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Famous Like Me > Actor > A > Fred Allen

Profile of Fred Allen on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Fred Allen  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 31st May 1894
   
Place of Birth: Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
   
Profession: Actor
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia

Fred Allen (May 31, 1894 – March 17, 1956) was a United States comedian best known for his witty, pointed radio programs of the 1930s and 1940s, including a comic "feud" with comedian Jack Benny. Allen was famous among his peers for his ability to ad-lib - a skill that Benny famously paid tribute to, responding to a mock insult with the line "You wouldn't say that if my writers were here."

Biography

Allen was born John Florence Sullivan in Cambridge, Massachusetts to Irish Catholic parents. He started off his professional career as Freddy St. James, but a mix-up at a venue turned out to be a blessing. Edgar Allen was booked at the same place as Freddy James, but the front office accidentally promoted the appearance of Edgar James and Fred Allen.

Fred Allen started his career in radio the same year as Jack Benny, 1932. Allen hit it big with the program Town Hall Tonight in 1934, the same year Jack Benny rose in the ranks of radio with 'The Jell-O Program'. Their feud started in the mid-1930s and, in a testament of the times, people believed in this feud so much that a boxing match between the two was staged, and it was sold out. Benny and Allen made guest appearances in each other shows and movies, needling each other with lines like, "Benny was born ignorant, and he's been losing ground ever since." They appeared as themselves in the 1940 film "Love Thy Neighbor", and Benny can be seen in Allen's neglected comedy film It's In The Bag (1945), along with William Bendix, Robert Benchley, and Jerry Colonna, among others.

Allen's humor was topical, with a more absurdist and literate slant than other comics, which limits its appeal to modern audiences. He fussed and moaned about corporate America and the absurdity of the times. Allen wrote most of his own material. He employed a few writers but they more or less served as consultants and sounding boards in the rough drafts.

Allen's comic stereotypes make many people today cringe. His Allen's Alley segment, for example, contained four stereotype characters: the Southern politician, the New England farmer, the Jewish wife, and the ranting Irishman.

Fred's female second banana was his wife, whose role was to simply stroll on-air exclaiming: "Mister Allen! Mis...ter Allen!" and then launch into a routine with Fred, usually about her mother. Hoffa remained with Allen throughout his entire radio show. Unlike Jack Benny, who used his wife Mary Livingstone as more or less his ego deflator, Fred used Portland's child-like un-professional delivery to comedically prop his ego.

Radio career

After Town Hall Tonight, Allen moved to a self-named show, a rarity in those days of sponsor-billed shows. In 1940 he went to CBS and hosted 'Texaco Star Theatre'. His famous Allen's Alley routine began in December 1944. Hypertension caused him to leave radio in early 1944, although he returned to NBC in late 1945 with the Allen's Alley routines that many remember. The Allen's Alley format went through many format changes, but generally consisted of Allen interviewing four people from different walks of life, all living in the same fictional alley. The roster went through many changes in the first couple of years, and early denizens included John Brown as the sarcastic John Doe, Jack Smart as Senator Bloat, Charlie Cantor as the dim-witted Socrates Mulligan, and perhaps best known of this group, Alan Reed as pompous poet Falstaff Openshaw. The most famous foursome, however, consisted of the following: Kenny Delmar as Southern politician Senator Claghorn, Parker Fennelly as the New England farmer Titus Moody, Minerva Pious as Jewish housewife Mrs. Nussbaum, and Peter Donald as the fast-talking Irishman Ajax Cassidy.

In 1948 Allen's radio career hit a major roadblock when it went up against a quiz program called Stop The Music, in which listeners were called at home to play the game. Allen remained in competition with the program until 1949 when his ratings were so low that he was taken off the air, after 17 years in radio.

Later career

Allen's career faded with the advent of television, although many say he paved the way for later satirists such as Stan Freberg in the 1950s and late-night talk show host David Letterman. Allen remained busy as a newspaper humorist and sporadic columnist. His major work in TV was a two-year run as a panelist on the quiz show What's My Line? from 1954 until his death in 1956. The cable/satellite network GSN (formerly Game Show Network) occasionally programs Allen's What's My Line? episodes in the early morning hours. Allen also wrote books, including Much Ado About Me and Treadmill to Oblivion.

Fred Allen died relatively young at the age of 61 on St. Patrick's Day in 1956. Fred Allen has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: a radio star on 6709-1/2 Hollywood B and a TV star on 7021 Hollywood Blvd.

Source material

Robert Taylor wrote a 1989 biography, Fred Allen: His Life and Wit.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Fred Allen