Burns and Allen
Burns and Allen | |
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Medium |
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Nationality | American |
Notable works and roles | The Burns and Allen Show (radio),The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show (TV) |
Former members | George Burns Gracie Allen |
Burns and Allen were an American comedy duo consisting of George Burns and his wife, Gracie Allen. They worked together as a successful comedy team that entertained vaudeville, film, radio, and television audiences for over forty years.
The duo met in 1922 and married in 1926. Burns played the straight man and Allen played a silly, addle-headed woman whose convoluted logic Burns was often ill-equipped to challenge. The duo starred in a number of films, including Lambchops (1929), The Big Broadcast (1932) and two sequels in 1935 and 1936, and A Damsel in Distress (1937). Their 30-minute radio show debuted in September 1934 as The Adventures of Gracie, whose title changed to The Burns and Allen Show in 1936; the series ran, moving back and forth between NBC and CBS, until May 1950. After their radio show's cancellation, Burns and Allen reemerged on television with a popular situation comedy, which ran from 1950 to 1958.
Burns and Allen's radio show was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame in 1994. Their TV series received a total of 11 Primetime Emmy Award nominations, and produced what TV Guide ranked No. 56 on its 1997 list of the 100 greatest episodes of all time. They were inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in 1988.
Vaudeville
Burns and Allen met in 1922 and first performed together at the Hill Street Theatre in Newark, New Jersey, continued in small town vaudeville theaters, married in Cleveland on January 7, 1926, and moved up a notch when they signed with the Keith-Albee-Orpheum circuit in 1927.
Burns wrote most of the material and played the straight man. Allen played a silly, addle-headed woman, a role often attributed to the "Dumb Dora" stereotype common in early 20th-century vaudeville comedy. Early on, the team had played the opposite roles until they noticed that the audience was laughing at Gracie's straight lines, so they made the change. In later years, each attributed their success to the other.
The Burns and Allen team was not an overnight sensation. "We were a good man-and-woman act," Burns said, "but we were not headliners or stars or featured attractions. We were on the bill with them. There would be a star or two stars and a featured attraction, and then we would come—fourth billing in an eight-act show." Their career changed direction when they made their first film.[1]: 26
Motion pictures
In the early days of talking pictures, the studios eagerly hired actors who knew how to deliver dialogue or songs. The most prolific of these studios was Warner Bros., whose Vitaphone Varieties shorts captured vaudeville headliners of the 1920s on film.
Burns and Allen earned a reputation as a reliable "disappointment act" (someone who could fill in for a sick or otherwise absent performer on a moment's notice). So it went with their film debut. They were last-minute replacements for another act (Fred Allen) and ran through their patter-and-song routine in Lambchops (1929). After a restoration, the film was released on DVD in October 2007, on disc three of a three-disc 80th anniversary edition of The Jazz Singer.[2][3]
Paramount Pictures used its East Coast studio to film New York-based stage and vaudeville stars. Eddie Cantor, Fred Allen, Ethel Merman and Smith and Dale were among the top acts seen in Paramount shorts. Burns and Allen joined the Paramount roster in 1930 and made a string of one-reel comedies through 1933, usually written by Burns and featuring future Hollywood character actors such as Barton MacLane and Chester Clute.
In 1932, Paramount produced an all-star musical comedy, The Big Broadcast, featuring the nation's hottest radio personalities. Burns and Allen were recruited, and made such an impression that they continued to make guest appearances in Paramount features through 1937. Most of these used the Big Broadcast formula of an all-star comedy cast. In 1935 the team also starred in a pair of low-budget features, Here Comes Cookie and Love in Bloom.
At RKO, Fred Astaire succeeded in his efforts to make a musical feature without Ginger Rogers, and the studio borrowed Burns and Allen from Paramount for the 1937 film, A Damsel in Distress. Their names appeared with Astaire's before the title. Under contract to RKO, the young Joan Fontaine was assigned as Astaire's romantic interest, but when she proved to be an inadequate dance partner Astaire did most of his dancing with Burns and Allen. The trio's comic dance in the film's "Fun House" sequence earned an Academy Award for choreographer Hermes Pan.[4]: 112 [5] Burns suggested a dance number that employs whiskbrooms as props, used in vaudeville by a duo called Evans and Evans. He bought the idea and auditioned the routine for Astaire, with Allen and the surviving member of the vaudeville team.[6]
This movie led Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to cast Burns and Allen in its Eleanor Powell musical, Honolulu (1939). This was their last film as a team; Gracie made two subsequent film appearances on her own, but Burns and Allen did not return to the cameras until their television series in 1950.
