speedy wrote:On the OTRR site, I looked up the Radio Guide issue that contains the first listing for this summer replacement (issue dated 7-4-36). It's a pdf file which is a scan of the entire 48 pages of that issue. Unfortunately I cannot cut and paste the listing frrom the pdf, so I will recreate it here:
NBC - Tim Ryan and Irene Noblette, comedy team; Don Voorhees' Orch.; Morton Bowe, tnr.; Don Wilson, m.c.
Here's a review in
Variety, July 1, 1936:
TIM AND IRENE
with Don Voorhees Orch., Don Wilson, Morton Bowe
Music. Comedy
30 Mins.
JELLO
Sunday. 7 p.m. EDST
WJZ. New York
(Young & Rubicam)
Young & Rubicam brought In two makeshift programs Sunday night (28) as July-August substitutes for bigger—and as it happens in both cases much better—winter shows. This one is out to keep the folks in the NBC blue tuning-in habit for the 7 p.m. (EDST) niche. That 7 p m. date, has been quite a fixed habit with a large segment of the population, due to the Jack Benny batting average. But that the present line-up can defeat gypsy tendencies among the dollars seems improbable.
Inaugural stanza sprawled on the clumsy side in its rather smar-alecky striving to thrust plugs for Jello into the script. This requires artistry. And as delivered, the Jello references licked what it requires.
Tim and Irene (Ryan and Noblette) were uneven. Their performance was like a political platform, parts of it good, parts of it bad. In general, the material was bargain basement comedy—a bit
shopworn.
Morton Bowe, extravagantly introduced, sang well. But those gushy 'go out there and wow em, old pal' preludes nobody any good. Especially not tenors. Bowe rose above it. Voorhees music zippy
throughout.
But the Jello didn't quite jell.
Land.
Other
Variety stories mention Dave Freedman was the writer, and Frank Jacquet was signed for the show in July. I always thought these broadcasts were known as "The Jell-O Summer Show."
It turned out to be a summer replacement show that got a summer replacement. It was moved from the Blue (WJZ) to the Red (WEAF) network on August 30th. Jack didn't return until October. Blue ran the Coburn Orchestra in the slot.
There's a note in
Variety of July 22, 1936 that Wilson, Tim and Irene (and the Voorhees Orchestra) were signed for a new show, Sunday, 5:30 to 6 p.m. on the basic Blue network (and some other Blue stations) starting Oct. 4, 1936 for Minute Tapioca (a General Foods product). Donsie evidently was busy.
Yhtapmys