Thursday, September 20, 2012

The Voice of Bart Simpson on The Joe Bev Experience - Saturday, September 22 - 3 pm (ET) on CRAGG

Nancy Cartwright on the Joe Bev Experience


Nancy Cartwright guest stars in "Scenes from the Daws Butler Workshop," part of "The Joe Bev 3-hour Block" airing every Saturday, starting 1 pm (ET) / 10 am (PT) at www.cultradioagogo.com


Host Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev) presents "Scenes from the Daws Butler Worksop," on the tenth edition of The Joe Bev Experience airing Saturday, September 22 at 3 pm ET / noon PT on http://www.cultradioagogo.com, right after Joe Bev's Comedy-O-Rama Hour and Jazz-O-Rama Hour (part of "The Joe Bev 3-Hour Block" starting 1 pm ET).


    Nancy Cartwright (the voice of Bart Simpson" acts with Joe Bev in two scenes written, recorded and directed by Daws Butler personally in his recording studio and workshop in Beverly Hills, CA in 1986.

    The records were made during Butler's voice acting workshop attended by many now working actors, including Bev and Cartwright.

    The hour also features other Daws Butler stories dramatized by Bev, several performed by Butler himself.

     Joe Bevilacqua is a veteran radio theater producer and voice actor. He also works on stage and is the winner of the 2012 New York TANYS Award for Excellence in Acting. He has performed at the Improv, Caroline's on Broadway, Catch a Rising Star, the Comic Strip, opened for Uncle Floyd, worked with Al Franken, Shelley Berman, Louis Black and Rick Overton. Joe has also MC'd shows featuring Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Mahr and Gilbert Gottfried. He has been regularly heard on National Public Radio and Sirius-XM Radio and has produced hundreds of hours of audiobooks. He currently produces and hosts three radio hours per week for the Internet radio station Cult Radio-A-Go-Go!

    Nancy Cartwright is an American film and television actress, comedian and voice artist. She is best known for her long-running role as Bart Simpson on the animated television series The Simpsons. Cartwright voices other characters for the show, including Nelson Muntz, Ralph Wiggum, Todd Flanders, Kearney, and Database. Born in Dayton, Ohio, Cartwright moved to Hollywood in 1978 and trained alongside voice actor Daws Butler. Her first professional role was voicing Gloria in the animated series Richie Rich, which she followed with a starring role in the television movie Marian Rose White (1982) and her first feature film, Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983).

    After continuing to search for acting work, in 1987 Cartwright auditioned for a role in a series of animated shorts about a dysfunctional family that was to appear on The Tracey Ullman Show. Cartwright intended to audition for the role of Lisa Simpson, the middle child; when she arrived at the audition, she found the role of Bart—Lisa's brother—to be more interesting. Matt Groening, the series' creator, allowed her to audition for Bart and offered her the role on the spot. She voiced Bart for three seasons on The Tracey Ullman Show, and in 1989, the shorts were spun off into a half-hour show called The Simpsons. For her subsequent work as Bart, Cartwright received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance in 1992 and an Annie Award for Best Voice Acting in the Field of Animation in 1995.

    Cartwright has voiced dozens of animated characters, including Chuckie Finster in Rugrats and All Grown Up!, Rufus in Kim Possible, Mindy in Animaniacs, Margo Sherman in The Critic and Chip in The Kellys. In 2000, she published her autobiography, My Life as a 10-Year-Old Boy, and four years later adapted it into a one-woman play.

More about Waterlogg Productions at http://www.waterlogg.com.












rentaudio
simply     audio

and we can voice anything you want...
just send us a script!




Ted Weems & Perry Como 78 Records on Jazz-O-Rama - Saturday, September 22, 2 pm (ET) - on CRAGG



Joe Bev presents 78 RPM Jazz with a Sense of Humor: "The Upbeat Heartaches of Ted Weems" on  The Jazz-O-Rama Hour, part of "The Joe Bev 3-hour Block" air every Saturday, starting 1 pm (ET) / 10 am (PT) at  cultradioagogo.com.

