Bob Hope
Birthday:
Birthplace:
Eltham, London, England, UK
It is hardly necessary to enumerate the accomplishments, patriotic services, charitable donations, awards, medals, and honorariums pertaining to Bob Hope, a man for whom the word "legend" seems somehow inadequate. Never mind that he was born in England; the entertainer unquestionably became an American institution.Hope's father was a stonemason and his mother a one-time concert singer; when he was two, his parents moved him and his brothers to Cleveland, where relatives awaited. Since everyone in the Hope clan was expected to contribute to the family's income, he took on several part-time jobs early in life. One of these was as a concessionaire at Cleveland's Luna Park, where Hope had his first taste of show business by winning a Charlie Chaplin imitation contest. (He later claimed he'd gotten his brothers to strong-arm all the neighborhood kids to vote for him). At 16, Hope entered the work force full-time as a shoe salesman for a department store, then as a stock boy for an auto company. At night, he and a friend picked up spare change singing at local restaurants and saloons, and, for a brief time, he was an amateur boxer, calling himself "Packy East." Picking up dancing tips from older vaudevillians, Hope decided to devote himself to a show business career, first in partnership with his girlfriend Mildred Rosequist, then with a pal named Lloyd Durbin. Comedian Fatty Arbuckle, headlining a touring revue, caught Hope and Durbin's comedy/dancing act and helped the boys get better bookings. Following the accidental death of Durbin, Hope found another partner, George Byrne, with whom he developed a blackface act. After several career reversals, Hope and Byrne were about to pack it in when they were hired to emcee Marshall Walker's Whiz Bang review in New Castle, PA. As the more loquacious member of the team, Hope went out on-stage as a single and got excellent response for his seemingly ad-libbed wisecracks. It was in this and subsequent vaudeville appearances that Hope learned how to handle tough audiences by having the guts to wait on-stage until everyone in the crowd had gotten his jokes; he was still using this technique seven decades later. Dropping his blackface makeup and cannibalizing every college humor magazine he could get his hands on, Hope took on yet another partner (Louise Troxell) in 1928 and started getting choice vaudeville bookings on the Keith Circuit. A year later, he was given a movie screen test, but was told his ski-slope nose didn't photograph well. With material from legendary gagster Al Boasberg, Hope appeared as a single in The Antics of 1931, which led to a better theatrical gig with Ballyhoo of 1932, in which he was encouraged to ad-lib to his heart's content. He then went back to vaudeville and squeezed in his first radio appearance in 1933 before being hired as the comedy second lead in an important Jerome Kern Broadway musical, Roberta. During the long run of this hit, Hope met and married nightclub singer Dolores Reade, who became still another of his on-stage partners when the play closed and Hope yet again returned to vaudeville. He scored a major success in Ziegfeld Follies of 1936, which spotlighted his talent for sketch comedy, and then co-starred with Ethel Merman and Jimmy Durante in Red, Hot and Blue. In 1937, he was brought to Hollywood for Paramount's The Big Broadcast of 1938, in which he duetted with Shirley Ross in the Oscar-winning song "Thanks for the Memory," which became his signature theme from then on. Hope's first few years at Paramount found him appearing in relatively sedate comedy leads, but with The Cat and the Canary (1939) he solidified his screen persona as the would-be great lover and "brave coward" who hides his insecurities with constant wisecracking. In 1940, Hope was teamed with Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour for Road to Singapore, the first of the still-uproarious "Road" series that featured everything from in-jokes about Bob and Bing's private lives to talking
Photos
Highest Rated Movies
Filmography
MOVIES
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | BOX OFFICE | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|---|
No Score Yet | Derby-Fieber USA |
|
— | 2014 |
No Score Yet | The Great Crooners |
|
— | 2008 |
No Score Yet | TV Mania Too! |
|
— | 2008 |
No Score Yet | The Legendary Crooners: Frank, Dean, Bing, Nat and Perry |
|
— | 2007 |
No Score Yet | Pioneers of Primetime |
|
— | 2005 |
No Score Yet | Not So Long Ago |
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— | 2004 |
No Score Yet | Popeye - Fists of Fury |
|
— | 2004 |
No Score Yet | Bob Hope - The Vietnam Years |
|
— | 2004 |
No Score Yet | D-Day Remembered |
|
— | 2004 |
No Score Yet | Bob Hope: Laughing with the Presidents |
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— | 2004 |
No Score Yet | The Great American Songbook |
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— | 2003 |
No Score Yet | Bob Hope: The Road to Laughter |
|
— | 2003 |
91% | The Kid Stays in the Picture |
|
$1.4M | 2002 |
No Score Yet | Bob Hope: His Road to Comedy |
|
— | 1999 |
No Score Yet | Sixty Years with Bob Hope |
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— | 1999 |
No Score Yet | Off the Menu: The Last Days of Chasen's |
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— | 1997 |
No Score Yet | Judy Garland's Hollywood |
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— | 1997 |
No Score Yet | Bob Hope: Hollywood's Brightest Star |
|
— | 1996 |
No Score Yet | Lucy & Desi: A Home Movie |
|
— | 1992 |
No Score Yet | Lucy: Queen of Comedy |
|
— | 1990 |
No Score Yet | You're the Top: The Cole Porter Story |
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— | 1990 |
No Score Yet | World's Greatest Movie Challenge |
|
— | 1989 |
No Score Yet | Family Day at the Movies |
|
— | 1988 |
No Score Yet | Forty Years of Television Broadcast Journalism: A Salute to KTLA |
|
— | 1987 |
32% | Spies Like Us |
|
— | 1985 |
No Score Yet | Bob Hope Buys NBC? |
|
— | 1985 |
89% | The Muppet Movie |
