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George Burns

George Burns (born Nathan Birnbaum; January 20, 1896 – March 9, 1996) was an American comedian, actor, writer, and singer, and one of the few entertainers whose career successfully spanned vaudeville, radio, film and television. His arched eyebrow and cigar-smoke punctuation became familiar trademarks for over three-quarters of a century. He and his wife Gracie Allen appeared on radio, television and film as the comedy duo Burns and Allen.

George Burns
Burns in 1961
Born
Nathan Birnbaum

(1896-01-20)January 20, 1896
New York City, U.S.
DiedMarch 9, 1996(1996-03-09) (aged 100)
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park
Occupations
  • Actor
  • comedian
  • writer
  • singer
  • television host
Years active1902–1996
Spouse
(m. 1926; died 1964)
Children2, including Ronnie

At the age of 79, Burns experienced a sudden career revival as an amiable, beloved and unusually active comedy elder statesman in the 1975 film The Sunshine Boys, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. Burns was only a Tony Award shy of being one of the few EGOT award recipients in the American entertainment industry, winning an Emmy, a Grammy, and an Oscar. Burns became a centenarian in 1996, continuing to work until just weeks before his death of cardiac arrest at his home in Beverly Hills, shortly after his hundredth birthday.

Early life

George Burns was born Nathan Birnbaum on January 20, 1896, in New York City,[1] the ninth of 12 children born to Hadassah "Dorah" (née Bluth; 1857–1927) and Eliezer Birnbaum (1855–1903), known as Louis or Lippa, Jewish immigrants who had come to the United States from Ropczyce,[2] Galicia, now Poland.[3] Burns was a member of the First Roumanian-American Congregation.[4]

His father was a substitute cantor at the local synagogue but usually worked as a coat presser. During the influenza epidemic of 1903, Lippe Birnbaum contracted the flu and died at the age of 47. Burns, called Nattie or Nate at the time, went to work to help support the family, shining shoes, running errands and selling newspapers.[5]

When he got a job as a syrup maker in a local candy shop at age seven, Burns was "discovered", as he recalled long after:[6]

We were all about the same age, six and seven, and when we were bored making syrup, we used to practice singing harmony in the basement. One day our letter carrier came down to the basement. His name was Lou Farley. Feingold was his real name, but he changed it to Farley. He wanted the whole world to sing harmony. He came down to the basement once to deliver a letter and heard the four of us kids singing harmony. He liked our style, so we sang a couple more songs for him. Then we looked up at the head of the stairs and saw three or four people listening to us and smiling. In fact, they threw down a couple of pennies. So I said to the kids I was working with: no more chocolate syrup. It's show business from now on.

We called ourselves the Pee-Wee Quartet. We started out singing on ferryboats, in saloons, in brothels, and on street corners. We'd put our hats down for donations. Sometimes the customers threw something in the hats. Sometimes they took something out of the hats. Sometimes they took the hats.

— George Burns

One of the Burns brothers' first regular gigs was operating the curtains at the vaudeville and nickelodeon theatre of Frank Seiden, father of Joseph Seiden, who would later become a Yiddish film producer.[7] Burns started smoking cigars when he was 14.[8]

Burns was drafted into the United States Army when the U.S. entered World War I in 1917, but he failed the physical examination because he was extremely nearsighted.[9] To hide his Jewish heritage, he adopted the stage name by which he would be known for the rest of his life. He later claimed that he selected the name of George Burns because there were two active star professional baseball players with the name (George H. Burns and George J. Burns, unrelated), each of whom would accumulate more than 2,000 hits and hold some major-league records. Burns also was reported to have taken George from his brother Izzy (who had first adopted the name because he hated his own) and Burns from the Burns Brothers Coal Company, from whose trucks he would steal coal as a youth.[10][11]: 33 

His first wife was Hannah Siegel (stage name Hermosa Jose), one of his dance partners. The marriage lasted 26 weeks and only occurred because Siegel's family would not permit her to tour with Burns unless they were married. They divorced at the end of the tour.[11]: 58 

Burns normally partnered with a girl, sometimes in an adagio dance routine, sometimes in comic patter. Though he had an apparent flair for comedy, he never quite clicked with any of his partners until he met Gracie Allen, a young Irish Catholic woman, in 1923. "And all of a sudden," he said in later years, "the audience realized I had a talent. They were right. I did have a talent—and I was married to her for 38 years."[12] Burns wed Allen in 1926.[8]

 
Burns, Allen and children just before sailing for Hawaii in 1938

Stage to screen

Burns and Allen began their career in motion pictures with a series of comic short films in the late 1920s and early 1930s, such as The Big Broadcast (1932) with Bing Crosby, both International House (1933) and Six of a Kind (1934) with W.C. Fields, The Big Broadcast of 1936 with Crosby again, The Big Broadcast of 1937 with Jack Benny, A Damsel in Distress (1937) with Fred Astaire and Joan Fontaine, and College Swing (1938) with Bob Hope and Martha Raye. Honolulu (1939) with Eleanor Powell and Robert Young would be Burns' last film for nearly 40 years although Gracie Allen starred in two more pictures without Burns.

In 1938, Paramount producer and managing director William LeBaron was planning a vehicle for Burns and Allen to team with established star Bing Crosby, with a script written by Don Hartman and Frank Butler. However, the story didn't fit Burns and Allen's style, so LeBaron ordered script rewrites to fit two male co-stars: Crosby and Bob Hope. The project became Road to Singapore (1940), the first in a long-running and popular series of "Road" films.

Radio stars

Burns and Allen first appeared on the radio as the comedy relief for bandleader Guy Lombardo. In his memoir The Third Time Around, Burns shared a letter from a college fraternity complaining that its weekly dance parties were interrupted by Burns and Allen routines.

Burns and Allen found their own show and radio audience, first airing on February 15, 1932. Their show was based on their classic stage routines and sketch comedy in which their style was woven into multiple smaller scenes, in a manner similar to that of the short films that they had made in Hollywood. They were also known for clever publicity stunts, such as Gracie's hunt for her missing brother that carried over into guest spots on other radio shows. In April 1935 they added Ferde Grofé as Musical Director.

The couple was portrayed at first as unmarried, with Allen the object of Burns' affections as well as those of other cast members. Bandleaders Ray Noble (known for his phrase "Gracie, this is the first time we've ever been alone") and Artie Shaw played love interests for Gracie. Singer Tony Martin also played Gracie's unwilling love interest whom she comically threatened to fire if he would not reciprocate her romantic interest.

Over time, as ratings declined and with their audience's close familiarity with their real-life marriage, Burns and Allen adapted their radio show in the fall of 1941 to present them as a married couple. Artie Shaw, who also appeared as a character in some of the show's sketches, was the show's bandleader at one time. Allen's character also changed slightly during this era, as she would often now be mean to Burns.

As this format grew stale over the years, Burns and his fellow writers redeveloped the show as a situation comedy in the fall of 1941. The reformat focused on the couple's married life and their friends and neighbors, including Elvia Allman as Tootsie Sagwell, a man-hungry spinster in love with Bill Goodwin. The characters of Harry and Blanche Morton became a mainstay of the program.

As with The Jack Benny Program, the new George Burns & Gracie Allen Show portrayed Burns and Allen as entertainers with their own weekly radio show. Goodwin remained, and the music was now led by Meredith Willson (later to be better known for composing the Broadway musical The Music Man). Willson also played himself on the show as naïve, friendly and shy with women. The new format's success made it one of the few classic radio comedies to completely reinvent itself and regain great success.