"Somebody Stole My Gal", "My Baby Just Cares For Me", and "Heartaches" will be among the 78 RPM records heard on the 14th edition of Joe Bev's Jazz-O-Rama Hour airing this Saturday, September 22, at 2 pm (ET) / 11 am (PT) on Internet radio powerhouse Cult Radio-A-Go-Go!

Joe Bev presents 78 RPM Jazz with a Sense of Humor
Ted Weems on the Jazz-O-Rama Hour
Sat. 2pm EST cultradioagogo.com
This Saturday Joe Bev presents 78 RPM Jazz with a Sense of Humor: "The Upbeat Heartaches of Ted Weems" (and Perry Como), including:



1."Somebody Stole My Gal" (1923)
2. "Holiday In Venice" (1931)
3. "I Don't Want Your Kisses" (If I Can't Have Your Love) (1929) 
4. "My Troubles Are Over" (1928)
5. Highways are Happy Ways (When They Lead The Way To Home) (1927)
6. "Me And The Man In The Moon" (1928)
7. "Remarkable Girl" (1929)
8. "The Man From The South" (With A Big Cigar In His Mouth) (1941)
9. "Washing Dishes With My Sweetie" (1930)
10. "My Baby Just Cares For Me" (1930)
11. "Look Who's Here!" ( 1931)
12. "Heartaches" (1933)
13. You Can't Pull The Wool Over My Eyes (1936)
14. "Nola" (1938)
15. "Oh! Monah" (1947)
16. "I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now" (1939)



Ted Weems was a popular mid-western bandleader who started his band in 1923 while attending the University of Pennsylvania. Around 1925 he moved his band to Chicago where he played in hotels and ballrooms around the city while also touring the mid-west. In 1932 The Weems Orchestra started appearing regularly on a sponsored nationwide radio program with Jack Benny. It was through radio that Weems made a name for himself and he continued to be associated with popular radio programs throughout the 1930s and 1940s such as The Fibber McGee and Molly Show and Beat The Band. In 1936 vocalist Perry Como joined the band. In 1942 the Weems Orchestra disbanded when Ted joined the Merchant Marines. After World War II, Weems put together another band which continued until the early 1950s.


Perry Como 1936 on the Jazz-O-Rama Hour
Sat. 2pm EST cultradioagogo.com
Perry Como was an American singer and television personality. During a career spanning more than half a century he recorded exclusively for the RCA Victor label after signing with them in 1943. "Mr. C.", as he was nicknamed, sold millions of records for Radio Corporation of America (RCA) and pioneered a weekly musical variety television show, which set the standards for the genre and proved to be one of the most successful in television history. Como was seen weekly on television from 1949 to 1963, then continued hosting the Kraft Music Hall variety program on a monthly basis until 1967. His television shows and seasonal specials were broadcast throughout the world. Also a popular recording artist, Perry Como produced numerous hit records with record sales so high the label literally stopped counting at Como's behest. His combined success on television and popular recordings was not matched by any other artist of the time. Como's appeal spanned generations and he was widely respected for both his professional standards and the conduct in his personal life. In the official RCA Records Billboard magazine memorial, his life was summed up in these few words: "50 years of music and a life well lived."


Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev) has been producing radio in many genres since 1971 when he was 12. At 19 in 1980, Bev became the youngest person to produce a radio show for public radio. He co-hosted The Jazz Show with Garret Gega in the early 80s, a four hour a week mix classic jazz and comedy. Bev also worked for WBGO, Jazz 88 in Newark, NJ and produced documentaries for WNYC New York Public Radio on jazz legends including Louis Armstrong, Wynton Marsalis, Count Basie, Woody Herman, Cab Calloway, and Lionel Hampton.

Bev also produces, directs, writes and voices half of The Comedy-O-Rama Hour, which is has been highest rated radio show on Cult Radio A-Go-Go! for many weeks. Joe Bev's other weekly radio show, The Jazz-O-Rama Hour debuted at #2.