When Burns was 79, he had a sudden career revival as an amiable, beloved and unusually active comedic elder statesman in the 1975 film The Sunshine Boys, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. In 1977, his starring role in Oh, God!, along with the former film, permanently secured his career resurgence. At the age of 80, Burns was the oldest Oscar winner in the history of the Academy Awards, a record that would remain until Jessica Tandy won an Oscar for Driving Miss Daisy in 1989. Burns, who became a centenarian in 1996, continued to work until just weeks before his death of cardiac arrest on March 19, 1996, at his home in Beverly Hills.
Filmography
Year | Title | Format | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1929 | Lambchops | Short | Added to the National Film Registry in 1999.[7] DVD release 2007[2][3] |
1930 | Fit to Be Tied | ||
1931 | Pulling a Bone | ||
1931 | The Antique Shop | Directed by Ray Cozine[citation needed][8] | |
1931 | Once Over, Light | Directed by Howard Bretherton | |
1931 | 100% Service | Directed by Ray Cozine.[8] DVD release 2006[9][10] | |
1931 | Oh, My Operation | Directed by Ray Cozine[8][citation needed] | |
1932 | The Babbling Book | ||
1932 | The Big Broadcast | Feature | |
1932 | Your Hat | Short | |
1932 | Walking the Baby | Directed by Aubrey Scotto | |
1933 | Let's Dance | Directed by Aubrey Scotto[8] | |
1933 | International House | Feature | |
1933 | College Humor | ||
1934 | Six of a Kind | ||
1934 | We're Not Dressing | ||
1934 | Many Happy Returns | ||
1935 | Love in Bloom | ||
1935 | Here Comes Cookie | ||
1935 | The Big Broadcast of 1936 | ||
1936 | The Big Broadcast of 1937 | ||
1936 | College Holiday | ||
1937 | A Damsel in Distress | ||
1938 | College Swing | ||
1939 | Honolulu |
Radio
In 1929 Burns and Allen made their debut radio performance broadcast in London on the BBC. In the United States, they had failed at a 1930 NBC audition. After a solo appearance by Gracie on Eddie Cantor's radio show, they were heard together on Rudy Vallee's The Fleischmann's Yeast Hour and on February 15, 1932, they became regulars on The Guy Lombardo Show on CBS. When Lombardo switched to NBC, Burns and Allen took over his CBS spot with The Adventures of Gracie beginning September 19, 1934.
Along the way, the duo launched the temporary running gag that made them near-irrevocable radio stars: the famous hunt for Gracie's "lost brother," which began on January 4, 1933 and eventually became a cross-network phenomenon. Gracie was also liable to turn up on other shows (especially those produced by the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency, which produced the Burns & Allen series) looking for her brother. Bad publicity after a bid by NBC to squelch the stunt—and an accidental mention by Rudy Vallee on his Fleischmann's Hour—helped the stunt continue, according to radio historian John Dunning's On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio, which also mentioned that Gracie's real brother, a "publicity-shy accountant" living in San Francisco, went into hiding until the gag ran its course.
Burns and Allen followed this with another stunt: "Gracie Allen for President." During the election year of 1940, Gracie represented the fictitious Surprise Party and advocated nonsense as part of her platform. The "campaign" was successful enough for Gracie to actually receive write-in votes on election day.
The title of their top-rated show changed to The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show on September 26, 1936. One successful episode, "Grandpa's 92nd Birthday," aired July 8, 1940. In 1941 they moved from comedy patter into a successful sitcom format, continuing with shows on NBC and CBS until May 17, 1950. As in the early days of radio, the sponsor's name became the show title, such as Maxwell House Coffee Time (1945–49).
