Sunday, 13 March 2016

Jack Benny, 1938

Jack Benny’s professional life had settled into a bit of a rhythm in 1938. There were no changes to the cast of his radio show (which hovered near the top of the ratings), Paramount had him in one picture a year and the vaudeville revue he had been headlining with the Chicken Sisters and others had been put away. He was still making charity appearances and had moved into his new home on Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills.

Let’s leaf through the pages of Variety, both the Hollywood and New York editions, to see what “our little star” was up to. I’ve avoided minutiae about movie castings, costume fittings, social outings, writing junkets to Lake Arrowhead and the controversy over finding a summer replacement show (eventually, General Foods decided on “Hobby Lobby”).

The picture Never Say Die was turned into a vehicle for Bob Hope; producer Arthur Hornblow thought it was better suited to him than Benny. Blonde Hungarian Franciska Gaal vanished from the cast; reading between the lines in Variety, Paramount felt she had problems with English and dropped her option by year’s end. Weekly Variety, for a time, had squibs commenting on Jack’s radio shows in addition to the usual review of the season premiere. Eddie Anderson began to be more prominently featured due to his tremendous popularity. Vocalist Kenny Baker signed to do Texaco Star Theatre; a year later, he dumped Jack’s show to concentrate fully on that. And at the end of the year, the smuggling case that resulted in charges against Jack (and George Burns) began coming to light.

January 7, 1938
Latest picture player to join list of horse owners is Eddie Anderson, Negro actor now at Warners in 'Jezebel.' Anderson purchased Porto Pal, two-year-old this week and has hired a trainer to ready nag for Santa Anita running. Anderson also is on the Jack Benny air show.

Sacramento, Jan. 7.—Although Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy are leading in the nation-wide poll currently being conducted by dailies in 46 key cities to determine the most popular ether feature, Sacramento has thrown the nod to One Man's Family, it was revealed in a vote count today.
Second place locally goes to Jack Benny, with Bergen and McCarthy poor third.

January 10, 1938
Numerous stars of films and radio will appear Saturday. Jan. 22 at the Hollywood Warners theatre in a benefit for the widow and child of the late Ted Healy. Jack Benny heads list. Others include: James Cagney, Pat O'Brien, Olsen and Johnson, John Boles, Al Jolson, John McCormick, Phil Baker, Dick Powell, George Jessel, Rudy Vallee, Ray Bolger, Bert Wheeler and Spencer Tracy.
Tickets are on sale at the Warners Hollywood boxoffice.
Entertainment committee includes Bryan Foy, Harry Seymour, Lew Cooper and Sol Dolgin.

January 11, 1938
Oklahoma City, Jan. 10.—Charlie McCarthy polled 605 votes to win local radio pop contest with 523 putting Bing Crosby in second and 493 for Jack Benny.
Followed Burns-Allen 132; Nelson Eddy, 110; Fred Allen, 99; Rudy Vallee. 97; Bob Burns, 75; One Man's Family, 54; Charles Butterworth, 50; Don Ameche, 47; Fibber McGee, 38.

January 12, 1938
San Francisco, Jan, 11.
Now that Jack Benny and his Jello gang have hied themselves back to Hollywood, local offices of General Foods and NBC are resuming normal activity for the first time in more than a week. Unprecedented demand for admission tickets to Benny's two broadcasts from the Community Playhouse, a 660-seater in the Western Women's Club building, here Sunday (9), had the sponsor and NBC in a dither ever since word got out that Benny was coming to town.
More than 30,000 written requests were received, in addition to an unestimated flood of telephone calls which kept both General Foods and NBC switchboards buzzing continually throughout the week. Execs and other employees, from managers to office boys, were deluged with pleas for ducats, many of the requests coming from almost-forgotten friends or acquaintances who had dropped out of sight for years. Among requests was one from the office of Governor Frank Merriam of California.
Tom Harrington and Bill Stuart of Young & Rubicam came up from Hollywood to supervise arrangements for the broadcasts. Gag writers Bill Morrow and Ed Beloin also in town. Benny, with Morrow and Beloin, met the local radio scribes last Wednesday at a breakfast in the Hotel St. Francis. Comedian said then he hoped to come to San Francisco for another personal appearance in about three months.

January 15, 1938
Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy have been added to the lineup of talent which will participate in the Warm Springs Foundation broadcast tonight over National Broadcasting blue web. Others who volunteered their services yesterday were Jack Benny, Walter O'Keefe, Dorothy Lamour, Tony Martin, Alice Faye and Kenny Baker.

New York, Jan. 14.—Broadway personalities chipped in $57,000 today for the Federation of Jewish Charities, at a luncheon held at the Astor hotel, in honor of Louis Sobol, columnist. Ed Wynn emceed the spread. Speakers were Judge Joseph M. Proskauer, Louis Nizer, Ben Bernie and Sobol. Total of $168,000 has been raised by the amusement industry in the federation's campaign, $50,000 of which was contributed by Hollywood. Coast contribs include Phil Baker, Eddie Cantor, Jack Benny and Louis K. Sidney.

January 18, 1938
Bill Morrow and Ed Beloin, writers of the Jack Benny airshow, report at Paramount today to write dialog for 'Never Say Die,' next Benny picture. Raoul Walsh will direct.



January 19, 1938
San Francisco... Lloyd Yoder is in the dog house with Carl Kroenke because he thought the NBC actor was trying to crash the gates for the Jack Benny show last week. Kroenke took the part of the Chinaman. Yoder had been told Benny would use a real Chinese for the part. [The broadcast was on Jan. 12. Yoder was a manager for NBC].

January 22, 1938
Dale Armstrong, LA Times radio editor, debuts new quarter hour airviewer on KFI Tuesday. Program known as Radiolio deals with interviews of topnotch airists. Jack Benny will be first to face mike with Armstrong. Tuesday night interviews held by Armstrong on KFAC have been cancelled.

January 29, 1938
Carole Lombard, Martha Raye, Burns and Allen and Jack Benny with Mary Livingstone will be bit players in Par's 'Cocoanut Grove.' According to the script, they will make brief appearances at the Grove in the pic. (What happened to Warners 'Garden of the Moon' starring the same night spot?).

January 31, 1938
Mary Livingstone has a platinum cigarette case with jewel charms that Jack Benny spent six months in collecting. The charms include three star sapphires and an old Maxwell done in diamonds.

February 1, 1938
In an exchange of guests, Jack Benny will appear on Metro's 'Good News' broadcast (17) and Robert Taylor goes on the Jello program (13). Deal is also on for a similar arrangement between Phil Baker and Metro for Taylor to do a swap for Baker's nemesis, Beetle (Ward Wilson) who has been haunting various shows.

February 2, 1938
As a gesture to Phil Harris, who is doing a dance stand at the Palomar, Jack Benny will take his radio troupe to the nitery tomorrow night for some impromptu hijinks. Program will be aired over Columbia coast network.

Chase & Sanborn's Sunday night hour on NBC zooms to an all time C.A.B. popularity rating of 44.9 in the latest compilation of that copyrighted trade barometer. This is a jump of around 7 points since the Mae West-Don Ameche skit that caused all the uproar, censorship threats, apologies, spankings and headaches.
Looks like the public is not concerned with the moral aspects of the much-vaunted case. Or that the front page and pulpit advertising compensated for all the difficulties by stimulating an audience perkup.
By the standards, and on the mathematical logic of C.A.B., figure of 44.9 means that about half the radio sets in the United States tuned in on the Edgar Bergen-Charlie McCarthy gallop.
In the half hour group Jack Benny romps in with 36.9 in the latest report.

February 9, 1938
More than 100 of filmdom's top personalities have volunteered their services as entertainers for the Screen Stars' Spring festival for the benefit of Mount Sinai Hospital and Clinic, to be held Feb. 28 at the Palomar. George Jessel is general chairman, and also will serve as master of ceremonies.
Funds will be used to finance the new clinic, where the needy are given free treatment and medicine.
Among the first to enlist for the program were Phil Harris, whose orchestra is the current attraction at the ballroom, and Jack Benny.
Max E. Marx, executive secretary of the clinic, announced that tickets for the benefit are available at Mount Sinai downtown headquarters, 416 West Eighth street.

