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    phil harris

    Explore "phil harris" with insightful episodes like "When Radio Ruled #69 - Phil Harris and his Orchestra 1938", "When Radio Ruled #67 - Jack Benny's Gang Go to Yosemite.", "When Radio Ruled #60 - Bie Mir Bist du Shön", "When Radio Ruled #54 - Soundscape 1937 part 21" and "When Radio Ruled Episode 46 - Soundscape 1937 part 13" from podcasts like ""beforetv's podcast", "beforetv's podcast", "beforetv's podcast", "beforetv's podcast" and "beforetv's podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (26)

    When Radio Ruled #69 - Phil Harris and his Orchestra 1938

    When Radio Ruled #69 - Phil Harris and his Orchestra 1938

    The Jack Benny show made Phil a huge star. Even though Phil would go on to do more films and have his own radio shows, and tour the country with his band, and appear on television and build a real estate empire he would always be known first and foremost for his Jack Benny years.

    What you are about to hear are a series of musical selections Phil and his orchestra played live on Jack Benny’s Jello program in 1938.

    Some are instrumentals and some feature Phil’s distinctive vocals, but all of them bring a joy and a bounce that will carry you through your day. So much fun to listen to. Enjoy Phil Harris and his orchestra playing live from 1938.

    SONG HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE

    Bei Mir Bist Du Shoen

    You Couldn’t Be Cuter

    Pocket Full of Dreams

    Jungle Beat

    What have you got that gets me?

    Franklin D Roosevelt Jones Instrumental

    I got Rhythm instrumental

    Jeepers Creepers instrumental

    When Radio Ruled #67 - Jack Benny's Gang Go to Yosemite.

    When Radio Ruled #67 - Jack Benny's Gang Go to Yosemite.

    Old Time Radio’s Jack Benny show was a sitcom disguised as a variety show.

     

    The cast used their real names, or rather their real stage names, but they all played characters unlike themselves. Characters of diverse comic points of view, each character contrasted with the others. Each funny in their own way and all together a delightful mix of contrasting attitudes and motivations.

     

    Jack Benny was the center of this comic universe. He portrayed a cheapskate, self centered scardy cat who imagined himself a rugged ladies man.

     

    Jack’s real life wife, Mary Livingston, played Jack’s sassy gal pal, boy crazy but not easily impressed by the rich and famous.

     

    Band leader Phil Harris was cast as a drunken, womanizing, musical man about town. More talent than brains and care free.

     

    Tenor vocalist Dennis Day presented as a simple minded momma’s boy. Innocent and child like.

     

    Announcer Don Wilson was the adult in the room, often the object of fat jokes, but treating all with affection and respect. Almost a big brother figure.

     

    The formula for the show was to move back and fourth between the world of putting on a half hour musical/variety radio show and the interpersonal world between the characters.

     

    As you might expect, these characters endeared themselves to their listeners. It was fun listening to the real Jack Benny playing the radio character Jack Benny who was portraying some character in a radio play. It was fun to hear radio Phil Harris pretend to not know anything about music. It was funny when radio Dennis Day believed everything he was told, or Radio Mary recounted the story of a disastrous date.

     

    These moments were broken up with songs from Phil and Dennis, sometimes Mary, and comical Jello commercials from Don. Sometimes sketches with guest stars who in most cases also played themselves in encounters with radio Jack Benny, like the time Barbara Stanwyck rehearsed a radio play with Jack or the time Orson Welles came by to give Jack acting lessons.

     

    In truth, the characters the cast portrayed became so well known and loved that they could stand alone, outside the variety show world.

     

    In early 1940 Jack and his writers did just that. For an entire month, the Jack Benny radio characters were sent on a fictional ski vacation to Yosemite.

     

    The Jack Benny Radio shows February 4, 11, 18, and 25 1940 presented the trip to and the adventures at Yosemite starring the Jack Benny Gang.