Eight weeks ago, the veteran voice actor added his third hour for Cult Radio, called The Joe Bev Experience which airs right after The Jazz-O-Rama Hour.

More about Waterlogg Productions at http://www.waterlogg.com.

An announcement about this week's Joe Bev Experience follows.







More about Waterlogg Productions at http://www.waterlogg.com.












rentaudio
simply     audio

and we can voice anything you want...
just send us a script!

Monty Python Tribute on Comedy-O-Rama - Tune in September 22 at 1 pm (ET) on CRAGG



Joe Bev &Lorie Kellogg's Comedy-O-Rama Hour 

is part of
"The Joe Bev
3-Hour Block" 
starting at 1 pm (ET)
listen online at cultradioagogo.com

The Comedy-O-Rama Hour  premieres Camp Waterlogg-A-Go-Go!  "Planes, Bicycles and Dumbbells" airing Saturday, September 22, as part of "The Joe Bev 3-Hour Block" starting at 1 pm - listen online at http://www.cultradioagogo.com. 


                                




On this Saturday's original improvisational radio theater comedy hour, Sgt. Lefty (played by Joe Bev) distracts himself with exercise while his girlfriend Olive Pitts (Played by Lorie Kellogg) flies back to Camp Waterlogg with her dad.

Lefty is interrupted by Elis the Boatkeeper, Adam Maxwell and Lil Orphan Andy (all also played by Joe Bev).

On the airplane, Olive and her dad suffer a virtual flight attendant and pill food as they watch "America's Got Two Left Feet" on TV.



Meanwhile, Elise catches Mrs. Terrwilliger (both played by Lorie Kellogg) stealing chicken feed for her wood rats.

Joe Bev also performs two radio cartoons: "The Two Spells" -- a tribute to Monty Python's Flying Circus by Pedro Pablo Sacristan, and "Malcom the Old Tire" by Daws Butler (the voice of Yogi Bear).


In addition, there is an installment of "The Adventures of Teaman" by Mitchell Pearson and the DQD Theater of Philadelphia.



Joe & Lorie performing live this year
Husband and wife, Joe Bev and Lorie Kellogg have been working together since they met in 1996. They recently toured with their Vaudeville in the Catskills stage show, in which they performed "Lambchops" the classic Burns and Allen comedy routine, and Bev MCd and performed the classic Abbott and Costello routine Who's On First? with Bob Greenberg. A second tour is planned for February and March 2013 (TBA).

Right after The Comedy-O-Rama Hour, Joe Bev's second weekly show The Jazz-O-Rama Hour airs and that is followed by his THIRD weekly hour The Joe Bev Experience".





Joe Bev
Now in its 32th week on Cult Radio-A-Go-Go!, The Comedy-O-Rama Hour is produced by Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev). Bevilacqua is a veteran radio theater producer and voice actor. He also works on stage and is the winner of the 2012 New York TANYS Award for Excellence in Acting. He has performed at the Improv, Caroline's on Broadway, Catch a Rising Star, the Comic Strip, opened for Uncle Floyd, worked with Al Franken, Shelley Berman, Louis Black and Rick Overton. Joe has also MC'd shows featuring Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Mahr and Gilbert Gottfried. He has been regularly heard on National Public Radio and Sirius-XM Radio and has produced hundreds of hours of audiobooks.



Lorie Kellogg
Lorie Kellogg is the co-producer. Kellogg started her education at the Kansas City Art Institute. There she studied painting, printmaking, photography, commercial design and video. She continued to Graduate School at the California Institute of the Arts where she received her MFA in Film/Video. Lorie is a graphic designer creating websites, logos, newsletters, newspaper & magazine layout, package design, ad design, and edits video & audio. On Comedy-O-Rama, Lorie also voices Ranger Lorie, Olive Pitts, Lkie (Sqweeky), Mrs. Terwilliger,  and half of voices in the Pedro cartoons.

More about Waterlogg Productions at http://www.waterlogg.com.



GET THE WATERLOGG PRODUCTION APP and listen to all the PODCASTS in on place!

Waterlogg Podcasts
Powered by Conduit Mobile