February 12, 1938
Phil Harris and the Jello air troupe, minus Jack Benny and Mary Livingstone, will guest on the Jack Oakie program Tuesday.

February 14, 1938
Eddie Anderson, currently in Warners 'Golddiggers in Paris' with Rudy Vallee, has dotted lined for a 13 week spot on the Jack Benny air program.

February 17, 1938
Fanny (Baby Snooks) Brice draws Jack Benny as a partner in her great love scene for Metro's Good News of 1938 today. After playing similar scenes with Robert Taylor, Clark Gable, Jimmy Stewart and Lou Gehrig, Miss Brice said after last night's rehearsals: Making mike-love with Benny is like shadow boxing; it's a lot of work but no one gets hurt.'

February 21, 1938
Jack Benny has compromised Board of Tax Appeals claim that radio comic was deficient $7,756 on his income tax for 1934. Benny will pay $4,500.

February 23, 1938
Jeanette MacDonald, Jack Benny, Edgar Bergen, Bob Burns and Allan Jones will furnish entertainment at testimonial dinner for Louis B. Mayer in Biltmore ballroom tomorrow night. Edward Ward will be musical director.

March 11, 1938
On short vacation, Jack Benny leaves for New York Monday (14) and his March 27 broadcast will originate from there. Benny will be accompanied by his writers Bill Morrow and Eddie Beloin, and Andy Devine. Mary Livingstone, Benny's wife, remains in Hollywood, while Kate Smith has been engaged to appear on the eastern broadcast.
Comic is slated to return here in time for his April 3 broadcast and then starts preparations for his starring spot in Paramount's 'Artists and Models." Arthur Hornblow, Jr., is producing.

March 12, 1938
Cliff Nazarro does a repeater on the Jack Benny broadcast Sunday with his double talk.

March 15, 1938
Jack Benny and Joe Penner will be on Phil Baker's broadcast Sunday to help him observe his fifth anniversary on the air. Special script is being dished up by Hal Block, Art Phillips and Nat Perrin.
Baker takes his troupe east after airing (27) for NY originations remainder of the current series. He will take a summer layoff of 13 weeks and return in early fall under his same sponsorship, Gulf Oil.

March 16, 1938
Hubbell Robinson of Young & Rubicam agency has the lead article in the current Scribner's magazine. It's heap big ballyhoo for Y. & R.’s Jello account and Jack Benny, but Robinson got paid for it.
Jack Benny is kidding Tom Harrington of Young & Rubicam because it was averred in the Scribner's article that the Jello program wanted jokes that were not too funny. Some mystery as to how that idea crept into the tale. Not in the original.

March 18, 1938
Film and radio personalities will provide the ‘flesh’ show, with a preview of a Warners feature as screen fare, at the benefit entertainment set by the Women's Welfare league for midnight, Saturday, at the Carthay Circle theatre.
Among those who will participate in the bill are Mischa Auer, Jack Benny, Bonita Granville, Billy Roberts, Dolores Costello, Mickey Rooney, Sidney Miller, Junior Coghlan, Rudy Vallee, the Galli Sisters, Jack Mulhall, Clarence Muse, Donald Crisp, George Jessel and the Fanchon and Marco girls.

March 21, 1938
Frisco Chatter... 1939 Exposition has assurance that Jack Benny, Chase & Sanborn, Burns and Allen and several Columbia shows will originate in Treasure Island's radio hall, planned to seat several thousands.

March 22, 1938
George Jessel helps Jack Benny celebrate his birthday on Jello broadcast here April 3. Next Sunday's airing is from New York with guesters including Kate Smith, Fred Allen, Robert Ripley, Harry Von Zell and Abe Lyman's orchestra.

April 4, 1938
Jack Benny is back from his short New York vacation scheduled to star in Paramount's 'Artists and Models' as his next picture, under direction of Mitchell Leisen.

Gals and Gab... Bill Morrow planting a blow-up cigaret with Phil Harris just before the Jack Benny show and frightening Joan Bennett who was visiting in the control room.

April 4, 1938
Sam Hearn's Frisco p.a. Sam Hearn has obtained leave-of-absence from his radio chore on the Jack Benny show for next Sunday (10). Comic opens week's personal appearance at the Golden Gate theatre, San Francisco, Wednesday (6). Leo Morrison handled the deal.

April 13, 1938
Jack Osterman column... Jack Benny told us [Al] Jolson promised Ruby [Keeler] he had sworn off betting on the nags, and on their way to Benny's new home she asked, 'Al, how far is it?' Jolson answered, "Only six furlongs more'.

Jack Benny and Phil Baker both used a burlesque of Metro's 'Yank at Oxford' on their shows last Sunday night (10). It was particularly unfortunate since the programs are in sequence, although not on the same networks.
Benny show, over WEAF for Jello, Benny show, was a punchy session for the series, particularly in the early portion, Baker show, on the other hand, was a weakie. Flock of misfire gags and labored puns weren't even close to average for the show. On more than one occasion the wait for an expected laugh that didn't come tossed the timing off.

April 20, 1938
Headliners added to the entertainment program for the Tri-Guild Ball Thursday (21) at the Cocoanut Grove include Jack Benny, George Burns and Gracie Allen in a specialty act; Frank Morgan and Gloria Stuart in a comedy skit; Freddie Fisher's Schnickelfritz Band, Maxine Sullivan, Bill Robinson, Judy Garland, Fanny Brice and her Baby Snooks routine, Ethel Merman and Bob Burns in a surprise number. Entertainment will supplement dinner and dancing, affair being first given jointly by Screen Actors Guild, Screen Directors Guild and Screen Writers Guild.

April 21, 1938
Jack Benny will give his own version of 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs' with members of his Jello cast taking the various parts during their airing Sunday on National red network.

April 23, 1938
Final title on Par's Jack Benny musical will be ‘Artists and Models Aboard.’ Had been ‘Artists and Models of 1938.’ Picture rolls May 2 under Mitchell Leisen. Arthur Hornblow, Jr., produces. Only cast set besides Benny is the Yacht Club Boys. [Mary Boland was signed days later. Joan Bennett was signed as well].

April 28, 1938
Rochester, butler to Jack Benny, has entered the Jack Benny Maxwell in the annual Fresno Hack Race, at Fresno State College, Friday. Race is for jaloppies 13 years old or more. Slow motion automobile feature will be ethered on Blue network of National Broadcasting from 2:30 to 3 p.m.

May 11, 1938
Two-comedians-with-one-idea is a situation that has bobbed up repeatedly through the present season. And Sunday seems the one night when the odds favor it. It happened again (8) when Jack Benny, at 7, over NBC, and Phil Baker, at 7:30. over CBS, had Mother's Day routines and also references (though here the resemblance was less close) to mayors.
Both programs were puffing a bit from the hard work of stabbing at the giggle-bag. Both had some classy moments and funny gaga. And both measured the river bottom of humor.

May 18, 1938
Mary Kelley has joined Phil Baker's supporting troupe on the Gulf Oil show. She was formerly with Jack Benny and Eddie Cantor.

May 23, 1938
JACK BENNY broke a standing rule on his program yesterday by opening a two chapter version of a current motion picture, 'The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,' Selznick-International production. Heretofore Benny has refused to carry over his comic versions of films. SI got a three appearance plug and full credits with the announcement a week ago, first chapter last night and concluding one next Sunday.

May 28, 1938
Jack Benny will act as master of ceremonies for the Motion Picture Electrical Pageant which will be held the night of June 9 at the Coliseum as one of the features of the Shrine convention.

June 1, 1938
Jack Benny gave most of his 30 minutes last Sunday night (29) to goofy dramatizations. In and out, but mostly missing. First part had the comic practicing for the rehearsal for his next Paramount picture. He had the blackface, Rochester, reading Joan Bennett's lines. Fair, though obvious.
Latter portion was a continuation of his previous week's Tom Sawyer takeoff. Benny doubled as Tom and the schoolmaster. Andy Devine was Huck Finn, Mary Livingstone was Becky Thatcher. Phil Harris was Tom's sissy brother, Sid. Most of the laughs came near the close, when the schoolmaster coached the class to get off all sorts of jibes at Fred Allen. Familiar mock ribbing fest.

