Blind Item #1 - Old Hollywood
This stand up comedian was considered the founder of stand up comedy. He was also perhaps the most racist person to ever achieve A list status.
This stand up comedian was considered the founder of stand up comedy. He was also perhaps the most racist person to ever achieve A list status.
Posted by ent lawyer at 2:00 AM
Labels: blind item , Old Hollywood Blind Item
Crazy Days and Nights is a gossip site. The site publishes rumors, conjecture, and fiction. In addition to accurately reported information, certain situations, characters and events portrayed in the Blog are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Information on this site may contain errors or inaccuracies; the Blog’s proprietor does not make warranty as to the correctness or reliability of the site's content. Links to content on and quotation of material from other sites are not the responsibility of Crazy Days and Nights.
Cookies & 3rd Party Advertisements Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on your site. Google's use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to your users based on their visit to your sites and other sites on the Internet. Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy. We allow third-party companies to serve ads and/or collect certain anonymous information when you visit our web site. These companies may use non-personally identifiable information (e.g., click stream information, browser type, time and date, subject of advertisements clicked or scrolled over) during your visits to this and other Web sites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services likely to be of greater interest to you. These companies typically use a cookie or third party web beacon to collect this information. To learn more about this behavioral advertising practice or to opt-out of this type of advertising, you can visit https://www.networkadvertising.org/managing/opt_out.asp.
37 comments:
Jack Benny?
Bob Hope(?)
I say with much trepidation.
Milton Berle
Henny Youngman?
Bob Hope?
George Burns.(Or Milton Berle).
My vote would also be for Benny, but I thought he had a good relationship with Rochester? Idk
I don't think it's Bob Hope. There was a story about him standing up during a Pearl Bailey show to shut up a racist heckler, and he would work with anyone as long as they were talented.
John Wayne
Then again, there are stories about Bob telling really virulent racist jokes offstage. TBH, there was a time years when those were commonly told, and I don't think that really was an indicator of whether someone was a racist.
Heard some very disgusting things about Bob Hope. Worst things than being racist.
Bob cheated on his wife for years, but I don't consider that worse than being racist.
No way this dude's A-list, and he's much more anti-Semitic than racist, but he was a HUGE influence: Frank Fay.
http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2014/06/comedys-fascist-sympathizer-by-kliph-nesteroff.html
Holy crap, from that article, I had no idea this happened:
" In January 1946, several months after Germany had been defeated, a rally of ten thousand white supremacists gathered at Madison Square Garden. They delivered speeches in support of Franco, Mussolini and their fallen hero Adolf Hitler. They promised that the defeat of Germany would not go unpunished. The podium was beneath a banner that saluted their guest of honor. The event was called "The Friends of Frank Fay."
Milton Berle?
Fred Allen or George Burns.
North American stand-up comedy has its roots in various traditions of popular entertainment of the late 19th century, including vaudeville, English music hall, burlesque or early variety shows; minstrel shows, humorist monologues by personalities such as Mark Twain, and circus clown antics. With the turn of the century and ubiquitousness of urban and industrial living, the structure, pacing and timing, and material of American humor began to change. Comedians of this era often depended on fast-paced joke delivery, slapstick, outrageous or lewd innuendo, and donned an ethnic persona—African, Scottish, German, Jewish—and built a routine based on popular stereotypes. Jokes were generally broad and material was widely shared, or in some cases, stolen. Industrialized American audiences sought entertainment as a way to escape and confront city living.
The founders of modern American stand-up comedy include Moms Mabley, Jack Benny, Bob Hope, George Burns, Fred Allen, Milton Berle, and Frank Fay all of whom came from vaudeville or the Chitlin' Circuit.[5] They spoke directly to the audience as themselves, in front of the curtain, known as performing "in one". Frank Fay gained acclaim as a "master of ceremonies" at New York's Palace Theater. Vaudevillian Charlie Case (also spelled Charley Case) is often credited with the first form of stand-up comedy; performing humorous monologues without props or costumes. This had not been done before during a vaudeville show.
Nightclubs and resorts became the new breeding ground for stand-ups. Acts such as Alan King, Danny Thomas, Martin and Lewis, Don Rickles, Joan Rivers, and Jack E. Leonard flourished in these new arenas.
Actually, the first recognized stand up comic was an English guy named Julius Tannen who was the first to put the props down and just tell jokes..he was the guy that gives the talking picture demo in Singin in the Rain...I dunno who this is, but Eddie Anderson had only kudos for Jack Benny
He may have been A list when he was first performing. Being a Nazi sympathizer and a wife beater probably diminished his popularity to the point where he was no longer given his due. He made a lot of enemies.
John Wayne was known for being a stand-up comedian?
Well, some of his westerns were cringe-funny. ;-)
Can we safely eliminate Moms Mabley or no?
I actually heard he was a pedophile.
Jerry Lewis?
Richard Pryor?
I read most guesses and comments and agree Bob Hope was an asshole and probably in the closet pedo, but I don't think racist. Lewis is a great answer but he was more of a full blown entertainer, so it leaves Burns, Berle, and Allen as the true pioneers of comedy. Young man played and instrument as well and Benny was close to and had wonderful relationship with Rochester.
According to Kliph Nesterhoff's book _The Comedians_, Frank Fay is the founder of American standup comedy, anyway -- as in, he didn't have an "act," he just stood there in a tuxedo and told jokes. And yes, he was a stupendously foul racist. But I doubt this blind intended for him to be the answer -- probably Berle or Hope, but it wasn't as if there was anything interesting or different about their racial attitudes...and at least in Berle's case, there's a story about his insulting Miles Davis's band to their faces back in the 50s.
Nobody has ever had anything negative to say about Benny, even in this regard, and actually Nesterhoff's book depicts Benny protesting the cartoonish qualities of Rochester and insisting that the writers make him much less of a Stepin Fetchit type... as after all the point of Benny's show was that the jokes were at his expense, not Rochester's.
Will Rogers
@ Encino Man- That is a very interesting possibility.
My guess as well.
What's everyone so outraged about? I'm sure this person was no more racist than Chris Rock who's ass everyone licks.
Alan King
Ted Healy.
Yea. You wish. Tell the truth, shame the devil.
Frank Day.
Minor skirmish between Richard Pryor and Milton Berle:
https://youtu.be/SkKdDWstwWE?t=113
Probably better/longer clips around.
[…] August 27, 2016 […]
Post a Comment