The show featured several regulars on radio, including Toby Reed, Gale Gordon, Bea Benaderet, Mel Blanc, Gracie's real-life friend Mary "Bubbles" Kelly, Ray Noble, singers Jimmy Cash and Tony Martin and actor/writer/director Elliott Lewis. The Sportsmen Quartet (appearing as "The Swantet" during the years the show was sponsored by Swan Soap) supplied songs and occasionally backed up Cash. Meredith Willson, Artie Shaw and announcers Bill Goodwin and Harry Von Zell were usually made a part of the evening's doings, often as additional comic foils for the duo.
For a long time they continued their "flirtation act" with Burns as Allen's most persistent suitor. Their real-life marriage was not written into the show until 1941, when Burns noticed that their ratings were slowly but steadily slipping. He realized that he and Gracie "were too old for our jokes," and revised the format to include husband-and-wife characters in a situation-comedy setting. Burns' assessment was correct, and the Burns and Allen program went on to achieve new heights.
Recordings of 176 episodes of the radio shows circulate on the web, CDs and DVDs—including all installments of the "Gracie for President" routine and some of the "lost brother" episodes.
Broadcast history
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1929 | BBC, London | Debut radio performance broadcast of Burns and Allen.[11]
: 124 |
February 15, 1932 – September 13, 1933 | The Robert Burns Panatela Program | CBS, 30 minutes Burns and Allen join Guy Lombardo as featured performers Becomes The White Owl Program May 31, 1933[12]: 58 [13] |
December 20, 1933 – June 13, 1934 | The White Owl Program | CBS, 30 minutes Burns and Allen headline their own show[12]: 58 [13] |
September 19, 1934 – September 25, 1935 | The Adventures of Gracie | CBS, 30 minutes[12]: 58 [13] |
October 2, 1935 – March 24, 1937 | The Adventures of Gracie | CBS, 30 minutes Called The Burns and Allen Show after the broadcast September 23, 1936[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [14] |
April 12, 1937 – August 1, 1938 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [15] |
September 30, 1938 – June 23, 1939 | The Burns and Allen Show | CBS, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [16][17] |
October 4, 1939 – June 26, 1940 | The Burns and Allen Show | CBS, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [18] |
July 1, 1940 – March 24, 1941 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [15] |
October 7, 1941 – June 30, 1942 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [16][19] |
October 6, 1942 – June 29, 1943 | The Burns and Allen Show | CBS, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [15][16] |
August 31, 1943 – June 13, 1944 | The Burns and Allen Show | CBS, 30 minutes[12]: 58 [14][15][16] |
August 15, 1944 – June 25, 1945 | The Burns and Allen Show | CBS, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [15][16] |
September 20, 1945 – May 30, 1946 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [16][20] |
September 5, 1946 – May 29, 1947 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[12]: 58 [16][20] |
September 4, 1947 – June 10, 1948 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[12]: 58 [16][20] |
September 30, 1948 – June 23, 1949 | The Burns and Allen Show | NBC, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [16][20] |
September 21, 1949 – May 17, 1950 | The Burns and Allen Show | CBS, 30 minutes[11]: 124 [12]: 58 [16] |
Accolades
The Burns and Allen Show was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame in 1994.[21]
Television
In 1950, Burns and Allen transitioned to television with The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show. An immediate success,[22] the half-hour situation comedy was broadcast October 12, 1950 – September 22, 1958, on CBS. The show was initially staged live in New York and presented every other week. In the fall of 1952 it became a weekly series filmed on the West Coast.[23]: 280–281 With 291 episodes, the show had a long network run through 1958 and continued in syndicated reruns for years.
The sets were designed to look like the couple's real-life residence. An establishing shot of the actual house on Maple Drive in Beverly Hills, California, was often used. Although extensively remodeled, that house still exists today—including the study over the garage where George would "escape" from Gracie's illogical logic. Burns lived in the house until his death in 1996, at the age of 100.
The format had George watching all the action (standing outside the proscenium arch in early live episodes; watching the show on TV in his study towards the end of the series) and breaking the fourth wall by commenting upon it to the viewers.