Supporting players

The supporting cast during this phase included Mel Blanc as the melancholy, ironically named "Happy Postman" (his catchphrase was "Remember, keep smiling!"); Bea Benaderet (later Cousin Pearl in The Beverly Hillbillies, Kate Bradley in Petticoat Junction and the voice of Betty Rubble in The Flintstones) and Hal March (later more famous as the host of The $64,000 Question) as neighbors Blanche and Harry Morton; and the various members of Gracie's ladies' club, the Beverly Hills Uplift Society. One running gag during this period, stretching into the television era, was Burns' questionable singing voice, as Gracie lovingly referred to her husband as "Sugar Throat." The show received and maintained a Top 10 rating for the rest of its radio life.

New network

In the fall of 1949, after 12 years at NBC, the couple took the show back to its original network CBS, where they had risen to fame from 1932 to 1937. Their good friend Jack Benny reached a negotiating impasse with NBC over the corporation he set up ("Amusement Enterprises") to package his show, the better to put more of his earnings on a capital-gains basis and avoid the 80 percent taxes slapped on very high earners in the World War II period. When CBS executive William S. Paley convinced Benny to move to CBS (Paley, among other things, impressed Benny with his attitude that the performers make the network, not the other way around, as NBC chief David Sarnoff reputedly believed); Benny in turn convinced several NBC stars to join him, including Burns and Allen. Thus, CBS reaped the benefits when Burns and Allen moved to television in 1950.

Television

The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show

 
George Burns and Gracie Allen, 1955.

On television, The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show put faces to some of the radio characters audiences had come to love although they were already familiar with Burns and Allen's faces from their films. A number of significant changes were seen in the show:

  • A parade of actors portrayed Harry Morton: Hal March, The Life of Riley alumnus John Brown, veteran film and television character actor Fred Clark, and future Mister Ed co-star Larry Keating.
  • Burns often broke the fourth wall, and chatted with the home audience, telling understated jokes and commenting wryly about what show characters were doing or undoing. In later shows, he would actually turn on a television and watch what the other characters were up to when he was off-camera, then return to foil the plot.
  • When announcer Bill Goodwin left after the first season, Burns hired announcer Harry Von Zell, a veteran of the Fred Allen and Eddie Cantor radio shows, to succeed him. Von Zell was cast as the good-natured, easily confused Burns and Allen announcer and buddy. He also became one of the show's running gags, when his involvement in Gracie's harebrained ideas would get him fired at least once a week by Burns.
  • The first shows were simply a copy of the radio format, complete with lengthy and integrated commercials for sponsor Carnation Evaporated Milk by Goodwin. However, what worked well on radio appeared forced and plodding on television. The show was changed into the now-standard situation comedy format, with the commercials distinct from the plot.
  • Midway through the run of the television show the Burns' two children, Sandra and Ronald, began to make appearances: Sandy in an occasional voice-over or brief on-air part (often as a telephone operator), and Ronnie in various small roles throughout the 4th and 5th seasons. Ronnie joined the regular cast in season 6. Typical of the blurred line between reality and fiction in the show, Ronnie played George and Gracie's on-air son, showing up in the second episode of season 6 ("Ronnie Arrives") with no explanation offered as to where he had been for the past five years of the show. Originally his character was an aspiring dramatic actor who held his parents' comedy style in befuddled contempt and deemed it unsuitable to the "serious" drama student. When the show's characters moved back to California in season 7 after spending the prior year in New York City, Ronnie's character dropped all apparent acting aspirations and instead enrolled in USC, becoming an inveterate girl chaser.

Burns and Allen also took a cue from Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz's Desilu Productions and formed a company of their own, McCadden Corporation (named after the street on which Burns' brother lived), headquartered on the General Service Studio lot in the heart of Hollywood, and set up to film television shows and commercials. Besides their own hit show (which made the transition from a bi-weekly live series to a weekly filmed version in the fall of 1952), the couple's company produced such television series as The Bob Cummings Show (subsequently syndicated and rerun as Love That Bob); The People's Choice, starring Jackie Cooper; Mona McCluskey, starring Juliet Prowse; and Mister Ed, starring Alan Young and a talented "talking" horse. Several of their good friend Jack Benny's 1953–55 filmed episodes were also produced by McCadden for CBS as well.

The George Burns Show

The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show ran on CBS Television from 1950 to 1958, when Burns at last consented to Allen's retirement. The onset of heart trouble in the early 1950s had left her exhausted from full-time work and she had been anxious to stop, but could not say "no" to Burns.

Burns attempted to continue the show (for new sponsor Colgate-Palmolive on NBC), but without Allen to provide the classic Gracie-isms, the show expired after a year.

Wendy and Me

Burns subsequently created Wendy and Me, a sitcom in which he co-starred with Connie Stevens, Ron Harper, and J. Pat O'Malley. He acted primarily as the narrator, and secondarily as the adviser to Stevens' Gracie-like character. The first episode involved the nearly 69-year-old Burns watching his younger neighbor's activities with amusement, just as he would watch the Burns and Allen television show while it was unfolding to get a jump on what Gracie was up to in its final two seasons. Again as in the Burns and Allen television show, George frequently broke the fourth wall by commenting directly to viewers. The series only lasted a year. In a promotion, Burns had joked that "Connie Stevens plays Wendy, and I play 'me'."

The Sunshine Boys

After Gracie's death in 1964, George immersed himself in work. McCadden Productions co-produced the television series No Time for Sergeants, based on the hit Broadway play; George also produced Juliet Prowse's 1965–66 NBC situation comedy, Mona McCluskey. At the same time, he toured the U.S. playing nightclub and theater engagements with such diverse partners as Carol Channing, Dorothy Provine, Jane Russell, Connie Haines, and Berle Davis. He also performed a series of solo concerts, playing university campuses, New York's Philharmonic Hall and winding up a successful season at Carnegie Hall, where he wowed a capacity audience with his show-stopping songs, dances, and jokes.

In 1974, Jack Benny signed to play one of the lead roles in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film version of Neil Simon's The Sunshine Boys (Red Skelton was originally the other, but he objected to some of the script's language). Benny's health had begun to fail, however, and he advised his manager Irving Fein to let longtime friend Burns fill in for him on a series of nightclub dates to which Benny had committed around the U.S.

Burns, who enjoyed working, accepted the job for what would be his first feature film appearance for 36 years. As he recalled years later:[6]

"The happiest people I know are the ones that are still working. The saddest are the ones who are retired. Very few performers retire on their own. It's usually because no one wants them. Six years ago Sinatra announced his retirement. He's still working."—George Burns

Ill health had prevented Benny from working on The Sunshine Boys; he died of pancreatic cancer on December 26, 1974. Burns, heartbroken, said that the only time he ever wept in his life other than Gracie's death was when Benny died. He was chosen to give one of the eulogies at the funeral and said, "Jack was someone special to all of you, but he was so special to me ... I cannot imagine my life without Jack Benny, and I will miss him so very much."[13] Burns then broke down and had to be helped to his seat. People who knew George said that he never could really come to terms with his beloved friend's death.

Six weeks before filming started, Burns had triple bypass surgery.[14]

Burns replaced Benny in the film as well as the club tour, a move that turned out to be one of the biggest breaks of his career; his wise performance as faded vaudevillian Al Lewis won him the 1975 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, and permanently secured his career resurgence. At the age of 80, Burns was the oldest Oscar winner in the history of the Academy Awards, a record that would remain until Jessica Tandy won an Oscar for Driving Miss Daisy in 1989.

