[78-L] RCA Victor humour

Thomas Brown stacksofmags at aol.com
Tue Oct 29 08:18:30 PDT 2013


Mr. Hope had a vast following, and the Paleface pictures helped him unseat Bing Crosby as the top box office star in the country.  I still ifnd his old films funny.  His later films and his TV specials?  Not so much....



-----Original Message-----
From: DAVID BURNHAM <burnhamd at rogers.com>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Tue, Oct 29, 2013 10:42 am
Subject: Re: [78-L] RCA Victor humour


Thanks, Thomas, when I typed "Calamity Jane" it didn't feel right, although it 
as also a movie that tickled me when I was a kid.  The scene I was remembering 
as where Hope was sitting in a barber's chair and it went nuts - spinning 
round rising to the ceiling then down to the floor - it doesn't sound that 
unny now but it sure had me going when I was 9.
db

>________________________________
 From: Thomas Brown <stacksofmags at aol.com>
To: 78-l at klickitat.78online.com 
Sent: Tuesday, October 29, 2013 4:57:19 AM
Subject: Re: [78-L] RCA Victor humour
 



Calamity Jane starred Doris Day and Howard Keel, not Bob Hope.  He was in 
aleface and Son of Paleface.





-----Original Message-----
From: DAVID BURNHAM <burnhamd at rogers.com>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Tue, Oct 29, 2013 2:18 am
Subject: [78-L] RCA Victor humour


Like beauty, "funny" is in the mind of the
beholder.  Many people would call Bob 
Hope one of the finest comedians but he often left me cold, although as a kid I 
>was in stitches watching "Calamity Jane", (or was it "Son of Paleface"?  I've 
forgotten).  Johnny Carson's humour lost some of it's effect because he seemed 
to want to make it clear that he was reading cue cards - obviously looking down 
>below the camera during his routines.  David Letterman, on the other hand, 
ften 
brings his cue card operator into the routine which adds to the humour.  To get 
>back to RCA and records, I always enjoyed the Allan Sherman "Peter and the 
Commisar" record but more for the "End of a Symphony" than the title track, (if 
>you want a spoof on "Peter and the Wolf", nothing can beat Peter Schickle's 
"Sneaky Pete and the
Wolf"), but, unfortunately, when the Sherman record was 
mastered onto CD, (and I hope it wasn't one of my ARSC friends who did it), the 
>applause is
painfully and speaker damagingly loud compared to the program content.


db



>________________________________
> From: David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
>To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com> 
>Sent: Monday, October 28, 2013 10:01:29 PM
>Subject: Re: [78-L] Mr. Magoo
> 
>
>On 10/28/2013
8:35 PM, Michael Biel wrote:
>> dl wrote:
>>>> RCA's sense of humor was sometimes very hard to detect.
>>
>> Guckenheimer Sour Kraut Band is not funny?????  Homer and Jethro is not
>> funny?????   "Sing Along with Jonathan and Darlene Edwards" is not
>> funny?????  Bob Arbogast "The Chickens Are In the Chimes" is not
>> funny????   Wingy's "Stop the War the Cats are Killing Themselves" is
>> not funny????  "Am I Dreaming or Are All My Favorite Bands Playing?" is
>> not funny?????  And check out "Bob and Ray On A Platter" instead of
>> "Throw a Stereo Spectacular".
>>
>> Mike Biel  mbiel at mbiel.com
>
>Jonathan and Darlene was funny, as well as their only album for RCA. 
>Guckenheimer was funny. The Chickens was Sacha Burland and Mason Adams, not 
ob 

>Arbogast, and was only a single. Wingy and All My Faves were 20 years earlier, 
>>ditto Spike Jones. Bob and Ray On a Platter was forced, not nearly as good as 
>their on air stuff, much better than Stereo Spectacular 'tis true. Homer and 
>Jethro, no contest. But they were still fighting a losing battle against 
erve, 

>Capitol and Coral, later United Artists. Nobody's mentioned Spike Jones but 
>he'd rarely been funny on Victor after 1950, notable exception being the one 
>side he made with Homer and jethro which RCA SAT ON for 3
or 4 years.
>
>dl
>>
>> -------- Original Message --------
>> Subject: Re: [78-L] Mr. Magoo
>> From: David Lennick<dlennick at sympatico.ca>
>> Date: Mon, October 28, 2013 7:17 pm
>> To: 78-L Mail List<78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
>>
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESE0RGxpqf8
>>
>> Never heard this one before!
>>
>> As for Magoo, the music by Dennis Farnon is
funnier than the sketch, and
>> it's
>> not top drawer either. CJBC in Toronto used a couple of portions of it
>> as the
>> opening and closing for their daily dose of Bob and Ray. (I did the same
>> years
>> later on a daily comedy bit on another station.)
>>
>> dl
>>
>> On 10/28/2013 6:34 PM, David Breneman wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> From: David Lennick<dlennick at sympatico.ca>
>>>
>>>
>>>> An album that's nowhere near as funny as you wish it would be, as I 
ecall.
>>>> Like the Bob and Ray Stereo Spectacular, or Lord Buckley's Hipsters
>>>> Flipsters,
>>>> or Allan Sherman's Peter. RCA's sense of humor was sometimes very hard
>>>> to
>>>> detect. (Defend 'em all you want, but I have never laughed at any of those
>>>> albums.)
>>>
>>> Re Magoo in Hi-Fi -
>>>
>>> I have a very nice copy of it, which I bought because I always thought I
>>> loved *everything* Jim Backus did (with the exception of Gilligan's 
sland).
>>> It's pretty unimaginative stuff. Magoo is building a Hi-Fi. He reads
>>> that he needs woofers and tweeters, so naturally he goes out and gets some
>>> dogs and birds. The jokes go down hill from there. All this inanity is
>>> commented upon by his doofy nephew Waldo - and that's insipid doofiness,
>>> not comic doofiness.
>>>
>>> Re "Why Don't You go Home for Christmas" -
>>>
>>> It's a monologue by Backus, delivered to his apparently shrewish wife,
>>> emploring her to go spend Christmas with her parents "So *I* can have a
>>> Happy New Year." ("If you had any class, you would go by bus.") You
>>> can almost imagine him in a smoking jacket, hoisting a martini and leaning
>>> against a console stereo, as he begins "Every year, about this time, Old
>>> Jingle-Bells-Ville..." Much more humor in three minutes
than the whole
>>> Magoo LP.
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> 78-L mailing list
>>> 78-L at klickitat.78online.com
>>> http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l

>>>
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> 78-L mailing list
>> 78-L at klickitat.78online.com
>> http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
>> _______________________________________________
>> 78-L mailing list
>> 78-L at klickitat.78online.com
>> http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
>>
>>
>
>_______________________________________________
>78-L mailing list
>78-L at klickitat.78online.com
>http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
>
>
>
_______________________________________________
78-L mailing list
78-L at klickitat.78online.com
http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l


_______________________________________________
78-L mailing list
78-L at klickitat.78online.com
http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l



______________________________________________
8-L mailing list
8-L at klickitat.78online.com
ttp://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l



More information about the 78-L mailing list