Jack Benny’s show debuted on radio on May 2, 1932, and among the other shows you could hear that night on WEAF (and a number of NBC Red affiliates) were Billy Jones and Ernie Hare, impersonator Ward Wilson, Ireene Wicker the Singing Lady, the Stebbins Boys and Lum and Abner. When Jack finally signed off on May 22, 1955, all of them were gone.
Benny’s longevity was matched by his popularity. Even when sponsors dropped him, it wasn’t because of ratings (Chevrolet dropped him solely because an executive wanted music, not comedy). Benny managed to find ways to keep his show fresh during his long time on radio; what he put on the air in 1932 was quite different than his broadcasts of 1955.
Jack had appeared on radio several times before he began his series for Canada Day, even before his appearance on Ed Sullivan’s interview show that landed him the job with the soft drink company. Except for Sullivan, Benny didn’t feel the others were significant and may have forgotten about them. But several were detailed in the third part of the New York Post’s profile of Benny, published on February 6, 1958. The article also goes into Benny’s comedy timing. We’ll have part five next week.
The Jack Benny Story 
By  DAVID  GELMAN  and  MARCY  ELIAS
ARTICLE IV   
In  the late  1920s,  American  light  culture was being   dispensed   from   three   different    sources—vaudeville,   the  movies   and, to  a   lesser   extent, radio.  
Like  a  speculator  in futures,  Jack  Benny  kept a  hand in all three.  
In  1928, at the  peak  of his  vaudeville  popularity, he signed  a  movie  contract   with   MGM  at  $850  a  week,  which  turned  out to be a very  comfortable  pension.  Benny  had  almost  nothing  to do for the  money.   
In   the  dressing  room   adjacent   to  Benny's  at  the time  was  fellow  vaudevillian  Benny  Rubin,  who was getting  nearly  as, much  money  for  even  less  work.  
"With  nothing  better  to do,"  Rubin  recalls,  "we  put  a  sign  over  the  dressing  rooms  that  said:  'Jack-Benny-Rubin,  Music  Publishers.'  Every  time  one  of the  MGM boys  wrote  a  song  hit, Jack  and I  would  rewrite the lyrics  and  they  spread  around  so fast  the  guys  wanted  to  kill  us.  Gus  Edwards  almost  came  after  us with  a  pistol  when  we rewrote  the lyrics  to a  song  he  wrote about  mothers,  this  way:  
 
'Your mother   and  my  Uncle  Sam, 
They are from   Kishnev,  I  mean Alabam’... '"
That  year  both  Benny  and Rubin  were   considered  for  a  local  radio  show. 
"I  got the  job,"  Rubin  said,  "and  to  compensate  I  hired  Mary (Livingston)  as my singer  and foil.   Jack   helped to write  the first  show.   One  of the jokes  called  for  Mary  to ask me where  I  came  from  and  I  had  to  say,  Ireland—I  mean  Coney  Ireland.'  
 
"When  the show  was  over  the sponsor  came  out  of  the  control  room  and walked  over  to  Mary  and said, 'Who  told  you  you  could  sing?   You're  through!'  I protested  and he  said,  'And as  for  you, you're   through   too.  You and  your  Coney  Ireland!'   Oh, it was  a  great  night  for the  three  of  us  because  the  Coney Ireland joke  was  one  Jack  dreamed  up."   
The   experience   effectively   squelched   Jack's   radio ambitions  for the time  but he  filed  it  away  for further investigation.   Meanwhile  he  idled  around  the MGM lot long  enough  to make  one Grade  A  type  movie,  "Hollywood  Revue  of  1929,"  then  begged  out of  his  contract  to  do the Earl  Carroll  Vanities  on Broadway  for $1,500 a week.   
While  the  show  was  touring   Chicago, Benny was enticed   into  doing  a  local   radio   show  and again  the  results  were  discouraging.   There  was  a  blizzard  on  the  night  of  the broadcast,  the  scheduled  singer  failed  to  appear  and Jack  had to  fill  in the spaces  with  jokes.  
 
'Who  Cares?'  
 