Oh, God!

In 1977, Burns made another hit film, Oh, God!, playing the omnipotent title role opposite singer John Denver as an earnest but befuddled supermarket manager, whom God picks at random to revive his message. The image of Burns in a sailor's cap and light springtime jacket as the droll Almighty influenced his subsequent comedic work, as well as that of other comedians. At a celebrity roast in his honor, Dean Martin adapted a Burns crack: "When George was growing up, the Top 10 were the Ten Commandments".

Burns appeared in this character along with Vanessa Williams on the September 1984 cover of Penthouse magazine, the issue which contained the notorious nude photos of Williams, as well as the first appearance of underage pornographic film star Traci Lords. A blurb on the cover even announced "Oh God, she's nude!"

Oh, God! inspired two sequels Oh, God! Book II (in which the Almighty engages a precocious schoolgirl played by Louanne Sirota to spread the word) and Oh, God! You Devil—in which Burns played a dual role as God and the devil, with the soul of a would-be songwriter (played by Ted Wass) at stake.

Later films

After guest-starring on The Muppet Show and Alice,[15] Burns appeared in 1978's Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, the film based on The Beatles' album of the same name. In 1979, at the age of 83, Burns starred in two feature films, Just You and Me, Kid and Going in Style. Burns remained active in films and TV past his 90th birthday. One of his last films was 1988's 18 Again!, based on his half-novelty, half-country music-based hit single, "I Wish I Was 18 Again". In this film, Burns played an 81-year-old self-made millionaire industrialist who switched bodies with his awkward, artistic, 18-year-old grandson (played by Charlie Schlatter).

Burns also did regular nightclub stand-up acts in his later years, usually portraying himself as a lecherous old man. He always smoked a cigar onstage and reputedly timed his monologues by the amount the cigar had burned down. For this reason, he preferred cheap El Producto cigars as the loosely wrapped tobacco burned longer. Burns once quipped "In my youth, they called me a rebel. When I was middle-aged, they called me eccentric. Now that I'm old, I'm doing the same thing I've always done and they're calling me senile."[citation needed]

Arthur Marx estimated that Burns smoked around 300,000 cigars during his lifetime, starting at the age of 14. In his final years, he smoked no more than four a day and he never used cigarettes or marijuana, claiming "Look, I can't get any more kicks than I'm getting. What can marijuana do for me that show business hasn't done?" His last feature film role was the cameo role of Milt Lackey, a 100-year-old stand-up comedian, in the 1994 comedy mystery Radioland Murders.

Final years and death

 
George Burns in 1986
 
Crypt of George Burns, in the Freedom Mausoleum, Forest Lawn Glendale

Burns was still appearing at major hotel/casinos in Las Vegas, Reno, and Lake Tahoe during the early 1980s. When Burns turned 90 in 1986, the city of Los Angeles renamed the northern end of Hamel Road "George Burns Road." City regulations prohibited naming a city street after a living person, but an exception was made for Burns. In celebration of Burns' 99th birthday in January 1995, Los Angeles renamed the eastern end of Alden Drive "Gracie Allen Drive." Burns was present at the unveiling ceremony (one of his last public appearances), where he quipped, "It's good to be here at the corner of Burns & Allen. At my age, it's good to be anywhere!"[16] George Burns Road and Gracie Allen Drive cross just a few blocks west of the Beverly Center mall in the heart of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Burns served as honorary chairman of the Center's endowment drive.[17]

Burns remained in good health for most of his life, in part thanks to a daily exercise regimen of swimming, walks, sit-ups, and push-ups. He bought new Cadillacs every year and drove until the age of 93. After that, Burns had chauffeurs drive him around. In his later years, he also had difficulty reading the fine print.

Then, Burns suffered a head injury after falling in his bathtub in July 1994 and underwent surgery to remove fluid in his skull. Burns never fully recovered and his performing career came to an end. In February 1995, Burns, in what would be his final television appearance, was presented with the very first SAG Lifetime Achievement Award by the Screen Actors Guild. In December of that year, a month before his 100th birthday, Burns was well enough to attend a Christmas party hosted by Frank Sinatra (who turned 80 that month), where he reportedly caught the flu, which weakened him further. When Burns was 96, he had signed a lifetime contract with Caesars Palace in Las Vegas to perform stand-up comedy there, which included the guarantee of a show on his centenary, January 20, 1996. When that day actually came, however, he was too weak to deliver the planned performance. He released a statement joking about how he would love for his 100th birthday to have "a night with Sharon Stone."

On March 9, 1996, 49 days after his centenary, Burns died in his Beverly Hills home.[18] His funeral was held three days later at the Wee Kirk o' the Heather church in Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery, Glendale.[18] As much as he looked forward to reaching the age of 100, Burns also stated, about a year before he died, that he also looked forward to death, saying that on the day he would die, he would be with Gracie again in Heaven. Upon being interred with Gracie, the crypt's marker was changed from, "Grace Allen Burns—Beloved Wife And Mother (1902–1964)" to "Gracie Allen (1902–1964) & George Burns (1896–1996)—Together Again". George had always said that he wanted Gracie to have top billing.

Legacy

 
The handprints of George Burns in front of The Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World's Disney's Hollywood Studios theme park.

George Burns has three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: a motion pictures star at 1639 Vine Street, a television star at 6510 Hollywood Boulevard, and a live performance star at 6672 Hollywood Boulevard. The first two stars were placed during the initial installations of 1960, while the third-star ceremony was held in 1984,[19][20] in the new category of live performance, or live theatre, established that year.[21] Burns is also a member of the Television Hall of Fame, where he and Gracie Allen were both inducted in 1988.

He is the subject of Rupert Holmes's one-actor play Say Goodnight, Gracie.

Bibliography

Burns was a bestselling author who wrote ten books:

  • Burns, George; Hobart Lindsay, Cynthia (1955). I Love Her, That's Why: An Autobiography. Simon and Schuster.
  • Burns, George (1976). Living It Up; or, They Still Love Me in Altoona!. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-11636-0.
  • Burns, George (1980). The Third Time Around. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-12169-2.
  • Burns, George (1983). How to Live to Be 100 – Or More: The Ultimate Diet, Sex and Exercise Book (At My Age, Sex Gets Second Billing). Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-12939-1.
  • Burns, George (1984). Dr. Burns' Prescription for Happiness:* *Buy Two Books and Call Me in the Morning. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-12964-3.
  • Burns, George (1985). Dear George: Advice and Answers from America's Leading Expert on Everything from A to B. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-13105-9.
  • Burns, George (1988). Gracie: A Love Story. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-13384-8.
  • Burns, George; Fisher, David (1989). All My Best Friends. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-13483-8.
  • Burns, George; Goldman, Hal (1992). Wisdom of the 90's. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-51777-8.
  • Burns, George (1996). 100 Years, 100 Stories. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-14179-9.