June 8, 1938
Phil Baker and Jack Benny both had 'echo' gags Sunday. This routine has possibly been done more this season and by more comics than any other. A moratorium is perhaps in order. [Harry Baldwin played the echo on the Benny show].

June 9, 1938
Commercial radio shows picked up a nice gain in average ratings this spring over a corresponding period last year, it is revealed in a table of comparisons compiled for its subscribers by Cooperative Analysis of Broadcasting (Crossley). Seasonal canvass discloses that the 10 leading programs in rural areas are, in the following order, Chase & Sanborn, Jack Benny, Major Bowes, Lowell Thomas, National Barn Dance, Burns and Allen, Town Hall, Lux Radio Theatre, One Man's Family and Phil Baker. Seven of the ten are listed as most favored by urban listeners.

June 10, 1938
Joan Bennett will do a love scene with Jack Benny on his Jello airer Sunday, plugging their Paramount picture, ‘Artists and Models Abroad.’

June 11, 1938
Jack Benny and his writers, Bill Morrow and Ed Beloin, have postponed their summer vacations to work on the next Benny film for Paramount. Picture will follow closely on current 'Artists and Models Abroad.' Benny was going to Honolulu with the scripters headed for South America.

June 22, 1938
Jack Benny will do another guest appearance en Lux Soap's dramatic series over CBS July 11. Comic parts with General Foods (Jell-O) for the summer following the June 26 broadcast.

June 30, 1938
Jack Benny yesterday tore up the contracts of Bill Morrow and Eddie Beloin, his radio writers, and handed them new ones. Only change in the tickets, which run to 1941, was in the coin, which was considerably upped.

July 11, 1938
Jack Benny has been set as master of ceremonies for the annual polo benefit for the Motion Picture Relief Fund, which will be held Sunday at Uplifters Field. Ginger Rogers and Joan Bennett are sponsoring the opposing teams.

July 14, 1938
Jack Benny moves into new Beverly Hills manse today.

July 20, 1938
Jack Benny will head cast of 'Man About Town' at Paramount. Mark Sandrich will direct. Arthur Hornblow will produce. Picture will not get under way until Nov.

July 30, 1938
Jack Benny will do a solo vacation, driving east, while Mary Livingstone staying home to mind the children [sic].

August 10, 1938
Eddie Anderson starts work today at Paramount in 'Thanks For the Memory.' Actor's picture name will be Rochester, same as used on his Jack Benny radio broadcast.

August 12, 1938
Bill Morrow, radio writer for Jack Benny, has long nursed a yen to loll on the beach at Waikiki. Last week he sailed for the isle to rest up before the fall grind begins. When his boat landed he was taken off on a stretcher and rushed to a hospital for an emergency operation. He'll pass two weeks in ward two.

August 24, 1938
Lineup of talent for Texaco's Star Theatre, debutting on the Columbia network Oct. 5, has virtually been set. Adolphe Menjou will do the emceeing and take an occasional dramatic fling on the petrol show with his wife, Veree Teasdale. Presiding over the comedy section will be Charles Ruggles and Una Merkel. On the vocal end will be Jane Froman and Kenny Baker. Latter doubles over from Jack Benny's Jello show. David Broekman's 35-piece crew fills the music niche.
Dramatic section will feature guesters from pictures and will be tied in with Max Reinhard't Workshop. Program airs here from 9:30 to 10:30 p.m. on Wednesday nights, the first half bucking Fred Allen in the east. Broadcast originates in Hollywood's KNX main studio, heard along the coast at 6:30 p.m.

August 31, 1938
Cecil B. DeMille turns actor over the air on the Lux Radio Theatre Sept. 26 with Jack Benny and Mary Livingston. Will be the producer's first radio acting spot though he is the emcee. Play will be modern radio version of Seven Keys to Baldpate.
DeMille is cast as himself. Will be the first time he has acted, he declares, since playing role of faro dealer in 'The Squaw Man,' his first motion picture production filmed 25 years ago.

September 1, 1938
Dorothy Lamour gets co-star spot with Jack Benny in Paramount's 'Man About Town,' which Mark Sandrich will direct as an Arthur Hornblow, Jr., production. This is Miss Lamour's top assignment, coming as result of her work in Spawn of the North.
Comedy based on Benn Levy's original screen play is being scripted by Allan Scott, and starts Nov. 14.

September 14, 1938
Radio's golden stream will pour over $5,000,000 into the coffers of film players in the next 39 weeks. Coin spread more than doubles the largesse scattered last season. Around 600 players will drag down that bonanza— and Uncle Sam won't be standing around in boxing gloves, either.
Top coin for a name player is still pegged at $5,000 a guest shot. Jack Benny, now a definite picture personality, still nets himself around $12,000 a week, and there are others nicking the sponsorial hander-outers for equally important wherewithal.

Plans for a ban on film stars who are also featured on the radio are underway in upstate New York today following special sessions here of the Allied Theatre Owners of New York, Inc. More than 300 independent exhibitors who are members of the association went on record as opposing appearances of film aces on the airwaves, charging that such radio programs are cutting heavily into their business. They are now trying to line up some kind of support for a direct appeal to major studios to ban players from the radio.
Lead in the battle was taken by Max A. Cohen of New York, president of the Allied Theatre Owners. His attack on such stars as Jack Benny, who receives substantial incomes from both films and radio, stole the limelight at the meeting here, called to discuss the role of the independents in the U. S. anti-trust suit against the major companies.

Orders currently on hand with the networks indicate that Jack Benny's program for Jell-O will this season again have the largest commercial hookup of stations, in the U. S. and Canada. Following are the programs that are slated to have from 60 stations up:
Jack Benny 113
Al Jolson 112
Edw. G. Robinson 112

September 17, 1938
Paramount initiated 110 members into its American Legion Post. Members include: Jack Benny, Bob Burns, Raoul Walsh. William Wellman and James Hogan, most of whom transferred from other posts. Officiating was Corydon Hill, commander of the 24th district.

September 24, 1938
Jack Benny’s race nag. Buck Benny, will be brought to the Count for the Santa Anita season. Steel will travel with the Alfred Vanderbilt string.

September 28, 1938
Dorothy Griwatz, one of C. B. DeMille's five secretaries, getting good natured ribbing for playing role of herself in boss' Jack Benny-Mary Livingstone airshow. [Article means the Benny-Livingstone appearance on “Lux.” The Benny show hadn’t returned from its summer break].

BENNY, DEMILLE and BENNY
'Seven Keys to Baldpate'
LUX
Monday, 9 P.M.
WABC-CBS, New York
(J. Walter Thompson)
Radio reviewing is peculiarly tough. Take this case. Smart spotlight ads in the dailies must have aroused keen anticipation in radio fans. They promised that Lux would deliver Jack Benny and Mary Livingstone (Mrs. Benny) and that Cecil B. DeMille would turn actor. There were other flavorsome dishes, including more comedy about 'The Bee' promised. It added up on paper to terrific audience-guaranteeing showmanship.
Now granting the premise that it was an attraction that would be S.R.O. in the family parlors, there are two thoughts that immediately complicate radio reviewing. First, what is the point of boredom and in what ratio to the total listening audience will the results of boredom be effective? If a given line-up of talent can draw, let us say, 10,000,000 listeners and 35% tune off after 12 minutes, the residue may still be large enough and important enough to be a good buy for the sponsor. Making a chump out of mere criticism. A second point in the dilemma of the critic is that the invisible audience cannot be seen actually walking out as in a theatre. Everything is thus thrown back on intuitive guesswork. But it's a cinch a theatre audience would walk if this noisy, wandering, only occasionally funny and hopelessly old-fashioned piece was offered them.
It started out with a couple of minutes of flip exchange between the Bennys. It brought DeMille into the situation smoothly. But once the would-be playwright arrived at Baldpate Lodge to write, and the interminable series of screams, quaint people and other interruptions began, the program was puffing on the ropes. It was much too long and that goes double for the spaces, between laughs.
Admitting that the Benny comedy formula is the most effective on the air, that it has built and held a steady C.A.B. rating, that it has produced many half-hours of top-flight humor, this one proved that it can go wrong in the big way: Here it exposed all its mechanism. It creaked, wheezed, strained. And was, with interruptions, downright dull.
Legitimate division of opinion may, of course, exist as to the shrewdness of forever talking about making moving pictures in Hollywood. Shop talk has apparently become an obsession with Benny and his writers. Nobody will take this seriously so long as that rating stays sky-high, of course. And nobody will take this review seriously, either, unless the Lux program tumbles a few points, to further suggest a correlation. Land.

