The Jumbo Fire Chief Program
Other names |
The Circus Concert The Fire-Chief Program The Fire-Chief Show Jumbo Fire-Chief Program |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy |
Running time | 28-31 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | WEAF |
Syndicates | NBC Red Network |
Starring |
Jimmy Durante Donald Novis Gloria Grafton |
Announcer | Louis A. Witton |
Written by |
Ben Hecht Charles MacArthur |
Directed by |
Billy Rose Adolph Deutsch (music director) |
Recording studio | The Hippodrome, New York City |
Air dates |
October 22, 1935 (rehearsal show) October 29, 1935 to January 14, 1936 |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 12 known episodes |
Opening theme | Over and Over Again by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart |
Ending theme | The Jumbo Fire Chief Program ending theme |
Sponsored by | Texaco |
The Jumbo Fire Chief Program was an American old-time radio program starring Jimmy Durante, Donald Novis and Gloria Grafton. The series was broadcast from WEAF radio and syndicated nationally over NBC radio. The series was based on Billy Rose's musical circus act Jumbo which premiered on Broadway in November 1935 and a continuation of sponsor Texaco's The Fire Chief, a radio program starring Ed Wynn that ended its three-year run several months before Jumbo' s premiere. The program starred Jimmy Durante as Claudius "Brainy" Bowers,[1] overzealous circus promoter of the Consodine circus act who usually gets the show in financial crisis due to his over exaggeration of the show's profits, and Donald Novis and Gloria Grafton as young love interests Matt Mulligan, Jr. and Mickey Consodine. Consodine is the daughter of John Consodine, the owner of the circus act.
The radio program broadcast 12 episodes[note 1] over the NBC from October 22, 1935–January 14, 1936. The series was recorded from the New York Hippodrome with an average audience of 4500–5000 people each week.[2]
Background
Ed Wynn's The Fire Chief
The series originated from Ed Wynn's departure from NBC's The Fire Chief in early 1935 and the show's sponsor Texaco wanting to continue the series.
Texaco and NBC premiered The Fire Chief in 1932. Comedian Ed Wynn played the title role of the Fire Chief. The series was popular and one of the first radio programs to be recorded before a live studio audience. Wynn left the program temporarily in 1933 when, in September of that year, Wynn along with Hungarian-born violinist Ota Gygi founded his own radio station, the Amalgamated Broadcasting System. The station lost money and went out of business five weeks later in November 1933.[3][4] He returned to The Fire Chief which continued until being cancelled in early 1935.
Billy Rose's Jumbo
On November 22, 1935, Billy Rose's musical Jumbo premiered at The Hippodrome in New York City. The musical told the story about a financially strapped circus. The musical also starred Durante, Novis and Grafton. At the end of each performance, Durante would lay down on the stage and permit a live elephant to place its foot upon his head. The musical closed on April 18, 1936, after 233 performances.[5]
Texaco's Jumbo Fire Chief
The Texas Company, aka Texaco, decided to continue their sponsored Fire Chief with The Jumbo Fire Chief Program. The Jumbo Fire Chief Program used the title of its predecessor and the premise of Jumbo. The serialized version of Jumbo premiered on October 29, 1935, from the Hippodrome and was broadcast over NBC. The series shared the same premise as the musical, which was the tale of a financially strapped circus and the tale of two young love interests; Matt Mulligan, Jr., (Donald Davis), and Mickey Consodine, (Gloria Grafton).[6] The series failed to reach popularity amongst viewing audiences and only aired 12 episodes before being cancelled on January 14, 1936.[note 2]
Cast and characters
- Claudius "Brainy" Bowers (Jimmy Durante) is the main protagonist of the radio program. Bowers, often called "Brainy" by his friends and circus counterparts, is the overzealous promoter of the circus. Brainy often is the one responsible for the circus' financial difficulties because of his over exaggeration of the show's profits and the performers income. But by the end of the episode, the circus got to stay open another week until the next payment was due. Durante was popular in the venue of radio before Jumbo Fire Chief. Durante made his first appearance on radio on the September 10, 1933 telecast of NBC's The Chase and Sanborn Hour. He performed regularly on the show until November 12 of that year.[7] After host Eddie Cantor left the program in 1934, Durante was brought back as substitute host.[8] He was host of the program from April 22–September 30, 1934. After Jumbo Fire Chief, Durante starred in The Durante-Moore Show[9] for seven years and then went to television with All Star Revue and The Jimmy Durante Show.
- Matt Mulligan, Jr. (Donald Novis) is the son of Matt Mulligan, Sr., the owner of the Mulligan Circus which is the main competition to the Consodine Show. Mulligan is the love interest of Consodine's daughter Mickey.[10]
- Mickey Consodine (Gloria Grafton) is the daughter of John Consodine and love interest to Matt, Jr.[10]
- Mr. Jellico (A.P. Kaye) is a representative from the Income Tax Department who usually comes every week to collect taxes accumulated from the circus.
Unheard characters
- John Consodine is the owner of the Consodine Show. Although never heard on mic, he is mentioned in almost every episode.
Notes
- ↑ Several sources list the number as 19 but all agree of 12 surviving episodes broadcast between October 1935–January 1936. The other seven either do not have title or have forgotten titles.
- ↑ This date is disputed amongst radio historians. While most sources and radio historians list the date of January 14, 1936, as the air date of the last episode of the program, some sources and historians believe the air date of the program's last episode to be February 25, 1936, due to 7 episodes of the program that have either unknown or forgotten titles.
References
- ↑ "Billy Rose's Jumbo Texaco Fire Chief Program (starring Jimmy Durante)- Complete 1935–36 Series 12-Rare Old Time Radio Shows Plus 2 Classic Jimmy Durante songs- "Frosty The Snowman" (1950 single) & " Isn't It a Shame Christmas Only Comes Once A Year" (from the 1950 film "The Great Ruppert") 1 MP3". Amazon.com. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ↑ "Trouble with the IRS". The Jumbo Fire Chief Program. Season 1. Episode 1. New York City. October 29, 1935. NBC. WEAF. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ↑ Elizabeth McLeod, Tonight The Program's Gonna Be Different: The Life and Times of Ed Wynn, the Fire Chief
- ↑ Sterling, Christopher H. (March 1, 2004). Encyclopedia of Radio 3-Volume Set. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-1354-5648-1.
- ↑ Hischak, Thomas S. The Rodgers and Hammerstein Encyclopedia (2007), Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 0-313-34140-0. p. 140
- ↑ "The Fire-Chief Concert Radio Program". www.vintageallies.com. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ↑ Jimmy Durante: His Show Business Career, with an Annotated Filmography and Discography by David Bakish, p. 25
- ↑ Rayno, Don (December 19, 2012). Paul Whiteman: Pioneer in American Music, 1930–1967. Scarecrow Press. p. 379. ISBN 978-0-8108-8322-2. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ↑ Sher, Aubrey J. (August 15, 2013). Those Great Old-Time Radio Years. Xlibris Corporation. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-4836-7909-9. Retrieved May 10, 2015.
- 1 2 "Radio Review: The Jumbo Fire Chief Program". www.greatdetectives.net. Retrieved May 10, 2015.
External links
Download