




The credits say Mike Lah, Ken Muse and Ed Barge are the animators, but I suspect there are others here, too.
















BENNY DISCARDS 'WASHED-UP' GAGSBenny changed writers in 1943 out of necessity. Afterward, the show foundered a bit for several reasons. Jack insisted on doing shows at military hubs; jokes were aimed at servicemen in the seats, not listeners at home. Lucky Strike commercials were strident and repetitive and, frankly, a tune-out factor; the insistent cigarette sell was the first thing the listener heard instead of Don Wilson soothingly regaling the audience about six delicious flavours and big red letters. The writers needed to get their bearings—they invented characters like whiny insurance man Herman Peabody and a pet camel that didn’t work. Losing Dennis Day and, for a time, Phil Harris to the war didn’t help. It seems the Benny brain trust wouldn’t entrust singer Larry Stevens with comedy and the lines handed to the replacement bandleaders sounded strained at times. The McFarland Twins were more amusing when they were parodied by Bob and Ray.
HOLLYWOOD, April 19 —(AP)— Tomorrow evening Jack Benny will formally (and funnily, he hopes) say goodbye to the Quiz Kids "because the situation is washed up."
When the Benny jokes become more important than the Benny situations, Jack finds something else to talk about.
The Buck Benny situation is washed up, as a running, week-to-week gag.
So is Jack's fiddle-playing, temporarily at least. The Fred Allen feud isn't washed up, but it's been deferred.
A quarter of a century of vaudeville and 10 years of radio have taught Benny most of the intricate ins and outs of humor.
"Well, I worry a little, too. That seems to help," Jack admitted.
Nervous Toll Is Great
Jack was in a secret-telling mood, pale blue shorts and a white terry cloth bathrobe, in the den of his home, the same home he uses so often for his humor.
For some, reason he felt like taking down his professional hair to show why his program goes on clicking like it does. His own hair was soon mussed by nervous hands. He smoked cigarettes continuously, often paced the room, jumped to answer the phone.
Obviously the toll on his nervous system is great. Getting to be radio's No. 1 man was comparatively easy; staying there is no cinch.
Uses "Situation" Comedy
Jack worries about his precious situations so much that he usually can anticipate when one is about to be washed up. Here's what he means by washing it up:
"Ours is a situation comedy. We don't just tell jokes. The gags we have fit the situation. We use a situation—say like the Buck Benny business—only as long as it is funnier than the jokes.
"The longer you use a situation, tho funnier the jokes must become. Phil Harris was the drunken pappy in that series.
"After four weeks, his jokes had to be twice as funny. In eight weeks, four times as funny. Just go on multiplying—brother, jokes just ain't that funny."
Likes Joke About Hotel
The Quiz Kids played on the Benny program for the past two Sundays, building up for Jack's Wednesday appearance with them. It was a new situation for him.
"Having them with us once more is as much as we could get out of that situation," he confessed.
"Last week they were staying at my house and everybody thinks it's nice of me to have them as my guests until we overhear one say, 'I think it would be just as cheap at a hotel'."
Jack first chuckled when he repeated that line, then laughed uproariously.
"You can't top a gag like that. I couldn't have them back at the house. But, since the idea is still good, I take them to the train."
Of course! Jack can't take them in anything but his Maxwell during tomorrow's episode at 7 o'clock (over WBEN). You've never heard him use the ancient bus unless the business at hand called for it.
Play Satires Are Finished
He seldom uses Rochester unless the scene, is laid at the Benny house. When the program is in the studio, Rochester telephones.
The play satire situation is just about washed up.
The last, "Tobacco Road," read well and sounded good in rehearsal, but the studio audience didn't react the way Jack hoped they would.
In other words, it wasn't too funny. Two or three years ago, satires on current movies went best on the Benny program. Times change, and so does humor.
"And situations," added Jack. "Let's see, now, on the first Sunday in May we oughta......"