October 7, 1938
JACK BENNY
With Mary Livingstone, Kenny Baker, Phil Harris, Don Wilson
Comedy, Songs, Band
30 Mins.
JELL-O
Sun., 7 p. m.
WEAF-NBC, New York
(Young & Rubicam)
What stood out in Jack Benny's re-entry in the 1938-39 C.A.B. steeplechase last weekend (2) was the novel way he introduced himself and the members of the cast. Each was sketched as hurriedly getting ready for the opening broadcast, and the whole thing added up to an unbroken fusillade of sock laughs. After that it was nip and tuck.
Most of the exchanges earned the usual Benny wallop, but there was one interval that sounded as though the troupe was taking time out to toss a hot potato. But even this doubtful interlude was compensated for. That came with the reading of a wire from Fred Allen, which said that he had heard the Benny program and that motion pictures would continue to be his best entertainment.
Benny had apparently elected to limit the participants to his permanent payroll for the opening installment. In addition to Mary Livingstone, Kenny Baker. Phil Harris and the salesman-stooge, Don Wilson, there was the blackface valet, 'Rochester,' and the perennial door-rapper with the quick rib. Among the nifty touches in the script was the foundation laid, for Kenny's British-imported valet. Kenny also contributed added underpinning to his status as one of radio's choice interpreters of romantic ditties. His voice and style are still making strides upward. Odec.

NBC's Radio City on the Coast was pressed into service last Sunday (2) at least two weeks before the plant will be ready for occupancy. Signal Carnival, a regional show, initiated the chain's signal from Sunset and Vine. Next week Jack Benny and Bob Hope move into the new quarters.
New plant will be opened without gala ceremony. Charge of 40 cents will be made for tours through the plant, the same price as prevails at Columbia down the street. Charles Thurman, in charge of guest relations for NBC in New York, is in L. A. to supervise the setup.

October 7, 1938
NBC is accused of none too affable treatment of Robert Wadlow, 8-foot, 8-inch giant, at the Jello broadcast last Sunday night. After he had consented to pose with Jack Benny and other members of the troupe for publicity stills he was gently escorted out of the studio and not allowed to remain for the show although he held two tickets. Network has the right to deny admission to the studio to any ticket holder and the premise for such action in this instance was that he would detract too much attention from the players on the stage. Wadlow took it as big as his stature and offered no protest although he had sought out the tickets to watch the show. NBC flackery stated that the stills taken with Wadlow will not be used.

October 14, 1938
Paramount yesterday set Jack Benny to star in ‘The Man In Evening Clothes,’ script for which is now being written by Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett. Harlan Thompson will produce. Picture will go into work in January, by which time Benny will have completed 'Man About Town.' [Dorothy Lamour signed as well].

October 18, 1938
PUBLICITY stunt concocted by Irving Parker for Earl Carroll's theatre-restaurant backfired yesterday when the ceremonial figures, W. C. Fields, Eddie Cantor and Jack Benny, clad in overalls as day laborers, went overboard on plugs for their radio commercials. News of the Day cameramen were on the job and ground away while the groundbreaking hijinks were being indulged. When the print was run off it developed that the comedians were trying to outshout each other on the products they sell on the air. News reel outfit decided to junk the whole clip.

November 2, 1938
Artists and Models Abroad
(WITH SONGS)
Hollywood, Oct. 26.
Paramount release of Arthur Hornblow, Jr. production. Stars Jack Benny and Joan Bennett; features Mary Boland, Charley Grapewin, Yacht Club Boys, Fritz Feld. Directed by Mitchell Leisen, Screenplay by Howard Lindsay, Russell Crouse, Ken Englund; from original story by Lindsay and Crouse, based on idea by J. P. McEvoy, Songs by Ralph Rainger and Leo Robin, Yacht Club Boys and Jock Rock. Musical direction, Boris Morros; camera, Ted Tetzlaff; asst. director, Richard Harlan; special effects, Farciot Edouart; editor, Doane Harrison. Previewed at Westwood Village, Oct. 25, '38, Running time, 90 mins.
Buck Boswell ... Jack Benny
Patricia Harper ... Joan Bennett
Mrs. Isabel Channing ... Mary Boland
James Harper ... Charley Grapewin
Yacht Club Boys ... Themselves
Dubois ... Fritz Feld
Marie ... Phyllis Kennedy
Gantvoort ... Monty Woolley
Elliott Winthrop ... George P. Huntley
Chickle ... Joyce Compton
Madame Brissard . . . Adrienne D'Ambricourt
Brissard ... Andre Cheron
Chaumont ... Jules Raucourt
Prefect of Police ... Georges Renavent
Simpson ... Chester Glute
Count Vassilly ... Alex Melesh
Dodie ... Dolores Cusey
Becky ... Sheila Darcy
Red ... Yvonne Duval
Kansas ... Marie De Forest
Miss America ... Gwen Kenyon
Jersey ... Joyce Mathews
Punkins ... Mary Parker
This is Paramount's second annual edition of the 'Artists and Models' series. Original was decidedly a filmusical, with numerous specialties, but the studio has shied away from the main ingredients which characterized its predecessor and, instead, 'Artists and Models Abroad' is straight farce comedy. The models in a fashion show and the artists are missing entirely. Despite its departure from formula, it's substantial laugh entertainment that will hit better than average biz. Jack Benny dominates most of the action, and scores continually with crisp and zippy dialog.
Benny heads a troupe of American entertainers stranded in Paris. Texas oil millionaire Charley Grapewin and his daughter, Joan Bennett, are recruited into the group under impression they, too, are penniless Americans. Tossed out of a hotel, troupe beds down in Feminine Arts building, giving Benny a chance to promote the girls into the fashion show. Missing jewels bring the gendarmes for further complications, but troupe finally starts homeward after a mad mixup is untangled.
Romance between Benny and Miss Bennett is held in restraint, affair is sincerely put over but without getting into clinches, Benny has dropped enough poundage to make his leading man role convincing. Miss Bennett parades an eye-filling wardrobe throughout.
The Yacht Club Boys have a few spots for some effective clowning, and Charley Grapewin, Mary Boland, Joyce Compton and Phyllis Kennedy are likewise effective.
Yarn was especially tailored for Benny, and most effectively. Mitchell Leisen's direction is topnotch, and he carries the picture through at a speedy pace. Photography hits a high mark of quality, and Paris backgrounds are of exceptional merit.
Fashion tableaux in the Palace of Feminine Arts is a dazzling, display of creations by the noted Parisian couturiers — Alix, Paquin, Lanvin, Patou, Lelong, Schiaparelli, Maggy Rouft and Worth.
Musical portion is restricted to four numbers, a specialty by the Yacht Club Boys, written by themselves, two songs, and one number used as background during the fashion show. No production presentations aside from the clothes show. Specialty by the Yachters is 'You're Broke, You Dope'; pair of melodies are 'Do the Buckaroo' and 'What Have You Got That Gets Me?', by Ralph Rainger and Leo Robin, dovetailed into the action. Both tunes are limited to one verse and chorus each, handled by Benny, the Yacht Clubbers and showgirls. They're planted nicely without background flash and put over primarily as part of the action. 'You're Lovely Madame' is the vocal ensemble number, and has the best chance for pop appeal.
Paramount gave the picture top production mounting. Sets are elaborate, but do not detract from action and story movement.

November 11, 1938
Masquers tonight toss testimonial dinner for Jack Benny and Edgar Bergen at club quarters on N. Sycamore.
Edward Earle will preside as chairman. William Collier, Sr., prexy, will be toastmaster and Charlie McCarthy will be official host, making Bergen earn his supper.
Mario Chamlee of Metropolitan Opera heads show after dinner.

November 16, 1938
NBC last week sold its first regular hookup on the blue (WJZ) link since the introduction of the new system of added discounts for those buying blue supplementaries. Armco is the account. It will fill the 3 to 3:30 segment Sunday afternoons, starting Jan. 15, with its usual brass band performance. Contract is for 42 stations. Network's station relations department has assured several affiliates on the blue that NBC would prevail upon the Jell-O division of General Foods to move Jack Benny over to the latter link from the red (WEAF). Benny got started on the blue, with the switch to the red taking place in 1936.