Filmography

Features
Short subjects
  • Lambchops (1929) as George the Boyfriend
  • Fit to Be Tied (1930) as a Tie Customer
  • Pulling a Bone (1931) as a Man with a Bone
  • The Antique Shop (1931) as Customer
  • Once Over, Light (1931) as a Barbershop Customer
  • 100% Service (1931) as George
  • Oh, My Operation (1932) as the New Patient
  • The Babbling Book (1932) as George
  • Your Hat (1932) as a Hat Salesman
  • Let's Dance (1933) as George, a Sailor
  • Hollywood on Parade No. A-9 (1933) as Himself (uncredited)
  • Walking the Baby (1933) as George
  • Screen Snapshots: Famous Fathers and Sons (1946) as Himself
  • Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Grows Up (1954)
  • Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Beauty (1955) as Himself
  • All About People (1967) as Narrator
  • A Look at the World of Soylent Green (1973) as Himself
  • The Lion Roars Again (1975) as Himself

Discography

Albums

Year Album Chart positions Label
U.S. Country U.S.
1970 George Burns Sings Buddah
1975 An Evening with George Burns: Live at Shubert Theater Pride
1980 I Wish I Was Eighteen Again 12 93 Mercury
George Burns in Nashville
1982 Young at Heart
1992 As Time Goes By Curb

Singles

Year Single Chart positions Album
U.S. Country U.S. CAN Country CAN CAN AC
1980 "I Wish I Was Eighteen Again" 15 49 8 25 19 I Wish I Was Eighteen Again
"The Arizona Whiz" 85
1981 "Willie, Won't You Sing a Song with Me" 66 George Burns in Nashville

Soundtracks

Radio series

  • The Robert Burns Panatella Show 1932–1933; CBS
In their debut series, George and Gracie shared the bill with Guy Lombardo and his orchestra. The pair launched themselves into national stardom with their first major publicity stunt, Gracie's ongoing search for her missing brother.
  • The White Owl Program 1933–1934; CBS
  • The Adventures of Gracie 1934–1935; CBS
  • The Campbell's Tomato Juice Program 1935–1937; CBS
  • The Grape Nuts Program 1937–1938; NBC
  • The Chesterfield Program 1938–1939; CBS
  • The Hinds Honey and Almond Cream Program 1939–1940; CBS
This series featured another wildly successful publicity stunt which had Gracie running for President of the United States.
  • The Hormel Program 1940–1941; NBC
Advertised a brand new product called Spam;[22] this show featured musical numbers by jazz great Artie Shaw.
This series featured a radical format change, in that George and Gracie played themselves as a married couple for the first time, and the show became a full-fledged domestic situation comedy. This was George's response to a marked drop in ratings under the old "Flirtation Act" format (as he later recalled, he finally realized "our jokes are too young for us").
  • Maxwell House Coffee Time 1945–1949; NBC
  • The Amm-i-Dent Toothpaste Show 1949–1950; CBS

TV series

Broadcast live every other week for the first two seasons, 26 episodes per year. Starting in the third season, all episodes were filmed and broadcast weekly, 40 episodes per year. A total of 291 episodes were created.
  • The George Burns Show 1958–1959; NBC
An unsuccessful attempt to continue the format of the Burns and Allen show without Gracie, the rest of the cast intact.
  • Wendy and Me 1964–1965; ABC
George plays narrator in this short-lived series, just as he had in the Burns and Allen show, but with far less on-screen time, as the focus is on a young couple played by Connie Stevens and Ron Harper. Stevens is, essentially, playing a version of Gracie's character.
Another short-lived series, a weekly comedy anthology program whose only connecting thread was George's presence as host. He does not appear in any of the actual storylines. He was 89 years old when the series was produced.

See also

References

  1. ^ Newcomb, Horace (2004). Encyclopedia of Television. Vol. 1, A–C (Second ed.). Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 369. ISBN 978-1-57958-394-1. from the original on April 26, 2016. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  2. ^ "Happy birthday George Burns, child of Rivington Street". The Bowery Boys: New York City History. January 20, 2010. Retrieved May 27, 2022.
  3. ^ Epstein, Lawrence J. (2011). George Burns: An American Life. McFarland. p. 189. ISBN 978-0-7864-8793-6. from the original on May 12, 2016. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  4. ^ Lueck, Thomas J. (January 24, 2006). "Downtown Congregation Vows to Repair Roof or Build Anew". The New York Times. from the original on June 18, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  5. ^ Logan, Joe (March 10, 1996). "George Burns Dies At 100 'Good Night, Gracie. Good Night, George.'". The Philadelphia Inquirer. from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Marx, Arthur. . Cigar Aficionado. Archived from the original on March 7, 2010. Retrieved August 21, 2007. Comedian George Burns is not only a living legend, he's living proof that smoking between 10 and 15 cigars a day for 70 years contributes to one's longevity.
  7. ^ Burns, George (July 19, 2017). I Love Her, That's Why! an Autobiography. Pickle Partners. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-78720-708-0. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Richards, David (November 8, 1984). "George Burns, Laughing All the Way". The Washington Post. from the original on September 17, 2020. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  9. ^ Smith, Scott S (February 23, 2016). "Oh, God, Was George Burns Funny, From Vaudeville To Film". Investor Business Daily. Retrieved October 2, 2022.
  10. ^ Epstein, Lawrence J. (September 7, 2011). George Burns: An American Life. McFarland. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-7864-5849-3. OCLC 714086527.
  11. ^ a b Burns, George (November 1988). Gracie: A Love Story. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 978-0-399-13384-8. The one issue that never came up between Gracie and me was religion. Gracie was a practicing Irish Catholic. She tried to go to Mass every Sunday. I was Jewish, but I was out of practice. My religion was always treat other people nicely and be ready when they play your music. Mary Kelly, who was also Irish Catholic, wouldn't marry Jack Benny because she didn't want to marry out of her faith, but Gracie didn't seem to care. In fact, I was a lot more concerned about what my mother thought than I was about Gracie.
  12. ^ Burns, George (1983). How to live to be 100—or more: the ultimate diet, sex, and exercise book. G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-399-12787-8.
  13. ^ "'Well!' Jack Would Have Said at the Turnout of the Stars". People. March 13, 1975. from the original on March 10, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
  14. ^ Natale, Richard (March 11, 1996). "George Burns: A Legend Laid To Rest". Daily Variety. p. 26.
  15. ^ Garlen, Jennifer C.; Graham, Anissa M. (2009). Kermit Culture: Critical Perspectives on Jim Henson's Muppets. McFarland. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-7864-4259-1.
  16. ^ "The Corner of Burns & Allen". Seeing-Stars.com. from the original on October 13, 2000. Retrieved February 28, 2012.
  17. ^ "Road to be Renamed for Actor". Los Angeles Times. April 10, 1986. p. 2 Westside. Retrieved April 24, 2022.
  18. ^ a b Krebs, Albin (March 10, 1996). "George Burns, Straight Man And Ageless Wit, Dies at 100". The New York Times. from the original on December 16, 2014. Retrieved December 11, 2014. He died at his home in Beverly Hills, Calif., said his manager, Irving Fein. ...
  19. ^ "George Burns". Hollywood Walk of Fame. from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  20. ^ "George Burns". Los Angeles Times. March 10, 1996. from the original on January 5, 2014. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
  21. ^ "History of the Walk of Fame". Hollywood Walk of Fame. from the original on October 27, 2019. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  22. ^ "George Burns and Gracie Allen Spam Advertisement". Woman's Day. Gallery of Graphic Design. November 1, 1940. from the original on February 9, 2012. Retrieved February 28, 2012.

