Premier Collections:
The Big Show, Volume 4
Liner notes written by Ivan G. Shreve, Jr.
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"Thank you, Miss Bankhead, sir..."
In
my liner notes for the first three collections of "The Big Show", I discussed the many elements that make the show a delight to
listen to: a high budget, top stars, a roster of experienced writing talents,
rare dramatic performances, and so on. But prime among these elements is the
inclusion of musician-composer Meredith Willson as the program's presiding
maestro, complete with a 44-piece orchestra and 16-voice chorus, and also as
stooge-sidekick to the mistress of ceremonies, "the glamorous, unpredictable"
Tallulah Bankhead. It was a role with which Willson was most comfortable
throughout his radio career, bringing meticulous comedic timing to his trademark
"chiffon swing" musical arrangements and a characterization that had been used
in series prior to "The Big Show's" debut -- most notably George Burns and
Gracie Allen's Thursday night comedy program for Maxwell House Coffee.
Robert
Meredith Reiniger was born on May 18, 1902 in Mason City, Iowa -- a town he
frequently mentioned during his on-the-air appearances and a hamlet that would
play a most extraordinary role in the defining moment of his entertainment
career. (More on that later.) He attended what we now call the Julliard School
in New York City, and later achieved fame as a flute and piccolo player with the
John Philip Sousa band and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra under the
direction of Arturo Toscanini. In 1929, Meredith moved to San Francisco to
become the concert director for station KFRC, where he was a regular on the
popular "Blue Monday Jamboree," and later became musical director of the NBC
Radio network in Hollywood.
His
early radio career began with appearances on series like "Carefree Carnival" and
"The Maxwell House Show Boat," and it was the latter broadcast that served as
his introduction to what would become a longtime association with sponsor
General Foods. He was tabbed by the company to be the musical director of their
successful "Good News" program, an hour-long extravaganza that could be called a
precursor to "The Big Show," and stayed on when the show was, in 1940, shortened
to thirty minutes and became "Maxwell House Coffee Time" and featured stars
Frank Morgan and Fanny Brice as "Baby Snooks". He left the series after four
years to fulfill a military obligation, which found him working for the Armed
Forces Radio Service.
It
was during his stint with the AFRS that he made the acquaintance of George Burns
and Gracie Allen, who invited him to provide "chiffon" musical arrangements for
their new series, also called "Maxwell House Coffee Time," in the fall of 1945.
In addition to his music, Meredith was called upon to participate weekly in the
show's zany proceedings; cast as a bashful bandleader, Willson was anxious to
get married but found himself completely tongue-tied and timid around the
opposite sex. His daffy naïveté was such that many observed he was the distaff
side of Gracie Allen, the epitome of the dizzy-but-lovable screwball. Willson
spent three years on the show before leaving in the fall of 1948 for his own
self-titled variety series. It was on "The Meredith Willson Show," as it was
appropriately titled, that the bandleader created another one of radio's
memorable components" "The Talking People." A vocal quintet consisting of Betty
Allen, Maxwell Smith, Norma Zimmer, John Rarig and Bob Hanlon, the group would
recite the show's Jell-O commercials in unison, creating a "shimmering" effect
that approximated the wiggling shimmy of the popular gelatin dessert. (Meredith
and his "Talking People" also appeared to promote Jell-O on other broadcasts as
well, notably the radio sitcom champ "The Aldrich Family.")
With
the debut of "The Big Show" in 1950, Willson generated big laughs on the
ninety-minute superstar broadcast by humorlessly referring to his boss Talloo as
"sir" and often prattling on at great length about his Mason City childhood.
During his "Big Show" stint, however, Meredith was hard at work at turning his
Mason City experiences into a stage musical - one that he later described as "an
Iowan's attempt to pay tribute to his home state." Eight years and thirty
revisions later, it premiered on Broadway in 1957 as "The Music Man," and became
one of the landmark stage musicals of all time. The tunes - Trouble, 76
Trombones, 'Til There Was You - were all composed by Willson, who wrote forty
songs for the show in all. (A "Big Show" broadcast from January 14, 1951,
available in our earlier Volume 3, includes an embryonic version of a "Music
Man" perennial, there titled "'Til I Met You," performed by Fran Warren.)
Practically every song from "The Music Man" is permanently etched in the history
of popular music; indeed, the prolific Willson made many contributions to this
arena, including "The Big Show's" signature sign-off, "May the Good Lord Bless
and Keep You." and the modern-day Christmas classic "It's Beginning to Look a
Lot Like Christmas."
With
the success of "The Music Man," Willson made the leap into musical theatre and
never really looked back; his follow-ups include "The Unsinkable Molly Brown"
and "Here's Love," a musical version of the film "Miracle on 34th Street." But
upon the demise of "The Big Show," Willson found time for one more radio series:
a variety program entitled "Encore" featuring operatic moments and musical stage
highlights and starring Marguerite Piazza and frequent "Big Show" guest Robert
Merrill. Meredith even made inroads into the visual medium, appearing as a
panelist on the early TV quiz show "The Name's the Same," concocted from the
Mark Goodson-Bill Todman game show factory.
Old-time radio fans have, of course, been long aware of Meredith Willson's
incomparable musical contributions to entertainment for years now. Thanks to
Radio Archives, Willson reigns supreme in five more sequential ninety-minute
broadcasts of "The Big Show" -- newly restored and remastered in this brand-new
Premier Collection:
Sixteenth Show of the Series
Tallulah welcomes a gathering of both high- and low-brow guests, including
Beatrice Lillie, Dennis King (who is featured in a dramatic adaptation of Herman
Melville's "Billy Budd"), Jack Carson and Ed Wynn. Ed volunteers once again to
interpret Lauritz Melchior's operatic performance (this time it's
"Tannhauser"...but it still sounds like "Carmen"). Later in the program, Carson
and Fred Allen do the same for Tallulah's rendition of "I'll Be Seeing You."