The  ubiquitous  Rubin,  who was appearing  in  "Girl  Crazy" in Chicago,  dropped  in at  the broadcast  studio,  passed  a  note  to  Benny  telling  him to  announce   that   he  would  do an imitation  of  Benny  Rubin,  then  stepped up  and did the  imitation   himself.   The  next  day  the  local  critics  panned  the show  and  advised  Jack  to stick to  his  own  material   instead  of  doing  bad  imitations.   
It  was a  minor   failure. Radio  in  those   days was largely  the province  of the dance  bands  and,  outside of  the  newspaper  critics,  there  were  few listeners  to judge its  merits  as an entertainment  medium.   
But  by  1932,  the  little   brown  box  had  assumed  a  vastly  increased  importance  in  thousands  of  American  living  rooms  where  it  had come  to  roost,  squat,  ugly  and owlish, and  yet somehow sparkling   with    personality.  
Names   like   Amos  and  Andy,   and  Stoopnagle  and  Bud  had come  into  the  household   language   from  nowhere  and  veteran  stage  performers  like  Eddie  Cantor, Ed  Wynn  and Burns  and  Allen   were   finding  a  mass  audience  for the  first  time.   
Reflecting  recently  on that  distant  dawning  of  modern times,  Benny  recalled:   
"I suddenly realized  that radio  was  becoming important  to the people  and  radio  people  were  becoming  more  important  than  stage  people.  I went  to Earl  Carroll  and  asked  him to let  me  out of my  contract. There I'd  quit a $1,500-a-week job without  the  prospect  of  anything definite in  radio. I was married  and  had  almost  no  money  to speak  of.  Then  Ed  Sullivan  signed  me to appear on his radio  show  and the Canada Dry people  heard me and gave  me a  job."   
It  happened  pretty  much  that  way.  On  the Sullivan show,  in  February, 1932, a network   audience  for  the  first  time  heard  the  mild,  medium-pitched, faintly  nasal voice of  Jack Benny uttering his  first  national self-effacement:  
"Hello  folks.   This is  Jack  Benny.   There  will  be a slight  pause  for everyone  to say, "Who  cares?'"  
 
It  is possible  that at that  very  moment a large  number  of people  did say  just  that   But in any  case  Canada  Dry   Ginger  Ale cared  and a  few  months later   Jack   had  a regular  radio  show  of his  own.   
At  9:30  p.m.  (EDT)  on May  2, 1932,  on  the  old  Blue  Network  of the National  Broadcasting  Co.,  announcer  Ed  Thorgerson   introduced  a  new  program   featuring George  Olsen  and his orchestra,  singer  Ethel  Shutta (Olsen's  wife),  and  starring  "that  suave  comedian,  dry  humorist and  famous   master  of Ceremonies—Jack "Benny." 
There   was  no studio audience   to hail  this  event  but  to   the  vast (about   60,000)    unseen   home   audience,   Benny explained in  his  patient,   mock-earnest inflections  that  he was  "making  my first  appearance  on the air  professionally.  By that  I  mean  I  am  finally  getting  paid, which  will  be a  great  relief  to my creditors."  
By  comparison   with  his  later  self-castigation, this was   almost   flattery.  But the seed  of  the Benny  syndrome  was  already visible, it's interesting  to  note,  however,  that  during  this  early  stage,  he  concentrated  on  the  outgoing   insult, the  insult   directed   toward   others. 
For  example,  after  his  opening  monologue  on  the  first  broadcast,  he said:  
"Oh,  George,  come  here—I  want  you  to say 'hello' to the folks."  
GEORGE:  "Hello, everybody."   
JACK:  "That  was  George  Olsen,  ladies  and  gentlemen.  He rehearsed  that  speech  all week." 
 