Further reading

External links

  • George Burns at IMDb
  • George Burns at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • George Burns at AllMovie
  • Home of George Burns & Gracie Allen-Radio Television Mirror-December 1940 (page 17)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived July 11, 2011)
  • FBI Records: The Vault – George Burns at vault.fbi.gov

george, burns, other, people, named, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspaper. For other people named George Burns see George Burns disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources George Burns news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message George Burns born Nathan Birnbaum January 20 1896 March 9 1996 was an American comedian actor writer and singer and one of the few entertainers whose career successfully spanned vaudeville radio film and television His arched eyebrow and cigar smoke punctuation became familiar trademarks for over three quarters of a century He and his wife Gracie Allen appeared on radio television and film as the comedy duo Burns and Allen George BurnsBurns in 1961BornNathan Birnbaum 1896 01 20 January 20 1896New York City U S DiedMarch 9 1996 1996 03 09 aged 100 Beverly Hills California U S Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial ParkOccupationsActorcomedianwritersingertelevision hostYears active1902 1996SpouseGracie Allen m 1926 died 1964 wbr Children2 including RonnieAt the age of 79 Burns experienced a sudden career revival as an amiable beloved and unusually active comedy elder statesman in the 1975 film The Sunshine Boys for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor Burns was only a Tony Award shy of being one of the few EGOT award recipients in the American entertainment industry winning an Emmy a Grammy and an Oscar Burns became a centenarian in 1996 continuing to work until just weeks before his death of cardiac arrest at his home in Beverly Hills shortly after his hundredth birthday Contents 1 Early life 2 Stage to screen 3 Radio stars 3 1 Supporting players 3 2 New network 4 Television 4 1 The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show 4 2 The George Burns Show 4 3 Wendy and Me 5 The Sunshine Boys 6 Oh God 7 Later films 8 Final years and death 9 Legacy 10 Bibliography 11 Filmography 12 Discography 12 1 Albums 12 2 Singles 13 Soundtracks 14 Radio series 15 TV series 16 See also 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksEarly life EditGeorge Burns was born Nathan Birnbaum on January 20 1896 in New York City 1 the ninth of 12 children born to Hadassah Dorah nee Bluth 1857 1927 and Eliezer Birnbaum 1855 1903 known as Louis or Lippa Jewish immigrants who had come to the United States from Ropczyce 2 Galicia now Poland 3 Burns was a member of the First Roumanian American Congregation 4 His father was a substitute cantor at the local synagogue but usually worked as a coat presser During the influenza epidemic of 1903 Lippe Birnbaum contracted the flu and died at the age of 47 Burns called Nattie or Nate at the time went to work to help support the family shining shoes running errands and selling newspapers 5 When he got a job as a syrup maker in a local candy shop at age seven Burns was discovered as he recalled long after 6 We were all about the same age six and seven and when we were bored making syrup we used to practice singing harmony in the basement One day our letter carrier came down to the basement His name was Lou Farley Feingold was his real name but he changed it to Farley He wanted the whole world to sing harmony He came down to the basement once to deliver a letter and heard the four of us kids singing harmony He liked our style so we sang a couple more songs for him Then we looked up at the head of the stairs and saw three or four people listening to us and smiling In fact they threw down a couple of pennies So I said to the kids I was working with no more chocolate syrup It s show business from now on We called ourselves the Pee Wee Quartet We started out singing on ferryboats in saloons in brothels and on street corners We d put our hats down for donations Sometimes the customers threw something in the hats Sometimes they took something out of the hats Sometimes they took the hats George Burns One of the Burns brothers first regular gigs was operating the curtains at the vaudeville and nickelodeon theatre of Frank Seiden father of Joseph Seiden who would later become a Yiddish film producer 7 Burns started smoking cigars when he was 14 8 Burns was drafted into the United States Army when the U S entered World War I in 1917 but he failed the physical examination because he was extremely nearsighted 9 To hide his Jewish heritage he adopted the stage name by which he would be known for the rest of his life He later claimed that he selected the name of George Burns because there were two active star professional baseball players with the name George H Burns and George J Burns unrelated each of whom would accumulate more than 2 000 hits and hold some major league records Burns also was reported to have taken George from his brother Izzy who had first adopted the name because he hated his own and Burns from the Burns Brothers Coal Company from whose trucks he would steal coal as a youth 10 11 33 His first wife was Hannah Siegel stage name Hermosa Jose one of his dance partners The marriage lasted 26 weeks and only occurred because Siegel s family would not permit her to tour with Burns unless they were married They divorced at the end of the tour 11 58 Burns normally partnered with a girl sometimes in an adagio dance routine sometimes in comic patter Though he had an apparent flair for comedy he never quite clicked with any of his partners until he met Gracie Allen a young Irish Catholic woman in 1923 And all of a sudden he said in later years the audience realized I had a talent They were right I did have a talent and I was married to her for 38 years 12 Burns wed Allen in 1926 8 Burns Allen and children just before sailing for Hawaii in 1938Stage to screen EditBurns and Allen began their career in motion pictures with a series of comic short films in the late 1920s and early 1930s such as The Big Broadcast 1932 with Bing Crosby both International House 1933 and Six of a Kind 1934 with W C Fields The Big Broadcast of 1936 with Crosby again The Big Broadcast of 1937 with Jack Benny A Damsel in Distress 1937 with Fred Astaire and Joan Fontaine and College Swing 1938 with Bob Hope and Martha Raye Honolulu 1939 with Eleanor Powell and Robert Young would be Burns last film for nearly 40 years although Gracie Allen starred in two more pictures without Burns In 1938 Paramount producer and managing director William LeBaron was planning a vehicle for Burns and Allen to team with established star Bing Crosby with a script written by Don Hartman and Frank Butler However the story didn t fit Burns and Allen s style so LeBaron ordered script rewrites to fit two male co stars Crosby and Bob Hope The project became Road to Singapore 1940 the first in a long running and popular series of Road films Radio stars EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Burns and Allen first appeared on the radio as the comedy relief for bandleader Guy Lombardo In his memoir The Third Time Around Burns shared a letter from a college fraternity complaining that its weekly dance parties were interrupted by Burns and Allen routines Burns and Allen found their own show and radio audience first airing on February 15 1932 Their show was based on their classic stage routines and sketch comedy in which their style was woven into multiple smaller scenes in a manner similar to that of the short films that they had made in Hollywood They were also known for clever publicity stunts such as Gracie s hunt for her missing brother that carried over into guest spots on other radio shows In April 1935 they added Ferde Grofe as Musical Director The couple was portrayed at first as unmarried with Allen the object of Burns affections as well as those of other cast members Bandleaders Ray Noble known for his phrase Gracie this is the first time we ve ever been alone and Artie Shaw played love interests for Gracie Singer Tony Martin also played Gracie s unwilling love interest whom she comically threatened to fire if he would not reciprocate her romantic interest Over time as ratings declined and with their audience s close familiarity with their real life marriage Burns and Allen adapted their radio show in the fall of 1941 to present them as a married couple Artie Shaw who also appeared as a character in some of the show s sketches was the show s bandleader at one time Allen s character also changed slightly during this era as she would often now be mean to Burns As this format grew stale over the years Burns and his fellow writers redeveloped the show as a situation comedy in the fall of 1941 The reformat focused on the couple s married life and