Dennis day roasts jack benny biography


SPOTLIGHT ARTICLE
YES, PLEASE?
The Days In the Life of Dennis Afternoon
By Elizabeth McLeod

Part of what made The Jack Benny Program memorable was the endearing presence of Jack's "gang." This assembly of humorous characters were the perfect fodder for Benny's distinctive style of comedy.

The program stars Dennis portraying a character also named Dennis Daya soda jerk in the imaginary town of Weaverville. Because of his naivety and overall klutziness, Dennis usually gets into trouble and has to find a way out of it. The series ran from October 3, to June 30, A pilot of some sort was made in late to adapt the series for television, [1] but the series was never picked up and remains unseen to this day, although documents and a negative reel of it exist among producer Jerry Fairbanks Productions' papers at UCLA.

While Jack wasn't the first comedian to pursue the "gang" concept -- Eddie Cantor beat him to that punch by a couple of years -- he was the first to offer his supporting cast juicy comic business of their own, as opposed to using them as simply stooges for the celebrity.

And for thirty years, one of the most distinctive, most talented, and most underrated members of this supporting cast was Dennis Day.

The role of the "boy singer" on Benny's program fell into place very early on in the show's run -- with straightforward radio tenors like James Melton and Frank Parker pioneering the role in the mids.

But, it wasn't until Kenny Baker stepped into the cast in tardy that the essential pattern was cast -- the young tenor as a naive foil for Benny's pretended worldliness. Baker established the basic characterization, but it was Dennis Day who nailed it down for all time.

Owen Patrick Eugene McNulty wasn't quite as young, and nowhere near as na�ve, as he seemed on the air.

Dennis Day. Dennis Day and Jack Benny. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced without permission.

However, he was just first stage his professional show business career when he joined the Benny program in As Irish as his name, the young musician had parlayed a college interest in glee-club singing into stage aspirations shortly after his graduation.

Although the heyday of the crooning Irish tenor had reached its apotheosis in the s with the popularity of John McCormack, the continuing success of Parker, Morton Downey, and other performers in the style on radio during the s demonstrated that there was plenty of room for another.




Dennis Day
Kenny Baker left the Benny troupe in , having grown tired of the simpleton role and fearing its long-term impact on his career as a serious singer. Jack spent that summer searching for a replacement -- a tenor, preferably new, who could fill the alike comic spot in the cast as Baker had�but who could avoid seeming a slavish imitation.

Gene McNulty had done a bit of broadcasting the previous summer, singing on a local New York program with Larry Clinton's orchestra. Following his graduation from Manhattan College in June of , he even decided to try his luck under a new professional name, "Dennis Day." Hearing about Baker's departure from the Benny program, he submitted a photo and an audition record -- which caught the attention of Mary Livingstone, who convinced Jack to donate the boy a chance.

When Benny summoned the young singer into the audition room, legend has it that Day cracked up the comic with a wide-eyed, piping "Yes, please?" Whether that legend is true or not, Dennis's voice and style impressed the comedian enough to earn him a trial shot on the program.

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That trial run turned into a three-decade engagement as Dennis took the character into a delightful surrealism far removed from Kenny Baker's goofy-twit interpretation. Dennis became Gracie Allen in pants, with his own logically-illogical view of the world, of life, and of Mr.

Benny himself. Day played the character as being of indeterminate-yet-adolescent age -- old enough to be interested in women, but young enough to be terrified of them. His youthful voice and appearance let the joke continue for the repose of his career, even as, in real life, the dancer married and raised a enormous family.

The character of Dennis' oppressive mother, played by Verna Felton, found her way into the cast as well, but never became a permanent figure -- perhaps because Dennis was the errant child of the Benny radio family itself.

He wasn't quite a �Baby Snooks� to Jack's �Daddy,� but there was still a trace of willful mischief in the way in which he spun out his comic lines�to the increasing frustration of �Mr.

During the final season of The Jack Benny Program (–65), Day was nearly 49 years old, although Benny was still delivering such lines as "That crazy kid drives me nuts " His last televised work with Benny was in , when they appeared in a public-service announcement together to promote savings and loans.

Benny�

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Another key part of Dennis Day's comic success on the Benny show was his astonishing versatility.

