Showing posts with label Betty Hutton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Betty Hutton. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

A Jack Armstrong episode from 09/17/40 and Jack Armstrong: Phantom of the Sawdust from 8/22/47 & The Bob Hope Show with Betty Hutton rehearsal recording from 11/3/41 - part 1 of 2


Betty Hutton in Let's Face It (1943)
with Bob Hope
The Lost OTR Show
with Joe Bev
A Jack Armstrong episode from 09/17/40 and Jack Armstrong: Phantom of the Sawdust from 8/22/47 & The Bob Hope Show with Betty Hutton rehearsal recording from 11/3/41 - part 1 of 2

Your BearManor curator Professor Ludwig Von Whatchamacallit (Fred Frees) travels in a van full of crazy Camp Waterlogg characters (created Joe Bev & Lorie Kellogg) in a series of improvised comic interstitials to introduce this month's line up!

THE LOST
OTR SHOW

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Lost, now found Old Time Radio programs, not heard in more than 60 years, produced and hosted by Joesph Bevilacqua (Joe Bev) for Waterlogg Productions.
Listen to BearManor Radio Online


Betty Hutton made 19 films from 1942 to 1952 including the hugely popular The Perils of Pauline in 1947. She was billed above Fred Astaire in the 1950 musical Let's Dance. Hutton's greatest screen triumph came in Annie Get Your Gun (1950) for MGM, which hired her to replace an exhausted Judy Garland in the role of Annie Oakley. The film, with the leading role retooled for Hutton, was a smash hit, with the biggest critical praise going to Hutton. (Her obituary in The New York Times described her as "a brassy, energetic performer with a voice that could sound like a fire alarm.")[5] Among her lesser known roles was an unbilled cameo in Sailor Beware (1952) with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, in which she portrayed Dean's girlfriend, Hetty Button. WIKI



Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy was a radio adventure series which maintained its popularity from 1933 to 1951. The program originated at WBBM in Chicago on July 31, 1933, and was later carried on CBS, then NBC and finally ABC.

Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy was a creation of General Mills, a pioneer in the development of unique and compelling advertising under the stewardship of Vice-president of Advertising, Samuel Chester Gale. Gale later served as President of the Ad Council. Intending to promote breakfast cereal Wheaties, Gale developed the character of Jack Armstrong as a fictitious "everyboy" whom listeners would emulate: If Jack ate Wheaties, boys across the nation would, too. Early popularity led to commissioning of a radio serial broadcast.[2] WIKI

ENJOY BETTY and HER SISTER MARION 

on THE JAZZ-O-RAMA HOUR!

 Get more Joe Bev audio here!
Joe Bevilacqua, also known as Joe Bev, is primarily known as a radio theater dramatist, but his career has taken him into every aspect of show business, including stage, film, and television, as a producer, director, writer, actor, and even cartoonist. In 1971 his father bought him a cassette recorder, on which he created his first audio story, Willoughby and the Professor, acting all the voices himself at the age of twelve. In 1975 Daws Butler, the voice of Yogi Bear and many other Hanna-Barbera and Jay Ward cartoon characters, dubbed himself Bevilacqua’s personal mentor after hearing a 120-minute cassette of Willoughby improvisations. Since 1980 Bevilacqua has produced many award-winning radio programs for National Public Radio, Sirius-XM Satellite Radio, and others.
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More about Waterlogg Productions at http://www.waterlogg.com
 All the Waterlogg Titles can be found here...

Saturday, August 4, 2012

78 Records of Marion & Betty Hutton - Today, Saturday, August 4, 2 pm (ET) - on Cult Radio-A-Go-Go! (CRAGG)






Joe Bev presents "The Hutton Sisters" on The Jazz-O-Rama Hour, part of "The Joe Bev 3-hour Block" air every Saturday, starting 2 pm (ET) / 11 am (PT) at cultradioagogo.com.






The seventh edition of Joe Bev's Jazz-O-Rama Hour airs this Saturday, August 4, at 2 pm (ET) / 11 am (PT) on Internet radio powerhouse Cult Radio-A-Go-Go! (http://www.cultradioagogo.com).



This Saturday Joe Bev presents 78 RPM Jazz with a Sense of Humor: "The Hutton Sisters," including:


"A Square In The Social Circle" - Betty Hutton with Paul Weston Orchestra (1945)
"The Five O'Clock Whistle" - Marion Hutton with Glenn Miller -  (1944)
"Murder, He Says" - Betty Hutton (1943)
"Sabotage" - Marion Hutton with The Glenn Miller Miller Orchestra (1941)
"Rocking Horse Ran Away" - Betty Hutton with The Paul Weston Orchestra (1944)
Marion Hutton
"I Want a Hat with a Cherry on it" - Marion Hutton with The Glenn Miller Orchestra (1940)
"It's Oh So Quiet" - Marion Hutton with The Pete Rugolo Orchestra - (1951)
"The Man with the Mandolin" - Marion Hutton with The Glenn Orchestra (1939)
"Orange Colored Sky" - Betty Hutton - The Pete Rugolo Orchestra (1950)
"Three Little Fishes" - Marion Hutton with The Glenn Miller Orchestra (1939)
"My Blue Heaven" - Betty Hutton (1950)
"A Bushel and a Peck" - Betty Hutton with The Mitchell Ayres Orchestra (1950)
"My Fickle Eye"  - Betty Hutton with Joe Lilley Orchestra - RCA Victor (1946)
"Jumpin' Jive" Marion Hutton with The Glenn Miller Orchestra (1944)
"The Rumba Jumps" Marion Hutton with The Glenn Miller Orchestra (1945)
"Who Kicked  the Light Plug" - Betty Hutton (1950)




Betty Hutton
"Betty and Marion were the two most 'hep' woman performers of the 1940s," says Jazz-O-Rama host Joe Bev, who remasters the 78 RPM recordings to bring out their former fidelity.


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.


Three 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.





 







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.

Last week, 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.








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