their friends and neighbors including Elvia Allman as Tootsie Sagwell a man hungry spinster in love with Bill Goodwin The characters of Harry and Blanche Morton became a mainstay of the program As with The Jack Benny Program the new George Burns amp Gracie Allen Show portrayed Burns and Allen as entertainers with their own weekly radio show Goodwin remained and the music was now led by Meredith Willson later to be better known for composing the Broadway musical The Music Man Willson also played himself on the show as naive friendly and shy with women The new format s success made it one of the few classic radio comedies to completely reinvent itself and regain great success Supporting players Edit The supporting cast during this phase included Mel Blanc as the melancholy ironically named Happy Postman his catchphrase was Remember keep smiling Bea Benaderet later Cousin Pearl in The Beverly Hillbillies Kate Bradley in Petticoat Junction and the voice of Betty Rubble in The Flintstones and Hal March later more famous as the host of The 64 000 Question as neighbors Blanche and Harry Morton and the various members of Gracie s ladies club the Beverly Hills Uplift Society One running gag during this period stretching into the television era was Burns questionable singing voice as Gracie lovingly referred to her husband as Sugar Throat The show received and maintained a Top 10 rating for the rest of its radio life New network Edit In the fall of 1949 after 12 years at NBC the couple took the show back to its original network CBS where they had risen to fame from 1932 to 1937 Their good friend Jack Benny reached a negotiating impasse with NBC over the corporation he set up Amusement Enterprises to package his show the better to put more of his earnings on a capital gains basis and avoid the 80 percent taxes slapped on very high earners in the World War II period When CBS executive William S Paley convinced Benny to move to CBS Paley among other things impressed Benny with his attitude that the performers make the network not the other way around as NBC chief David Sarnoff reputedly believed Benny in turn convinced several NBC stars to join him including Burns and Allen Thus CBS reaped the benefits when Burns and Allen moved to television in 1950 Television EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show Edit George Burns and Gracie Allen 1955 On television The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show put faces to some of the radio characters audiences had come to love although they were already familiar with Burns and Allen s faces from their films A number of significant changes were seen in the show A parade of actors portrayed Harry Morton Hal March The Life of Riley alumnus John Brown veteran film and television character actor Fred Clark and future Mister Ed co star Larry Keating Burns often broke the fourth wall and chatted with the home audience telling understated jokes and commenting wryly about what show characters were doing or undoing In later shows he would actually turn on a television and watch what the other characters were up to when he was off camera then return to foil the plot When announcer Bill Goodwin left after the first season Burns hired announcer Harry Von Zell a veteran of the Fred Allen and Eddie Cantor radio shows to succeed him Von Zell was cast as the good natured easily confused Burns and Allen announcer and buddy He also became one of the show s running gags when his involvement in Gracie s harebrained ideas would get him fired at least once a week by Burns The first shows were simply a copy of the radio format complete with lengthy and integrated commercials for sponsor Carnation Evaporated Milk by Goodwin However what worked well on radio appeared forced and plodding on television The show was changed into the now standard situation comedy format with the commercials distinct from the plot Midway through the run of the television show the Burns two children Sandra and Ronald began to make appearances Sandy in an occasional voice over or brief on air part often as a telephone operator and Ronnie in various small roles throughout the 4th and 5th seasons Ronnie joined the regular cast in season 6 Typical of the blurred line between reality and fiction in the show Ronnie played George and Gracie s on air son showing up in the second episode of season 6 Ronnie Arrives with no explanation offered as to where he had been for the past five years of the show Originally his character was an aspiring dramatic actor who held his parents comedy style in befuddled contempt and deemed it unsuitable to the serious drama student When the show s characters moved back to California in season 7 after spending the prior year in New York City Ronnie s character dropped all apparent acting aspirations and instead enrolled in USC becoming an inveterate girl chaser Burns and Allen also took a cue from Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz s Desilu Productions and formed a company of their own McCadden Corporation named after the street on which Burns brother lived headquartered on the General Service Studio lot in the heart of Hollywood and set up to film television shows and commercials Besides their own hit show which made the transition from a bi weekly live series to a weekly filmed version in the fall of 1952 the couple s company produced such television series as The Bob Cummings Show subsequently syndicated and rerun as Love That Bob The People s Choice starring Jackie Cooper Mona McCluskey starring Juliet Prowse and Mister Ed starring Alan Young and a talented talking horse Several of their good friend Jack Benny s 1953 55 filmed episodes were also produced by McCadden for CBS as well The George Burns Show Edit The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show ran on CBS Television from 1950 to 1958 when Burns at last consented to Allen s retirement The onset of heart trouble in the early 1950s had left her exhausted from full time work and she had been anxious to stop but could not say no to Burns Burns attempted to continue the show for new sponsor Colgate Palmolive on NBC but without Allen to provide the classic Gracie isms the show expired after a year Wendy and Me Edit Burns subsequently created Wendy and Me a sitcom in which he co starred with Connie Stevens Ron Harper and J Pat O Malley He acted primarily as the narrator and secondarily as the adviser to Stevens Gracie like character The first episode involved the nearly 69 year old Burns watching his younger neighbor s activities with amusement just as he would watch the Burns and Allen television show while it was unfolding to get a jump on what Gracie was up to in its final two seasons Again as in the Burns and Allen television show George frequently broke the fourth wall by commenting directly to viewers The series only lasted a year In a promotion Burns had joked that Connie Stevens plays Wendy and I play me The Sunshine Boys EditAfter Gracie s death in 1964 George immersed himself in work McCadden Productions co produced the television series No Time for Sergeants based on the hit Broadway play George also produced Juliet Prowse s 1965 66 NBC situation comedy Mona McCluskey At the same time he toured the U S playing nightclub and theater engagements with such diverse partners as Carol Channing Dorothy Provine Jane Russell Connie Haines and Berle Davis He also performed a series of solo concerts playing university campuses New York s Philharmonic Hall and winding up a successful season at Carnegie Hall where he wowed a capacity audience with his show stopping songs dances and jokes In 1974 Jack Benny signed to play one of the lead roles in the Metro Goldwyn Mayer film version of Neil Simon s The Sunshine Boys Red Skelton was originally the other but he objected to some of the script s language Benny s health had begun to fail however and he advised his manager Irving Fein to let longtime friend Burns fill in for him on a series of nightclub dates to which Benny had committed around the U S Burns who enjoyed working accepted the job for what would be his first feature film appearance for 36 years As he recalled years later 6 The happiest people I know are the ones that are still working The saddest are the ones who are retired Very few performers retire on their own It s usually because no one wants them Six years ago Sinatra announced his retirement He s still working George BurnsIll health had prevented Benny from working on The Sunshine Boys he died of pancreatic cancer on December 26 1974 Burns heartbroken said that the only time he ever wept in his life other than Gracie s death was when Benny died He was chosen to give one of the eulogies at the funeral and said Jack was someone special to all of you but he was so special to me I cannot imagine my life without Jack Benny and I will miss him so very much 13 Burns then broke down and had to be helped to his seat People who knew George