November 18, 1938
Jack Benny is planning to go east after first of the year and do several of the Jello broadcasts from the other seaboard. Don Wilson, who announces and participates in the Sunday hijinks, would sub a pinch-hitter on the Joe E. Brown program, on which he also barks the commercials. Entire troupe with the possible exception of Phil Harris would make the trip. [Warren Hull filled in for Wilson on the Brown show].

November 26, 1938
Sudden switch in plan will take the Jack Benny Jello airshow to New York for two weeks following tomorrow night's offering. Company trains out Monday on Super Chief on what representatives said was a personal business' trip for the comedian.
Those set to make the trip will be Mary Livingston, Bill Morrow and Ed Beloin, writers, Don Wilson and Rochester. Phil Harris will commute by plane for the two eastern shows from his night spot engagement in the Wilshire Bowl.
Benny is trying to make arrangements to fly Andy Devine east for the Sunday (11) show. It will be Devine's first trip to Gotham, giving scripters different slant to build show around.
Benny has cancelled shooting schedule on his next Paramount picture 'Man About Town' set to roll next week.

December 2, 1938
Paramount yesterday set Dec. 12 as starting date on ‘Man About Town,’ Jack Benny starrer, which Mark Sandrich will direct. Harold Lewis has been set as sound recorder.

December 5, 1938
Jack Benny is being sought by the [San Francisco] Call-Bulletin for a mammoth Christmas party in the Civic Auditorium.

December 7, 1938
New York. Dec. 6.—List of 100 film and radio names was being scrutinized by federal authorities today in connection with the indictment of Mrs. Elma N. Lauer, wife of a state supreme court justice, over an alleged smuggling plot.
Investigation revolves around Albert N. Chaperau, self-styled Nicaragua commercial attache, and friend of Mrs. Lauer who also is under indictment.
Among those who have appeared before the grand jury, which accuses Chaperau of smuggling Paris style creations into this country are George Burns and Gracie Allen, Jack Pearl and Wallace Ford.
Mentioned as future witnesses are Jack Benny and Joseph Moskowitz. Inclusion of Benny, Pearl, Ford and Moskowitz was desribed by informed persons in trade as a result of easy camaraderie aboard ship. Mrs. Lauer was pictured as affable mixer, liking to cultivate picture people.

NBC distributed about 1,400 tickets for Jack Benny's first program in the east last Sunday (4) before apprised by comedian that he would not work in large studio. Benny insisted on 300-seater with result that net was busy trying to recall as many as possible (many were invites) but there were still a flock turned away at the gate.

December 14, 1938
Jack Benny in Cleveland last night presiding over annual Christmas benefit party of the Cleveland Press.

December 17, 1938
Jack Benny made no comment concerning the Mrs. Edgar J. Lauer-Albert N. Chaperau smuggling case when he returned yesterday from New York, where he appeared before the federal grand jury investigating the case.

December 20, 1938
Murray Bolen of the Young & Rubicam radio production staff takes over the Jack Benny Jello opus upon its relinquishment after the Jan. 1 broadcast by Tom Harrington, who moves to New York to be radio head of the agency. Bolen has been Harrington's aide on the program.

Paramount studio reaches a new high in air plugs on transcontinental lanes this week when 15 stars will go before the mike to dole out credits on 12 pictures. Big move to keep the boxoffice take for Christmas week on the upward trend, started Sunday night.
Jack Benny gave out for his 'Artists and Models Abroad.' Next Sunday he will tell of 'Man About Town,' his next picture with Dorothy Lamour, who will plug the picture on the Chase & Sanborn hour.

American Advertisers in Canada
SHOW SPONSOR COST
Jack Benny... General Foods Corp. $627.83
Lux Radio Theatre ... Lever Brothers. $1,280.85 [most expensive]

December 28, 1938
Jack Benny's Christmas night broadcast was a comedy gem. Interrupted only by a single hymn, beautifully rendered by Kenny Baker and, what was equally smart, not interrupted at all by any commercial. Only one offhand reference in comedy vein to Jello must have left a particularly good impression for the religious holiday.
Benny has been off-stride lately. His New York broadcasts were especially poor (and not because the visual audience in the east is tougher!) but with this session he was playing professional football again after slipping back to high school standards.
It is the deadly responsibility of the Benny brigade to maintain the fastest comedy pace ever set in radio. Small wonder from time to time they go stale. Formula stuff was particularly lack-lustre in the business of going to, arriving in, and returning from, Hollywood (previous weeks), but this time Benny fooled the plot-guessers — there was nothing about gifts. He got well away from previous Christmases.
As a case history in mental picture-making this scripts could be held up, line for line, for clinical study. It was beautifully rehearsed and emphasized, and spread a vivid sense of make-believe. Most of the time Benny was script-pictured as on a ladder decorating a tree. His self-pretentious social plans, all dashed by double-meaning telegrams from celebrated guests that regret they can't come, were woven into a routine of doorbell-ringing, quips from Mary Livingstone, comic impertinences by the colored butler, Rochester, and a hoke Santa Claus played by Andy Devine (who got stuck in the chimney).
Joan Bennett was on the show (a much-booked gal these days) as one who caused Benny to droll sentimentally. She made a perfect foil for the fatuous self-deluding characterization which Benny has by now developed into a fine art. Benny makes himself likable by making himself slightly absurd, and therefore thoroughly human.

'Man About Town' starring Jack Benny, Dorothy Lamour and Edward Arnold rolls today at Paramount with Mark Sandrich directing. Arthur Hornblow, Jr., produces with Ted Tetzlaff on the camera; Hans Dreier and Robert Usher set as art directors; LeRoy Stone editing, Harold Lewis sound technician, Charles Woolstenhulme biz manager and Holly Morse assistant director.

Triple-barrel name lure for opening Screen Guild airshow Jan. 8 was set yesterday by Screen Actors Guild, with headline honors being shared by Jack Benny, Joan Crawford and Judy Garland.
Reginald Gardiner also is in cast of a musical revue, being scripted by Young & Rubicam staff from an idea suggested by Morrie Ryskind of Screen Writers Guild. Mitchell Leisen of Screen Directors Guild will direct.
Agency yesterday was still trying to persuade George Murphy to act as permanent emcee on the show.

December 31, 1938
Phil Harris goes into Man About Town,' Jack Benny starrer at Paramount, in the role of an ork leader. He will wave the baton before Matty Malneck's swing gang. Harris is the second of the Benny radio crew to go into the picture, the other being Eddie Anderson, better known as Rochester.

Billy Cook has been set for a part on the Jack Benny-Jello airer Sunday. [Cook was the boy who played the New Year on the Jan. 1 show].

Saturday, 12 March 2016

The Short Cartoon Career of J. Waldo Purrington

The mid-1940s saw the rise of a number of cartoon characters—Heckle and Jeckle, Sylvester the cat, Yosemite Sam, Casper the Friendly Ghost. There were others that tried. One of them was Professor J. Waldo Purrington.

You probably haven’t heard of him. But he did make it onto a theatre screen. At least once.

J. Waldo was part of an attempt by Planet Pictures and Oscar Productions to break into the movie business. Historian Jonathan Boschen recently dug up a little bit of information about Planet’s animated obscurity, so allow me to pass on the fruits of his work combined with some additional revelations.

Planet first appeared on the scene in 1944. The first reference to the company in Daily Variety was on February 19, 1945 when there was word it had rented space at the new Consolidated Studios to make 16 millimetre films (as a side note, Hugh Harman was also on the lot making industrial films, some of which included animation). Planet intended to create a full programme in 16 millimetre for any theatres that wanted to run films in that format—features, newsreels, even cartoons. Its first “feature” was ready that September. “Jeep Herders” ran only 59 minutes and was co-produced and directed by ex-stuntman Dick Talmadge and Harvey Perry.