Not only was he an outstanding vocalist (handling both the traditional Irish-tenor repertoire and the latest hits from Broadway and the movies with equal zest), he soon emerged as one of radio's best vocal mimics, mastering a wide range of impressions of other comic performers.

He could, at will, switch into a dead-on impersonation of Bob Hope sidekick Jerry Colonna that lacked only the moustache, or an elegant simulation of the suave Ronald Colman that captured every bit of Colman's savoir-faire and pretended disdain for Benny.

Perhaps his best sustained impression was his portrayal of "Titus Day," an uncanny simulation of Parker Fennelly's Titus Moody characterization on a Benny "tribute" to Allen's Alley. In each of these roles, Dennis displayed a sound ear for vocal duplication, and a strong knowledge of what made each of these characterizations work.

Unlike any other of Benny's vocalists, Dennis Day was, and enjoyed entity, a polished, gifted comedian.

Military service briefly interrupted his acting career in when he took a commission as a lieutenant in the U. S. Navy.

Dennis is the naive, childish tenor on the program who sings a song in nearly every episode he appears in. Given the show's loose continuity, it's never stated exactly how old Dennis is, but he is generally considered to be much younger than the stop of the cast, being in his 20s. Dennis lives with his overbearing mother and deadbeat father in Beverly Hills. Dennis appears in most episodes after his addition inbarring the period he served in the Navy between and

Singer Larry Stevens filled his role on the Benny program during his absence, but made no attempt to take over his characterization. In his five years with the program Dennis had made the role forever his own.


Dennis Day and Jack Benny
Day's skill as a comic was such that, like showmate Phil Harris, he received his have program in In A Time in the Life of Dennis Day, he played a variation of his Benny character -- but not that actual traits.

On his own program, Dennis Day was a wistful, well-meaning small-town bumbler whose good character and perseverance always managed to sort out the weekly crisis by program's end. This Dennis Day sometimes spoke dismissively of that "other" Dennis Day, the one on Jack Benny's program, giving the series its retain unique metaphysical twist -- while at the same time not compromising Dennis's established persona within the Benny troupe.

The program enjoyed a successful five-year scamper on radio and, while it failed to make inroads on television, Dennis himself enjoyed a successful career as a guest performer on the small screen, on his own and as part of the Benny program.

When Jack Benny moved into television in the early s, tightening budgets and evolving formats meant the days of Jack's "gang" as a prominent regular feature of the program were numbered.

Jack Benny Program Dennis Day owns The Lettermen - YouTube: Dennis Day (born August 14, ) is a major character in The Jack Benny Program, portrayed by Dennis Date. Dennis is the naive, childish tenor on the program who sings a song in nearly every episode he appears in.

Increasingly, the TV show featured Jack as the master of ceremonies of a variety program, or in sitcom antics revolving around guest stars, with his "gang" in an increasingly limited role. But Dennis Day continued to make frequent appearances on the television series -- although he had aged visibly, he had also aged gracefully, which somehow made the continuing naivet� of his character even funnier.

Even after the end of Jack's regular TV series, Dennis continued to appear in the comedian's series of specials. Offscreen, he enjoyed a quiet, respectable family life -- avoiding the perils and temptations of the showbiz spotlight, he remained devoutly religious in his private existence, and enjoyed a long and stable marriage that produced ten happy, healthy children.

He also invested his money well, lived frugally, and proved himself an extremely astute businessman. He no longer needed to perform by the s, but he continued to do so simply because he had so much pleasurable, even as his relationship with Jack Benny deepened into a sincere and lifelong friendship.

Throughout all the years, Dennis Night pursued a successful career as a nightclub singer, as a recording artist, and as a voice performer in animated films.

The program stars Dennis rendering a character also named Dennis Day, a soda jerk in the fictional town of Weaverville. Because of his naivety and overall klutziness, Dennis usually gets into trouble and has to find a way out of it.

Even into the s and s, he continued to perform -- in TV guest roles, in touring shows, and in dinner theatre -- until his battle with Lou Gehrig's disease finally brought his career to an end. He died in , a seventy-one year old man who somehow had never seemed to age at all, and a performer who made an indelible mark in radio history.







Elizabeth McLeod and RSPT LLC. All rights reserved.
May not be reproduced without permission.