During the course of the eight-year run, the TV show had remarkable consistency in its cast and crew. The episodes were produced and directed by Ralph Levy (1950–53); Frederick de Cordova, later director of NBC's The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1953–56); and Rod Amateau (1956–58). The original writing staff consisted of Sid Dorfman, Harvey Helm, Paul Henning and William Burns (George's brother). The TV show was produced under the banner of McCadden Productions, a company run by George Burns which he named after the street on which his brother, William, lived. The McCadden catalog is owned by Sony Pictures Television.
Bea Benaderet carried over from the radio show, portraying neighbor Blanche Morton. Her husband Harry Morton was first portrayed by Hal March (October–December 1950), and then by John Brown (January–June 1951), and after that, Fred Clark, until 1953 when the role was assumed by Larry Keating.
Also appearing in the TV series were Burns and Allen's two adopted children, Ronnie and Sandra.[24] Ronnie became a near-regular on the show, playing himself but cast as a young drama student who tended to look askance at his parents' comedy style.[citation needed] Sandra declined becoming a regular member of the cast, although she appeared in a few episodes, usually as a secretary or the voice of a telephone operator.[citation needed]
In March 1953, The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show joined I Love Lucy as part of the CBS Monday night prime-time lineup. As a result, the show entered the top 30 television programs in the Nielsen ratings ranking at No. 20. For the 1954–1955 season, it ranked No. 26, and for both the 1955–56 and 1956–57 seasons it was No. 28. With I Love Lucy ending its six-year run on CBS in the spring of 1957, the television network wanted to renew the Burns and Allen series, but by this time Allen had grown tired of the grind. Nevertheless, Burns committed both of them for another year, which would be their eighth—and last—on television.[25]: 274
Allen announced her retirement on February 17, 1958, effective at the end of the current season.[25]: 275
Burns and Allen filmed their last show June 4, 1958.[26]: 3 The filming was an emotional experience, although nothing was said about it being Allen's last performance. At the wrap party, Allen took a token sip of champagne from a paper cup, hugged her friend and co-star Bea Benaderet, and said "Okay, that's it." After one last look around the set, she said, "And thank you very much, everyone."[25]: 279–280
"She deserved a rest," Burns said when Allen devoted herself to gardening and being a housewife:
She had been working all her life, and her lines were the toughest in the world to do. They didn't make sense, so she had to memorize every word. It took a real actress. Every spare moment—in bed, under the hair dryer—had to be spent in learning lines. Do you wonder that she's happy to be rid of it?[22]
Burns attempted to continue the show with the same supporting cast but without Allen. The George Burns Show lasted one season (October 21, 1958 – April 14, 1959) on NBC.[23]: 281
Following a mild heart attack in the 1950s,[25]: 21 Gracie Allen suffered a series of angina episodes over a number of years.[25]: 284, 307 She had a major heart attack in 1961.[25]: 289, 310 She lived a slower but comfortable retirement for another three years, often appearing in public with her husband but never performing. Gracie Allen died August 27, 1964.[22]
Accolades
The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show received a total of 11 Primetime Emmy Award nominations.[27][28][citation needed]
In 1997, the 1954 episode, "Columbia Pictures Doing Burns and Allen Story", was ranked No. 56 on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All-Time.[29]
McCadden Productions
The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show was produced under the banner of McCadden Productions, a company run by George Burns which he named after the street on which his brother William lived. While the series was in production Burns began producing other television shows and commercials. McCadden Productions employed more than 300 people and produced series including Mister Ed, The Bob Cummings Show, The People's Choice, The Marie Wilson Show and Panic!.[25]: 293
"Television was still so new that nobody really knew what kinds of shows the audience would watch," Burns wrote, "but I figured that people would like the same things on television that they liked in vaudeville, so we did shows with pretty girls and animals."[25]: 293–294
Legacy
Known for his philanthropy, George Burns made numerous contributions to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. The hospital is located at the intersection of George Burns Road, dedicated in 1986, and Gracie Allen Drive, dedicated in 1995. The George Burns–Gracie Allen Chair in Cardiology was established in 1989. The Burns and Allen Research Institute was dedicated in 1996, on Burns' 100th birthday.[30]
Sources and further reading
- Blythe, Cheryl & Sackett, Susan (1986). Say Good Night, Gracie!: The Story of Burns and Allen. New York: E.P. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-24386-0.
