplan-Sheinwold
Updated" is the most recent
book on the system that gained
many adherents and left its mark
on standard bidding techniques, a
method originally developed with
the late Alfred Sheinwold; it
represents the agreements he used
with Norman Kay. His other books
were "How to Play Winning
Bridge" (the original K-S
book), "The Complete Italian
System of Winning Bridge,"
and "Duplicate Bridge: How
to Play, How to Win."
Edgar
Kaplan was the prime mover behind
most of the major changes in the
Laws during the past few decades;
he served on and chaired both
national and international Laws
commissions, and was widely
regarded as the leading authority
on bridge law. Often an American
delegate to the World Bridge
Federation, he was influential on
several committees of the world
body (frequently Appeals
chairman) and for a long time its
witty chief commentator. He
served as a director of the
American Contract Bridge League
and, for many years, of the
Greater New York Bridge
Association.
Most Bridge
World
readers will remember Edgar
Kaplan best as an authoritative
and entertaining author and a
clever editor. By example, he
established a high tone, not only
in his writing but in all his
activities. At the table, Edgar
was a quintessential civil player
who demonstrated how to compete
fiercely at the highest levels
while showing respect for
partner, the opponents, and the
game of bridge.
Editor's
Note: In the December issue, the
magazine will begin a series of
articles recalling Edgar's
enormous contributions to the
bridge world and The
Bridge World.
|