Posted on 11/26/2015 12:04:27 PM PST by SoFloFreeper
Oh, I’m not knocking it. I just have a strong liking for the Paramount films because Jack Benny basically plays his same radio persona in them, or something very close, like a radio announcer (as in “The Big Broadcast of 1937”).
Who was making the films in Hollywood at the time? Wasn’t Hollywood a bed of liberals and socialists then as it is now? The champions of the downtrodden? So if thats the case who was doing the stereo typing and exclusion of inclusion by blacks into main stream Hollywood?
I loved the Jack Benny show and his "on going battles" with Fred Allen of Allens Ally.
Also there was Fibber McGee and Molly (Jim and Marion Jordan. Married in real life as well as their show)
ping
bump
Benny had the funniest show on radio, bar none. Jack’s timing was immaculate, and the main cast (Don Wilson, Eddie Anderson, Dennis Day, Mary Livingston, Mel Blanc and Phil Harris) was superb. So were many of the actors who played recurring roles, such as Frank Morgan (the YESSS man who specialized in sales clerks who antagonized Jack); Joseph Kearns (best know as Mr. Wilson on Dennis the Menace; he played the superannuated guard who had been protecting Jack’s money vault since (pick one) the founding of Los Angeles, or the year when Jack turned 38.
But the real secret to Benny’s success was not just his talent, but his contributions as a writer and producer, though he never claimed a credit in either department. He wanted the show to be funny, knew what worked and didn’t care who got the punch line. That’s why performers like Dennis Day and Eddie Rochester often got the best lines at Jack’s expense. On other shows, they would have been minor or recurring characters at best.
Benny also kept his writing staff largely intact for decades, while contemporaries (like Bob Hope) went through them like Kleenex. They also knew what worked and kept his best routines fresh. Example: every year, there was a Christmas skit based on Jack endlessly debating what he was going to buy Don Wilson for a Christmas gift. Of course, it had to be cheap (one year it was a pair of shoelaces), playing into Benny’s reputation as a skinflint. And it paired him with a hapless sales clerk (usually Mel Blanc) who had to put up with Jack debating metal versus plastic-tipped shoelaces.
You can hear episodes of the Benny radio show on XM Channel 148. Always worth a listen. Better than anything remotely described as a sitcom on TV today..
Jack Benny was the master of the pause.
Johnny Carson too
I have SirusXM and listen to Jack Benny every chance I can get. The humor is not too dated and the show is still fresh and funny today as it was over 70 years ago.
Eddie Anderson at one time was one of the highest paid performers in Hollywood earning upwards of $300,000 a year.
Jack Benny and Eddie Anderson were also good friends and loved to go to Santa Anita or The Hollywood race tracks to play the ponies.
Jack Benny was the guiding genius of his writers and once came up with an idea for a radio contest, Tell us why you hate Jack Benny.
His rivalry with Fred Allen was legendary, it was a put on as they were close friends in real life, they would go on each other’s show and it was a riot. When Fred Allen went off the air Benny hired some of Allen’s people for his own show.
Jack Benny was a class act and his show was a one of kind.
Actually most of the studio heads then were fairly conservative and mostly Republicans.
Sometime after W.W. II, certainly by the 1950’s, there was a change as the old guard died off.
I wouldn’t call who ever made “Mission To Moscow’’ conservative.
While the studio heads then might have been somewhat conservative a lot of writers and directors were not.
Also keep in mind the times, it was W.W.II and a lot of propaganda films were made for the war effort including the one you mentioned.
The great Hollywood investigation was post W.W. II when the Cold War started.
Weekly or even more often, the Jack Benny show is on Sirius XM Radio Classics where it is very popular — the radio show seems very “modern”.
There are some 640+ episodes of the Jack Benny radio show on archive.org for free download. I have them all.
57 years is actually less than 60 years. Other than that, good article. Jack Benny was a class act.
#14 Fred Allen shows. I have his book and that guy sure could zing people in a funny way.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=fred+allen
I grew to particularly appreciate Fred Allen when seeing reruns of dozens and dozens of his appearances on early-to-mid-1950s “What’s My Line” episodes on the Game Show Network. Long ago, I didn’t quite ‘get’ his wry style of humor, which was more akin to that of turn-of-the-century, small-town New England. When I was a high-schooler, collecting cassette tapes of old radio shows, I didn’t find his humor quite as accessible as Benny or many others. But nowadays, I count myself a big Fred Allen fan as well.
However, I’ve always loved the one Hollywood film that he starred in, “It’s in the Bag” (1945). The six-minute bit Allen did with Benny in it is thoroughly hilarious. I’d made a videotape copy of the film back in 1984, and finally upgraded with the recent dvd release. Great, silly comedy film.
Fred Allen quotes.
http://www.fredallen.org/quotes.html
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