- Burns, George (1988). Gracie: A Love Story. New York: Putnam. ISBN 0-399-13384-4.
- Burns, George & Lindsay, Cynthia (1955). I Love Her, That's Why!. New York: Simon and Schuster.
- Clements, Cynthia & Weber, Sandra (1996). George Burns and Gracie Allen: A Bio-Bibliography. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-26883-5.
- Eagan, Eileen (1996). "'Our Town' in Cold War America: The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show (1950–1958)". Film & History. 26 (1–4): 62–70. doi:10.1353/flm.1996.a395958. S2CID 162053631.
- Morris, J.K. (March 1953). "Gracie Allen's Own Story: Inside Me". Woman's Home Companion: 127.
- Staples, Shirley (1984). Male-Female Comedy Teams in American Vaudeville, 1865–1932. Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press. ISBN 0-8357-1520-5.
References
- ^ Nussbaum, Albert (March 1977). "Funny Man: An Interview with George Burns". Take One. 5 (8). Unicorn Publishing Corp., Montréal, Québec, Canada: 26–28.
- ^ a b "New DVDs: The Jazz Singer". The New York Times. October 16, 2007. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
- ^ a b "'The Jazz Singer 80th Anniversary Collector's Edition' DVD From Warner Home Video". Warner Home Video, July 9, 2007. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
- ^ Jewell, Richard B. The RKO Story. New Rochelle, New York: Arlington House, 1982. ISBN 0-517-54656-6
- ^ "Academy Awards Database". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on 2009-02-08. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- ^ "A Damsel in Distress". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- ^ "National Film Registry Titles". National Film Preservation Board. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- ^ a b c d Parker, Kit (ed.), Kit Parker Films Catalog 1980–1981, page 301.
- ^ "Cavalcade of Comedy: The Paramount Comedy Shorts 1929–1933". Kino Video, 2006. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
- ^ Cavalcade of Comedy. WorldCat. OCLC 63791558.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 124–128. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hickerson, Jay, The Ultimate History of Network Radio Programming and Guide to All Circulating Shows. Hamden, Connecticut: Jay Hickerson, Box 4321, Hamden, CT 06514, second edition December 1992
- ^ a b c "Burns and Allen". The Digital Deli. Archived from the original on 2014-11-30. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ a b "The Burns and Allens Show". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ a b c d e "The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Burns and Allen Show". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ "Chesterfield Time". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ "The Hinds Honey and Almond Cream Program". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ "The New Burns and Allen Show". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ a b c d "Maxwell House Coffee Time". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
- ^ "Burns and Allen". National Radio Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 2014-11-10. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
- ^ a b c "Gracie Allen Dead; Comedianne Was 58". The New York Times, August 29, 1964.
- ^ a b Brooks, Tim, and Earle Marsh, The Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows 1946–Present. New York: Ballantine Books, 1988 (fourth edition), ISBN 0-345-35610-1
- ^ "Gracie Ends Act with George". Life, September 22, 1958, pages 88–93. 22 September 1958. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Burns, George, Gracie: A Love Story. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1988. ISBN 0399133844
- ^ "George Burns, Comedy's Elder Statesman, Dies". Oliver, Myrna, Los Angeles Times, March 10, 1996. 10 March 1996. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- ^ "George Burns and Gracie Allen Show". The New York Times (Baseline StudioSystems). Retrieved 2014-11-08.
- ^ "Emmy Awards Database". The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2014-11-08.
- ^ "Television's Best Episodes". St. Louis Post-Dispatch, June 23, 1997, page 06A.
- ^ Webster, Emma, "Cedars dedicates Burns and Allen Institute". Daily Variety, January 16, 1996.
External links
Radio
- Zoot Radio, free 'Burns and Allen' old time radio show downloads, 160 episodes
- Burns and Allen on Old Time Radio Outlaws
Television