










Ed Barge, Ken Muse and Mike Lah received screen credit for animation in this short (I think that's Muse doing the Cupid scene). Frank Graham supplies the voice of the evil aparition of Jerry.











It was just a cold, fans of Jack Benny were told, but it was much worse than that.
Watawasco, Chief Bruce Poolaw, Charlie Muskrat, Bobby Little Beaver and "two young Indian maidens," all from the Penobscot reservation at Old Town. Poolaw will then officially invest Benny with honorary membership in the Maine Guides' Association, concretely expressed through the medium of a Maine guide's regulation shirt.
Jack Benny has finally come through with a good picture, a slapstick comedy to be sure, but very funny and particularly suited for times such as these. It is titled. "George Washington Slept Here" and it opened at Hamrick's Music Box theater Thursday. Ann Sheridan plays the faminine [sic] lead while the supporting cast includes Charles Coburn, Percy Kilbride, Hattie McDaniel, William Tracy, Joyce Reynolds, Lee Patrick. Charles Dingle and a number of others.
Jack Benny is proving his serious intent to bring to servicemen the best possible entertainment Comedian has been playing army camps and naval bases in the east each Monday and Tuesday, saving the balance of the week for the preparation of his radio show. He is traveling his usual radio show (Mary Livingstone; Dennis Day, Sam Hearn, Don Wilson, Rochester, Abe Lyman's orch, Rose Blane) to nearby training stations and for an added feature he has Danny Kaye, star of “Let’s Face It,” whose show idles Mondays.
February 3, 1943
IN A SWIFT EXCHANGE involving distances and repartee, Jack Benny and Joel Kupperman, the superlative Quiz Kid, will dash in and out of each other's program Sunday. . . . Six-year-old Joel will be guest star on the Jack Benny show, which originates in the Eighth Street Theater in Chicago at 6 p.m. (WBRC, 6 p.m.) . . . After several rounds of banter, Joel will take to his short legs, hurrying off to the Quiz Kids program which will be aired at 6:30 p.m. front the Blue Network studios several miles away and over WGN. . . . When his show is concluded, Benny will leap into a cab and spurt for Quiz Kids, where he is scheduled to be honorary judge. . . . Joe Kelly, quiz master of the youthful experts, will inform Benny of what has occurred prior to his arrival. (Turner Jordan, Birmingham News)
The professional relationship between Benny and Rochester is a landmark in the history of the entertainment world, and a tribute to Benny's astuteness. Contrary to the general custom, Benny goes all out in building up his "stooges"—or is "entourage" a better word? Unlike most comedians, Benny does not hog the jokes. To the contrary, he goes to the other extreme, and throws most of the gags to his company. More often than not, Benny is the butt of a gag.
A letter of commendation and, consolation to Jack Benny, radio and film comedian, now recuperating in Chicago from illness due to overwork was sent to him the other day by Mayor Spellacy, in connection with the opening here today at Loew's Poli Theater of Benny's latest cinema endeavour, "The Meanest Man in the World." The letter in full follows:
While he explained Jack Benny’s show and news broadcasts are his favourite radio listening, he revealed he is no ordinary radio fan but a sponsor as well. The cigar firm of which he is president once sponsored Graham McNamee on the air and has used spot announcements.
Hollywood—Jack Benny in from the desert to unhorse Orson Welles from his Grape-nuts show April 11.
Jack Benny's windup show Sunday (30) on NBC was a typical Benny offering replete with fast-flying gags, sweet and sour; several shrewd digs at Fred Allen; a poem by Mary Livingstone, and pun-ridden commercials delivered by an overly protesting Don Wilson. As an added feature, Deanna Durbin sang 'Say a Prayer for the Boys Over There' impressively. A serious note was also sounded by Benny on the subject of Memorial Day and its significance, but the stanza ended in an atmosphere of hi-jinks.
ADVANCED AMERICAN BASE, SOMEWHERE IN NEW GUINEA, June 17 (Delayed) (AP)—Jack Benny and the Andrews Sisters entertained the most experienced attack squadron in the United States Air Force more or less by proxy last night [16].
It’s bemusing that old animated cartoons are either not seen, are edired or contain warnings. These very same cartoons already went past the censor’s eye before they were even approved to be shown to audiences.
"We have to be careful about Jerry kicking Tom in the back-side. Those gags don't get by so much any more," says Joe Barbera, who writes and directs the cat and mouse series at MGM with William Hanna.
Besides being censored, Tom and Jerry are like live movie stars in other ways, too. They have wardrobe "tests" before the cartoon is drawn, just like Lana Turner. They get stacks of fan letters ("Why does the cat always get beat up?").
"In one cartoon, ‘Aboo Ben Boogie,’ we had a sexy girl, looking like a Betty Grable. She had on transparent pantaloons so you could see her legs.
The censors have also cut bank robberies, holdups, and ghosts from cartoons to keep the children happy. 













How often is an understudy forced to go on stage for the star and ends up with a hugely successful career?
CNR is a 6-foot, sandy-haired comedian who wears horn-rimmed glasses, or they wear him. He has long arms which rotate like helicopter blades, particularly when Carol Channing is teaching him to dance, "1-2-3." He's a master at delayed reactions.
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — Chances are the dolphins at Sea World in Orlando, Fla., are still chuckling. And, probably, the whales and the seals are smiling, too. After all, they were exposed to Charles Nelson Reilly for a while, and that's enough to make anybody happy.