Girl Comedian Years To Be Dramatic StarBefore the war, Kulp had been with the Miami Beach Sun-Star and Kimberly-Clark Advertising, in addition to her radio work. Some time before February 1948, she had moved to WIOD, Miami. You can see more of how she got to Hollywood in the story to the right from the Lock Haven Express of February 4, 1952.
Nancy Kulp, considered one of TV’s new comedy finds through appearances on the “Bob Cummings Show” over CBS TV, would rather be a serious actress. Despite all her efforts, however, everytime she goes dramatic all she gets are laughs.
Nancy found her niche early in the Cummings teleseries in the role of Pamela Livingston, girl bird-watcher, and has been written into the series many times since. In addition to acting, she also writes dramatics but hasn’t sold anything of note as yet.
Combining two careers dates back to Nancy’s college days at Florida State University from which she graduated in 1943. While there she developed, wrote and starred in a radio show, “Tassle McLaughlin, Woman,” a satire on soap operas. She left college with a journalism degree and joined the Waves for 2 ½ years. Hollywood got to know Nancy in 1951. She credits famed George Cukor, the director, for her first big chance in a picture, “Model and Marriage Broker,” in which she played a comedy role. Since then, besides films, she has been on such TV programs as “Video Theater,” “It’s a Great Life,” “Topper,” “Our Miss Brooks,” and “I Love Lucy.”
Nancy was born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Aug. 28, 1921, and moved to Florida in 1933 with her parents. Even as a youngster she tried to be serious and won only laughs. This happened when she was just three years old.
“My mother and I were at a movie,” recalls Nancy. “The theater was dark and my mother suddenly missed me. A spot light was on the stage and there I was standing in the middle of it singing ‘Jesus Loves Me’ while the audience roared!”
Nancy vows that someday, and she hopes it will be soon, she’ll be up before the television cameras emoting like mad while tears come down the cheeks of the viewers at home. Making people cry will make her happy.
Frustrated Spinster Nancy Kulp Type-CastThis story is from the National Enterprise Association syndicate, June 5, 1965.
By HANK GRANT
Even before he'd cast the regular stars for his then-new Beverly Hillbillies series, creator-producer Paul Henning had decided that morose-looking, goggle-eyed Nancy Kulp would play the seedy-tweedy secretary, Jane Hathaway.
In fact, he created the role with Nancy in mind as a mere extension of her "birdwatching spinster" role on the old Bob Cummings Show, which Hemming had also produced.
Even before her rise to comedy recognition on the Bob Cummings Show, which provided her with five years of steady pay-checks, Nancy had already been type-cast as the perfect picture of a frustrated spinster.
One comedy star refused to use her again on his show, saying: "She stole every scene she was in with me. All she has to do is to purse her laps, roll her eyes Heaven-ward, and I'm dead — the laugh is hers!"
• • •
I FOUND Nancy much comelier than she appears on the screen, but when I complimented her on her beautiful, silky hair (it was a sincere comphment), she quickly asumed her familiar horsey-long face and we both laughed.
Encouraged by what was obviously a defense strategy against compliments, I asked Nancy this candid question: Is it possible that you play the frustrated spinster so well because the role parallels your real life?
• • •
WITHOUT batting an eye, she answered: "Unfortunately, that's true. I'm not a dyed-in-the-wool spinster; I was married once for a short time, but the only thing my husband and I had in common was a mutual love of laughs.
"Frustration has been a part of my life ever since I can remember. It runs in the family, too. Just when my father finally made a name for himself as one of the country's leading stock brokers, zoom! came the crash of '29!
"Even my great uncle, Samuel J. Tilden, suffered a frustration that was a lulu. He won the popular vote for President of the United States, but lost the office by one vote in the Electoral College!
• • •
"I'VE BEEN frustrated in practically everything I really wanted to do. Actually, I left Florida 12 years ago (where she'd headed publicity for two Miami radio stations) to come to Hollywood for a publicity career. Director George Cukor had me working as an actress before I'd been here two weeks.
"I hadn't even thought of becoming an actress, so I decided I'd be a serious one. Frustration, again.
"I'm quite happy, now, with good friends, a fine income and freedom to pursue any hobby I care to. But I'll continue to be frustrated till I either get some serious acting roles or a man who loves me seriously. So far, I've had neither!"
• • •
LIVING THE life of a bachelorette in Tarzana, in the San Fernando Valley, Nancy spends much of her free time looking for real estate bargains and antiques. She once had her own antique shop.
She's currently on vacation from Hillbillies but is acting in Jerry Lewis' movie "Who's Minding the Store." She's playing a white huntress.
Nancy's Faith RenewedAfter Hillbillies, Kulp emulated Green Acres. She gave up city life and returned to the farm in Pennsylvania—and then witnessed what winter was like there, so back she went to California, becoming involved in several charity groups in Palm Springs. She died of cancer on February 3, 1991. You can read more about her earlier life by clicking on the clipping to the right.
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
Hollywood—After a change in time at the beginning of the TV season, the Beverly Hillbillies slumped to 33rd in the popularity ratings, then roared back by season's end into 8th place in the Top Ten.
The remarkable comeback of the show, always a target for critical barbs, assured Buddy Ebsen & Co. of a fourth year on home screens.
• • •
IT ALSO renewed Nancy Kulp's faith in audiences accepting a show at face value.
Nancy, who plays pompous secretary Jane Hathaway in the series, builds up a large head of steam whenever the series is rapped by critics, or ignored by TV people as not even being worthy of mention for Emmy consideration.
"It's absurd," snaps Nancy. "The show's existence is for only one reason—FUN. I think it's damn good fun, along with a lot of biting satire.
"I say, isn't there room for this? Can't our critics understand this? Can't they classify the show as strictly for fun? Our big audience accepts us on this merit alone and I suppose we should be grateful. But some people make me mad.
• • •
"I MET a man just the other day who said he didn't like the show. I asked him, 'Have you seen it?' His answer was 'No, of course not. I leave the room when my family tunes in.'
"Well, I sure told that fellow off. I asked him, 'Do you let critics do all your thinking? There was no answer, of course."
Nancy Kulp has had a strange career since arriving in Hollywood in 1951 to appear in movies and then TV. She was cast as a "broad Eve Arden type," but she also played heavies and roles calling for a Brooklyn accent.
She made her first big hit on TV as Pamela Livingstone, the bird watcher on The Bob Cummings Show. She credits this role with her zooming popularity as a comedienne.
• • •
"PAMELA WAS a real good character audiences liked," she says.
Before filming for the new season starts in July, Nancy is going on a 7000-mile, six-week tour of the U.S. in a station wagon. She will be sight-seeing and buying antiques, a hobby with her.
Since coming to Hollywood from Miami, where she studied journalism and worked in radio. Nancy was divorced.
What was her hubby's occupation?
Nancy sounds like bank secretary Jane Hathaway when she gives the question a double take.
"That's a marvelous question," she says, stringing out the words a la Jane. "You know, I don't recall that he ever had a job."











