The list of children who became pen pals with a legendary athlete is probably short. A tally of kids who were visited in their home by not one but two Kennedys is likewise slim.
How amazing is it, then, that the name of Ron Rabinovitz would appear on both. Growing up in Sheboygan, Wis., Rabinovitz corresponded with Jackie Robinson in the 1950s and became the ballplayer's friend. And when Sen. John Kennedy campaigned in the 1960 Wisconsin primary, 15-year-old Ronnie was there to run errands.
"Here's this little kid from Sheboygan, and these two men are in his life," said Ron Peluso, artistic director of the History Theatre. "You've got to write a play about that."
Peluso commissioned Eric Simonson ("Lombardi," "Bronx Bombers") to write "The Incredible Season of Ronnie Rabinovitz," which opens Saturday night at the St. Paul theater. The play attempts to dramatize a story that would seem implausible as fiction. It features Ansa Akyea as Robinson — a character he also portrayed last spring in Children's Theatre's "Jackie and Me" — Peter Middlecamp as Kennedy, Jack Alexander as Ronnie and Mark Benninghofen as his father, Dave Rabinovitz.
Rabinovitz, now a 68-year-old sales representative who lives in Edina, still seems a little stunned by the course of events that made him a witness to history.
"All this is because of my father," he said recently as he led a reporter on a tour of his memorabilia. "This play is a way to honor my parents — my dad."
An abiding friendship
Dave Rabinovitz was a lawyer who worked for progressive causes in Sheboygan, now a city of 50,000 that claims to be the bratwurst capital of the world.
He also loved the Brooklyn Dodgers, particularly after they broke the color barrier with Robinson in 1947. He wrote to Robinson about his admiration and the ballplayer invited the Rabinovitzes to visit when Dodgers played the Braves in Milwaukee.