|
— | 1979 |
90% | Hearts and Minds |
|
— | 1975 |
No Score Yet | Cancel My Reservation |
|
— | 1972 |
No Score Yet | Raquel! |
|
— | 1970 |
No Score Yet | How to Commit Marriage |
|
— | 1969 |
No Score Yet | The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell |
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— | 1968 |
No Score Yet | Eight on the Lam |
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— | 1967 |
No Score Yet | Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! |
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— | 1966 |
13% | The Oscar |
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— | 1966 |
No Score Yet | I'll Take Sweden |
|
— | 1965 |
No Score Yet | A Global Affair |
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— | 1964 |
No Score Yet | Call Me Bwana |
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— | 1963 |
No Score Yet | Critic's Choice |
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— | 1963 |
No Score Yet | The Road to Hong Kong |
|
— | 1962 |
No Score Yet | The Sound of Laughter |
|
— | 1962 |
No Score Yet | Bachelor in Paradise |
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— | 1961 |
No Score Yet | The Story of Will Rogers |
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— | 1961 |
No Score Yet | The Facts of Life |
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— | 1960 |
No Score Yet | Danny Thomas Special: The Road to Lebanon |
|
— | 1960 |
No Score Yet | The Five Pennies |
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— | 1959 |
No Score Yet | Alias Jesse James |
|
— | 1959 |
No Score Yet | Paris Holiday |
|
— | 1958 |
No Score Yet | The All-Star Christmas Show (Bing Crosby - Bing Crosby's White Christmas USO All Star Show) |
|
— | 1958 |
No Score Yet | Beau James |
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— | 1957 |
No Score Yet | The Iron Petticoat |
|
— | 1957 |
No Score Yet | The Seven Little Foys |
|
— | 1955 |
No Score Yet | Casanova's Big Night |
|
— | 1954 |
No Score Yet | Here Come the Girls (Champagne for Everybody) |
|
— | 1953 |
71% | Scared Stiff |
|
— | 1953 |
50% | The Greatest Show on Earth |
|
— | 1952 |
91% | Son of Paleface |
|
— | 1952 |
75% | Road to Bali |
|
— | 1952 |
No Score Yet | My Favorite Spy |
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— | 1951 |
No Score Yet | The Lemon Drop Kid |
|
— | 1951 |
80% | Fancy Pants |
|
— | 1950 |
No Score Yet | The Great Lover |
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— | 1949 |
No Score Yet | Sorrowful Jones |
|
— | 1949 |
100% | The Paleface |
|
— | 1948 |
No Score Yet | Variety Girl |
|
— | 1947 |
78% | My Favorite Brunette |
|
— | 1947 |
100% | Road to Rio |
|
— | 1947 |
No Score Yet | Where There's Life |
|
— | 1947 |
No Score Yet | Monsieur Beaucaire |
|
— | 1946 |
100% | Road to Utopia |
|
— | 1945 |
No Score Yet | The All-Star Bond Rally |
|
— | 1945 |
No Score Yet | The Princess and the Pirate |
|
— | 1944 |
No Score Yet | Let's Face It |
|
— | 1943 |
20% | They Got Me Covered |
|
— | 1943 |
No Score Yet | Star Spangled Rhythm |
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— | 1942 |
100% | My Favorite Blonde |
|
— | 1942 |
86% | Road to Morocco |
|
— | 1942 |
No Score Yet | Louisiana Purchase |
|
— | 1941 |
No Score Yet | Nothing But the Truth |
|
— | 1941 |
89% | Road to Zanzibar |
|
— | 1941 |
86% | The Ghost Breakers |
|
— | 1940 |
100% | Road to Singapore |
|
— | 1940 |
No Score Yet | The Cat and the Canary |
|
— | 1939 |
No Score Yet | Caught in the Draft |
|
— | 1939 |
No Score Yet | Some Like It Hot (Rhythm Romance) |
|
— | 1939 |
No Score Yet | Never Say Die |
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— | 1939 |
No Score Yet | Thanks for the Memory |
|
— | 1938 |
No Score Yet | Give Me A Sailor |
|
— | 1938 |
No Score Yet | College Swing |
|
— | 1938 |
No Score Yet | The Big Broadcast of 1938 |
|
— | 1937 |
No Score Yet | The Old Grey Mayor |
|
— | 1935 |
No Score Yet | Going Spanish |
|
— | 1934 |
No Score Yet | Radio Star - die AFN-Story |
|
— |
TV
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|
85% |
The Simpsons
1989
|
|
|
76% |
Roseanne
1988-2018
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
American Masters
1986
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
The Golden Girls
1985-1992
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
Highway to Heaven
1984-1989
|
|
|
44% |
The Academy Awards
1978
|
|
|
100% |
The Muppet Show
1976-1981
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
The Odd Couple
1970-1975
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
Get Smart
1965-1970
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
I Love Lucy
1951-1957
|
|
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Quotes from Bob Hope's Characters
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | Siberia in the spring. Must be a million laughs. |
Vinka Kovelenko: | Here's to world peace. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | to world peace it is. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | To world peace it is. |
Vinka Kovelenko: | You dare to drink to that openly? |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | - I don't think anybody heard me. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | I don't think anybody heard me. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | Keep your flaps down this is a short runway. You're amazing. |
Vinka Kovelenko: | That is because American woman are superficial. They are interested chiefly in their polish and false busoms. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | Yeah, they're inclined to make mountains into molehills. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | A hole in one gal, huh? |
Col. Newton Tarbell: | I'm cancelling your leave. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | You wouldn't do that. |
Col. Newton Tarbell: | It's done. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | - They didn't act this way at the recruiting office. |
Maj. Chuck Lockwood: | They didn't act this way at the recruiting office. |