     

    Although presented episodically because of Jack’s half hour time slot, these four shows are a single radio play running approximately 80 minutes. It is a radical break from the Jack Benny formula, and adds layers of nuance to the characters as these actors get to really act in the longer more sustained narrative involving these characters.

     

    And that’s what you are about to hear, the entire radio play cut together with commercials etc. edited out in order to focus on the story and maintain pacing.

     

    Believe me, this is good stuff. Jack Benny and the Gang go to Yosemite parts 1, 2, 3, & 4.

     

    When Radio Ruled #60 - Bie Mir Bist du Shön

    When Radio Ruled #60 - Bie Mir  Bist du Shön

    Bie Mir Bist du Shön

    This song shot up the charts, appearing in the top ten on January 8 1938, going to number one two weeks later and staying in the top spot from 5 to 10 weeks, depending on your source.

    And it went international before that was really a thing, becoming a massive hit in Germany and Poland as well as the United States.

    Dozens of established recording artists, Like Kate Smith and Benny Goodman, rushed to record their own version of the song.

    This incredible popularity made singers on the Radio of every style cover the song , and that is what you are going to hear, Radio greats interpreting this song each in their own style and bringing something new to it each time.

    You are about to hear “Bie Mir Bist du Shön” performed by The Andrew Sisters, Pinky Tomlin, Phil Harris, Georgie Jessel, Eddie Cantor, Little Dorothy Wade, Kenny Baker, and child star Bobby Breen.

     

    When Radio Ruled #54 - Soundscape 1937 part 21

    When Radio Ruled #54 - Soundscape 1937 part 21

    This podcast is a montage of excerpts from old time radio shows performed live and broadcast November 8 to November 28, 1938.

    Starring Bing Crosby, Jimmy Wallington, Eddie Cantor, Fibber McGee and Molly, Benny Goodman, Colonel Stoopnagle and Budd, Don Wilson, Jack Benny, Phil Harris, Mary Livingstone, Orson Welles, and more.

     

    Featured Songs include Eddie Cantor, “Getting some fun out of Life”, Bing Crosby “I’m Humming”, Some smoking Benny Goodman Swing Instrumentals and the Benny Goodman orchestra featuring vocalist Martha Tilden “Mama that moon is here again”, Pinky Tomlin “The Lady who couldn’t be Kissed” and Phil Harris “You can’t stop me from dreaming”

    When Radio Ruled Episode 46 - Soundscape 1937 part 13

    When Radio Ruled Episode 46 - Soundscape 1937 part 13

    This podcast is a montage of excerpts from old time radio shows performed live and broadcast June 21 to July 11, 1937.

    Starring Cecil B. DeMille, Don Wilson, Phil Harris, Jack Benny, Mary Livingston, Jimmy Wallington, Pinky Tomlin, Don Ameche, Charlie McCarthy, Edgar Bergen, Sonya Hennie, W.C. Fields, Dorothy Lamour, Robert Armbruster, Zasu Pitts, Hoagy Carmichael, and more.

    Featured Songs include Mary Livingston with the cast of the Jack Benny Show “The Love Bug”, Pinky Tomlin “As Far As Your Concerned”, The cast of the Charlie McCarthy Show with Hoagy Carmichael, “I love you like my old felt hat”

    When Radio Ruled #44 - Soundscape 1937 part 12

    When Radio Ruled #44 - Soundscape 1937 part 12

    This podcast is a montage of excerpts from old time radio shows performed live and broadcast June 13 to June 20, 1937.

    Starring Pinky Tomlin, Don Ameche, Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Dorothy Lamour, W.C. Fields, Joan Blondell, Rogers & Hart, Jack Benny, Don Wilson, Kenny Baker, Phil Harris, Cecil B. DeMille, Helen Wills Moody, Fibber McGee and Molly, Rudy Vallee, Fanny Brice, Charles Winninger, May Robson, and more.

    Featured Songs include Pinky Tomlin “Ragtime Cowboy Joe Medley”, Don Ameche “A little of you on toast:” Rudy Vallee “We danced the night away”