said that he never could really come to terms with his beloved friend s death Six weeks before filming started Burns had triple bypass surgery 14 Burns replaced Benny in the film as well as the club tour a move that turned out to be one of the biggest breaks of his career his wise performance as faded vaudevillian Al Lewis won him the 1975 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and permanently secured his career resurgence At the age of 80 Burns was the oldest Oscar winner in the history of the Academy Awards a record that would remain until Jessica Tandy won an Oscar for Driving Miss Daisy in 1989 Oh God EditIn 1977 Burns made another hit film Oh God playing the omnipotent title role opposite singer John Denver as an earnest but befuddled supermarket manager whom God picks at random to revive his message The image of Burns in a sailor s cap and light springtime jacket as the droll Almighty influenced his subsequent comedic work as well as that of other comedians At a celebrity roast in his honor Dean Martin adapted a Burns crack When George was growing up the Top 10 were the Ten Commandments Burns appeared in this character along with Vanessa Williams on the September 1984 cover of Penthouse magazine the issue which contained the notorious nude photos of Williams as well as the first appearance of underage pornographic film star Traci Lords A blurb on the cover even announced Oh God she s nude Oh God inspired two sequels Oh God Book II in which the Almighty engages a precocious schoolgirl played by Louanne Sirota to spread the word and Oh God You Devil in which Burns played a dual role as God and the devil with the soul of a would be songwriter played by Ted Wass at stake Later films EditAfter guest starring on The Muppet Show and Alice 15 Burns appeared in 1978 s Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band the film based on The Beatles album of the same name In 1979 at the age of 83 Burns starred in two feature films Just You and Me Kid and Going in Style Burns remained active in films and TV past his 90th birthday One of his last films was 1988 s 18 Again based on his half novelty half country music based hit single I Wish I Was 18 Again In this film Burns played an 81 year old self made millionaire industrialist who switched bodies with his awkward artistic 18 year old grandson played by Charlie Schlatter Burns also did regular nightclub stand up acts in his later years usually portraying himself as a lecherous old man He always smoked a cigar onstage and reputedly timed his monologues by the amount the cigar had burned down For this reason he preferred cheap El Producto cigars as the loosely wrapped tobacco burned longer Burns once quipped In my youth they called me a rebel When I was middle aged they called me eccentric Now that I m old I m doing the same thing I ve always done and they re calling me senile citation needed Arthur Marx estimated that Burns smoked around 300 000 cigars during his lifetime starting at the age of 14 In his final years he smoked no more than four a day and he never used cigarettes or marijuana claiming Look I can t get any more kicks than I m getting What can marijuana do for me that show business hasn t done His last feature film role was the cameo role of Milt Lackey a 100 year old stand up comedian in the 1994 comedy mystery Radioland Murders Final years and death EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message George Burns in 1986 Crypt of George Burns in the Freedom Mausoleum Forest Lawn Glendale Burns was still appearing at major hotel casinos in Las Vegas Reno and Lake Tahoe during the early 1980s When Burns turned 90 in 1986 the city of Los Angeles renamed the northern end of Hamel Road George Burns Road City regulations prohibited naming a city street after a living person but an exception was made for Burns In celebration of Burns 99th birthday in January 1995 Los Angeles renamed the eastern end of Alden Drive Gracie Allen Drive Burns was present at the unveiling ceremony one of his last public appearances where he quipped It s good to be here at the corner of Burns amp Allen At my age it s good to be anywhere 16 George Burns Road and Gracie Allen Drive cross just a few blocks west of the Beverly Center mall in the heart of the Cedars Sinai Medical Center Burns served as honorary chairman of the Center s endowment drive 17 Burns remained in good health for most of his life in part thanks to a daily exercise regimen of swimming walks sit ups and push ups He bought new Cadillacs every year and drove until the age of 93 After that Burns had chauffeurs drive him around In his later years he also had difficulty reading the fine print Then Burns suffered a head injury after falling in his bathtub in July 1994 and underwent surgery to remove fluid in his skull Burns never fully recovered and his performing career came to an end In February 1995 Burns in what would be his final television appearance was presented with the very first SAG Lifetime Achievement Award by the Screen Actors Guild In December of that year a month before his 100th birthday Burns was well enough to attend a Christmas party hosted by Frank Sinatra who turned 80 that month where he reportedly caught the flu which weakened him further When Burns was 96 he had signed a lifetime contract with Caesars Palace in Las Vegas to perform stand up comedy there which included the guarantee of a show on his centenary January 20 1996 When that day actually came however he was too weak to deliver the planned performance He released a statement joking about how he would love for his 100th birthday to have a night with Sharon Stone On March 9 1996 49 days after his centenary Burns died in his Beverly Hills home 18 His funeral was held three days later at the Wee Kirk o the Heather church in Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery Glendale 18 As much as he looked forward to reaching the age of 100 Burns also stated about a year before he died that he also looked forward to death saying that on the day he would die he would be with Gracie again in Heaven Upon being interred with Gracie the crypt s marker was changed from Grace Allen Burns Beloved Wife And Mother 1902 1964 to Gracie Allen 1902 1964 amp George Burns 1896 1996 Together Again George had always said that he wanted Gracie to have top billing Legacy Edit The handprints of George Burns in front of The Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World s Disney s Hollywood Studios theme park George Burns has three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame a motion pictures star at 1639 Vine Street a television star at 6510 Hollywood Boulevard and a live performance star at 6672 Hollywood Boulevard The first two stars were placed during the initial installations of 1960 while the third star ceremony was held in 1984 19 20 in the new category of live performance or live theatre established that year 21 Burns is also a member of the Television Hall of Fame where he and Gracie Allen were both inducted in 1988 He is the subject of Rupert Holmes s one actor play Say Goodnight Gracie Bibliography EditBurns was a bestselling author who wrote ten books Burns George Hobart Lindsay Cynthia 1955 I Love Her That s Why An Autobiography Simon and Schuster Burns George 1976 Living It Up or They Still Love Me in Altoona Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 11636 0 Burns George 1980 The Third Time Around Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 12169 2 Burns George 1983 How to Live to Be 100 Or More The Ultimate Diet Sex and Exercise Book At My Age Sex Gets Second Billing Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 12939 1 Burns George 1984 Dr Burns Prescription for Happiness Buy Two Books and Call Me in the Morning Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 12964 3 Burns George 1985 Dear George Advice and Answers from America s Leading Expert on Everything from A to B Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 13105 9 Burns George 1988 Gracie A Love Story Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 13384 8 Burns George Fisher David 1989 All My Best Friends Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 13483 8 Burns George Goldman Hal 1992 Wisdom of the 90 s Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 51777 8 Burns George 1996 100 Years 100 Stories Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 14179 9 Filmography EditFeaturesThe Big Broadcast 1932 as Himself International House 1933 as Doctor Burns College Humor 1933 as Himself Six of a Kind 1934 as George Edward We re Not Dressing 1934 as Himself Many Happy Returns 1934 as Himself Love in Bloom 1935 as Himself Here Comes Cookie 1935 as Himself The Big Broadcast of 1936 1935 as Himself The Big Broadcast of 1937 1936 as Mr Platt College Holiday 1936 as George Hymen Winterset 1936 A Damsel in Distress 1937 as Himself College Swing 1938 as George Jonas Honolulu 1939 as