As for the company’s cartoons, we learn this from The Educational Screen magazine of February 1946.
PLANET PICTURES, INC., 5746 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood 28, Calif., has launched, in addition to its 16mm releases of entertainment features in color, the release of a series of first-run animated cartoons filmed in 16mm Kodachrome. The first series of amusing subjects introduces a whimsical, intellectual and absent-minded cat as Professor J. Waldo Purrington, who is devoted to the cause of pure science and proceeds to demonstrate the scientific truth or falsehoods of various familiar adages and accepted precepts. The first in this series to be released to Planet's national distributing organization is Honesty is the Best Policy. Subsequent subjects will clarify such old adages as Haste Makes Waste, Finders Keepers—Losers Weepers and Barking Dogs Never Bite.
Another series of cartoons will feature laugh-provoking characters known as "Diddits", invisible little men who busily run the affairs of the universe, utilizing the most ingenious inventions. Original theme music will be featured ; the script is narrated by the many-voiced Frank Graham, tailored to appeal to all ages.
The current release in Planet's series of 16mm color features is The People's Choice, described as a rollicking satire on the production of radio programs and the building up of radio personalities.
Graham is another of animation’s unsung voice artists. He worked for Warner Bros. (the narrator in Bob Clampett’s Horton cartoon, for one), MGM (The House of Tomorrow and The Shooting of Dan McGoo, among many), Columbia (he played both starring roles in many of the Fox and Crow shorts) and Walt Disney.

We’ve reported on the blog before about cartoon series announced with great fanfare only to fizzle out before anything got made. But Honesty is the Best Policy was not only made, it premiered in Hollywood. The Billboard magazine of April 13, 1946 reported:
Planet Premieres All-16mm. Program
HOLLYWOOD, April 6.—With the customary Hollywood fanfare Planet Pictures this week launched the world premiere of an entire theater program in 16mm. Kodachrome film—newsreel, cartoon and feature—at the local Marcal Theater.
Purpose of the showing was two-fold, according to Planet officials, to demonstrate to the industry and public that the showing of 16mm. subjects in regular auditoriums is practicable and that color may be filmed economically in 16mm. stock. The Marcal, a nabe house, was chosen because it has an average size screen (16 by 22 feet) and an average throw of light (123 feet). Full program runs 95 minutes.
Planet Pictures deserves an “E” for effort in presenting this experimental program, the fact that it didn’t prove what it had hoped to, notwithstanding. Technically speaking, of the three subjects shown, the short trailer-type cartoon was better than either the newsreel or the feature. The cartoon star, Professor J. Waldo Purrington, will probably not cause Walt Disney any sleepless nights, however.
The “newsreel,” edited from footage obtained from various sources, runs 10 minutes and includes shots of Lockheed’s new Constellation airliner, take-off and landing of the P-80 Shooting Star jet fighters, sport shorts of child athletes and field archery contestants, and close-ups of baby chinchillas. Outstanding were the chinchilla close-ups, which were sharp and in contrast to all the other footage shown. The reason for this, according to 16mm. experts, is that these particular close-ups were filmed with a ten-inch lens, giving a clear image equal to any shot on 33mm. stock. Long shots were particularly fuzzy thruout the showing because wide angle lenses for 16mm. color films are not yet developed to the point where they reflect well on a full-size screen.
Sound projection was generally satisfactory, barring a tendency toward thinness of tone.
The main feature, The People’s Choice, was not—by any standards—an epic production, but the critic is forehandedly disarmed in advance by a program note which states frankly that “The People’s Choice is not an epic production; Planet is not a major studio.”
Whether the cartoon was ever shown again in a theatre is something further research will have to discover.

16 millimetre was a format for home movie projectors so it’s no surprise ads for the Purrington cartoon were taken out in several magazines aimed at the home movie hobbyist. The May 1946 edition of Popular Photography featured a brief blurb on the cartoon and revealed who was involved in it.
HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY. 16 mm color. Planet Pictures Inc., 6362 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood 28, Calif. Purrington, a lovable cartoon character who takes the form of a whimsical, absent-minded cat, springs from the drawing board of Paul Fitzpatrick, Jr., and will romp through an entire series of short subjects to prove or disprove well-known adages. The first of these is Honesty Is the Best Policy.
So just who was Paul Fitzpatrick, Jr.? And who was behind Oscar Productions and Planet Pictures? This gets convoluted, so bear with me.

Planet was the cartoon’s distributor while Oscar was the producer. Oscar Productions wasn’t named for the Academy Award statue, as you might think. A photo in a 1945 edition of Film World magazine (which we, unfortunately, can’t reproduce) shows Fitzpatrick, Oscar president Oscar Kipust and company general manager Maurice Goldman signing the distribution deal with Planet president Jack Seaman.

Paul George Lanctot Fitzpatrick, Jr. was a former Disneyite. He was born in Toronto in December 1910. His father moved the family to Montreal in 1914 then to Manhattan in 1916. He spent some time in the ‘20s in London, England and arrived in Los Angeles from St. Louis in the late ‘30s. An edition of The American Film Institute Catalog lists him as one of the people who worked on Bambi and The Reluctant Dragon; Hans Perk’s excellent blog shows he was an effects animator on Fantasia as well. He copyrighted a song in 1944 and his name is on the copyright for a drawing of Purrington (March 14, 1946) and for the Diddits (April 10, 1946). Oscar Kipust, as Oscar Productions, copyrighted a drawing of “The Professor” on the Diddits (Dec. 10, 1945). The 1959 Film Daily Yearbook lists Fitzpatrick running the New York branch of Telepix Corp., an industrial and commercial film company which, at the time, employed former Warner Bros. cartoon manager Johnny Burton. Within two years, he had opened his own company to make theatrical, educational and commercial films.

Kipust had no animation experience. He was born in Poland in 1905 and died in Los Angeles in 1996. In 1930, he was a salesman at a hosiery store in New York. By 1940, he was in Hollywood, employed as a property manager at a movie studio. He got some newspaper ink in 1968 as the prop man who built the huge Dagwood sandwiches seen on the Blondie TV show on CBS (yes, they contained real food).

Oscar Productions was actually the cartoon subsidiary of Meridian Pictures, run by Sam Nathanson, the former sales boss of Planet (Daily Variety, Aug. 30, 1946). I’ll spare you some corporate departures and reorganisations and, instead, point out what looks like Meridian’s last cartoon hurrah. Kipust’s name is nowhere to be found. From Daily Variety, November 20, 1946:
Meridian Announces Cartoon Department
Meridian Pictures yesterday announced formation of a commercial film department to make live action and cartoon films for industrial and educational purposes. Maurice Goldman will head the department, with Norman McCabe heading story and layout and Harry Love the art department. Harry Thudium will be head sales supervisor for the new Meridian subsidiary. Productions will be in addition to the slate of 24 entertainment features already announced by Meridian.
Oscar Productions was bought out in 1947 by Walter Lantz, who planned to set up a new 16 millimetre unit concentrating on commercial pictures in Kodachrome (Daily Variety, May 20, 1947).

What became of the Oscar Productions cartoon (or cartoons if others were made)? Was it fully animated or limited? Did Oscar hire some Golden Age animators to work on it on a freelance basis? I’m afraid when you start digging through the world of obscure animated cartoons, you raise more questions that even the noted Professor Purrington could answer.

Late additional note: As usual, others raised these questions long before I did and found answers. See the comment section.

Friday, 11 March 2016

Baseball Bugs Backgrounds

Mike Maltese may have been a security guard in You Ought To Be in Pictures (1940), but in Baseball Bugs (1945), he’s a detective. Well, on the wall out of the outfield fence, anyways.

Maltese wrote the cartoon but Paul Julian is responsible for the ads in the background.

Here’s Bugs (in a hole in the outfield?). There’s an ad I can’t snip together with this compilation frame grab for “Tudor Boy.” I can’t explain the other ads except for “Filboid Studge.” It’s from the short story Filboid Studge, the Story of a Mouse That Helped by H. H. Munro. I love how Bugs has his carrot in a hot dog bun. Is this Virgil Ross’ animation?



The next background fits in an inside reference to Virgil Ross. Do I need to explain Camuels? “Lausbub” is a German word. I found a reference to it in a number of old New York City newspapers which gave the translation as “prankster” or a “lousy boy.” See how educational cartoons are?



Oddly, the background changes when a Gas House Gorilla is on the mound. We never see enough of the background to know what word ends in “albo.”



