Showing posts with label Don Ameche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Don Ameche. Show all posts

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Review: Chase and Sanborn/Edgar Bergen - Charlie McCarthy

When I was growing up, my brother used to talk about Charlie McCarthy.  For the longest time, I had no idea who Charlie McCarthy was.

When I found old-time radio in 1975, I found out quickly.  Although I don't really remember if I knew that Bergen was a ventriloquist.  My brother wasn't around to ask.  I may have asked my parents - but at any rate, sometime after 1975, I found out that Charlie was a dummy.

Skip ahead a half of a lifetime and here I am listening to all of the surviving broadcasts.  The shows themselves are something that I simply cannot like; there is too much music and too much slapstick and vaudevillian-type humor that reminds one of a bad Abbott and Costello Show.

However, when Bergen and his dummies are isolated, apart from the periphery of the rest of the show (which can include lots of "awful" singing and coffee commercials) you find a treasure.

Bergen, by all accounts, wasn't a very good ventriloquist.  His lips moved and his talent in this area was far behind others.  But his material was good and he was on the radio, where you couldn't see his lips moving.

Bergen didn't just have Charlie McCarthy - who was very much a Bugs Bunny/Walter Tetley-type  character (sans the Brooklyn accent) - Charlie was like a smart-aleck kid who could get away with almost anything.  He really wasn't that funny but he provided laughs now and then.

Charlie and to a lesser-extent, Bergen, became super famous almost overnight.  For a good part of the latter 1930's, Bergen's dummies were as popular (or more-so) than any other star on radio.  He made films too.

One of these guys is Mortimer Snerd
So, Charlie sent Bergen to the top.  But Charlie wasn't the funniest dummy.  Bergen's funnier routines weren't with Charlie at all but with with Mortimer Snerd.  Mortimer was a dumb, country, farmer-type.  An Elmer Fudd, if you will, only much more stupid.  And much funnier.

It's Snerd that really stands out when you listen to the sketches as a whole.

Another dummy, Effie Clinker, is Bergen's female persona.  I do not find the character funny in the least.  I don't think Bergen ever really felt that comfortable with Effie as he uses her very sparingly on the radio shows.

When broken down into dummy sketches, you will find a quick-paced barrel of fun.  While the various Bergen radio shows drag (many of them last as long as an hour) 90% of the sketches last less than 7 minutes.  And I'd guess that 75% of those actually last less than 5 minutes.

Other than Bergen and his dummies, the one standout would be Don Ameche.  Ameche comes and goes throughout the series.  When he is in the sketches with the dummies (in my recollection, always with Charlie) he plays an Italian named Gazzolla.  The Gazzolla character can be quite amusing at times when paired with McCarthy.

Yes, we are talking about a very juvenile/vaudevillian-type show; I understand that kind of humor isn't everyone's cup of coffee tea.  But I think it's worth your while to do me a favor... I have literally broken the shows down, commercial free and in high-quality and improved sound.  I'm not quite finished, as I have anywhere from 75 to 100 more sketches to go.  But even now, you can find almost 350 sketches at archive.org.  I suggest you go there and at least take a listen to the work I have done and download at your leisure.

The rest of the sketches should be up sometime before the end of year.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

More Mae West - Don Ameche

According to the book, Mae West: An Icon in Black and White  (again, another book not in my book section as I write this) there's a terrific quote from Edgar Bergen:
If she (West) says 'appendecitis,' it sounds like sex.  - Edgar Bergen

©Jimbo 2010/2011

Shock! Something I'll bet you did not know! Shock!

According to the book, Mae West: It aint no sin, (not yet in the book section as I write this piece) we find that the notroious Adam and Eve sketch that West and Don Ameche did (that got her unfairly banned from radio) was written by...

ARCH OBOLER!

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Fairly unexciting photo dump/March 30th


Arthur Treacher

This is a very large picture of Bing Crosby.  Click to enlarge.

Bob Burns - his bazooka and unkowns

Don Ameche


Fred Allen and Portland


Odd angle photo of Harold Peary and his wife

Monday, January 24, 2011

Revisted CONTROVERY! (Part II)

Here is Mae West (as recalled in an earlier post on this blog called, "CONTROVERY!" in the famous "Adam and Eve" sketch with Don Ameche.

This was 1937 - and she was banned from radio for 37 years after this sketch. Tame today but packed a wallop then:

(((HEAR)))
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