Even  the  stingy   insult,   which  by  now of  course  homes  to  Benny  like  a  faithful  shaggy  dog,  was out-going  then.  On  the same  show,  Jack  used  this  one  on  Olsen:  
"He  invited  me to dinner  the other  night,  much to his  own surprise,  and he  paid  the check  with  a  $5  bill  that  was  in his  pocket  so long  that  Lincoln's  eyes  were  blood-shot."   
Olsen  was  the hapless  target  for most  of the sponsored  abuse  that night.  There  was  really  no other  target  available.   Thorgerson  was  not an integrated  member  of the cast  (as was  announcer  Don  Wilson  later),  and  therefore  not fair  game.   
Ethel   Shutta  was—and  for  that   master  still is—a lady,  and ladies  were never insulted  on the  Benny  show,  except  for  the  mythical   ones  like   Benny's   off-stage  girl  friend  on  the  first  program  who,  he said,  "poses  for  the beauty  ads  entitled  'before  taking.'" 
 Years  later  the  Lincoln joke  turned  up  again  the   show, only  now  Benny   himself  was  the  object,  Fred  Allen  was  the  aggressor,  the  $5  bill  had  been  devalued to a nickel  and  Lincoln  had  become an  Indian.   
This  was  only a  small  sample  of the infinite  variety  of  the  same  old  things  on  the  Benny  program.  Old  jokes  never  die  there.  They  merely  dissemble.   
Once accorded   the   tribute of   studio audience laughter, a  Benny  joke  is  apt to  become a  tradition.  The  same  may  be  said  of  the  familiar  cast  of characters on  the  show,  most  of  whom  were  hired  on  the  most  tentative  terms  and then  simply  stayed  and stayed. 
'Who  Goes There?'  
The  longevity   figures  on  some  of  the  people  connected  with  Benny  read  a  bit  like  the seniority  chart  of  a  life  insurance  office:  Don  Wilson,  24 years;  Eddie  "Rochester"  Anderson,  21  years;  Dennis  Day,  19 years; Mel  Blanc,  15 years;  guitar  player  Frank  Remley, 20 years;  writers  Sam  Perrin  and  George  Balzer,  15 years.  
When   Benny   tells   his  secretary, Bert   Scott   (16  years), "Send in the new  writers," he means  Hal  Goldman  and  Al  Gordon,  who have   been   with  him  eight years.  
But  by  far the  oldest thing  on the show   (next  to  Benny)  is  the money  bit, which  received  what   many   consider its apotheosis  several  years  ago  in a  situation  that  had Benny  going  down  to the secret  vault  under  his  house  where  he hoards  his cash.  
It  was for  the  most  part  a  pure   sound  gag. For nearly  a  full  minute  nothing  was  heard  from  the  stage  but  the  tap-tap  of  Benny's  footsteps down  an  apparently  endless staircase toward  the  vault.  As the  descent  became  deeper  and  deeper,  the idea  became  more, and more preposterous, Benny's stinginess  became more  and more fantastic  and the studio  audience became  more  and  more  hysterical with  laughter.
For  the  sake  of  comparison it might  be  argued  that,  had  Fred   Allen   used  the  same   joke,  he  would   have   stopped   at   the   first   landing;    Bob  Hope    perhaps   would  have  gone  as far as the  second  landing,  and  any  number  of  others  would  have  gone  to a   third  landing.   
Benny  went  all the way to  some  incredibly  subterranean   cellar  and when  he  reached   bottom  a  guard  called out: 
"Who  goes  there?"   
The   timing  and execution   came   off  perfectly,  the  response  was overwhelming,  and it  was in  fact   very   funny.   And  this  is Benny's  art,  take  it or leave it.  
"Like  everything  I've  ever  done  on the show,"  Jack  said   recently, "becoming  the  butt  of  the jokes may have  started  on one program  and  gotten  such  a  good  response  that  we  Just  kept  it  up.  I  can't  say that  I  appreciated  its lasting  value  at  first.  It just  happened  by  accident.   
"Like   the Fred  Allen  feud.  If we had  contrived  the thing,  if  we had said,  'Let's  start   a  feud,'   it  wouldn't  have  lasted  a week.   That's  the way all the jokes  that  have  stayed  with  me  started.   They  all  started   with   one  joke." 
 
TOMORROW:   The Benny  Era. 
 


I was with an elementary school class trip back around 1966 or so that went to see three episodes of "To Tell the Truth" being taped, and as part of the warm-up, Johnny Olson and an elderly woman (in hindsight obviously a plant) in the audience did the "Ireland / Coney Ireland" bit. Even if the station manager didn't like it, the third graders and the adults in the TTTT audience thought it was funny. Nice to see the dialect pun had a high-class pedigree if Jack really did think it up.
ReplyDeleteI defy anyone to dislike anything Johnny Olson did. He was the best.
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