Who needs rum and Coca-Cola when you can have Rum Cola? Note the little bottom trail on the “a” like Coke uses.



A Cal Dalton inside joke.



A Calvert dry gin parody next to more Filboid Studge.



A building across the street from the back of the Polo Grounds (which look more like Yankee Stadium) reads “Julius Food” something. I suspect Julian is making fun of his own name.



Could this be a switch on the RKO Theatre? The buildings are stylised, kind of a proto-UPA (which is where Julian ended up after leaving Warner Bros.).



Gerry Chiniquy’s thin-headed, cross-eyed version of Bugs can be seen in some scenes, and Manny Perez and Ken Champin also animated in this very fine cartoon by Friz Freleng. Frank Graham and Bea Benaderet join Mel Blanc in providing voices, and Tedd Pierce briefly appears as one of the Gorillas. If you’re wondering, the music over the opening titles is Sousa’s Sabre and Spurs March, and we get to hear Ahi Viene La Conga as well.

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Sorry, Dad, We're Only Takin' Jets

A B-29 develops hands and feet when it needs to in Little Johnny Jet (released in 1953). For example, when it’s kicked out of the reenlistment headquarters because he’s obsolete. The U.S. Air Force is only taking jets.

Here are some frames. I like the smug jets in the background.



A number of years ago, someone asked me if a short cut had been made at the 5:29 mark, pointing to a soundtrack record released a number of years ago where Volga Boatman was played for a few seconds then there was the sound of an explosion—something not heard in the version of the cartoon in circulation. Was a Russian sight gag cut? As an Avery cartoon might say “Mmmmm....could be!” But I really don’t know for sure.

Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Life With Dawn Wells, On and Off an Island

Ginger or Mary Ann?

We don’t propose to answer that hotly-argued question in this post, but we might be able to answer another one—when Dawn Wells (Mary Ann) got interviewed by a wire service entertainment reporter for the first time.

The answer seems to be 1966, when Vernon Scott gave her some ink in his United Press International column. Wells set out to parlay being a beauty queen—she was Miss Nevada in the 1960 Miss America contest—into an acting career. In 1961, she guested on The Roaring 20s one night, then appeared on Maverick the next. But until Gilligan’s Island rolled around in 1964, much of the newspaper coverage she got was appearing as a demonstration model in a syndicated young women’s fashion and beauty column (at first billed as “seen in Columbia’s ‘The New Interns’”), such as the picture to the right.

Before we get to Scott’s interview, let’s drag out another syndicated piece designed to promote Gilligan’s Island. I suspect it was re-written (and not very much) from a CBS Press Release, with publicity photos attached. Creator Sherwood Schwartz created little biographies on the characters during the pitch stage, only some of which made it into the series. This is the only place I’ve seen some of this information, so I pass on the article for you back story/trivia lovers. Its first appearance I can find in a newspaper is on September 19, 1964.
A Shipwreck Is Twisted Into Comedy
By PHILLIP RIDGEWOOD

New York—Ever since the Greek hero Ulysses took 20 years to get home because of various involuntary stops on islands, the theme of shipwreck on an island (desert or otherwise) has continually entranced both story teller and listener.
Sinbad the Sailor, Robinson Crusoe, Ben Gunn and the admirable British butler Crichton have served as prototypes for innumerable variations on a theme which seemingly has never gone out of fashion.
And now comes Gilligan's Island, which takes the universally interesting plot and gives it some twists that the other tale spinners never dreamed of in their more sedate treatments of the theme.
• • •

Gilligan's Island is a new half-hour comedy series premiering Saturday, Sept. 26 (8:30-9:00 p. m.), on CBS and Channel 12. It maroons a vacationing party on an apparently uninhabited island and promises a weekly outing of preposterously comic dimensions.
The story begins on a warm, sunny morning in the waters of the Kalakakua Yacht Basin as the good ship S. S. Minnow, manned by First Mate Gilligan (Bob Denver), who can best be described as a disaster area, and commanded by a prideful skipper (Alan Hale) prepared for a routine sightseeing tour of the neighboring islands.
Five carefree passengers boarded the Minnow that summer morning, never dreaming what fate held in store for them. They included the Thurston Howells (Jim Backus and Natalie Schafer) of Sands Point, Long Island, and terribly rich; Miss Ginger Grant (Tina Louise) of Hollywood, Cal. a serious student of the theater and a graduate of the Arnie Wurtzel Drama Workshop; Professor Roy Hinkley (Russell Johnson), an expert in the field of dull meals who is currently at work on a book called "Rust, the Real Red Menace," and Miss Mary Ann Summers (Dawn Wells) of Winfield, Kan., a secretary for the Bye Bye Birdie Electronic Scarecrow Company whose perfect five-year record — never absent and never late — has been rewarded by her employers with four fabulous, fulfilled days on a cruise.
• • •
THUS IT WAS that the Minnow left the harbor that memorable morning and turned her bow toward open sea, destined to go down in history with other famous shipwrecks.
And now, somewhere in the vast Pacific, seven castaways fight valiantly for survival, awaiting the day when somehow, some way, they will be rescued from the tropical wilderness of Gilligan's Island.
It probably shouldn’t surprise you that Wells doesn’t appear to have been interviewed until toward the end of the show’s second season. For one thing, she was unknown. Bob Denver had been featured in The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, while Jim Backus was a veteran of radio, cartoons (he was still loved as Mr. Magoo) and the sitcom I Remember Joan. They got the bulk of the media coverage. And for another thing, critics hated the show. Just hated it. Hal Humphrey of the Los Angeles Times called it “A TV series that never should have reached the air this season, or any other season.” Programme analyst James Cornell of the N.W. Ayer ad agency predicted a flop and a 74th place at the end of the season (by April, it was tied for seventh with Red Skelton). It seemed like they would only write about the show under duress.

But here’s Vernon Scott in a feature story that appeared in newspapers starting on June 4, 1966.
Dawn Wells Likes Sun On Or Off Gilligan's Isle
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Dawn Wells, the pretty little thing in shorts running around "Gilligan's Island," is a sun worshipper who spends most of her time at home in shorts too.
Unlike the character of Mary Ann, which she plays weekly in the CBS-TV series, she does not wear pigtails nor is she, more's the pity, unmarried. Dawn, in fact, is the wife of Larry Rosen, a Hollywood agent.
They live in a 17-year-old Spanish house in the suburb of Tarzana on an acre lot which qualifies in California as a "ranch." It is planted in a multitude of fruit trees—five varieties of citrus, peaches, plums' and apricots make up the orchard.
Last year Dawn went native and canned a dozen jams of each fruit.
"They turned, out pretty good," she says, "but we still have a lot of them left over. I don't think I'll do any canning this year."
The house is filled with antiques, mostly Spanish. Dawn is particularly proud of her bedroom suites which dates back to 1840. She bought it in Virginia City. There are two bedrooms, a den and guest house out by the pool which is shaded by enormous evergreens. It is around the pool that Dawn wears her shorts, sopping up the sun and entertaining on weekends.
Saturdays and Sundays are virtually open house at the Rosen place. As many as 30 friends stop by to swim, play bridge, charades and enjoy an evening barbecue with Larry manning the charcoal and steaks.
Dawn must watch her weight at all times. She eats no breakfast, settling for a cup of coffee at CBS Studio Center every morning at 7:30. Lunch consists of steak and salad.
"When I get home it takes me about an hour to get out of my makeup," she says. "By that time I'm not very hungry, but I do fix Larry's dinner—usually steak or chops.
"He prefers pot roast or spaghetti, and I have those dishes for the occasional day off I get from the series."
Dawn doesn't eat dinner. She does the dishes and devotes the balance of the evening to reading her scripts.
The Rosens have no children, but Dawn has a pet sparrow named Lyndal Bird, a beady eyed little character who lives happily in a cage and eats from her hand. “Lyndal Bird fell out of a tree three years ago when it was just a baby,” Dawn says. “I kept him in a shoe box and took him to work with me. Now he’s a wonderful pet.”
She also has a calico cat who wandered into the yard one day and decided she’d found a home. The cat is Samantha and would like to make a meal of Lyndal Bird—which keeps the family in an uproar whenever the bird is loose in the house.
Because their home and surroundings provide a year round vacation land, Dawn and Larry seldom go to the beach or mountains.
They enjoy skeet shooting however, and during the summer hiatus from the series the couple head for Dawn's father's cabin in Idaho where they spend a week or two fly fishing.
Dawn drives a 1956 American sports car which she had reupholstered and painted. Larry drives to his Beverly Hills office in a 1961 sedan.
Most of their friends are neighbors, including Mike Ansara and his wife, Barbara Eden. Otherwise, the Rosens avoid actors.
"I don't care much for actors as close buddies," Dawn says. "All they want to talk about is show business."
“Gilligan’s Island” is a far cry from the kind of life Dawn lives off-screen. But both at work and play Dawn manages to spend plenty of time in the sunshine.
Scott’s column leaves one with the impression of Dawn Wells that she’s a happy person with ordinary problems just like you and me. And I suspect that’s why she got all kinds of fan mail (Sherwood Schwartz said she got more than Tina Louise, who played Ginger) and still has a loyal following almost 50 years after her show left prime time.