Joe Duffy The Solid Gold Cadillac 1956 as the Narrator voice The Sunshine Boys 1975 as Al Lewis Oh God 1977 as God Movie Movie 1978 as Himself Introductory Segments uncredited Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band 1978 as Mr Kite Just You and Me Kid 1979 as Bill Going in Style 1979 as Joe Oh God Book II 1980 as God Two of a Kind 1982 as Ross Boppy Minor Oh God You Devil 1984 as God Harry O Tophet 18 Again 1988 as Jack Watson David Watson A Century of Cinema 1994 documentary Radioland Murders 1994 as Milt Lackey last film appearance Short subjectsLambchops 1929 as George the Boyfriend Fit to Be Tied 1930 as a Tie Customer Pulling a Bone 1931 as a Man with a Bone The Antique Shop 1931 as Customer Once Over Light 1931 as a Barbershop Customer 100 Service 1931 as George Oh My Operation 1932 as the New Patient The Babbling Book 1932 as George Your Hat 1932 as a Hat Salesman Let s Dance 1933 as George a Sailor Hollywood on Parade No A 9 1933 as Himself uncredited Walking the Baby 1933 as George Screen Snapshots Famous Fathers and Sons 1946 as Himself Screen Snapshots Hollywood Grows Up 1954 Screen Snapshots Hollywood Beauty 1955 as Himself All About People 1967 as Narrator A Look at the World of Soylent Green 1973 as Himself The Lion Roars Again 1975 as HimselfDiscography EditAlbums Edit Year Album Chart positions LabelU S Country U S 1970 George Burns Sings Buddah1975 An Evening with George Burns Live at Shubert Theater Pride1980 I Wish I Was Eighteen Again 12 93 MercuryGeorge Burns in Nashville 1982 Young at Heart 1992 As Time Goes By CurbSingles Edit Year Single Chart positions AlbumU S Country U S CAN Country CAN CAN AC1980 I Wish I Was Eighteen Again 15 49 8 25 19 I Wish I Was Eighteen Again The Arizona Whiz 85 1981 Willie Won t You Sing a Song with Me 66 George Burns in NashvilleSoundtracks Edit1978 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band soundtrack 1996 Music From The Life A New Musical soundtrack Radio series EditThe Robert Burns Panatella Show 1932 1933 CBSIn their debut series George and Gracie shared the bill with Guy Lombardo and his orchestra The pair launched themselves into national stardom with their first major publicity stunt Gracie s ongoing search for her missing brother The White Owl Program 1933 1934 CBS The Adventures of Gracie 1934 1935 CBS The Campbell s Tomato Juice Program 1935 1937 CBS The Grape Nuts Program 1937 1938 NBC The Chesterfield Program 1938 1939 CBS The Hinds Honey and Almond Cream Program 1939 1940 CBSThis series featured another wildly successful publicity stunt which had Gracie running for President of the United States The Hormel Program 1940 1941 NBCAdvertised a brand new product called Spam 22 this show featured musical numbers by jazz great Artie Shaw The Swan Soap Show 1941 1945 NBC CBSThis series featured a radical format change in that George and Gracie played themselves as a married couple for the first time and the show became a full fledged domestic situation comedy This was George s response to a marked drop in ratings under the old Flirtation Act format as he later recalled he finally realized our jokes are too young for us Maxwell House Coffee Time 1945 1949 NBC The Amm i Dent Toothpaste Show 1949 1950 CBSTV series EditThe George Burns and Gracie Allen Show 1950 1958 CBSBroadcast live every other week for the first two seasons 26 episodes per year Starting in the third season all episodes were filmed and broadcast weekly 40 episodes per year A total of 291 episodes were created The George Burns Show 1958 1959 NBCAn unsuccessful attempt to continue the format of the Burns and Allen show without Gracie the rest of the cast intact Wendy and Me 1964 1965 ABCGeorge plays narrator in this short lived series just as he had in the Burns and Allen show but with far less on screen time as the focus is on a young couple played by Connie Stevens and Ron Harper Stevens is essentially playing a version of Gracie s character George Burns Comedy Week 1985 CBSAnother short lived series a weekly comedy anthology program whose only connecting thread was George s presence as host He does not appear in any of the actual storylines He was 89 years old when the series was produced See also EditList of actors with Academy Award nominationsReferences Edit Newcomb Horace 2004 Encyclopedia of Television Vol 1 A C Second ed Fitzroy Dearborn p 369 ISBN 978 1 57958 394 1 Archived from the original on April 26 2016 Retrieved January 12 2016 Happy birthday George Burns child of Rivington Street The Bowery Boys New York City History January 20 2010 Retrieved May 27 2022 Epstein Lawrence J 2011 George Burns An American Life McFarland p 189 ISBN 978 0 7864 8793 6 Archived from the original on May 12 2016 Retrieved January 12 2016 Lueck Thomas J January 24 2006 Downtown Congregation Vows to Repair Roof or Build Anew The New York Times Archived from the original on June 18 2015 Retrieved March 17 2010 Logan Joe March 10 1996 George Burns Dies At 100 Good Night Gracie Good Night George The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved April 24 2022 a b Marx Arthur Ninety eight year old George Burns Shares Memories of His Life Cigar Aficionado Archived from the original on March 7 2010 Retrieved August 21 2007 Comedian George Burns is not only a living legend he s living proof that smoking between 10 and 15 cigars a day for 70 years contributes to one s longevity Burns George July 19 2017 I Love Her That s Why an Autobiography Pickle Partners p 14 ISBN 978 1 78720 708 0 Retrieved April 24 2022 a b Richards David November 8 1984 George Burns Laughing All the Way The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 17 2020 Retrieved April 24 2022 Smith Scott S February 23 2016 Oh God Was George Burns Funny From Vaudeville To Film Investor Business Daily Retrieved October 2 2022 Epstein Lawrence J September 7 2011 George Burns An American Life McFarland p 18 ISBN 978 0 7864 5849 3 OCLC 714086527 a b Burns George November 1988 Gracie A Love Story New York G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 978 0 399 13384 8 The one issue that never came up between Gracie and me was religion Gracie was a practicing Irish Catholic She tried to go to Mass every Sunday I was Jewish but I was out of practice My religion was always treat other people nicely and be ready when they play your music Mary Kelly who was also Irish Catholic wouldn t marry Jack Benny because she didn t want to marry out of her faith but Gracie didn t seem to care In fact I was a lot more concerned about what my mother thought than I was about Gracie Burns George 1983 How to live to be 100 or more the ultimate diet sex and exercise book G P Putnam s Sons p 61 ISBN 978 0 399 12787 8 Well Jack Would Have Said at the Turnout of the Stars People March 13 1975 Archived from the original on March 10 2011 Retrieved February 27 2012 Natale Richard March 11 1996 George Burns A Legend Laid To Rest Daily Variety p 26 Garlen Jennifer C Graham Anissa M 2009 Kermit Culture Critical Perspectives on Jim Henson s Muppets McFarland p 218 ISBN 978 0 7864 4259 1 The Corner of Burns amp Allen Seeing Stars com Archived from the original on October 13 2000 Retrieved February 28 2012 Road to be Renamed for Actor Los Angeles Times April 10 1986 p 2 Westside Retrieved April 24 2022 a b Krebs Albin March 10 1996 George Burns Straight Man And Ageless Wit Dies at 100 The New York Times Archived from the original on December 16 2014 Retrieved December 11 2014 He died at his home in Beverly Hills Calif said his manager Irving Fein George Burns Hollywood Walk of Fame Archived from the original on December 28 2017 Retrieved December 28 2017 George Burns Los Angeles Times March 10 1996 Archived from the original on January 5 2014 Retrieved March 24 2014 History of the Walk of Fame Hollywood Walk of Fame Archived from the original on October 27 2019 Retrieved December 28 2017 George Burns and Gracie Allen Spam Advertisement Woman s Day Gallery of Graphic Design November 1 1940 Archived from the original on February 9 2012 Retrieved February 28 2012 Further reading EditGottfried Martin 1996 George Burns Simon amp Schuster Young Jordan R 1999 The Laugh Crafters Comedy Writing in Radio amp TV s Golden Age Beverly Hills Past Times Publishing ISBN 0 940410 37 0 Burns George 1989 All My Best Friends G P Putnam s SonsExternal links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to George Burns Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Burns George Burns at IMDb George Burns at the Internet Broadway Database George Burns at AllMovie Home of George Burns amp Gracie Allen Radio Television Mirror December 1940 page 17 Georgeburns com at the Wayback Machine archived July 11 2011 FBI Records The Vault George Burns at vault fbi gov Portal Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Burns amp oldid 1149574542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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