Bing Crosby and Bob Hope are heard on the Chesterfield commercial. The
performers are Ed Wynn, Jack Carson, Beatrice Lillie ("Not Wanted on the
Voyage"), Dennis King, Lauritz Melchior (Wagner's "Dreams"), Fred Allen,
Portland Hoffa, The West Point Choir ("The Corps"), announcer Ben Grauer,
Meredith Willson and his Orchestra and Chorus and Tallulah Bankhead.
Sunday, February 18, 1951 - 90:00 - NBC, sponsored by Anacin, Chesterfield
and RCA Victor
Seventeenth Show of the Series
Judy Holliday returns to the program...and she's still needling Tallulah
about her love life. Talloo also crosses verbal swords with Monty Woolley and
then accompanies him in re-creating his most famous stage/movie role in a scene
from the Moss Hart-George S. Kaufman play "The Man Who Came to Dinner." Later in
the program, Judy, Jack Haley, and Olsen and Johnson send up the same scene. Uta
Hagen and Paul Kelly also perform scenes from Clifford Odetts' "The Country
Girl." Bing Crosby and Bob Hope are heard on the Chesterfield commercial. The
performers are Jack Haley (who warbles a hilarious tune about all the Irish
talent in Hollywood), Uta Hagen, Monty Woolley, Judy Holliday, Ole Olsen and
Chic Johnson, Paul Kelly, Robert Merrill (Verdi's "Di Provenza"), announcer Ed
Herlihy, Meredith Willson and his Orchestra and Chorus ("Military Polka") and
Tallulah Bankhead.
Sunday, February 25, 1951 - 90:00 - NBC, sponsored by Anacin, Chesterfield
and RCA Victor
Eighteenth Show of the Series
This program features an outstanding tribute to the great Irving Berlin --
but before the show-stopping finale, Ethel Merman spars verbally with Talloo,
Portland Hoffa sings "Sweet Marie" (with hubby Fred Allen accompanying her on
the banjo), and Herb Shriner does one of his classic "Hoosier" routines. Clive
Brook, Hugh Riley and Margaret Phillips perform an excerpt from Philip Barry's
"Second Threshold," adapted by Robert Sherwood. Bing Crosby and Bob Hope are
heard on the Chesterfield commercial. The performers are Clive Brook, Ethel
Merman, Frankie Laine ("Swamp Girl"), Fred Allen, Herb Shriner, Hugh Riley,
Margaret Philips, Margaret Truman ("Love is Where You Find It"), Portland Hoffa,
announcer Ed Herlihy, Meredith Willson and his Orchestra and Chorus ("Aba Dabba
Honeymoon") and Tallulah Bankhead.
Sunday, March 4, 1951 - 90:00 - NBC, sponsored by Anacin, Chesterfield and
RCA Victor
Nineteenth Show of the Series
The program features a compendium of comedy veterans: Bob Burns, "The
Arkansas Traveler", tells stories from his hometown of Van Buren, Arkansas --
and plays the bazooka to boot; Smith and Dale perform their immortal "Dr.
Kronkheit" routine with Jean Courtney as the nurse; and tall tales emanate from
Baron Munchausen (Jack Pearl) to the amazement of straight man Cliff Hall ("Vas
you dere, Sharlie?"). Jimmy Durante is reunited with vaudeville partner Eddie
Jackson (the two men sing "Bill Bailey") and Celeste Helm and Talloo dish the
dirt about each other. Bing Crosby and Bob Hope are heard on the Chesterfield
commercial. The performers are Billy Eckstine ("If"), Bob Burns, Celeste Holm
("The Happy Ending"), Jimmy Durante, Eddie Jackson, Evelyn Knight ("I Remember
the Cornfields"), Jack Pearl, Cliff Hall, Jean Courtney, Joe Smith and Charlie
Dale, announcer Ed Herlihy, Meredith Willson and his Orchestra and Chorus
("Thoughts While Strolling") and Tallulah Bankhead.
Sunday, March 11, 1951 - 90:00 - NBC, sponsored by Anacin, Chesterfield and
RCA Victor
Twentieth Show of the Series
Ethel Waters recreates her celebrated stage role as Hagar in a dramatized
scene from "Mamba's Daughters" and Fred Allen tells the sad tale of how a family
was ripped apart by the quiz show phenomenon...just before Talloo auditions to
appear on Phil Baker's radio show. Bing Crosby and Bob Hope are heard on the
Chesterfield commercial. The performers are Phil Baker (who plays "Stardust" on
his accordion), Johnny Burke, Eddie Cantor ("Oh! Oh! Oh! There's Nothing Like
Radio"), Eddie Fisher ("Bring Back the Thrill"), Ella Fitzgerald ("Sometimes I'm
Happy"), Fred Allen, Portland Hoffa, Jan Peerce ("May the Good Lord Bless and
Keep You"), Ethel Waters ("Happiness is Just a Thing Called Joe"), Martin
Blaine, announcer Ed Herlihy, Meredith Willson and his Orchestra and Chorus
("Here Comes the Springtime") and Tallulah Bankhead.
Sunday, March 18, 1951 - 90:00 - NBC, sponsored by Anacin, Chesterfield and
RCA Victor
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