Tuesday, 8 March 2016

Felix Gets Them Drunk

Was there ever a period when there were more drinking jokes in animated cartoons than during Prohibition?

They got pretty outrageous once sound cartoons rolled around, but here’s a pretty tame one from the silent Felix the Cat short Two-Lip Time (1926). Felix accidentally knocks a pint of gin into a watering can then waters some flowers and what looks like a tree stump. The flowers want more. One tulip drinks from a puddle and then smacks its lips. The tree staggers around and falls over. It’s all pretty innocent but amusing.



There are never any animation credits on these silent Felixes. Maybe it’s in over-compensation for years of Pat Sullivan getting credit for Felix, but today you get the impression that Otto Messmer was responsible for all these silent shorts after Bill Nolan left. But there was a team of people who animated them and it’d be nice to match an animator to a specific cartoon.

Monday, 7 March 2016

Pardon My Glove

“So, it’s you, the maniac!” exclaims Wally Walrus (voiced by Jack Mather). “That is an in-sult!” cries Woody Woodpecker (voiced by J. Ben Hardaway), who challenges him to a duel by slapping him with a glove as in the traditional form. The glove is anything but traditional.



Les Kline and Pat Matthews are the only animators to get screen credit. Kline did exaggerated perspective animation like this in other shorts, so he could be responsible here.

Sunday, 6 March 2016

Tralfaz Sunday Theatre – Tom Schuler, Cobbler Statesman

This edition of Tralfaz Sunday Theatre features one of those Commie-hunting era cartoons that waves the American flag. A number of them were made by John Sutherland Productions for right-wing groups, but this one was made by someone else for the U.S. Information Service.

“Tom Schuler – Cobbler Statesman” doesn’t have any credits (the ending features the Screen Cartoonists Guild bug) but Graham Webb’s The Animated Film Encyclopedia came up with some and a pretty good mix of people worked on this. The cartoon was made by Sketchbook Film Productions; perhaps some information about the company will come to light.

The cartoon was directed by Dick Lundy, the ex-Disney animator who went on to direct at Lantz and MGM in the ‘40s. The story was by Bill Scott, best known for Rocky and Bullwinkle, but a somewhat unwilling spinmeister at Sutherland for several years. The animators were Ray Patterson, Grant Simmons, Mike Lah, Osmond Evans and Stan Walsh. The first three were at MGM; Patterson and Simmons left for Walter Lantz and then worked out a deal with Robert Lawrence in mid-1954 to open their own studio. Lah and Walsh were principals in Quartet Films, a commercial outfit, while Evans had been at UPA with Scott. Curt Perkins was responsible for backgrounds while Michel Perrier wrote the score.

The narration is by one of the greats of radio, Marvin Miller, who also freelanced for Sutherland and UPA.

Variety of April 28, 1955 reveals:
U.S. State Dept. is dubbing the 30 minute documentary, "Tom Schuler—Cobbler Statesman," in 16 languages for distribution abroad, Sketchbook Film Productions, which made film for U.S.I.A. release in Germany, disclosed yesterday. Pic copped a certificate of merit at 1954 Edinburgh Film Festival, and a similar citation by 1955 Golden Reel Film Festival of Film Council of America earlier this month in NY.
Subject deals with an immigrant cobbler during drafting of the American Constitution.
It’s a half hour long, so you may not want to sit through the whole thing. Unfortunately, this isn’t a restored version.

Quitting Radio

Nobody really believed it, not even when it he said it. And he said every few years.

Jack Benny said he’d quit radio.

Of course, he did quit in 1955—not altogether on his own accord—but he talked about it off and on well before that.

Jack confided his goals in New York Post columnist Earl Wilson in 1946, and one of them was leaving radio in 1950. That didn’t happen. He wanted to do more movies. It didn’t happen (other than some cameo appearances). He wanted to do a comedy play. That didn’t happen, either. About the only thing he did that he promised to do was produce motion pictures. He produced one, The Lucky Stiff (1949), that performed so badly at the box office, Variety reported Benny would have to reimburse CBS for the loss under the deal that saw the network buy his company, Amusement Enterprises.

Anyway, here’s Wilson’s column from May 26, 1946. The picture below, by the way, is Wilson, not Benny.
Benny's Greatest Worries—Jack Wants to Be a Producer
By Earl Wilson

Jack Benny will quit radio! "I'm not stage struck any more," he confessed to me.
Yes, he'll quit—oh, in about three or four years.
He had me by the arm as we walked along 57th St., which flattered the hell out of me, because everybody recognized him.
"I'd like to do radio a couple or three more years, about three more pictures, and one good comedy play for Lindsay and Crouse in New York."
"Then you'll retire?" I said.
"No, no! I'll go into the executive side of show business. Produce my own pictures. I'd never want to retire. If I'm going into the executive side, there is no sense waiting till you get real old. Gee," he said, "I wish I were 40. Oh, well, I can wait."
Jack, who's 52, added as we walked along that he'll probably stick around on NBC for four more years because of contracts and options.
"Lately it's been like a vacation," he said, "because I have such wonderful boys writing for me. I play golf six days a week.
"I know they're so good that the show isn't going to stink, and if it isn't what we want, we can always fix it up. I brought my golf clubs along to New York. I hope I can get one game in. Golf is all I have to worry about now. Golf and cigars. If I'd quit smoking cigars, I'd be the healthiest guy in the world."
As an employee for a cigarette company, or an employer of a struggling cigaret company—it is hard to get this straight—Jack puzzles everybody by his cigar-smoking. He even smokes cigars while broadcasting, stopping to remark in an offhand way that this cigar he's smoking is so round, so firm, so fully packed. "I could get fired for this, you know," he says.
Jack's current person-to-person battle with Fred Allen's hilarious. Introducing Fred to the studio audience, Jack said, "We seldom have a great guest star on our program and we haven't got one tonight—I want you to meet him, Fred Allen."
"He said I'm no guest," replied Fred. "I'm getting the same salary no guest would get." There was a brief silence, and Fred said, "If you think this is a lull, wait’ll you hear his program."
"I thought we'd have Bing Crosby as guest star tonight," Jack said, "but he's busy hearing confessions."
And so on, with Phil Harris finally referring to Jack as "The Spendthrift." Columnist Irv Kupcinet recently reported that when somebody gave Mary Livingston a new fountain pen she said, "Oh good, now I won't have to buy one from Jack!"
Actually, Jack paid for my lunch. (Being a little fearful, I just had salad.) He had a big lunch, dessert, gave the waiter a fat tip, and bought himself an expensive smoke afterward—a cigar, of course.
Jack'll return to Chicago after his next broadcast, loaf around there with his father for a week or so, then drive his own car leisurely back to Hollywood. It's been almost 15 years since he went on the air the first time and said, "This is Jack Benny talking. There will be a moment of silence while you say 'Who cares?' "
A quite a lot of folks evidently do care now.
This column appeared in print on the same day as Benny’s final show of the 1945-46 season. The last two broadcasts originated from New York City, Jack’s original base of radio operations. It was also the same night as Jack’s famous King For a Day broadcast on the Fred Allen Show. You can hear it below. And if one of the secondary actors sounds like Fred Flintstone, it’s because it is. Alan Reed appeared with Allen off and on for a number of years.

FRED ALLEN SHOW, May 26, 1946